Events archived below were organised
by supporters of the Global Justice Movement, and some may
still be of interest. However, we have moved on from this
listing format. For current events please go to the Global
Table Events Page, which has its own archive.
Click here
for details |
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FSS |
19-21Sept |
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THINKING THROUGH A COLLAPSING
WORLD |
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Sun |
21st Sept |
10.30am |
21st Century Democracy - Spirit
Matters |
Open Day in London |
Sat |
4th Oct |
10am-6pm |
The first LONDON SOCIAL FORUM
|
London School of Economics |
Wed |
8th Oct |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Thu |
9th Oct |
- 7.30pm |
Does World Money need World
Governance? |
Talking Economics, London |
Thu |
9th Oct |
- 7.30pm |
The Arms Trade ? Out of Control
? |
Change-Net, Bristol |
Sat |
11th Oct |
10.30-6pm |
Dismantling the Oil Economy |
LSE, London |
Sat |
11th Oct |
10-4.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Glasgow |
Tue |
14th Oct |
- 7.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Bristol |
Wed |
15th Oct |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
15th Oct |
- 7.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: London |
Thu |
16th Oct |
- 7.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Kendal |
Sat |
18th Oct |
- 12-5pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Manchester |
Mon |
20th Oct |
- 7.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Darlington |
Tue |
22nd Oct |
- 7.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Sheffield |
Wed |
22nd Oct |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
22nd Oct |
- 6.30pm |
Demba Dembele - Whodunit to
the world's poor? |
WDM Tour: Birmingham |
Wed |
22nd Oct |
- 6-9pm |
Islamic Alternatives to Interest-Based
Banking and Finance |
FFSC: House of Lords |
Fri |
24th Oct |
10am-5pm |
London 21 - Working Towards
Sustainability - AGM |
Whitechapel, London |
Fri |
24th Oct |
- 7pm |
Monetary Justice - Tue Challenge
for World Development |
James Robertson, Bristol |
RES |
23-26 Oct |
residential |
WORKING FOR WORLD CHANGE Course
2003/04 |
Weekend at Braziers College |
Sat |
25th Oct |
10-5pm |
Global Conflict or Human Scale
Development? |
Schumacher Lectures, Bristol |
RES |
28-30 Oct |
residential |
Conference associated with "Prosperity"
Newsletter |
Bromsgrove,
Worcestershire, UK |
S/S |
27/28 Oct |
residential |
SUSTAINABLE INNOVATION 03 |
Conference in Stockholm |
Wed |
29th Oct |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
S/S |
1/2nd Nov |
residential |
SHARED PLANET - Student Conference
|
University of Liverpool |
Wed |
5th Nov |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Thu |
6th Nov |
- 7.30pm |
Does World Money need World
Governance? |
Talking Economics, London |
Sat |
8th Nov |
11am-3pm |
Open BOOK DAY prior to CCMJ
AGM at 3.30pm |
Christian Council for Monetary
Justice |
Wed |
12th Nov |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
12th Nov |
- 6-9pm |
Modern Jihad: Tracing the Dollars
behind the Terror Networks |
FFSC: House of Lords |
FSS |
14-16 Nov |
10-4pm |
Introduction to Renewable Energy |
University of Aberystwyth |
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19/21 Nov |
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The Bush State Visit - welcoming
events
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WATCH THIS SPACE |
Tues |
25th Nov |
- 6-9pm |
Publicly Created Money and Public
Finance |
FFSC: House of Lords |
Wed |
26th Nov |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Thu |
4th Dec |
- 7.30pm |
Does World Money need World
Governance? |
Talking Economics, London |
Wed |
10th Dec |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
17th Dec |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
24th Dec |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
31st Dec |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
7th Jan |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
14th Jan |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
14th Jan |
- 6-9pm |
Citizens Diplomacy & "Simultaneous
Policy" Initiative |
FFSC: House of Lords |
Wed |
21st Jan |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
RES |
26/27 Jan |
residential |
MONEY & THE REAL ECONOMY |
Conference in Indonesia |
Wed |
28th Jan |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
4th Feb |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
11th Feb |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
18th Feb |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
25th Feb |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
25th Feb |
- 6-9pm |
Peter Challen,
James Gibb Stuart and Alistair McConnachie: "Winning
the Support of MPs for EDM 323" |
FSC: House
of Lords |
Wed |
3rd Mar |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Fri |
5th Mar |
7pm
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Social Forums and the Politics
of Global Solidarity: with
Tariq Ali plus Annick Coupe, Marco Berlinguer, John Appollis,
and Annie Pourre |
LSE, Houghton Street, London
WC2 (Holborn Tube) |
Wed |
10th Mar |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
17th Mar |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
FSS |
19-21 |
residential |
THE MONEY CRUNCH: Complementary
Solutions Currency weekend
with Thomas H. Greco, Bernard Lietaer, Sergio Lub, Edgar
Cahn, et al
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Naropa University in Boulder
Colorado |
Wed |
24th Mar |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
24th Mar |
- 6-9pm |
"Integrating
Money, Finance and Banking - Moving from Theory to Practice" |
FSC: House
of Lords |
Wed |
31st Mar |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
7th Apr |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
14th Apr |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
21st Apr |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
28th Apr |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
5th May |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Thu |
6th May |
- 6-9pm |
Stephen Zarlenga
(USA) in support of EDM 323 |
FSC: House
of Lords |
Wed |
12th May |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Sat |
15th May |
3.30pm |
KYOTO MARCH: Time to Stand
up for the Environment
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Rally at Imperial War Museum
|
Wed |
19th May |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
26th May |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
2nd June |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
9th June |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Tue |
15th June |
- 6-9pm |
Judith Hunt:
Mutually Created Money for Small Traders and Companies |
FSC: House
of Lords |
Wed |
16th June |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
16th June |
6-8pm |
Economics Topics for the European
Social Forum Agenda
|
Room E171, LSE, Houghton Street |
Wed |
23rd June |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
30th June |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Thu |
1st July |
6-8pm |
Selling London Down the Thames
|
Room H216 Connaught House LSE |
Wed |
7th July |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
Wed |
14th July |
11am-1pm |
Global Table
- regular meeting |
Friends House,
Euston, London |
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Mon/Tue 26th/27th January 2004 |
International
Conference: MONEY & THE REAL ECONOMY
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Presenting comparative
studies in real money linkages with social issues, economic
transformations, institutions and markets |
Trisakti University,
Jkarta, Indonesia |
Professor Masudul
Alam Choudhury, Dept of Economics & Finance, College
of Commerce & Economics, Sultan Qaboos University,
Muscat 123, Sultanate of Oman: Fax (968) 514-043 Tel:
(968) 515-845 - masudc@squ.edu.om
- also SEE
ARTICLE |
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Thursday
4th December 2003: 7.30-9pm |
TALKING
ECONOMICS - monthly conversations on events of the day |
Dr Christopher Houghton
Budd on: Retirement Revisited - Grasping the Pensions
Nettle |
Venue: Rudolf
Steiner House, 35 Park Road, Near Baker St. Tube. Cost:
Donation of £3.50
|
Dr. Christopher Houghton Budd
01227 738207 or chb@ae-institute.com
Arthur Edwards 01993 891363 or mail@oxfordeconomicsforum.co.uk
Rudolf Steiner House 0207 723 4400
www.talkingeconomics.co.uk
|
As the WTO meeting
in Cancun draws to a close, the need to create a culture
of thinking inclusively about economic life sounds
with ever greater clarity. The alternative is a strident
factionalism in which self-assertion rules, the evidence
for this is not to be found in human nature alone,
but rather in the concepts used to describe our economic
world conception. But what if we can think and talk
in a way which allows us to conceive a humane world
? Economists, politicians, journalists, protestors,
corporate lobbyists might discover a common language
afterall. We invite you to a series of Thursday evening
events that aim to explore contemporary economic issues
within the context of a brief introduction leading
to open conversation. If you would like to display
this programme on a notice board you can download
it at - http://www.talkingeconomics.co.uk/poster.doc
- I look forward to your participation, Arthur Edwards
-
Retirement Revisited Grasping
the Pensions Nettle: Modern pension funding
makes assumptions about demography and growth that
may no be longer valid. It also tends to work through
inflationary investment in property or playing the
stock market, and relies on casting values forward.
Could we not fund pensions in a more direct manner
by investing in new activities, rather than buildings
and the stock exchange, and by using present-time
money transfers. More radically, should we simply
abandon them altogether or have they become an inalienable
right?
These
events are organised by members of the Associative
Economics Network, established in 1998 to encourage
the development of an associative approach to modern
economic life. Membership of the Network is open to
all and entails no obligations. The annual fee of
£10 includes bi-monthly issues of e2 - Journal
of Associative Economics. Associative Economics is
a non-partisan approach to the wide and divergent
range of thought currently informing modern debates
- from neo-liberal to ‘alternative’, and
including the ideas of Rudolf Steiner. If
you would like to join, please register online at
www.ae-institute.com. or send your name and address
together with £10 to Centre for Associative
Economics, PO Box 341, Canterbury CT4 8GA.
|
|
Tuesday November
25th 2003, 6-9pm |
PUBLICLY-CREATED
MONEY AND PUBLIC SERVICES |
Speakers: Dr John
Courtneidge, Richard Murphy, Richard Greaves |
FORUM FOR STABLE CURRENCIES
at the House of Lords, Westminster, London SW1, Black
Rod's entrance, Room G
|
Organiser:
Sabine McNeill
|
EDM 1515 in 2002 called for using the
public credit. EDM 854 in 2003 asks for an Inquiry into
that the possible benefits of PUBLICLY-CREATED MONEY.
EDM1515 with 24 and EDM 854 with 26 signatures have
thus set signals for understanding the mechanisms of
money creation and supply in a Parliamentary context.
