“We stand at a critical moment in Earth's history, a time when humanity must choose its future.
(This quotation and most of those that follow are from the Earth Charter)
In 2012 the world communitywas looking back to the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 with a conference Rio+20 in June which reviewed progress and assessed what the world and each of us needed to do next if we wanted to hand on a planet worth living in to future generations. One World Week 2012 offered us an opportunity to review the findings of the conference and plan the actions we could take to contribute to an equitable, harmonious and enduring future.
"Cooperatives are a reminder to the international community that it is possible to pursue both economic viability and social responsibility. "
(United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon)
2012 was also the UN Year of Co-operatives and our theme offered opportunities to celebrate sharing and working together with others.
We all wondered what the world was coming to and what the future hold for our children. How could we cope with a warming world, declining resources, growing inequality and unrest?
“As the world becomes increasingly interdependent and fragile, the future at once holds great peril and great promise.”
Could our generation take the steps needed right away to ensure that future generations would be able to continue to access the resources they needed to enjoy a fulfilling life? Were we prepared to embrace the changes that could offer hope and a future for all?
“To move forward we must recognize that in the midst of a magnificent diversity of cultures and life forms we are one human family and one earth community with a common destiny.”
We affirmed that we were all members of one world and that technology had enabled us to move around the globe for work and leisure and to communicate with ease. Also that trade had moved us closer, reinforcing our growing interdependence. However, we also recognised that some people had been forced to move by poverty, conflict and persecution to seek refuge and make new homes. We reflected that living and working together with people of many cultures and abilities had not only enriched our lives but enabled us to find shared ways of surviving as one world.
We acknowledged that our economies, natural environment and societies were increasingly interwoven. Could we cooperate to move towards a global society, which adapted to change while:
- balancing the needs of nature, economy and society,
- respecting universal human rights, and economic justice,
- and building a culture of peace?
We asked we could accept that it was only by working together to meet these challenges could we share quitably the legacy we have received with our descendants?
“Towards this end, it is imperative that we, the peoples of Earth, declare our responsibility to one another, to the greater community of life, and to future generations.”
the Earth Charter here
OWW's partners in the Stop Climate Chaos Coallition offed us a video: "Reasons to be cheerful" documenting progress on environmental protection since the first Rio Conference in 1992 (see it here)
OWWFollow up Rio+20 in your OWW events
In OWW 2012, under our theme of Sharing Destiny,we looked at the outcomes of the Rio+20 conference which took place in June, 2012. Representatives from around the world met at this UN environment summit to “secure renewed political commitment for sustainable development*, ... ”.
The Stop Climate Chaos Coalition (SCCC), of which OWW is a member, encouraged people to organise events to raise awareness of what was at stake at Rio in June and invite their MP to support a Rio Connection Declaration.
You could involve local representatives of other SCCC members in planning your OWW events for October. Have a look at the SCCC site where a Map tells you who is in your local area or you could get in touch with local branches of the SCCC members listed on the website.
In 1992, the UN Earth Summit in Rio de Janiero, Brazil, was unprecedented for a UN conference. It sought to help governments rethink economic development, recognising that economic and social progress depended on finding ways to prevent environmental degradation and preserve our resource base. Government representatives from around the world agreed to put in place:
“A comprehensive plan of action to be taken globally, nationally and locally ... in every area in which human impacts on the environment.” (It became known as Agenda 21)
In 2012, twenty years on, the objective of the ‘Rio+20’ Conference was to:
“secure renewed political commitment for sustainable development*, assess progress to date and… address new and emerging challenges”.
(More information at: www.uncsd2012.org )
There was much debate about this term with many feeling it had been highjacked from its original meaning.
A simple and common definition is “... development that meets the needs of the present, without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”.
Living within our environmental limits is one of the central principles of sustainable development, but it also means meeting the diverse needs of all people in existing and future communities, promoting personal wellbeing, social cohesion and inclusion, and creating equal opportunity.
There was much talk of a green economy - Governments and businesses wanted a green economy that promoted growth through developing energy saving technologies and low carbon technologies. One of OWW's partners, the World Development Movement, warned that it all depended on whose green economy it is! More here
Date: 17 Array 2015 00:00 to 25 Array 2015 23:00
The International Week for Nonviolence
Date: October 17th -25th 2015
Venue:
Various locations around the United States and Internationally.
The Blogging Carnival for Nonviolence is running as part of the International Week for Nonviolence, so please read the blogs here:
http://www.instantblogsubscribers.com/entry/Zhana21/261320/Blogging+Carnival+for+Nonviolence+2015
Links for the Week for Nonviolence are also available on that page.
Preserving and Strengthening the Middle/Working Class.
"Changing the Culture of Violence in America - and the World".
This event is NOT about "hope", it is about practical methods to bring about positive change.
We CAN transform society. It starts by transforming ourselves.
You can also read the blogs in the Blogging Carnival for Nonviolence. Blogs by Nonviolent Communication (NVC) trainers and authors who work internationally, as well as members of Black Women for Positive Change, and others, will be updated daily during the Week for Nonviolence.
They will include topics such as:
Black Lives Matter - Is There an Age Gap?
Transforming Conflict into Connection and many more.
