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marioliva   marioliva Marioliva's TIGblog
Marioliva's profile

América Latina, letal para los jóvenes
About this category: Peace, Conflict & Governance



Un joven en Latinoamérica de entre 15 y 24 años de edad está en más peligro de morir asesinado que en cualquier otro lugar del mundo.

Así lo asegura un informe "Mapa de la Violencia" de la Red de Información Tecnológica Latinoamericana (RITLA) tras analizar 83 países, entre ellos 16 latinoamericanos.

En él se asegura que es hasta 30 veces más probable que un joven sea asesinado en Latinoamérica que en Europa.

El Salvador lidera esta macabra lista con 92 jóvenes asesinados por cada 100.000 habitantes, seguido de Colombia, Venezuela, Guatemala y Brasil, los "top 5" de la lista.

Según afirmó en conversación con BBC Mundo el autor del informe, Julio Jacobo Waiselfisz, el homicidio en América Latina es un fenómeno sobre todo juvenil, al contrario de otras zonas del mundo.

"Preocupa especialmente América Central donde ya existía una historia de guerras civiles y una cultura política de violencia. Pero ahora ha empeorado por la expulsión de Estados Unidos de integrantes de bandas juveniles llamadas maras, especialmente jóvenes salvadoreños", afirmó Waiselfisz.

El problema es especialmente acuciante en El Salvador, Nicaragua y Guatemala que han visto cómo sus índices de criminalidad juvenil se han disparado.

Colombia y Brasil, mejor

El experto destaca que, por primera vez en 10 años, Colombia no es el país con más homicidios.

"Hasta 2004-2005 el eje de la violencia lo formaba Brasil y Colombia, ahora es Centroamérica. Colombia comenzó a luchar contra ella en ciudades como Cali y Bogotá haciendo entre otros reordenamientos urbanos, mientras Brasil empezó a mejorar sobre todo a partir de 2003 con una campaña de desarme".

Los países latinoamericanos más seguros para los jóvenes son Chile, Cuba y Uruguay, con unos 7 homicidios por 100.000 habitantes.

En total, la tasa de homicidios juveniles en la zona es de 36,6 por 100.000 habitantes, mientras que en África es 16,1, América del Norte 12, Asia 2,4, Oceanía 1,6 y Europa 1,2.

El informe además explica que para los jóvenes la distribución el ingreso explica el 63,5% de la variabilidad de las tasas de homicidio, muy por encima de las tasas de pobreza, debido a una mayor sensibilidad a los fenómenos que derivan de las injusticias distributivas. Fuente: http://noticias.prodigy.msn.com/bbc.aspx?cp-documentid=14296134#toolbar

November 28, 2008 | 12:46 PM Comments  0 comments

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leapinGazelle   leapinGazelle ghazaleh's TIGblog
ghazaleh's profile

education


What the hell is it? Who knows best? What is the best schooling?

School assignments give you something to do. If you’re not in school, no one will give you any assignments, so you have to make up your own assignments, and not too many people are good at that. So that’s why school works. It puts you around people, you’re in a social setting, you make friends and you remember the recesses, lunch breaks, team practices and secret crushes. It gives you a reason to keep going and its manual is:

  • listen to your teacher
  • make your parents happy
  • do your homework
  • study
  • get good marks
  • and you will have a better life.

That was SO me baby! I loved school. It was awesome.

But then something kicked in. I grew up. I realized that it wasn’t school that I liked, it was the act of DOING. I was the one motivating myself. I was the one questioning things, reading things and getting stuff done. I was the one who was teaching myself. I was the one who beat myself, worried myself, stressed myself and hated myself. I was passionate and I didn’t know why I just couldn’t get to what I wanted. I pursued a creative arts program in grade 7 and that’s when I discovered graphic design. It was fun! I liked computers and programs and it had no boundaries! I could teach myself as much as I wanted and the teacher had no control. So I kept teaching myself. At the age of 12, the computer became my toy. So much to explore! Graphic design was what kept me going in school, but what I really wanted was to be a super sports star.

That didn’t work out. So I chose an art school and studied graphic design — why the hell not? It was easy and fun.