Interest on debt constitute some 22% of taxpayerâs
money spent by Government - generally slightly more
than the military budget . Who benefits? And how does
the exponential growth of compounding interest effect
the country's economy and government's budget? Public
Services have been suffering noticeably and the Public
Services Forum is an opportunity to draw the Union's
attention to the devastating effects of our debt- and
interest-based monetary system. John Courtneidge's article
"New initiatives for Public Finance" has been
published in "Voice of the Unions", and we
will hear a report on the latest attempts of raising
awareness among those who suffer most; the workers and
employees - whether personally through health and education,
or collectively through transport and pensions.
Dr John Courtneidge is
a chemist, town councillor, Quaker, Co-operator and
socialist. He co-founded the Campaign for Interest-Free
Money in 1997 and has been an active supporter of monetary
reform on many levels. Richard Murphy
is the mastermind behind EDM854: an accomplished accountant
and businessman. Richard Greaves worked
as a solicitor for 15 years before becoming interested
in economics and politics, including the power of banks
in money creation.
The Forum for Stable Currencies
has been hosting debates between analysts of monetary
reform, victims of banks and institutions and promoters
of LETS and Barter Companies since 1998. Programmes
have been distributed to both Houses of Parliament in
the hope that the topics debated become part of the
political agenda, especially as the EURO challenges
the sovereignty to issue a national currency.
The Forum operates from the following principles:
* The parliamentary process needs to make certain that
the Money Supply ensures its value" Lord Caithness
* Money should be the servant not the master of humanity.
* Banksâ ability to create money out of nothing
must be curtailed.
* Personal responsibility needs to be maximised.
When it is compounding interest upon interest, growth
is exponential; for profits and for debts. Any exponential
growth is unnatural and unsustainable. 97% of money
in circulation is created as interest-bearing debt.
Since 1967, notes and coin (M0), the share of the total
money supply (M4) issued by governments free of interest
has gone down from 31% to 3%, i.e. Virtually all money
is created by banks with a near monopoly.
Organiser: Sabine McNeill, tel. 020
7328 3701, 21 Goldhurst Terrace London NW 6 3HB www.intraforum.net/money
sabine@globalnet.co.uk
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Friday 14, Saturday 15, and
Sunday 16 November 2003, 10am-4.30pm daily
|
Weekend Course:
Introduction to Renewable Energy
|
For information
on the course contents please contact Green Dragon Energy
on 01654 761 570 or dragonrg@talk21.com |
Fee: £35 (Concession: £25)
To register contact the Centre for Continuing Education
- it is advisable to register early as demand for places
is usually high. Places are allocated on a 'first come
first served basis' and students are not registered
on the course until they have completed a registration
form and paid the fee. It is not possible to reserve
places by telephone or e-mail.
|
Centre of Continuing Education,
University of Wales, 10-11 Laura Place, Aberystwyth,
SY23 2AU, Mid Wales - 01970-622-677 - bff@aber.ac.uk.
|
The course
will give an overview of the technology of renewable
energy and outline the basic principles of solar electricity,
solar water heating , small-scale wind power and microhydro-power
and their applications for homes, businesses and farms.
Visit the
Green Dragon website for an overview of some of
the technologies covered on the course. The course
is an ideal way to learn about the nuts and bolts
of this increasingly important range of technologies.
The course is aimed at those in the business, non-profit,
public and academic sectors who wish to get a comprehensive
introduction to renewable energy electrical technology
in general, as well as those wishing to installing
renewable energy systems in both urban or rural settings.
The emphasis will be on how things work, what it is
practicable to do, and participants will have the
opportunity to develop their own projects. At the
end of the course participants should be able to do
basic designs for renewable energy systems.
Course themes:
Overview of Renewable Energy Technologies;
Electricity, Power & Energy; Solar electricity;
Solar water heating; Electricity from Wind; Micro-hydro;
Small system design; Small system sizing; Project
design
People from
the following organisations have attended this course:
National Assembly of Wales, Green Alliance, BRE (Building
Research Establishment), North-East London Energy
Efficiency Advice Centre, British Antartic Survey,
Leeds City Council, Groundwork Wales, Solar Century,
Powys Energy Agency, Friends of the Earth, Welsh Development
Agency (WDA), Dept of Environment, Northern Ireland,
Indian Forestry Commission, West Wales Eco-centre,
Marlec Engineering Ltd, WS Atkins Consulting Engineers
Ltd, The Green Party, Pembrokeshire National Park,
The National Energy Foundation, Centre for Arid Zone
Studies, Sustainable Development Team, Government
Office for the South East, School of Agricultural
& Forest Sciences, Wales, Positive Power, Pembrokeshire
Energy Agency, Control Techniques Ltd, National Energy
Services, The Earth Centre, Nanteos Woodland Group
Ltd, Solar Shakti, EnergyTech Ltd, Trigonos, Awel
Aman Tawe, SEPCO, Flatholm Project, Trans-send, Eco-Exmoor
Ltd, Vale Royal Agenda 21, Redbricks Community, Swansea
Environment Centre, Sundance Renewables, Merthyr Tydfil
County Borough Council, Enviros, Solent Energy Efficiency
Advice Centre, The Environment Agency, Stockholm Environment
Institute, Southwest Regional Assembly, The Gaia Foundation,
Bristol City Council, Sollatek, Youth Hostels Association,
Earthwatch Europe, International Invotation Services,
The Ethical Investment Co-operative
Food and accommodation
are not included in the course fee. B&B prices
start around £20 and there are lots of places
in and around the town. There are also youth hostels.
The Aberystwyth Tourist Information Centre can be
contacted on 01970 612125 or aberystwythtic@ceredigion.gov.uk.
Websites that provide lists are: www.tourism.wales.gov.uk
and www.ceredigion.gov.uk/croeso/RCheck2k1/index.htm.
The Centre of Alternative Technology and several wind
farms are in the vicinity. Aberystwyth has an arts
centre with cinema, pubs, cafes, several bookshops
and is located right on the sea - the beach is only
five minutes away from the course venue. Courses for
groups can also be arranged at this venue and at others.
|
|
Wednesday, November 12, 2003,
6-9pm
|
MODERN
JIHAD: Tracing the Dollars behind the Terror Networks
|
Speaker: Loretta
Napoleoni, Economist,
political analyst and novelist,
|
FORUM FOR STABLE CURRENCIES,
House of Lords, Westminster, London SW1, St Stephen's
Gate Entrance - Committee room G
|
Organiser:
Sabine McNeill
|
Loretta Napoleoni
Economist, political analyst and novelist,
Loretta Napoleoni has spent several years interviewing
former members of Italian armed groups. Thanks to her
unique insight into the management of armed organisations,
she has written a book on a new shocking phenomenon:
the economics of terrorism.
Modern Jihad: Tracing the Dollars
Behind the Terror Networks propels the reader into
the nether world of illegal organisations. >From
the Contras to Al Qaeda, Loretta Napoleoni maps out
the arteries of an international economic system that
feeds armed groups the world over with an endless supply
of cash. Chasing terror money, she takes the reader
from CIA headquarters to the smuggling routes of the
Far East, from the back rooms of Wall Street to hawala
exchanges in the Middle East.
The "Economy of Terror" that
Napoleoni identifies is a 1.5 trillion-dollar fast-growing
economic system. It is made up of an illegal businesses
such as arms and narcotics trading, oil and diamonds
smuggling, as well as charitable donations, profits
from legal businesses and an intricate system of finance.
Most importantly, Napoleoni reveals the interdependency
between the economies run by armed groups and western
economists. This ranges from consumption of narcotics
to the production of arms, and from the recycling of
illegal money to speculation on the stock markets, as
occurred prior to 9/11.
Loretta Napoleoni is the first author
to tackle the issues raised by September 11th 2001 from
a specifically economic perspective. Presenting an astonishing
array of evidence, taken from the extensive research
and interviews, her book is a fascinating account of
controversial issues of life at the heart of many of
today's international problems. Revealing how the "new
economy of terror" has evolved by proxy through
various wars -- from the Cold War to Al Qaeda --Napoleoni
argues that today's Islamic terror groups are driven
by real economic forces in the Muslim world. They are
the same forces that have been hindered in the last
century by the economic interests of both the West and
it allies, the oligarchic powers of the Middle East.
The Forum for Stable Currencies
has been hosting debates between analysts of monetary
reform, victims of banks and institutions and promoters
of LETS and Barter Companies since 1998. Programmes
have been distributed to both Houses of Parliament in
the hope that the topics debated become part of the
political agenda, especially as the EURO challenges
the sovereignty to issue a national currency.
The Forum operates from the following principles:
* The parliamentary process needs to make certain that
the Money Supply ensures its value" Lord Caithness
* Money should be the servant not the master of humanity.
* Banksâ ability to create money out of nothing
must be curtailed.
* Personal responsibility needs to be maximised.
When it is compounding interest upon interest, growth
is exponential; for profits and for debts. Any exponential
growth is unnatural and unsustainable. 97% of money
in circulation is created as interest-bearing debt.
Since 1967, notes and coin (M0), the share of the total
money supply (M4) issued by governments free of interest
has gone down from 31% to 3%, i.e. Virtually all money
is created by banks with a near monopoly.
Organiser: Sabine McNeill, tel. 020
7328 3701, 21 Goldhurst Terrace London NW 6 3HB www.intraforum.net/money
sabine@globalnet.co.uk
|
|
Saturday 8th Nov
2003 11am - 3.30pm |
Open
BOOK DAY prior to AGM of the Christian Council for Monetary
Justice at 3.30pm
|
Chairman Rev Canon
Peter Challen |
Christchurch, 27
Blackfriars Road, London SE1 |
Contact:
peter@southwark.org.uk
view downloadable POSTER
|
We are inviting publishers and booksellers
to display and sell books related to economic justice
at an Open Day from 11am, with the CCMJ AGM to follow
at 3.30pm. We will also LAUNCH a stirring new book brimming
with anecdotal accounts of the deep effect of monetary
injustice on our lives. Christchurch is the HQ of the
South London Industrial Mission) and is close to both
Blackfriars and Southwark
Rev Peter Challen writes
Dear Friend,
This week's Church Times (October 3rd 2003) has a Leader
Commentary on 'Forgive us our debts' [in response to
an article by Antonia Swinson in the same edition (p15)],
and which includes the sentence 'Debt is the church's
business, on pastoral grounds alone', and ends with
the words 'A prophetic Church will focus on the victims
of reality'. It is an interesting coincidence, as I
was about to send you the invitation below. I hope that
you might wish to take up the invitation or to pass
it to specific persons who you think might like to attend
this event.