Please join us. http://www.instantblogsubscribers.com/entry/Zhana21/261320/Blogging+Carnival+for+Nonviolence+2015
Young people and elders will be sharing our views, methods and experience of nonviolence.
Any members of organisations, faith communities, or others organising events during the Week for Nonviolence please contact Black Women for Positive Change with deails.
This is open to everyone. http://www.blackwomenforpositivechange.org/2015-week-of-non-violence-flyer/
Admission Details: All Welcome
Date: 18 Array 2015 10:00 to 24 Array 2015 22:00
OWW at Wild Thyme
Date & Time: 18 - 24 October 2015
every day from 10am -2pm
Venue: Wild Thyme
102 Palmerston Road
Southsea PO5 3PT
Exhibition about OWW in the shop window
inside an exhibition about
Fairtrade and Global Justice Now's campaigns
about Agroecology and African food
A stall with a different focus each day:
Mon: Fairtrade and Global Justice Now campaigns information
Tues: Traidcraft sales; Global Justice Now campaigns info.
Wed: Fairtrade and Global Justice now campaigns information
Thur: Fairtrade
Fri: Zaytoun and Palestinian products - sales
Sat: Fairtrade (maybe not definitely as Great South Run starts)
Call us: 02393 073768
Email us: info@wildthymewholefoods.co.uk
Admission Details: all welcome
19 October 2015
A talk about
South Staffs Search and Rescue and Missing People
Date & Time: Monday 19th October 2015 at 7:30 pm
Venue: Sacred Heart RC Church
Silver Link Road
Glascote
Tamworth B77 2EA
St John's Justice and Peace Group
are privileged to have as a speaker
a volunteer and PA for South Staffs Search and Rescue
and as a result of this has become involved in the growing problem of Missing People.
Some who go missing are those with mental health issues, Dementia, and of course trafficking.
12 people every day go missing in Staffordshire.
Many organisations working in these fields are funded by donations.
The group felt that this year's theme
'Hope in Action' to build a more equal and peaceful world,
fitted really well with those working in these difficult areas.
Admission: Free
Contact Name: Lynda Sanders
Email: Lyndamsanders@aol.com
Telephone: +447989225740
19 October 2015
Evening on Refugees
Film plus a visitor sharing experiences
Date & Time: Monday October 19th 2015 at 7.30 pm
Venue: Christ Church URC
239 Milton Road
Portsmouth PO4 8PH
"Tell it like it is" will show a screening of the play "Exile".
In attendance will be local people working with refugees and an actor from the play, who is himself a refugee.
He will be able to answer questions as we consider our response to the plight of asylum seekers.
Contact Name: Christine Macmillan
Email: cmcmfish@yahoo.co.uk
Telephone: 023 92 817288
Admission: Free - all welcome
Date: 19 Array 2015 19:30 to 24 Array 2015 19:30
Theatre production by Riding Lights
Touring from September 16th until November 28th 2015
Full details of the tour and all venues can be found at
http://ridinglights.org/baked-alaska-tour-dates/
Tickets can be purchased
from the Box Office: 01904 613000 OR online
Press photos can be viewed at
http://ridinglights.org/baked-alaska-production-photos/
An island in the South Pacific has a problem. It’s hollow.
Anxiety levels are rising in a North American boardroom. Eve’s garden is bursting with next door’s rubbish. Even the ducks have relocated… they’re in Bangladesh.
From the four corners of the earth come colourful, inter-connecting stories of humanity living with the wild, unpredictable effects of climate change.
Scientists, farmers, oil magnates, climate warriors, prophets, mothers, journalists and others just like you and me – we’re all in the mix and hungry for a recipe of hope. In the struggle over power, some sound the warming bell, some blow hot and cold, while others make a pudding of the planet.
Vivid, sharp and deliciously entertaining, BAKED ALASKA serves up the realities of climate change with flair and clarity about the temperatures involved.
In the high-energy, ‘seriously funny’ style for which Riding Lights is well known, BAKED ALASKA is something we can all look forward to… unless we do something about it.
Dates and Venues in One World Week
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Monday 19/10/2015 Alderley Edge, Cheshire |
Time: 7:30pm Alderley Edge Methodist Church, Chapel Road. Alderley Edge SK9 7DU. Venue phone: 01565 872306 |
Tuesday 20/10/2015 Birmingham |
All Saints Kings Heath | |
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Time: 7:30pm All Saints Church, 2 Vicarage Rd, Kings Heath, B14 7RA. Venue phone: 0121 444 0760 |
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Wednesday 21/10/2015 Stoke-on-Trent |
St Paul’s Church | |
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Time: 7:30pm. St Paul’s, 131 Longton Hall Road. ST3 2EL. Venue phone: 01782 598366 |
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Thursday 22/10/2015 Wolverhampton, W. Midlands |
St. John’s in the Square | |
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Time: 7:30pm. St. John’s in the Square, St. John’s Square WV2 1DT. Venue phone: 01902 422642 |
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Friday 23/10/2015 Lichfield, Staffordshire |
Lichfield Cathedral | |
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Time: 7:30pm.
Lichfield Cathedral, The Close. WS13 7LD. Venue phone: 01543 306100 |
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Saturday 24/10/2015 Shrewsbury |
Church of the Holy Spirit | |
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Time: 7:30pm. |