|
|
|||
|
Recent Articles
Recent Comments
Search
This Month
Month Archive
|
« July 16
Friday, July 18
by
CIVICUS Blog
on Fri 18 Jul 2008 12:04 PM SAST
By Ingrid Srinath, CIVICUS Secretary General. Issued Date: e-CIVICUS 398, 16 July 2008 -
When I was a teenager, in Mumbai, India, my parents hired a new maid. She was exactly the same age as I was, but unlike me, had never been to school. While I probably attributed my academic ‘success’ to my own hard work, and my parents probably believed they’d paid for it through theirs, the stark reality was that my education had been paid for by our new maid and her brothers and sisters all over India. Hundreds of millions whose life choices were limited virtually from birth by a deeply entrenched system of privilege that, for instance, granted me access to a subsidised education all the way up to the post-graduate level, while excluding her from even basic literacy. more »
by
CIVICUS Blog
on Fri 18 Jul 2008 12:03 PM SAST
By Ingrid Srinath, CIVICUS Secretary General. Issued Date: e-CIVICUS 397, 9 July 2008 -
This issue of e-CIVICUS goes to press as the G8 meeting winds down in Japan. The inclusion of the O5 countries as guests went some way towards redressing the melanin deficit in the club of the planet’s most powerful, but continued to present a chromosomally-challenged picture. It is no surprise therefore that the outcomes represent not simply lack of progress, but several steps backward on the issues that most affect the majority of civil society. more »
by
CIVICUS Blog
on Fri 18 Jul 2008 12:01 PM SAST
By Ingrid Srinath, CIVICUS Secretary General. Issued Date: e-CIVICUS 396, 2 July 2008 -
The crisis of democracy and human rights in Zimbabwe is a stark, ongoing reminder of the inadequacies of political leadership and civil society in Africa and around the world. While ordinary Zimbabweans fight a life and death struggle for their basic human rights and for their rights to democratic voice, the rest of us - politicians, civil society organisations and the media - seem to be able to do little more than wring our hands in despair and issue appeals for sanity and balance. Despite the clamour of voices seeking decisive action from African governments, especially in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) countries, an ‘election’ that most people agree was an utter sham of democracy has been conducted and a victor declared with utter impunity. more »
by
CIVICUS Blog
on Fri 18 Jul 2008 11:58 AM SAST
By Ingrid Srinath, CIVICUS Secretary General. Issued Date: e-CIVICUS 395, 27 June 2008 -
The 8th CIVICUS World Assembly in Glasgow was, in my view, momentous in more ways than one. Marking the 60th Anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the World Assembly provided a grim reminder of the growing threats to civil society globally, whilst simultaneously highlighting the opportunity to build partnerships and alliances of unprecedented width and depth. more »
|
||