The Christian Council for Monetary
Justice asks you to consider this invitation. CCMJ is
taking an initiative to advance the readership in economic
justice, and the knowledge of incremental steps towards
peace and inclusive justice, especially where there
is Christian resonance in the writing. We are inviting
publishers and booksellers to display and sell books/journals
related to economic justice, and in particular to monetary
justice.
We would like to promote such new books
as : Jonathan Bartley's - Subversive Manifesto -
lifting the Lid on God's political Agenda, BRF
2003, Antonia Swinson's Root of All Evil? - how
to make spiritual values count - St Andrew's Press
2003, Kamran Mofid's - globalisation for the common
good 2000, and older works like Peter Selby's -
Grace and Mortgage: what it means to be in Christ
today - Credit Action's - range of popular
writings - David Jenkins' - Market Whys and
Human Wherefores: thinking again about Markets, Politics
and People -Cassell 2000, Keith Tondeur's What
Jesus Said about Money and many more that may well
appear in Christian Bookshops.
BUT we would also like to bring to
you attention many books written by Christians in their
professional capacities, whose significant work does
not normally appear in Christian Bookshops such as :-
James Robertson's Creating New Money, Michael
Rowbotham's The Grip of Death, John Tomlinson's
Honest Money, Rodney Shakespeare and Peter
Challen's Seven Steps to Justice - NEP 2002,
James Gibb Stuart's The Money Bomb, Michael
Hudson's The Lost Tradition of Biblical Debt Cancellations,
The Dundee report - Wealth;: a Christian View,
Margrit Kennedy's 'Interest and Inflation-Free
Money - Creating an exchange medium that works
for everybody and protects the earth'
Burdens of debt at personal, corporate,
national and international levels and the disregard
of biblical teaching on usury are conspiring to create
immense social disease. This is an initiative to tackle
those issues among Christian readers. This Open Day
might even raise up a commitment to hold, say, a Faith
and Just Economics Week in Christian Bookshops, in 2004.
I would be grateful to hear you response to this invitation
and to answer any questions you may have. Yours sincerely,
Canon Peter Challen, Chair, Christian Council for Monetary
Justice
R

|
|
Saturday 25th October
10am-5pm
|
2003 Schumacher
Lectures - 25th Anniversary; "Global Conflict or
Human Scale Development? |
Speakers: The Rt
Hon Michael Meacher MP, Ann Pettifor, Peter Russell |
Venue: The Victoria
Rooms, Clifton, Bristol. |
Booking essential - prices
below - via: Schumacher UK on 0117-903-1081
www.schumacher.org.uk
yolanda@schumacher.org.uk
|
Speakers: MICHAEL MEACHER
MP, Minister of State for the Environment 97-03 - NATURAL
GOVERNANCE
ANN PETTIFOR, Director at the New Economics Foundation
- REAL WORLD ECONOMICS
PETER RUSSELL, Cosmologist and Author - THE SCIENCE
OF UNDERSTANDING
Theme: In the last couple
of years we have seen global conflict scale up to truly
dangerous levels. It is as though the interests of a
small group of countries and companies take priority
over the concerns of the rest of humanity. Unprecedented
military technology is being used to assert political
and economic power. Whilst it is desirable for tyrants
to be removed, there is growing concern about the legitimacy
of preventative warfare. It is time that human scale
development became incorporated into a new diverse world
view. Drawing on the thought of E.F. Schumacher we are
helping to develop positive solutions. This year's Bristol
Schumacher Lectures coincide with the 30th Anniversary
of the publication of Small is Beautiful and the 25th
Anniversary of the founding of Schumacher UK. Our three
speakers will echo some of Schumacher's thinking while
presenting their own unique ideas and experience. We
look forward to a stimulating and thought provoking
day of Lectures and debate. Please join us for a very
stimulating day.
THE SPEAKERS
The Rt Hon Michael Meacher MP - Minister of
State for the Environment 97-03
Michael Meacher was Minister of State for the Environment
from May 1997 until he was replaced in the cabinet reshuffle
of June this year. Many people think it was because
of his increasing concerns over genetically modified
food. He became a Labour MP in 1970 and since then his
varied political appointments have included Chief Opposition
Spokesman on Health and Social Security (83-87, 89-92),
on Employment (87-89, 95-96) on Overseas
Development (92-93), on Public Service and Citizen's
Rights (93-94), on Transport (94-95) and on Environmental
Protection (96-97). Currently he is a member of the
Environmental Audit Committee. His many political interests
include environmental protection, sustainable development
and the reform of the machinery of government. In 1992
his book Diffusing Power: The Key to Socialist Revival
was published.
Ann Pettifor - Director at the New Economics
Foundation
Ann Pettifor is editor of a new annual publication
- Real World Economic Outlook (RWEO) - first published
in Sept 2003 by Palgrave Macmillan. The mission of this
radical survey of the global economy is to promote easy-to
understand economics, and to give consumers a real understanding
of the frightening legacy of globalisation: debt-deflation.
RWEO will also give activists the confidence, the data,
and the analyses needed to challenge the orthodoxies
of their governments, the IMF, and mainstream economists.
In 1996 Ms Pettifor co-founded the Jubilee 2000 movement
for the cancellation of the debts of the poorest countries.
In 1998 she led a protest of more than 70,000 in Birmingham,
at the G8 Summit. Jubilee 2000 mobilized the first-ever
global petition of 24 million signatures and persuaded
G8 leaders to cancel $100bn of debt - $36bn of which
is now written off.
Peter Russell - Cosmologist and Author
Peter Russell studied
mathematics and theoretical physics at the University
of Cambridge. Then, as he became increasingly fascinated
by the nature of consciousness, he moved into experimental
psychology. He then went to
India, studied meditation and Eastern philosophy, and
on his return took up research into the psychophysiology
of meditation at Bristol University. He was one of the
first people to introduce human potential seminars into
the corporate field, and for twenty years worked with
major corporations on creativity, learning methods,
stress management and personal development. His principal
interest is the inner challenges of the times we are
passing
through. He has written ten books in this area, including
The Awakening Earth, The White Hole in Time, and most
recently, From Science to God: A Physicist's Journey
into the Mystery of Consciousness.
TICKET PRICES & SCHUMACHER UK MEMBERSHIP
Single (non member): £22,
Concessionary (non member): £18, Schumacher UK
Member: £12 (members are entitled to 1 discounted
ticket, Family members two discounted tickets), plus
Lunch: £7. Single Membership
£25, Family Membership: £35, Concessionary
£20.
For post and packing please add the following if you
live: in the UK: £2.50; outside the UK in Europe:
£5; outside Europe: £10
For FURTHER INFORMATION or to BOOK A TICKET please contact:
Yolanda Pot, Schumacher UK Administrator, CREATE Environment
Centre, Smeaton Road, Bristol, BS1 6XN, UK.
Tel/Fax: 0117 9031081, Email: yolanda@schumacher.org.uk,
Website: www.Schumacher.org.uk
|
|
Thursday
6th November 2003 - 7.30-9pm |
TALKING
ECONOMICS - monthly conversations on events of the day |
Dr Christopher Houghton
Budd on: The Visible Hand
Growing beyond the Enlightenment |
Venue: Rudolf
Steiner House, 35 Park Road, Near Baker St. Tube. Cost:
Donation of £3.50
|
Dr. Christopher Houghton Budd
01227 738207 or chb@ae-institute.com
Arthur Edwards 01993 891363 or mail@oxfordeconomicsforum.co.uk
Rudolf Steiner House 0207 723 4400
www.talkingeconomics.co.uk
|
As the WTO meeting
in Cancun draws to a close, the need to create a culture
of thinking inclusively about economic life sounds
with ever greater clarity. The alternative is a strident
factionalism in which self-assertion rules, the evidence
for this is not to be found in human nature alone,
but rather in the concepts used to describe our economic
world conception. But what if we can think and talk
in a way which allows us to conceive a humane world
? Economists, politicians, journalists, protestors,
corporate lobbyists might discover a common language
afterall. We invite you to a series of Thursday evening
events that aim to explore contemporary economic issues
within the context of a brief introduction leading
to open conversation. If you would like to display
this programme on a notice board you can download
it at - http://www.talkingeconomics.co.uk/poster.doc
- I look forward to your participation, Arthur Edwards
-
The Visible Hand Growing beyond the Enlightenment:
- Modern economic
life is permeated by assumptions about the earthly-only
nature of the human being. ‘Unable to act nobly,
we need the invisible hand of an omnipresent but invisible
god.’ So said Adam Smith … until close
to his death, that is! Now, 250 years later, what
can we say about this ‘invisible hand’
and its economic consequences. Has the time come to
make the hand visible?
These
events are organised by members of the Associative
Economics Network, established in 1998 to encourage
the development of an associative approach to modern
economic life. Membership of the Network is open to
all and entails no obligations. The annual fee of
£10 includes bi-monthly issues of e2 - Journal
of Associative Economics. Associative Economics is
a non-partisan approach to the wide and divergent
range of thought currently informing modern debates
- from neo-liberal to ‘alternative’, and
including the ideas of Rudolf Steiner. If
you would like to join, please register online at
www.ae-institute.com. or send your name and address
together with £10 to Centre for Associative
Economics, PO Box 341, Canterbury CT4 8GA.
|
|
November
1st & 2nd |
SHARED
PLANET - Student Conference |
Robert Newman, Caroline Lucas,
Zac Goldsmith, Peter Kilfoyle
|
University of Liverpool |
Cost just £15!
