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Alliance for responsible and sustainable societies

The Alliance for Responsible and Sustainable Societies is a global network with
representatives from all over the world. Organisations associated with the
Alliance integrate a framework of responsibility into social and professional
fields including law, education, climate change, labour relations, agriculture.
Responsibility is relevant to all aspects of sustainability: governance,
economic systems, environmental and social policy and ethics.

Œconomy Transition to a responsible, plural, and solidarity-based economy
Governance Democratic and responsible governance
Global community Citizen practices for world citizenship
Interdependences between humanity and the biosphere Perennial planetary balances
and the wellbeing of human societies
Responsability A pivotal concept, the backbone of the ethics of the twenty-first
century
Education Education to responsibility and world citizenship


ZOOM


REPORTING FROM NEW ZEALAND: COVID-19 - JUST RECOVERY

Healthy Ecosystems for Human Wellbeing

by Betsan Martin and Michael Pringle
published in The Dig platform on April 23, 2020

The COVID-19 crisis is compelling us to kick-start investment in a regenerative
and zero-carbon future. We were bold enough to act quickly to stop the virus –
can we now chart a course for a just recovery? Has the crisis finally made
leaders, citizens, and banks bold enough to drive a transition to a more fair,
sustainable, and resilient economy?

Healthy Ecosystems for Human Wellbeing

Economists and ecologists, Māori leaders, scientists, and NGO advocates are all
speaking with increasing unanimity about the need for a climate and ecosystem
‘responsible’ world to emerge from this planetary pandemic. Such calls include
demands for fairer housing and livelihoods, rehabilitated waterways and forests,
regenerative land use, and even more participatory rangatiratanga
(self-determination).

The evidence is clear that the destruction of nature and biodiversity are
significant contributors to the emergence, virulence, and spread of COVID-19. In
a recent piece on The Conversation – Coronavirus is a wake-up call: our war with
the environment is leading to pandemics– the authors outline that “now is the
time to put in place the settings for planetary health. We live in an
interdependent world in which there are no borders to a virus.”

Humanity is progressively marching back the frontier between human habitation
and jungle and forests for farms, plantations, and energy and mineral
extraction. This and global warming are both destabilising the established
cycles of previously resilient biodiverse habitats and species.

This is placing unprecedented strain on wildlife, leading to a ‘sixth mass
extinction’ event, and forcing animals to move rapidly into new areas that were
previously not suitable for habitation.

In this process, viruses from wild animals are increasingly interacting with
food crops, and domestic animals and are seeking new hosts outside of
diminishing wild animal populations. They are finding these new hosts in people
– leading many scientists to warn of an increased likelihood of outbreaks of
novel pathogens as our encroachment on wilderness areas continues.

Are we are serious about avoiding disaster and charting a new course for
humanity in balance with the natural world? If so, we need to address the
destructive patterns of land use and extractive economics leading to these
interconnected crises.

Read on...


REPORTING FROM PHILIPPINES: SURPRISING OPPORTUNITIES FOR SOCIAL AND SOLIDARITY
ECONOMY IN THE CORONAVIRUS ERA

So many challenges and problems are currently...

So many challenges and problems are currently associated with the lockdown due
to the global hygienic crisis, but adversity also brings surprising
opportunities.

As food supplies in shopping malls are dwindling - due to slowdown of deliveries
as a result of the lockdown, the Asian Solidarity Economy Council (ASEC) has
received many requests for information, knowledge about the approach of social
solidarity economy (SSE) for bringing groups of consumers and groups of
producers together to co-create an alternative, transformative socially
responsible economies. ASEC is calling for direct linkages between consumer
communities in the urban centers and producer communities in the rural
areas/countryside. We’re telling them stories of communities that have
reorganized their local economies through solidarity initiatives of people.

In May 2020 ASEC organized a two days online course, the «ASEC Online SSE
Academy», followed by numerous participants from the Asian countries. Innovative
case studies were reported, videotaped and are accessible here.

Moments of solidarity in the socio-economic space among people scattered in
various places of the world are little seeds of systemic change. Quite
significantly, they provide « proofs of concept » of the jointly built global
vision and shared values of all actors around the world who are committed to
systemic change.

Read on...


FROM GREECE TO TURKEY, THE SOLIDARITY OF THE PEOPLES IS THE ONLY RESPONSE TO
BARBARISM

May 13, 2020 - in front of Herodeion, under...

May 13, 2020 - in front of Herodeion, under Acropolis in Athens, Greece - a
magnificent concert!

120 Greek musicians sing in memory of the Turkish musicians Helin Bolek and
Ibrahim Gokcek, who died in May 2020 after a hunger strike of 288 and 323 days.
Helin and Ibrahim were members of the activist group ’Grup Yorum’ and had
started a hunger strike to protest against the persecution of the Turkish
authorities, the imprisonment of members of the group and the destruction of
their cultural center.

watch in youtube here

"From Greece to Turkey, the solidarity of the peoples is the only response to
barbarism."




THE LAST PRODUCTIONS


The Metamorphoses of Responsibility and the Social Contract

A radical new approach for the French Citizens’ Climate Assembly

Let us be done with the powerlessness and together develop territory-based
‘Transition Factories’


CALENDAR

 * 24 March 2020 to 28 May 2020 : Webinars: UNESCO learning cities respond to
   COVID-19

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