Then I started discovering that, um, I need a passion. I started seeing what graphic design for what it truly was and then I started hating it as “school”. Everyone was doing it. It wasn’t as fun as before. It was like everyone else was discovering it and the profession of it became dull for me.

Who am I? Why am I doing this?

School couldn’t answer that question because school has only one answer and the answer is: “it’s not my problem - you chose to go here”

So education became exploring myself.

And that really happened in my last year of school. From 0 to 21, it took me that many years to realize that education is freedom of expression, networking and collaboration.

I take full responsibility for thinking that way because I know who I am now.

I AM education baby. All I do is school me.

      

November 27, 2008 | 1:11 AM Comments  0 comments

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jenergy   jenergy Jennifer Corriero's TIGblog
Jennifer Corriero's profile

Art for me
About this category: Arts & Media


layout

Art for me
is a journey
into the unspoken, unknown, unwanted and unheard
realities of our shadows
and of our hopes.

We are suspended in time
glimpsing in the mirror
of our future and our past
They flash before us and cause a jolt
of hope, of fear, of want, of release.

Our senses on overload
we admire and adore
our object of fascination
representing the idol we love
and demon we hate.

we forgive
we empathize
we heal
we bathe
in beauty
and bliss.

This is art
for me.

November 27, 2008 | 12:46 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Public Speaking...


November 24, 2008 | 7:09 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Team...


November 24, 2008 | 7:07 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Leadership...


November 24, 2008 | 6:25 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Attitude . . .


November 24, 2008 | 6:23 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Wireless Africa Project

The just concluded IDRC funded Wireless Africa Project facilitated by Meraka
Institute, CSIR introduced simple technological solutions Africa as
continent needs at this time and age. Voice over IP and Wireless Internet
Service Provider (VOIP in a box, and WISP in a box, mesh potato, Village
Telco, Internet and Phone billing) Through WISP internet link can be shared
amongst neighbors such as schools, organizations and institutions and have a
billing system which enables the host to monitor, control and bill users.
This was a technical and business workshop; to build technical capacity to
extend existing networks through introduction of new technologies and use
the business model skills acquired sustain it. The workshop brought
together over 13 African countries (refer to website), with two
representatives each. Most technological solution use the open hardware and
software to create robust equipment affordable to Africa and built with
Africa in Mind. The technologies are simplified and often referred to as
being in a 'BOX'. The amazing part, the equipments are low power too.

The future according to the facilitators Alberto Escudero-Pascual and Louise
Berthilson founders of IT46, a Swedish consultancy company with focus on
information technology in developing regions is that the solutions should be
a plug and play piece of equipment that any one can plug into an existing
network (LAN or WAN) to give it more functionality. The team wouldn't be
complete without Sebastian Büttrich is a generalist in technology with a
background in scientific programming and physics. Originally from Berlin,
Germany, he worked with IconMedialab in Copenhagen from 1997 until 2002. He
holds a Ph.D. in quantum physics from the Technical University of Berlin.
His physics background includes fields like RF and microwave spectroscopy,
photovoltaic systems, and advanced maths. He held a session. He is also a
performing and recording musician. What a talent. He held a captivating
session on Mesh Networking and internet Billing. Did you know that mesh
networking through use of the very simple networking devices can extend your
wide area network over 200km? It is possible.

The Wireless Africa consortia was present and was part of the very able
facilitators.

The underpinning philosophy of the Wireless Africa initiative is to develop
business models that support community owned networks whereby the
infrastructure is owned and/or operated locally; local networking costs
contained within the community and traffic is aggregated at the community
level to save through bulk purchase of bandwidth.

November 24, 2008 | 5:36 AM Comments  0 comments

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abc4all   abc4all A Better Community for All (ABC4All)'s TIGblog
A Better Community for All (ABC4All)'s profile

Eric Gitonga Mburugu (Kenya) is ABC4All Mentor of the Week sharing his vision: Global Efforts Initiative (GEI)!
About this category: Learning & Education


Erick Gitonga Mburugu, stating what is uppermost on his mind, offers his vision: The Global Efforts Initiative (GEI).