C all 01865 245678 or see:
|
An
inspirational event with speakers, workshops, and
hundreds of students tackling the biggest issues in
the world including Fairtrade, climate change, HIV/AIDS,
world trade...Come together with hundreds of others
to inform yourself, share ideas, learn new skills
and find out what action you can take to build a fair,
sustainable and shared planet. “I have come
away with so much ...totally inspired me!” student,
2002.
Speakers:
International speakers on climate change, Fairtrade,
HIV/AIDS, world trade, peace - Robert Newman activist,
comedian, and author, Caroline Lucas Green MEP, author
and campaigner., “Question Time” panel
debate: Back by popular demand, featuring Zac Goldsmith
(The Ecologist Magazine), Peter Kilfoyle MP (former
New Labour minister) and others to be confirmed
Workshops:
The biggest & most diverse workshop programme
of any UK student conference. Choose from 50+ dynamic
workshops on essential campaigning skills and issues
of global significance. From starting an action group
to using the media; from human rights in Burma to
GM food. With workshops to suit all levels of knowledge
run by global campaigning organisations, student campaigners,
grassroots networks, ethical companies and co-ops.
Conference Fringe:
Interactive fringe programme - your chance to discuss
the big questions and debate the answers. And More….
Plus stalls, campaign information, books, Fairtrade
goods, book signings, Saturday night party.
Booking:
will be taken online in September. Call 01865 245678
for further information. Cost just £15! Your
ticket includes: both days of the conference, basic
crashpad accommodation and the Saturday night party.
The ticket price includes “crashpad” accommodation
on Friday & Saturday night – you will need
to bring a sleeping bag and camping mat – sorry,
we can’t provide these!
We hope you'll join us (and the
world will live as one)
“Amazing... a huge variety of issues covered
in an accessible way…I am so inspired I just
can't thank you enough.” student, 2002
|
|
|
27 & 28 October
2003 |
SUSTAINABLE
INNOVATION 03
Towards Sustainable Product Design 8
8th International Conference
|
Organised by
The Centre for Sustainable Design, UK
|
Nordic Sea Hotel
Stockholm
Sweden |
Register at www.cfsd.org.uk/events/tspd8
|
Sponsored by The Nordic
Council of Ministers, Sweden, Swedish Business Development
Agency (NUTEK), Sweden, Ministry of Environment, Sweden
Supported by World Business Council
for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), Switzerland, Department
for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA), UK,
Sustainable Trade & Innovation Centre (STIC), The
Netherlands
Benefits to delegates * Access to leading-edge
research and practice * Over 60 high quality papers
* 'Out of box' thinking opportunities * Networking with
business, government and academia * Visit to Ice Bar
Invited speakers
Leading experts from Europe and Japan will present at
Sustainable Innovation 03: Dr Peter White, Procter &
Gamble, UK, Katsuro Oda, University of Tokyo, Japan,
Bas de Leeuw, United Nations Environment Programme,
France, Nigel Roome, Erasmus University, Netherlands;
Gunnel Wisen, ABB, Sweden; Anna Lise Mortensen, Hartmann,
Denmark; Maarten Ten Houten, Philips Consumer Electronics,
Netherlands; Andrew Baynes, Apple, France; Mike Barry,
Marks & Spencer, UK Andreas Englund, MiNT, Sweden;
Daleanne Bourjaily, Royal Tropical Institute, Netherlands;
Per Eriksson, VINNOVA, Sweden; Sune Halvarsson, NUTEK,
Sweden; Frieder Rubik, IOEW, Germany; Ritu Kumar, Sustainable
Trade & Innovation Centre, UK; Arnold Tukker, TNO,
Netherlands; Colin Beard, Sheffield Hallam University,
UK
Unique Features:
Creative Spaces: The Centre for Sustainable
Design are working with five highly creative
individuals to add a unique 'out of the box' element
to the conference. Creative Spaces will provide delegates
with new perspectives and experiences, whilst providing
a platform to generate high quality, innovative ideas.
(nobleandsilver) - Comedians and Video Producers
- UK
* Will launch two short videos to highlight key sustainability
challenges with a range of examples of
'sustainable solutions' * Will showcase their award-winning
and highly entertaining mult-media experience
Niels Peter Flint - Concept Designer - Denmark
* Will direct two unique 'experiences' designed to enable
delegate's to think differently about sustainability
* Processes used act as catalysts to stimulate new thinking
and viewpoints
David Walker & Rob Holdway - Directors
- Giraffe Innovation, UK
* Will direct five workshops aimed at creating innovative
sustainable products and services concepts
* The workshops will focus on five areas and will be
led by experienced industry practioners
- home - food - mobility - information and communications
technologies - clothing
* Central to the session will be the use of Giraffe's
unique Eco-Cubes process
* Awards will be given to winning ideas
Living Laboratory
Five innovative concepts will be presented:
* The Power Tile * PReco * Eco Mileage Card * Memo Board
* Splendid Eco-Car
Contact
For more information on Sustainable Innovation 03 please
contact:
Russ White, Conference Administrator,
The Centre for Sustainable Design, The Surrey Institute
of Art & Design, University College, Falkner Road,
Farnham, Surrey, GU9 7DS, UK, Tel: + 44 (0) 1252 892772,
Fax: + 44 (0) 1252 892747, Email: rwhite@surrart.ac.uk
Website: www.cfsd.org.uk
|
|
Saturday 25th October
10am-5pm
|
2003 Schumacher
Lectures - 25th Anniversary; "Global Conflict or
Human Scale Development? |
Speakers: The Rt
Hon Michael Meacher MP, Ann Pettifor, Peter Russell |
Venue: The Victoria
Rooms, Clifton, Bristol. |
Booking essential - prices
below - via: Schumacher UK on 0117-903-1081
www.schumacher.org.uk
yolanda@schumacher.org.uk
|
Speakers: MICHAEL MEACHER
MP, Minister of State for the Environment 97-03 - NATURAL
GOVERNANCE
ANN PETTIFOR, Director at the New Economics Foundation
- REAL WORLD ECONOMICS
PETER RUSSELL, Cosmologist and Author - THE SCIENCE
OF UNDERSTANDING
Theme: In the last couple
of years we have seen global conflict scale up to truly
dangerous levels. It is as though the interests of a
small group of countries and companies take priority
over the concerns of the rest of humanity. Unprecedented
military technology is being used to assert political
and economic power. Whilst it is desirable for tyrants
to be removed, there is growing concern about the legitimacy
of preventative warfare. It is time that human scale
development became incorporated into a new diverse world
view. Drawing on the thought of E.F. Schumacher we are
helping to develop positive solutions. This year's Bristol
Schumacher Lectures coincide with the 30th Anniversary
of the publication of Small is Beautiful and the 25th
Anniversary of the founding of Schumacher UK. Our three
speakers will echo some of Schumacher's thinking while
presenting their own unique ideas and experience. We
look forward to a stimulating and thought provoking
day of Lectures and debate. Please join us for a very
stimulating day.
THE SPEAKERS
The Rt Hon Michael Meacher MP - Minister of
State for the Environment 97-03
Michael Meacher was Minister of State for the Environment
from May 1997 until he was replaced in the cabinet reshuffle
of June this year. Many people think it was because
of his increasing concerns over genetically modified
food. He became a Labour MP in 1970 and since then his
varied political appointments have included Chief Opposition
Spokesman on Health and Social Security (83-87, 89-92),
on Employment (87-89, 95-96) on Overseas
Development (92-93), on Public Service and Citizen's
Rights (93-94), on Transport (94-95) and on Environmental
Protection (96-97). Currently he is a member of the
Environmental Audit Committee. His many political interests
include environmental protection, sustainable development
and the reform of the machinery of government. In 1992
his book Diffusing Power: The Key to Socialist Revival
was published.
Ann Pettifor - Director at the New Economics
Foundation
Ann Pettifor is editor of a new annual publication
- Real World Economic Outlook (RWEO) - first published
in Sept 2003 by Palgrave Macmillan. The mission of this
radical survey of the global economy is to promote easy-to
understand economics, and to give consumers a real understanding
of the frightening legacy of globalisation: debt-deflation.
RWEO will also give activists the confidence, the data,
and the analyses needed to challenge the orthodoxies
of their governments, the IMF, and mainstream economists.
In 1996 Ms Pettifor co-founded the Jubilee 2000 movement
for the cancellation of the debts of the poorest countries.
In 1998 she led a protest of more than 70,000 in Birmingham,
at the G8 Summit. Jubilee 2000 mobilized the first-ever
global petition of 24 million signatures and persuaded
G8 leaders to cancel $100bn of debt - $36bn of which
is now written off.
Peter Russell - Cosmologist and Author
Peter Russell studied
mathematics and theoretical physics at the University
of Cambridge. Then, as he became increasingly fascinated
by the nature of consciousness, he moved into experimental
psychology. He then went to
India, studied meditation and Eastern philosophy, and
on his return took up research into the psychophysiology
of meditation at Bristol University. He was one of the
first people to introduce human potential seminars into
the corporate field, and for twenty years worked with
major corporations on creativity, learning methods,
stress management and personal development. His principal
interest is the inner challenges of the times we are
passing
through. He has written ten books in this area, including
The Awakening Earth, The White Hole in Time, and most
recently, From Science to God: A Physicist's Journey
into the Mystery of Consciousness.
TICKET PRICES & SCHUMACHER UK MEMBERSHIP
Single (non member): £22,
Concessionary (non member): £18, Schumacher UK
Member: £12 (members are entitled to 1 discounted
ticket, Family members two discounted tickets), plus
Lunch: £7. Single Membership
£25, Family Membership: £35, Concessionary
£20.
For post and packing please add the following if you
live: in the UK: £2.50; outside the UK in Europe:
£5; outside Europe: £10
For FURTHER INFORMATION or to BOOK A TICKET please contact:
Yolanda Pot, Schumacher UK Administrator, CREATE Environment
Centre, Smeaton Road, Bristol, BS1 6XN, UK.
Tel/Fax: 0117 9031081, Email: yolanda@schumacher.org.uk,
Website: www.Schumacher.org.uk
|
|
Friday 24 October
11.45am -5.30pm (10.45 pm for AGM) |
London 21's
Annual Networking Conference
- Progress Towards Community-Based Sustainability in London
|
Brady Arts Centre, Whitechapel
- 192-196 Hanbury Street, E1 5HU (Tel: 020 7 364 7900)
- MAP
-
a footpath links the East end of Hanbury Street
to Vallance Road, and the Brady Arts Centre is therefore
just two minutes walk from Whitechapel Tube Station
(Metropolitan and District Lines). Buses: 25, 253, 106,
D3.
|
Vinciane Rycroft
London 21 Sustainability Network, 5 Blackstock Road,
London N4 2JF
020 7 359 8228
vinciane@london21.org
|
Booking is essential. The event
is £5 for community groups and £12 for others,
payable on the day, and includes a vegetarian lunch
and refreshments. The
AGM is free. To register, please send your name, organisation
and contact details and the question you would like
the Panel to address during Question Time
|
PROGRAMME
10am: Visit of the Spitalfields' City
Farm -two forty-minutes guided tours of the Spitalfields
City Farm project will take place: 10 am - for London
21 members and users attending the AGM
11am - for those who only wish to attend
the Conference In addition to its urban farm, the project
includes a multicultural horticultural project, a Young
Farmerâs Club, Rubbish Revolution, and a training
programme for the community. Spitalfields Farm is five
minutes walk from the location of the Conference, and
just to the right (East) of Shoreditch Station on the
MAP
10.45 - Registration of London 21 members
and users
11.00 - London 21's Fourth AGM
11.45 - Registration of non-members
/ Tea and coffee
12.00 - Question Time on Progress towards
Community-based Sustainability in London - A Panel will
answer questions submitted in writing and in advance.
--1.30 - Lunch and displays
--2.15 - Carrousel presenting each
workshop topic and London Sustainability Week
--3.30 - Workshops: -
Environmental Justice, Sustainability & Local Strategic
Partnerships, Mapping Community Action for Sustainability,
Borough-wide Sustainability Networks
--4.45 - Plenary
--5.15 - Close and networking drinks
London 21 promotes,
supports and networks community action for sustainability
in Greater London
.
|
|
Friday 24 October
2003, 7 for 7.30pm |
"Monetary Justice:
The Challenge for World Development" |
JAMES ROBERTSON
Writer and researcher into alternative economics
Co-founder of the New Economics Foundation |
CHANGE-NET at Brunswick
Unitarian Church, Brunswick Square, Bristol, BS2 (off
Bond St, end of M32) |
Part of the WDM and Jubilee
Debt Campaign national speaker tour on debt: www.wdm.org.uk
(0117) 909 3491 -
andy@inwebs.co.uk
|
The World Development Movement (WDM)
campaigns to tackle the root causes of world poverty.
With our partners around the world, we win positive
change for the world's poorest people.
|
|
Weekend 23rd to
26th October |
WORKING
FOR WORLD CHANGE Course 2003/04 Introductory Weekend |
Convened and sponsored
by Braziers Park School of Integrative Social Research
|
Braziers Park, Ipsden,
Wallingford, OX10 6AN. |
www.braziers.org.uk
01491 680221
admin@braziers.org.uk
|
This year sees the launch of the Working
for World Change course at Braziers Park. It follows
on from a successful and productive 6 month INTERNS
programme which ran here from October 02 to April 03.
The internationally recognised Permaculture Design Course
forms the core of the programme, set in the context
of our latest thinking around: • thinking and
multiple intelligences • learning styles, action
learning approaches and learning communities •
re-evaluation counselling, transition design and direct
action • micro-democracies, leaderful and supportful
societies, designing productive meetings and events,
governance and decision making. There will be a feast
of edge events including group Alexander Technique sessions,
Spiral Dynamics explorations, singing and dancing, theatre
in World Change, practical gardening and more.
Is this for you? The programme is designed
principally with three groups of people in mind. We
will provide an opportunity to refocus for anyone going
through a period of transition or taking their first
steps in to the world change movement. We also see the
course as a valuable training in professional development
for those who are already working in NGOs, local government
and social enterprises. The internship may be more suitable
for younger people seeking an apprenticeship or progression
from conventional education.
Progression routes: Our approach is
to provide people with a creative mix of practical knowledge
and skills which can be developed without limits through
true lifelong learning. Active progression routes are
in place for Permaculture and for Re-Evaluation Counselling.
World Change philosophy:
Our philosophy of world change assumes success through
persistent and courageous application of thoughtful
strategies arising from accurate observation of current
realities (no quick fixes).
Staff: Principal tutor,
Andy Langford MSc, DMS, DipPermDes, has been working
for world change since 1977 using both academic and
practical action learning pathways. He is a well known
permaculture teacher and group facilitator. He will
be supported by Jessie Marcham and other members of
the Braziers community. There will also be a sparkling
array of guest tutors in attendance.
Dates and Fees: Six
residential 3 day weekends October 03 to April 04 and
a full residential week in January 04 give us the time
and space for a blend of relaxed intensity. First weekend,
23rd to 26th October is an introduction and a taster.
Buy this for an introductory rate of £150 (normally
£185). Full fees £1400 with flexible payment
methods, day learner rates and work exchanges possible.
One-off weekends also available. Please ask for details.
Internship option:
For people with full time availability we are offering
live-in internships for 6 months @ £800 including
full attendance on course weekends. Board and lodging
is exchanged for (per week) 4 days work in the College
and grounds and 1 day spent on mutually inspired project
work. Braziers is a living experiment in integrative
social research and interns are invited to be active
participants in this work.
Brochure: A brochure
for the course can be found at www.braziers.org.uk.
Paper copies are also available on request.
Contacts: For general
information about Braziers Park, and to see the introductory
brochure, visit www.braziers.org.uk
You can phone us on: 01491 680221 (office phone with
answer machine) 01491 680481 (residents’ phone)
You can email us on: admin@braziers.org.uk or jessiemarcham@hotmail.com/
You can write to us at: Braziers Park, Ipsden, Wallingford,
OX10 6AN. We look forward to
hearing from you! Please forward this email, pin it
on your notice boards and spread the word…
|
|
Wednesday, October
22nd 2003, 6-9pm |
Islamic Alternatives to Interest-Based Banking and Finance
|
Speakers: Waheed
Quaiser, Gohar Bilal, Tarek El Diwany
|
FORUM FOR STABLE CURRENCIES
at the House of Lords, Westminster, London SW1, Black
Rod's entrance, Room G
|
Organiser:
Sabine McNeill
www.reinventingmoney.com
www.islamicfinance.com
www.islamic-banking.com
|
Today, the necessity of repaying interest-bearing
debt has come to dominate the daily affairs of rich
and poor societies alike. Many nations face a combination
of debt and monetary crises from which, at best, only
temporary respite is available. The emergence of Islamic
banking and finance has therefore been heralded in some
quarters as an exciting new means of competing with
interest-based practices throughout the world. Its proponents
insist that this nascent industry genuinely reflects
both the Islamic prohibition upon usury (the practice
of taking interest for lending money ) and the wider
requirements of Islamic commercial law. Others see it
as a dangerous force for compromise, one that will in
due course lead to the abandonment of the usury prohibition
in the Muslim world. Is Islamic banking and finance
any different to conventional banking and finance ?
And what does Islam have to offer the world of monetary
reform ? At this session of the Forum for Stable Currencies,
three speakers from a diverse range of Muslim opinions
provide their answers on topics from money creation
to Islamic mortgages.
Waheed Qaiser is an
accomplished Islamic Banker and management professional.
He is credited with providing Islamic mortgages to the
Muslims and to other communities in the West. He has
held responsible positions in CitiBank NA, Islamic Investment
Banking Unit, USB AG and HSBC Republic. Mr Qaiser is
currently supporting various other organisations to
promote the cause for of Islamic Banking globally.
Tarek El Diwany currently
runs his own company for business research and software
development. After studying accounting and finance,
he became a derivatives dealer and private financial
market consultant, before he was Head of Islamic Finance
at one of the largest international broking companies
in the City.
Gohar Bilal is a structured
finance professional with a focus on Islamic finance.
She is the European representative of Harvard Islamic
Finance Information Program and a Visiting Scholar of
the Harvard Law Schoolâs Islamic Legal Studies
Program. Her articles on Islamic Mortgages have appeared
in Mortgage Finance Gazette.
The Forum for Stable Currencies
has been hosting debates between analysts of monetary
reform, victims of banks and institutions and promoters
of LETS and Barter Companies since 1998. Programmes
have been distributed to both Houses of Parliament in
the hope that the topics debated become part of the
political agenda, especially as the EURO challenges
the sovereignty to issue a national currency.
The Forum operates from the following principles:
* The parliamentary process needs to make certain that
the Money Supply ensures its value" Lord Caithness
* Money should be the servant not the master of humanity.
* Banksâ ability to create money out of nothing
must be curtailed.
* Personal responsibility needs to be maximised.
When it is compounding interest upon interest, growth
is exponential; for profits and for debts. Any exponential
growth is unnatural and unsustainable. 97% of money
in circulation is created as interest-bearing debt.
Since 1967, notes and coin (M0), the share of the total
money supply (M4) issued by governments free of interest
has gone down from 31% to 3%, i.e. Virtually all money
is created by banks with a near monopoly.