To read Eric's words provides an opportunity to review where we have been, where we are and where we are headed. ANY ABC4All Mentor can read Eric's vision and have such stimulation!

Included in what Eric shares:

"I have chosen to work very closely in partnership with ABC4All in order to ensure the success of humanity in meeting the transcendent challenges. Therefore, I am willing and ready to hold talks with you and others within and out your network on how we could work together in forming a strong alliance...Maybe we could come together and merge our ideas, you know the idea and vision you had and have for ABC4All and that I have for the Global Efforts Initiative, and form something new and very progressive for the global community. It's just a thought that has popped up. Think about it."

Indeed we can all think about it!

Thank you, Eric, for such a carefully presented offering for your MOTW page!

Respectfully,
Burton Danet, Ph.D.
Co-Founder, ABC4All
*************************
Below is the response to Eric after first reading of his submission:

Eric, Eric, Eric,
You are amazing.
You are eloquent.
You are organized
You are dedicated.
You are relentless.

You have assessed What The World Needs Now.
http://ABC4All.net/wtwnn.htm

You have taken action.
You are creating GEI.
You are working in conjunction with cooperating parties.
You are on the right track, you know it, you are passionate, and you BELIEVE and have FAITH in what you are doing.

Eric, we are on the same page.
Parallel tracks, perhaps, but nevertheless we already are working together,
perhaps without formalizing it. How we discover the path to mutual cooperation will become evident.

CLICK! to read Eric's Mentor of the Week page!

--
Where is ABC4All headed? Answer: A Knol has been created!
http://knol.google.com/k/abc4all-team/poised-for-global-relief/yz1gm8gg234a/2

***************

A Better Community for All (ABC4All), a virtual entity, encourages community empowerment through sharing of information.

Participants create their own activity/role and eventually discover an appropriate self-designation, all the while supporting Global Humanitarian Relief!

PREAMBLE: http://ABC4All.net

November 21, 2008 | 10:56 PM Comments  0 comments

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leapinGazelle   leapinGazelle ghazaleh's TIGblog
ghazaleh's profile

Time don’t exist baby!


Who doesn’t want the world to be a better place?

I don’t know if I know anyone who doesn’t. And I also don’t believe that people enjoy seeing people suffer and die unless they disconnect themselves from reality and live in illusion.

Speaking of illusion, I think Time is an illusion. I don’t believe that it exists. Everyone knows that we live in the Now. But it’s not just Now that we can focus on. Our brains are much more complex than that and unless we live in the countryside, down in the valley or up on the mountains, life just ain’t all that simple as Now. What about doing things and getting things done without having any preconceived ideas of how long it will take? What about doing what your heart desires, what your brain connects, what your vision gravitates? What about all that energy inside you that you didn’t know existed until you saw that photo, that film, that book, that baby, that child, that boy, that girl, that woman, that man, that old man, that old lady, that store, that game, that dance, that song, that laughter, that smile?

Does any of that have anything to do with Time? 

Oh, I guess that boy, girl part does. 

So let me ask you: Are you old? Or are you young? Are you a baby, a child?

We watch our bodies develop and as they develop we start basing our actions on Time, because that’s what our parents tell us, that’s what the institutions tell us, the teachers tell us, the family tells us, the media tells us, the best friend tells us, the spouse tells us, the sibling tells us.

Let it go.

Time don’t exist baby.

You want to change the world - get to it. Follow your heart, feel the energy and use your brain. Love and power are determined by the number of people you touch. Grow your networks and together you are one.

If you are afraid (to do what you wanna do), you’ll never be happy. If you are brave (and do what you wanna do), you’ll be a leader. It’s as simple as that.

Are you ready for the challenge? Or are you still afraid to change the/your world?

      

November 21, 2008 | 12:11 PM Comments  0 comments

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leapinGazelle   leapinGazelle ghazaleh's TIGblog
ghazaleh's profile

what Time is it?


So now that I’ve revealed my disbelief in Time, I should at least make some sense of the theory of relativity and science in regards to this matter.