Organiser: Sabine McNeill, tel. 020
7328 3701, 21 Goldhurst Terrace London NW 6 3HB www.intraforum.net/money
sabine@globalnet.co.uk
|
|
Wednesday 22 October
6:30pm for 7pm ending at 9pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba Dembele and
Polly Jones, JDC |
Birmingham - Methodist
Central Church Centre, 208 Corporation Street, Birmingham,
B4 6QW - Opposite the Law Courts |
For details contact Birmingham JDC
on 0121 471 4175 and also visit the website of the World
Development Movement
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal,
Manchester, Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When
rich countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Tuesday 21 October
7:30pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele and Peter Hardstaff (Head of Campaign Policy,
WDM) |
Sheffield - St.
Mark's Church, Broomfield Road - Adjacent to the Royal
Hallamshire Hospital and can be reached by buses 60&50 |
For details contact Sheffield WDM on
0114 236 0361 and also visit the website of the World
Development Movement
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal,
Manchester, Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When
rich countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Monday 20 October
7:30pm - 9.30 pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele and Effie Jordan (Debt Campaigner - WDM). Chair:
Andy Welford, East Cleveland WDM |
Darlington - Queen
Elizabeth Sixth Form College, Vane Terrace, Darlington,
DL3 7AU |
For details contact East Cleveland
WDM on 01947 840 708 and also visit the website of the
World
Development Movement
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal,
Manchester, Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When
rich countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Saturday 18 October
12-5pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele and Jubilee Debt Campaign Speakers |
Manchester (JDC
National Campaigners Day) - Cross St Chapel, Cross Street,
Manchester, M2 1NL
The chapel is located on the ground floor of a modern
office block, opposite St Anne's Street |
For details contact Jubilee
Debt Campaign on 020 7922 1111 and also visit the website
of the World
Development Movement
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal,
Manchester, Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When
rich countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Thursday 16 October
7:30pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele and Martin Powell (Debt Campaigner - WDM) |
Kendal - Large Committee
Room, The Town Hall, Highgate, Kendal, LA9 4DL |
For details contact South Lakeland
WDM on 01539 720 255 and also visit the website of the
World
Development Movement
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal,
Manchester, Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When
rich countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Wednesday 15 October
7.30pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele, Peter Hardstaff (Head of Campaign Policy - WDM),
Stephen Rand (Director, Tearfund and Co-Chair, Jubilee
Debt Campaign) and DFID representative (tbc), Chair: Ann
McKechin MP, Chair, All Party Group on Heavily Indebted
Poor Countries |
Committee Room 10,
House of Commons, Westminster
Use Stephen's Entrance |
For details contact Helen Fowell
on 0800 328 2153 or email Helen@wdm.org.uk
and also visit the website of the World
Development Movement
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal, Manchester,
Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When rich
countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Tuesday 14 October
7:30pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele and Peter Hardstaff (Head of Campaign Policy -
WDM) |
Bristol - Unitarian
Church, Brunswick Square, Bristol, BS2 8PE (off Bond Street,
at end of the M32) |
For details contact Bristol
WDM on 0117 924 3493 and also visit the website of the
World
Development Movement
(0117) 909 3491 - email contact
andy@inwebs.co.uk
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal, Manchester,
Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When rich
countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Saturday 11 October
10am - 4.30pm |
Colludo
- Whodunit to the world's poor?
World Development Movement & Jubilee Debt Campaign
Speaker Tour 11- 22 October 2003 beginning at the WDM
Scotland Small World Big Challenge Conference |
Speakers: Demba
Dembele, Marlene Barrett (Head of Campaign Communications
- WDM) and Harriet Lamb (Director of Fairtrade Foundation).
|
Glasgow (WDM Scotland
Small World Big Challenge Conference)
Renfield St Stephens Conference Centre, 260 Bath Street,
Glasgow. |
For details contact WDM Scotland
on 0131 557 0444 or visit the
conference website
|
Glasgow, Bristol, London, Kendal, Manchester,
Darlington, Sheffield and Birmingham. "When rich
countries or the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) say a country is getting debt relief, they
don't tell you all the strings they attach. After decades
in Africa, after all the failures, they are still pushing
for the same policies, and they are discredited world-wide."
Demba Dembele, Senegal. Dembele, director of the Forum
for African Alternatives, Senegal, will expose the culprits
behind the deadly economic conditions attached to debt
relief. Hear the evidence, decide, take action.
|
|
Saturday
11th October 10.30am -6pm
|
NO NEW OIL
- OIL, WAR & CLIMATE CHANGE: DISMANTLING THE OIL ECONOMY
|
Variety of speakers
- see below |
LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS
Clement House, D Building, Aldwych, London. Holborn
or Temple tube.
|

LSE People and Planet su.soc.peopleandplanet@lse.ac.uk.
www.peopleandplanet.org
- www.risingtide.org.uk.
Register now to avoid disappointment by writing
to info@risingtide.org.uk or call the Rising Tide Oxford
office on 01865 241 097. There is no attendance fee
and we are only asking for a small donation on the door
to cover costs. Discussion List news-subscribe@risingtide.org.uk
|
NO NEW OIL - OIL, WAR AND CLIMATE CHANGE:
DISMANTLING THE OIL ECONOMY - LONDON SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS.
SATURDAY 11TH OCTOBER
Following the invasion of Iraq
and an unprecedented heat wave in Europe, this gathering
will expose the connections between oil, war, and climate
change. It brings together experienced campaigners from
across the environmental, peace and social justice movements
to share strategies and develop proposals for new campaigns.
The day will combine presentations, workshops, slides,
slides and specially commissioned video.
MORNING PRESENTATIONS - A series
of short presentations accompanied by specially commissioned
videos.
THE MAIN PLAYERS AND THE NEW OIL FRONTIER
James Marriott and Greg Muttitt from Platform UK present
a multi-media tour of the main companies, where they
are operating and where they are expanding- and an overview
of how this relates to conflict zones and countries
with repressive regimes.
EXPOSING THE ROLE OF OIL IN THE WAR
IN IRAQ
Steve Kretzmann of Sustainable Energy and Economy Network
explores the links between oil companies, the Bush administration
and the war in Iraq. He looks ahead at the frontier
for new oil and the potential for new conflicts.
FINANCING NEW OIL
Nicholas Hildyard of The Corner House exposes the sources
of private and public investment in new oil development,
with a particular focus on export credit agencies and
the multi-lateral finance institutions.
THE LINKS BETWEEN EXXON, RIGHT WING
THINK TANKS, CLIMATE SKEPTICS AND THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION
Cindy Baxter, coordinator of the Stop Esso Coalition,
reveals a complex web of influence, patronage and corruption.
TEN YEARS OF RESISTANCE TO NEW OIL
- WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
Andy Rowell, researcher, journalist and author, evaluates
the ten years of oil campaigns since the execution of
Ken Saro Wiwa; the successes and the lost opportunities.
CLIMATE CHANGE- THE WEAPON OF MASS
DESTRUCTION
George Marshall from Rising Tide presents the case for
regarding climate change as a new tool for oppression
and examines the climate implications of exploiting
the remaining undeveloped oil resources.
LUNCH BREAK AND OPEN FORUM
During the lunch break, the Open Forum is a chance to
meet campaigners from environment, development and peace
groups, and find out more about their work.
AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS - People can attend two of the following
workshops as all workshops will be repeated:
Dismantling the oil industry - looking
at the web of oil industries from a UK perspective,
discussing the social justice issues of dismantling
the industry, and identifying campaign opportunities
and targets.
Causes and impacts of climate change
- author and journalist Mark Lynas personal experiences
and slides of the impacts of climate change around the
world.
Baku-Ceyhan Campaign - the BP pipeline
through Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey is a case study
in the environmental and social impacts of large oil
and gas projects. The resistance to public funding for
the pipeline has encouraged one of the largest oil campaigns
seen in the UK...and it needs your support.
Campaigning Against New Oil - A panel
of campaigners draws together the strands of the last
decade of campaigning on oil, climate change and fossil
fuel frontiers. What lessons have we learnt? How can
we take this forward?
Resistance and Solidarity - A presentation
of case studies from around the world where oil has
been a catalyst for conflict including Colombia, West
Papua, Nigeria, Chad/Cameroon, Baku-Ceyhan and Tibet.
The panel discussion asks how we can show solidarity
and effectively support struggles from the UK?
FINAL PLENARY- PROPOSALS FOR NEW CAMPAIGNS
The final session brings together the discussions from
the workshops, contains short presentations on campaigns
and activities and invites people to support the growing
movement against the expansion of oil and gas production.
BOOKING DETAILS
The gathering runs from 10.30 am-6pm at the London School
of Economics, Clement
House, D Building, Aldwych, London. Nearest tubes: Holborn,
Temple. The full agenda of speakers and workshops will
be posted on the RIsing Tide website www.risingtide.org.uk.
We are expecting to fully fill the
venue, so please register your name now to avoid disappointment
by writing to info@risingtide.org.uk or call the Rising
Tide Oxford office on 01865 241 097. There is no attendance
fee and we are only asking for a small donation on the
door to cover costs.
The conference is being organised by:
LSE People and Planet su.soc.peopleandplanet@lse.ac.uk.
www.peopleandplanet.org
Rising Tide UK. A national network
of small groups and individuals dedicated to taking
local action on climate change and building a movement
against climate change. Our short monthly news sheet
carried information, events, and news from the UK climate
change movement. To subscribe send a blank e-mail to:
news-subscribe@risingtide.org.uk Your details will never
be passed to anyone else.
|
|
Thursday 9th October
- 7.30 pm |
Oxfam-Amnesty
debate and question time - 'The Arms Trade ? Out of Control?'
|
Chair: Sir Donald
Maitland (ex UN diplomat)
Academic: Sam Perlo Freeman (co-author of launch research
papers)
Politician: Roger Berry MP & Chair
of Quad Committee
Corporate: Brinley Salzmann, Export Director,
Defence Manufacturers Association
NGO: Debbie Hillier, Oxfam (author of
launch report) |
|
Friends Meeting House, 126,
Hampton Rd, Redland, Bristol
|
|
|
Thursday
9th October 2003: 7.30-9pm |
TALKING
ECONOMICS - monthly conversations on events of the day |
Dr Christopher Houghton
Budd on: Does World Money need World Governance? |
Venue: Rudolf
Steiner House, 35 Park Road, Near Baker St. Tube. Cost:
Donation of £3.50
|
Dr. Christopher Houghton Budd
01227 738207 or chb@ae-institute.com
Arthur Edwards 01993 891363 or mail@oxfordeconomicsforum.co.uk
Rudolf Steiner House 0207 723 4400
www.talkingeconomics.co.uk
|
As the WTO meeting
in Cancun draws to a close, the need to create a culture
of thinking inclusively about economic life sounds
with ever greater clarity. The alternative is a strident
factionalism in which self-assertion rules, the evidence
for this is not to be found in human nature alone,
but rather in the concepts used to describe our economic
world conception. But what if we can think and talk
in a way which allows us to conceive a humane world
? Economists, politicians, journalists, protestors,
corporate lobbyists might discover a common language
afterall. We invite you to a series of Thursday evening
events that aim to explore contemporary economic issues
within the context of a brief introduction leading
to open conversation. If you would like to display
this programme on a notice board you can download
it at - http://www.talkingeconomics.co.uk/poster.doc
- I look forward to your participation, Arthur Edwards
-
Does World Money need World Governance? The
response of many to the globalisation of economic
life is to globalise political life also. But does
the melting together of national economies require
a world polity? Or should we not distinguish between
economic and political sovereignty, maintaining the
latter on a national basis and reserving it to governments?
The corollary would be to make the institutions of
economic life more genuinely accountable than they
are to date.
These
events are organised by members of the Associative
Economics Network, established in 1998 to encourage
the development of an associative approach to modern
economic life. Membership of the Network is open to
all and entails no obligations. The annual fee of
£10 includes bi-monthly issues of e2 - Journal
of Associative Economics. Associative Economics is
a non-partisan approach to the wide and divergent
range of thought currently informing modern debates
- from neo-liberal to ‘alternative’, and
including the ideas of Rudolf Steiner. If
you would like to join, please register online at
www.ae-institute.com. or send your name and address
together with £10 to Centre for Associative
Economics, PO Box 341, Canterbury CT4 8GA.
|
|
Saturday 4th October
10.30am-6pm |
The first LONDON
SOCIAL FORUM:
Another London is possible...
|
Civil Society Fair with stalls |
London School of
Economics, Houghton Street, London WC2. Temple/Holborn
tube stations |

info@londonsocialforum.org.uk
* www.londonsocialforum.org.uk
|
London is a global city
- a target for companies worldwide which seek to profit
from public services, the home of banks and multinational
companies which plunder the world,a refuge for people
displaced by those attacks, and a centre of multi-cultural
resistance against oppression. In a period when politicians
have abandoned our lives to market forces and war, people
are trying to find real solutions to our problems. Yet
such efforts remain fragmented across issues, while
strategic debate is often reducd to sloganising and
cheerleading. To create a new world requires
different ways of linking our needs and aspirations.
There is a worldwide democratic ferment generating new
organsiational forms - sometimes called 'social forums'
based on solidarity, inclusion, horizontality, participation
and conviviality. The First London Social Forum aims
to provide a space for reflective debate on strategies
for creating another London and another world. Themes
include: Media; Transport; War, peace and civil liberties;
London as a global city; Refugees and racism; Public
services - fighting privatisation and developig alternatives.
|
|
Sunday 21st September
2003 10.30am-6pm |
The
Second Spirit Matters Day:
" 21st Century Democracy" |
Roy Madron of Gaian
Democracies |
Essex Hall, 1-6
Essex Street, Strand (opposite the Royal
Courts Of Justice), London WC2 |
Free Admission (donations to cover
costs) / Drinks provided. Please bring vegetarian food
to share
Contact:
020-7624-1123 spiritmatters@hotmail.com
www.spiritmatters.info
|
A day of talks, group discussions,
meditation, music, dance, networking and Qi Gong with
Barbara Brown. Free admission (donations to cover costs)
Bring vegetarian food to share.
LATEST INFORMATION:
Announcing The Second Spirit
Matters Day: 21st Century Democracy
Is democracy failing
us? Have we ever really had democracy - and are there
opportunities now for creating it, or for taking it
further? Can democracy tame the big global organizations
which currently escape democratic control, like the
multi-national companies and the International Monetary
Fund? Can democracy go beyond the rule of political
parties to become a democracy for citizens as a whole?
How should democratic systems take account of the sustainability
of our long-term future, and of other species?
Join us for a vibrant, intelligent,
interesting and fulfilling day: Roy Madron, co-author
(with John Jopling) of Gaian Democracies will talk with
Victor Anderson about new approaches to local and global
democracy, followed by small group discussions, music
with David Lasserson, dance with Plaxy O'Keefe, meditation
and Qi Gong with Barbara Brown. Our aim is that the
event will lead to the creation of new alternative local
groups through which we can infuse the political process
with the values, goals and truths of the human spirit:
joy, friendship, creativity, compassion and a sense
of belonging.
Spirit Matters
is a self-organising, independent network of men and
women of a variety of ages, faiths, cultures and political
orientations, who believe that the introduction of spiritual
values to our personal and public lives is essential
if we are to solve the problems of war, poverty, alienation,
and environmental destruction that face us in the 21st
century.
'Spirit Matters Days' are a new initiative
to bring together people who want to connect with their
own spirituality and to transform their own lives in
order to rekindle creative political participation in
shaping our society as active citizens. Through working
together, whether in harmony and joy, supporting and
nurturing one another, or in passionate but constructive
conflict, challenging one another to live our highest
values, the people involved in Spirit Matters hope to
help one another to bring personal dreams of fulfilment
and collective political dreams of sustainable living
to fruition.
Spirit Matters Day: PROGRAMME
10:30 - Registration /Coffee/tea-
11:00- 11:20: Welcome/meet your neighbour/guided meditation
11:20 -12:15: Victor Anderson discusses Gaian Democracies
with Roy Madron, followed by a Q and A
12:15 - 12:30 Music by David Lasserson
12:30- 1:30 Lunch. Please bring vegetarian food
to share
1:30- 1:40 Welcome Back
1:40 - 2:00 - Qi Gong with Barbara Brown
2:00- 3:00 - Small group discussions on purpose and
principles. What is the purpose of Spirit Matters and
other similar groups and what are the principles that
guide us?
3:00 - 3: 45 - Large group plenary, bringing the small
group talks and conclusions back to the centre
3: 45 - 4:00 coffee/
tea break
4:00- 5:00 - Further small group
discussions to consider ideas for new projects, founding
new groups or networking within existing ones.
5:00 -5:30- Large group plenary,
bringing the small group conclusions back to the centre
5:30 - 5:50 - Dances with Plaxy
O'Keefe
5:50- 6:00 Group meditation/
final words
Further information from:
Spirit Matters,
C/O 27 Lonsdale Road, London NW6 6RA,
Tel: 0207-624-1123 Fax: 0207-624-1124,
Email: spiritmatters@hotmail.com Website: www.spiritmatters.info
|
|
Friday
19th to Sunday 21st September 2003 |
THINKING THROUGH A COLLAPSING WORLD: Pathways to Reconciliation |
Conference will
be opened by Mary Robinson |
Conway Hall, Red
Lion Sq, (Holborn tube) London WC1 |
Organised by The Global Reconcilation
Network: www.collapsingworld.org
UK contact: Chris
Macrae,
cbn007@easynet.co.uk
£10 per session,
£25 per day (concs)
|
The aim of the event,
an Australian initiative, is to bring together people
thinking about and working towards local and global
reconciliation in order to establish an ongoing framework
that allows us to share experiences and to work together.
The topics addressed will include: the concepts of 'reconciliation'
and 'civil society'; political action, reconciliation
and the roles of local and global politics; the problem
of terrorism and cultural, political and religious responses
to it; and issues of culture, citizenship and democracy.
The format will include both lectures and interactive
workshops, with ample opportunity for contributions
from all the participants. An intended outcome of the
meeting is a charter to facilitate ongoing co-operation
among groups around the world working for reconciliation.
The conference will be opened by
Mary Robinson (Former Irish President
and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, now of the
Global Ethics Initiative), and has a unique range of
speakers from across disciplines, cultures and community
organisations around the world. Individuals, community
groups and organisations around the world with an interest
in issues associated with reconciliation are participating.
Join renowned academic thinkers, social activists and
policy makers to identify the obstacles to reconciliation
and share ways to build community.
Speakers will include:
Jakob Finci: Chair, National Coordinating
Committee for the Establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission in Bosnia Herzegovina.
Charles Villa-Vincencio: Executive
Director Institute for Justice and Reconciliation, South
Africa, Former National Research Director, South African
Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Tanya Hosch, Director, Australian Indigenous
Leadership Centre.
Hans D'Orville: Director Strategic
Policy, UNESCO, Paris.