I don’t believe in perfection, absolutes or even words being the best way to define Nature. Nature is nature. Can nature talk, write, pay your bills, or tell you what you need to do to get a good paying job? No, I don’t think Nature had a clue that that’s what humans cherished in life. Nature is God. I don’t care who you are or what you think. Nature is God. It’s simple, I’ll say it again: Nature is God. All together now: “NATURE IS GOD.”

Good.

So now that we have that straight, why are we trying to define Nature through Science and God through Religion? Science and Religion are systems designed by humans to break apart Nature and God and make them more complex. I don’t blame us though - we are Humans. It is Human Nature to be inquisitive and since we have Nature in Human Nature, we are naturally responsive to our Body and Mind. Our Senses are what keep us alive and guide us to happiness.

It is Time to:

  1. Follow your Senses through Body and Mind
  2. Accept Nature as God
  3. Experience the naturally inquisitive Human Nature respond to Nature

Assuming you could live a whole century and witness society develop decade by decade, at some point you’ll realize that you were always a child and no one listened to you, not even you. All you really wanted to do was play, and no one thought it was the right thing to do, especially the people who loved you dearly. So you didn’t even dare to, because it was Time that was holding you back. It was your fear of Time and everyone else’s proof of Time that stopped you. You started something, it didn’t go well, and you thought it wasn’t the right Time. So you beat yourself and cried inside. “No one gets what I’m trying to do!” You brushed it off and went back to being afraid.

It’s time to let go of Time and let it only be determined by the impact of what you have done. You take it out of you, put it out there, and see what sticks and what doesn’t. You enjoy the stickies — they can get you a little high. Sometimes they can get you too high and you might loose your head. The one’s that didn’t stick are your friends too, and they came to fight for their right. You love the stickies so much that you may forget what was in you in the first place and what you were trying to do. But that’s not Time! That’s learning by doing! It’s called research, art, poetry, design, activism, development, growth — it’s all of those things that are simply experienced. It’s not slow, or fast, it just gets determined by how much you do and how many people you tag on the way.

Play tag. It’s time to play tag!

You’re It!

      

November 21, 2008 | 10:11 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

Tips for Tutoring Adult Students

Methods and Materials for Conversation and Writing Tutors

Eric H. Roth writes...

How do you effectively teach English to a struggling private student? What will you actually do for 60-120 minutes together? How will you make the lessons meaningful enough that your client feels satisfied and wants to retain you for future lessons?

First, you must be very clear about what the client wants and expects. Some tutors even present a written contract outlining their rates, the location and times of meetings, and payment policies. I've never been that formal, but I have also never been burned the way some tutors have been. In fact, I've had only very positive experiences with clients. Why? Perhaps luck; perhaps because I screen potential clients. I only work with professionals, graduate students, and/or friends and spouses of friends with a solid foundation in English. Be explicit about what you want and don't want to teach a client. Be prepared to provide options for potential clients that you reject.

For students who want to improve their conversation, I strongly suggest that you select the topic and materials in advance. You can use newspapers and/or magazines to find appropriate articles to begin the conversation. (I usually assign the articles a week ahead and give them my conversation worksheets.) My favorite book - because I wrote it and it provides 45 self-contained thematic chapters - is Compelling Conversations: Questions and Quotations on Timeless Topics. The combination of poignant questions, vocabulary lists, proverbs, and witty quotations makes your job much easier.

If you have a weaker student looking to improve their speaking skills, then I would advise using a picture dictionary. There are several fine ones. You might use the Oxford Picture Dictionary to open conversations, and I would be tempted to ask the client to bring in photographs and ads each week. You will need patience and be prepared to repeat words. Many students will want to work on their pronunciation. You can also ask/assign them listening activities on the web. I like Voice of America's Special English programs for intermediate and advanced students. You will have to direct lower levels to websites to practice their listening and speaking skills with drills. They will love the work; you might go mad repeating vowel sounds.