Of particular interest:
session on Sunday 21st "Democracy, Citizenship
and Ethics"
Contributors: Chantal Mouffe, Professor of Politics
and Social Theory, University of Westminster, UK; Mary
Crewe and Christoff Heyn, Centre for Study of AIDS and
Human Rights, Pretoria University, South Africa; Ian
Campbell, International Health Consultant, Salvation
Army & UNAIDS; Miri Weingarten, Physicians for Human
Rights, Israel; Ganesh N. Devy, Director, Tribal Academy,
Tejgadh & Professor of Humanities, DA-IICT University,
India; Roy Madron, Producer & Author, Gaian Democracies
Enterprise, UK; Jim Welsh, Coordinator, Medical Program,
Amnesty International, UK; Daphna Golan, Director, Internship
Programs, The Minerva Center for Human Rights, The Hebrew
University of , Israel; Clive Baldwin, Head of International
Advocacy, The Minority Rights Group, London; representatives
from community groups
The conference will also
launch a Global Reconciliation
Network to promote cooperation amongst community
based groups around the world. A communiqué for
the network will be released at a closing press conference
on 21st September (International day of Peace).
|
|
Saturday Sept 20th:
6.30pm-12 midnight
|
PARTY TIME
AT HUGO'S: |
Dinner, Jazz &
Blues Evening: Benefit for Water Aid |
Hugo's Cafe: Lonsdale
Roadd London, NW6 |
£30 - book via
Earth Emergency:
020-7372-1232
|
|
|
Sunday
20th July 2003: 11am-1pm and 2pm |
WISH
YOU HAD BEEN PART OF GREENHAM? Join us at a reunion, a
Celebration of Peace, Greenham Peace March, STATUE to
be unveiled |
Rosalie
Huzzard,
Ellen Diederich, Fasia Jansen and Karen Andrews |
All
welcome - bring a picnic from 11am then unveiling at Cardiff
City Hall 2pm |
Contact:
0164- 621-449 greenhamsculpture@hotmail.com
www.wfloe.fsnet.co.uk |
PROVISIONAL
PROGRAMME: Speakers: Rosalie Huzzard – WILPF, Ellen
Diederich. Oberhausen. International Womens’ Peace
Archive, Fasia Jansen. friedensa@aol.com, Karen Andrews
US Military wife, from inside the Greenham Base now student
of Peace and Justice at Wellesley College. USA. Also UK
Soldier, ex Falklands/Greenham airbase, will read his
peace poetry - contact via Barbara R.
Celebratory cake with maps of Malta and Wales made by
Pembroke WI. Videos: "Greenham the making of a monument"
– Undercurrents. Oxford. German Womens’ Greenham
Vide., Welsh poetry an englyn by Vernon Jones . Acappella
Singers 2.00pm
Another womens’ sculpture story – www.undelete.org/woa/woa09-25.html
Large marble sculptures of three women suffragists languish
in the basement of the US Capital Building for 75 years
– 1921 -1997. Sculptures made by women, of women
installed by women. An even more difficult and dramatic
story than the Greenham story. Life size Greenham Sculpture
by Anton Agius of Rabat Malta made for the cause of Peace,
a sculpture made with love as much as money. |
|
Thursday 3rd
July 2003, 7.30-9pm
|
CULTURE: The
Essential Investment
|
Dr Christopher
Houghton Budd
|
Rudolf Steiner
House, 35 Park Road, Near Baker Street Tube. London
NW1 6XT. Cost: Donation of £3.50
|
|
Most commentators regard
culture as a side-show, an event in the margins with
little if any real economic significance. But what if
culture were shown to be the source of new values and
fresh energy, and thus of future economic life? What
if modern speculation and the anarchy of the financial
markets pointed to an unrecognised phenomenon - the
ability today to fund culture on a massive scale? Could
we tame the markets by investing in culture?
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Tuesday 24th June
2003, 7pm |
MONEY DEBT and the
OUTDATED EURO |
MIKE ROWBOTHAM author
of "'GRIP OF DEATH" and SIR RICHARD BODY, former
MP |
House of Lords,
Westminster, London W1. Committee Room 3 St Stephen's
entrance: Booked in the name of Lord Stoddart of Swindon:
Free |
Organised by the
Anti-Common Market League
28 Highdown, Worcester Park, Surrey, KT4 7HZ |
How the current financial system functions
as debt, and why the Euro is already out of date; yesterday's
solution to yesterday's problem. Why is joining the
EURO deemed to be irreversible ? Why does the EURO gain
such wholehearted support from the banks? Modern financial
systems are based on almost entirely on debt and banking.
The deficiency of this arrangement and the criticism
it has attracted suggests that monetary reform is likely
in the future. Countries within the EU locked into a
single currency would be ill-placed to undertake such
reforms, tied to an outmoded, centralist, power-based
financial system.
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Wednesday 25th June
from 7.00pm |
"GENETICALLY
MODIFIED NATION" DEBATE |
Peter Lillford,
York University & Claire Oxborrow, Friends of the
Earth |
EMMAUS COMMUNITY,
School Lane, Carlton, Beds |
To confirm your
attendance and for more information call 01234 721379
or email Sharon.Jackson@CarltonCSR.com |
The government is encouraging a public
debate about genetically modified crops (GM), before
they decide if GM is to be grown on a commercial basis
in the UK. This is your chance to find out more about
the implications of genetically modified crops and to
put your view to the government.
SPEAKER FOR GM - Peter Lillford
CBE Prof. Public Awareness of Science, York University.
SPEAKER AGAINST GM - Claire Oxborrow - Head of Food
Campaigns at Friends of the Earth·
The speakers will put forward their point of view after
which the debate attendees will discuss their own views
in small groups. The results will be recorded on feed
back forms and sent to the UK Government as a true representation
of the public view. Feedback from GM Debates across
the country must be submitted by 18th July: the results
will be evaluated by an independent market research
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Wednesday
25th June: 6pm |
The role of the armed forces
in environmental protection.
|
Major
General Eustace D'Souza (retired) (India)
|
Committee
Room 6, House of Commons, Westminster, London W1: Free
|
Michael
Harbottle Memorial Lecture of the One World Trust |
Major General
Eustace D'Soouza PVSM became Secretary General of the
World Wildlife Fund for India on his retirement. He subsequently
served two terms as Consultant for South Asia to the International
Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). He has been the
motivating force to create within the Indian armed services
(in the navy, army and air force) a structure for environmental
protection so that today every unit has a specific environmental
role to play. He regards this as central to global security
and part of the whole 'web of life'. |
|
Fri/Saturday
June 27-28th |
24
HOURS FOR TRADE JUSTICE |
Bradford
Trade Justice |
Including
Trade training, a gathering in Centenary Square, Bradford,
and a "Great Trade Debate" |
For
details contact: annaqui@fish.co.uk
|
|
Saturday
21st June 2003: 11am-12.30pm |
"THE NHS REFORM:
PUBLIC HEALTH OR PRIVATE PROFIT?" |
Prof. Allyson Pollock
(UCL, London) |
Café
Diplo at the The French Institute, 17 Queensberry
Place, London SW7 2DT: £2 |
"Friends
of le Monde Diplomatique"
|
Prof. Pollock is
head of the Public Health Policy Unit at UCL and director
of Research and Development at UCL Hospitals at UCL
Trust. Her work on PFIs has been a major intervention
and she has written on globalisation and Health. She
will be speaking on whether the NHS Plan and Foundation
Hospital Trust lead to greater privatisation of health
care funding and delivery. She has written reports on
the PPP (Private Public Partnership) and the agenda
for privatisation of the Welfare State. (For
further information see University College London, School
of Public Policy)
|
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Thursday 19th June 2003
|
Richard Murphy |
DEBT-BASED FINANCE:
Publicly Created Money and Pensions as Constructive Alternatives
|
Forum for Stable Currencies
at the House of Lords, Westminster,
London SW1
|
Sponsored by Lord
Ahmed, 6-9pm Room G, via Blackrod's Entrance |
Organiser:
Sabine McNeill |
Richard Murphy is
an economics graduate and chartered accountant. He trained
with what is now KPMG before starting his own firm at
the age of 26. This grew to have three partners and
eight hundred clients before he and his partners sold
it in 2000 to concentrate on other activities. He has
also been chairman, chief executive or finance director
of nine SMEs (Small and Medium Enterprises) over the
last 15 years and continues his active involvement in
the commercial economy at present. Richard has written
on taxation and accounting matters for many years, both
within the profession and now as a regular contributor
to the Observer. He campaigned for Oxfam in the 1980s
and has been involved in new economics in some way since
the first TOES (The Other Economic Summit). He now campaigns
on reform in three areas: international tax, pensions,
and the money supply. He created the economic thinking
behind the "People's Pensions" report published
in 2003 and wrote most of the Briefing Document for
Early Day Motion 854. He is currently undertaking work
on the economics of extortionate lending for the New
Economics Foundation, Church Action on Poverty and the
Debt on the Doorstep Campaign.
|
|
Saturday 24th May 2003 |
Dr Vineeta Gupta (Insaaf International)
and World Bank Boycott co-ordinators |
"BREAKING THE BANK'S BOND" |
Café Diplo |
The French Institute, 17 Queensberry
Place, London SW7 2DT |
"Friends
of le Monde Diplomatique"
|
Dr. Vineeta Gupta is
General Secretary of Insaaf International, a Punjab-based
human rights group committed to social justice, where
she works on efforts to disclose the harmful effects
of World Bank user fees on health care. Dr. Gupta and
members of the WBBoycott will discuss the social, economic
and environmental impact of the WB and explore means
of effective local resistance to its destructive economic
policies. The Boycott is an international coalition
of grassroots groups which seeks to increase financial
and political pressure on the World Bank by discouraging
local institutions from investing in its bonds, from
which it raises 80% of its money. Since its launch in
April 2000, over 75 institutional investors have joined
the Boycott, including trade unions such as The International
Brotherhood of Teamsters, religious groups such as Pax
Christi (USA), banks such as the Co-operative Bank UK,
and SRI firms such as the Calvert Group. For further
information: -
For further information
|
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Saturday 7th June
2002 |
Dr Brighton Chireka
(Chairman of the Zimbabwe Association in London) |
"ZIMBABWE
THE PRESENT AND THE FUTURE" |
Café Diplo
|
The French Institute,
17 Queensberry Place, London SW7 2DT |
"Friends
of le Monde Diplomatique"
|
This café
aims to give a general overview of the economical and
social issues Zimbabwe is going through and the consequences
it can have to a wider scale in Africa. Dr Brighton
Chireka, Chairman of the Zimbabwe Democracy Trust organisation
in London, will discuss and answer your questions regarding
the political actions of President M. Robert Mugabe.
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