You can also make a good income helping ESL students write college admission essays, practice TOEFL and GRE essays, and proofreading papers. There are many fine books you can use. I recommend Keith Folse's Great Essays and picking any of the standard test preparation guides published by Barrons or Kaplans. For worse or for better, the focus is on structure and not content. Spelling, somehow, often doesn't even officially matter. You might also use the excellent Cambridge Vocabulary in Use series and Grammar in Use series. You can also recommend Grammar Troublespots for international students.

Finally, I have had great success sharing insights on adapting to American culture. My favorite book for this challenging task remains Checklists for Life: 104 Lists to Help You. Each chapter focuses on a practical life skill from buying a computer and finding a good mechanic to organizing your workplace and writing letters of condolence. Inevitably the readings lend themselves to engaging conversations and a satisfying exchange of information and insights. I have also assigned readings from Don't Sweat the Small Stuff, but the advice offered often seems very idealistic and naive to immigrant professionals. Still, clients love the idioms and find that the perspective illuminates unknown aspects of American culture - or at least a segment of American culture.

Finally, the key to tutoring ESL students - or anyone else - remains respecting the student, meeting their needs, and providing a solid structure for your lessons. I have found that using a set text, developing a known routine, and combining conversation, vocabulary and writing skills makes for a successful and satisfying experience.

As William Shakespeare noted four centuries ago, "All's well that ends well". Therefore, you should also have the grace to know when to end your lessons. Some clients will want to keep working with you. Set a clear goal for your lessons, and conclude when the students have reached that goal. You can then become genuine friends and leave money out of the equation.

Or not. You choose. What are your goals for tutoring students?

TEFL.NET ESL Reviews & Articles© Eric H. Roth 2007
Eric Roth currently teaches writing and verbal skills to international graduate students at the University of Southern California. Eric has helped university students discover the pleasures and perils of the English language from dozens of countries over the last 15 years. He recently co-authored an EFL book titled "Compelling Conversations: Questions and Quotations on Timeless Topics" from materials he developed as a tutor and teacher. Eric can be reached through http://www.compellingconversations.com.

November 21, 2008 | 5:51 AM Comments  0 comments

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pscornerstone   pscornerstone Aare Kornar !'s TIGblog
Aare Kornar !'s profile

World AIDS Day marks 20th anniversary of solidarity

By Sara Speicher



For Eric Sawyer, the late 1980s was a "war time situation". "People with
AIDS were fighting for their lives and for their friends", says Sawyer, an
AIDS activist and co-founder of ACT UP New York. By 1988, seven years after
the first case of AIDS was reported, AIDS was causing more deaths in the US
then there were in the Vietnam War, and between 5 and 10 million people were
estimated to be infected with HIV around the world. Yet governments, media
and society in general were not giving AIDS adequate attention. So, "people
with AIDS had to literally take to the streets and block traffic and take
over government buildings", Sawyer recalls.



Sawyer had been on the front lines of the AIDS epidemic since developing his
first HIV-related symptoms in 1981, before AIDS was officially identified.
For him and for thousands of other activists around the world, the formation
of World AIDS Day in 1988 was one of the few moments in the year where the
growing tragedy of AIDS would finally get attention around the globe.



Now at its 20th anniversary, World AIDS Day continues to be the focus of
global solidarity for a pandemic that has led to over 25 million deaths with
an estimated 33 million people currently living with HIV worldwide.



World AIDS Day was reportedly the brainchild of the late Jonathan Mann, at
the time the director of the Global Programme on AIDS (GPA) at the World
Health Organization. After positive reactions to the idea of World AIDS Day
by over 100 health ministers at the January 1988 London gathering focused on
AIDS and at the 1988 International AIDS Conference in Stockholm, the World
Health Organization declared 1 December 1988 as the first World AIDS Day,
which was recognised and supported by the UN General Assembly in October
1988.



"We wanted to provide a platform so that people who were working on the
issue at any level could get involved", says Tom Netter, who worked with
Mann as the head of the GPA's public information office. Fostering a sense
of solidarity was paramount, says Netter, "so that people could do things at
the grassroots level and feel part of the global response at that time."



Netter recalls that in 1988, despite the short planning time, an event was
held in every member state. "That was eye opening", he said, "It showed that
people wanted to have something that they could grab on to, to feel part of
the overall response." In the World Health Organization itself, panels from
the AIDS quilt were displayed. "People found that very moving . . . it
showed the individuals affected."



Within three years, the activities around the day "became something that was
going to happen spontaneously.People on the ground took off with it", says
Netter.



Unique momentum



The energy behind World AIDS Day, and the activism that has characterised
the response to AIDS among civil society, is unique.



Prior to AIDS, Netter states, "there wasn't really so much of an advocacy
movement regarding diseases or people who were ill. AIDS really was the
first that mobilised people."



It was the people most affected who brought the urgency, passion and
accountability to the movement. Sawyer recalls, "Early on the most
significant leadership was actually done by people with AIDS themselves".



Whilst early activists targeted authorities' slow response to AIDS, that
didn't mean that scientists and activists were on opposite sides, says
Professor Lars Kallings, the first president of the International AIDS
Society, also founded in 1988. "If you think from the beginning, before
there was any treatment, the doctors felt very helpless. They suffered by
not being able to help their patients. Therefore, even scientists have been
on the front lines, on the barricades, very often against the authorities,
the government."



World AIDS Day has been a symbolic focus for this activism. It "gave people
a sense that they were part of a larger movement than what they were
involved in individually and locally", Netter states.



But this doesn't mean that one day is enough. "For me", says Frika Chia
Iskandar, a young woman from Indonesia working with the Asia Pacific Network
of People Living with HIV/AIDS (APN+), "it doesn't seem like 'World' enough,
it is not public enough". For activists now, she reflects, the day itself
doesn't make a difference when "our days are filled with AIDS". Yet, she
emphasises, "For the public, though, it is at least one day where we think
about AIDS, and it is still needed."



Greg Gray, an APN+ advisor who also carries a supporting role for the NGO
delegation to the UNAIDS governing board agrees, "World AIDS Day has real
value for raising awareness with the broader public. But when you are
working with the grassroots community affected by HIV it doesn't connect as
much. When you do it day in and day out, it becomes the norm. World AIDS Day
is trying to get a bit of that message home to a much broader community."



Placing a spotlight on leadership



For Kallings, that broader community from the beginning included leaders. At
times, the absence of leadership has been most apparent. "We had to push
Ronald Reagan to get his tongue around AIDS", Kallings recalls. "That didn't
happen until 1987 when tens of thousands of his countrymen had already
died."



But Kallings also recalls early World AIDS Day events where presidents and
royalty participated, such as in Tanzania and Thailand. "That puts the
limelight on AIDS", he says, "and showed solidarity in the country."



The danger, as Matilda Moyo, a steering group member of the Pan Africa
Treatment Action Movement, points out, is that World AIDS Day becomes a
"cheap opportunity for governments to make promises that they fail to
deliver on". Sometimes media only focus on covering government's statements
on the day, she says, and fail to lift up what challenges there are
according to civil society working with HIV and AIDS on a daily basis.



Kallings, who is currently the United Nations' Special Envoy for HIV/AIDS in
Eastern Europe and Central Asia, acknowledges that it "is a constant fight
to get the leaders to leave the denial and indifference. One of my roles is
to persuade leaders to use their power to influence the public concept
because discrimination is very deep in the population and it will not change
unless there is leadership."



The leadership required to address AIDS must come from all aspects of the
community. "Leadership in HIV is nothing without political leadership", says
Eunice Kapandura, a 25-year old positive youth activist from Zimbabwe, yet
adding, "when we talk of leadership we mean meaningful representation of the
community." Archbishop Njongo Ndungane, founder and president of African
Monitor, emphasises the role of religious leaders, who "should shout at the
rooftops that AIDS is not a punishment from God but a medical condition
which is preventable, manageable and treatable although not curable."



Within the AIDS advocacy movement, leadership has changed over these past 20
years, especially after the breakthrough in combination therapy, Sawyer
says. Of the early activists who had been leading the fight, "a lot of them
died, a lot of them went on to work full-time for AIDS organizations and
after working 8-10 hours a day to provide care and support they no longer
had time or energy for activism. And others who received treatment, they
returned to their careers. That shifted leadership in both AIDS
organisations on the frontline and government officials and researchers."

Even though the pandemic still affects every country in the world and rages
in Sub-Saharan Africa, AIDS fatigue seems to have hit particularly Western
media and society. "The passion that people brought to the epidemic has
pretty much been lost",

Sawyer reflects.



Chia Iskandar wants to see young leaders in the response, but it's not just
about their age. "It's not about youth, but about new ideas. We need to be
able to keep the idealism alive - the mutual energy, mutual knowledge
transfers, knowing that we are fighting the challenges, fighting the virus,
not fighting each other." She adds that one of the critical aspects of
leadership is "'passing on the knowledge' from the leaders who have
'developed' themselves in the response to the new 'young' leaders and
working together."



With young people now the population most affected, Moyo affirms, "We need
leadership that is creative, young and vibrant and brings fresh ideas on how
to tackle the global challenge."



What remains key is that those most affected lead the way. "For myself being
a person living with AIDS", Sawyer states, "it would be important to
strengthen leadership of people living with HIV and AIDS and the affected
community."



>From one day to a campaign



In 1996 when the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) became
operational, it took over the planning and promotion of World AIDS Day.
However, according to Anne Winter, head of advocacy and communication at the
time, organisers soon felt that rather than only emphasise one day they
wanted to encourage an extended effort over a long period.



Thus in 1997, the World AIDS Campaign was born, charged with focusing on
longer-term messages and strategy. World AIDS Day became the highlight of a
year-long emphasis.



With the campaign, Winter says, "we always tried to use issues that were
innovative and would really move the agenda forward".



The themes chosen for the first two years - on children and young people -
were in fact roundly criticised at the time. "People said this was just a
way to get attention about the epidemic, that the epidemic is not about
children", Winter recalls. But the theme highlighted that the extent and
severity of the epidemic in the developing world was not widely known. "It
was important to change the face of the epidemic and that people recognise
it was a family disease and that children were very much affected by it in
different ways."



In late 2004, the World AIDS Campaign became independent to broaden civil
society ownership and participation. Based in South Africa and The
Netherlands, the World AIDS Day theme is now chosen by its Global Steering
Committee after a broad consultation with people involved in the response
from all over the world. The themes often are repeated for two years to help
get key messages home to the public and to leaders, and all of the themes
are under the 2005-2010 campaign slogan, "Stop AIDS. Keep the Promise."
targeting political leaders' commitment to reach universal access to
prevention, treatment, care and support by 2010.



Leadership needed now



Kallings acknowledges that the response to AIDS today is much better than it
was 20 years ago, but far more action needs to be taken. "Last year it was
three million on treatment. That is a remarkable success. But it is still
only one-third of people needing urgent treatment. The current financial
crisis is a threat to that successful trend. It very much calls for
continued lobbying and pressure to continue to get enough financial support
not only to maintain the current level but to increase it to three times
more and include more preventative measures."



Sawyer notes that World AIDS Day "remains one of the few days where the
world pays a lot of attention to AIDS". Yet, with people living longer
because of anti-retroviral medicines and the many other global issues
needing attention, it seems the news value has faded. Despite the Western
media fatigue, Sawyer notes, "we still have over 8000 deaths a day, 2-3
million dying and millions of new infections each year". As part of a think
tank called aids2031, Sawyer is thinking of another anniversary - the 50th
anniversary of the identification of AIDS - and hoping that leadership at
this 20th anniversary of World AIDS Day will mean those numbers are
tragedies of the past.



The World AIDS Campaign supports, strengthens and connects campaigns that
hold leaders accountable for their promises on HIV and AIDS. "Stop AIDS.
Keep the Promise" is the slogan for the World AIDS Campaign from 2005-2010.
www.worldaidscampaign.org



For more information or for interviews with experts, national campaigners
and people directly affected by HIV and AIDS, contact the World AIDS
Campaign at
media@worldaidscampaign.org, +31 20 616 9045 (Netherlands) or +44 1524 727
651 (UK).





The article is availble on:
http://www.worldaidscampaign.org/en/Media/WAC-News/World-AIDS-Day-marks-20th
-anniversary-of-solidarity

November 20, 2008 | 10:53 AM Comments  0 comments

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jonah   jonah Jonah Wittkamper's TIGblog
Jonah Wittkamper's profile

Advice for the obama administration

Sure, I'm aware that this "advice" might be published somewhere.

Sure, I'm aware that this "advice" could be used for the Obama-Biden administration staff selection process, which I'm interested in, so I'll go with a first person narrative.

In 2000 I co-founded the Global Youth Action Network, with a dream, much like Obama's platform, of empowering greater youth participation in politics. I believe that when young people are given a voice, a place to stand, or a voice, and are inspired and unencumbered, they are capable of great things. Many have called young people the "world's greatest untapped resource."

My advice to the administration is to set in motion a series of structural and political "opportunities" that open the door for citizens, and especially young people, to "participate" in greater and greater ways.

I helped Brazil develop its national youth policies. One piece of legislation requests that all high schools in the country create environmental councils. Picture students organizing to be stewards of their school, working together to map its carbon footprint and reduce waste. It's inspiring a new generation of environmentalists. Another policy, created by earlier creative legislators, requests that all schools have student unions and elections. They encourage democratic participation early on. Another "innovative" idea, in the laboratory of social technologies, which is Brazil, is the "Participatory Budget." Picture a city setting aside 1% of its annual budget, each year, to projects determined by consensus-inspired, citizen-led decision-making processes. Imagine dozens of young people getting together to determine whether their town should invest in a job training center or a music recording studio. They learn from each other in the process, and realize that "job training" serves a greater community. I saw it happen and that kind of deliberative process created more trust, ensuring that the Job Training Center was very successful, with lots of participation, doing much more than your traditional center could ever do.

Brazil is just one of many countries in the world with innovative social technologies that bring people (especially young) together in new ways. 45 of the 46 countries in the Council of Europe have "National Youth Councils." They provide a platform for young people to engage in the democratic process and deliver their political recommendations to national legislatures. Dozens of countries around the world have "National Youth Service" programs where "conscription" doesn't mean serving the army, but serving communities instead. Malaysia has National Youth Awards which recognize the extraordinary contributions of young people to their communities each year. The honor inspires many to choose community participation over materialism. My friend in Viet Nam runs a radio show where young people talk about their solutions for the country's problems. Another friend manages a Latin American network of young people who read newspapers, identify mis-representations of youth, and youth issues, and then respond by writing editorials and educating journalists. Another friend in the Gambia brings truck loads of city youth into the countryside. They connect with the land, the produce, the origins of their food, and commit themselves to an organic, independent future. The global food security alarms that went off earlier this year were silent in his backyard.

The world has a lot of wisdom and ideas to offer us, here in the USA. Many of these programs don’t cost a penny. All we need is the idea, or the visibility, or the convener, or the wave of the legislative wand. Maybe it's coming?

The Bush administration looked out into the big unknown world with fear and suspicion. This new administration doesn't. I think we should create a Presidential Commission on Youth and Intergenerational Partnership. I'd be happy to share my vision of what it could be… but who's ear do I have? Yours? Email me: jonah@youthlink.org (www.bridgingnetwork.org)

November 20, 2008 | 12:30 AM Comments  0 comments

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jonah   jonah Jonah Wittkamper's TIGblog
Jonah Wittkamper's profile

Quick catch up

I haven't posted to my own blog for years.

I'm now living in the USA, near Washington, DC. I'm a dad. My son is almost four. I helped build the Leverage Alliance (a network of young philanthropists) and then the Bridging Network (www.bridgingnetwork.org) to consult on young philanthropy.

In July of 2007 I launched www.ezintouch.com to help people with contact management and email marketing and in September of 2007 I became the chief system geek at Distributive Networks (www.distributivenetworks.com) to be part of the team that developed the technology for Obama's text messaging platform.

Oh, I also just helped my Dad launch a bed and breakfast / vacation rental on his farm in Union, WV. Check out www.pynemountainfarm.com


November 20, 2008 | 12:24 AM Comments  1 comments

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