Posts Tagged "climate justice"

Rallying for Climate Justice!

December 5, 2011

Sunday, December 4 By Caroline Foster The climate justice rally was one of the highlights of my time in Durban so far.  Although mixed reports are coming in on the actual number of participants (anywhere from 3,000 to 20,000), thousands…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

COP 17: from Peoples’ Space to Conference Hall

December 3, 2011

As a first timer to a COP, I’m blown away by the cynical emphasis on offsets and the carbon markets and the resistance to REAL emission cuts.  Will the hope of Kyoto Protocol die here? At the Reducing Emissions from…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Is Canada Placing Conditions on Climate Adaptation Funding?

December 2, 2011

By John Dillon Environment Minister Peter Kent maintains that Canada is refusing to commit to further greenhouse gas (GHG) emission reductions under the Kyoto Protocol (KP) because the KP only applies to developed countries. He says developing and emerging countries…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

COP17 — at the stadium

December 1, 2011

Following  November 26th’s orientation and dinner (a local favourite,  “bunny chow” – hollowed-out loaf of bread filled with curry and eaten with fingers) at the Diakonia Centre (Diakonia Council of Churches – Durban, a rather unique local council of churches…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Durban COP17 — Meeting our Partners

November 30, 2011

By Jim Davis I am ensconced in Durban for the start of the  climate negotiations as an accredited civil society observer with the World Council of Churches (WCC).   I must say, however, that we are all chagrined by the ongoing…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Ecuador’s Oil Struggle: Reflections on an Amazonian Journey

November 25, 2011

In July 2011, KAIROS staff Rachel Warden and Sara Stratton, together with Fort Chipewyan activist George Poitras, travelled to Ecuador to learn more about the impacts of oil exploration on the Indigenous peoples and ecosystems of Ecuador’s Amazon region. The…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights, Latin America, UNDRIP Blog Updates

KAIROS Statement on the UN Conference on Climate Change Durban, South Africa

November 17, 2011

We call on the members of our KAIROS churches and all people of good will to join us in urging the government of Canada to champion the following three goals at the November-December 2011 UN Conference on Climate Change at…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

KAIROS Staff head to COP 17, UN Climate Change Conference in Durban

November 17, 2011

Jim Davis and Caroline Foster are imminently heading to Durban COP 17.  John Dillon, who’s staying home, will be following Durban outcomes closely. Amidst the hurly-burly of organizing their departures, KAIROS staffers gave us a sentence (or so) each on…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

KAIROS plays key role in World Council of Churches North American Hearings on Poverty, Wealth and Ecology.

November 15, 2011

From November 6th to 11th, representatives from churches in Canada and the United States, joined by guests from every continent, met in Calgary, Alberta for a consultation convened by the World Council of Churches on issues of poverty, wealth and…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Policy Briefing Paper #28: Is Durban the world’s last, best hope to avoid climate disaster?

November 13, 2011

“Our Mother Earth is ill. The development model of unlimited economic growth and overconsumption has broken the balance between human beings and the envi-ronment. The current proposals on the table in the nego-tiations are not enough to stop climate change….

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Canadian Interfaith Call for Leadership and Action on Climate Change

November 11, 2011

We, representatives of Canadian faith communities, are united in our conviction that the growing crisis of climate change needs to be met by solutions that draw upon the moral and spiritual resources of the world’s religious traditions. We recognize that…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Global South Expresses Concern about REDD

November 4, 2011

REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation) is a plan for curtailing greenhouse gas emissions by preserving the world’s forests. KAIROS has examined REDD in the 2010 briefing paper Decisive Action Vital at Cancún Climate Talks. This initiative will…

Post filed in: Indigenous Rights, UNDRIP Blog Updates

Women’s Rights: Instruments for Lasting Peace

September 30, 2011

Collaborative Research & Analysis — “Women’s Rights: Instruments for Lasting Peace”” contributes research and analysis to the KAIROS Women of Courage Initiative, a program of research, education, networking and advocacy to promote women’s rights and support women’s rights defenders in…

Post filed in: Asia-Pacific, Gender Justice/Women of Courage, Latin America

Fate of Tar Sands Pipelines Crucial for Climate Justice

August 12, 2011

Please read KAIROS’ Report “Fate of Tar Sands Pipelines Crucial for Climate Justice” President Barack Obama is facing a crucial decision that will define the U.S. position on climate justice. He can heed the advice from the Environmental Protection Agency…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights

Joint Statement on Free, Prior & Informed Consent (FPIC)

May 25, 2011

Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Tenth session New York, 16-27 May 2011 Agenda Item 3(c): Free, prior and informed consent Joint Statement of: Assembly of First Nations, Chiefs of Ontario, Grand Council of the Crees (Eeyou Istchee), First Nations Summit,…

Post filed in: Indigenous Rights

United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples

May 25, 2011

UNITED NATIONS DECLARATION ON THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES Adopted by the UN General Assembly 13 September 2007 “The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples was adopted by the General Assembly on Thursday September 13, by a majority of…

Post filed in: Indigenous Rights, UNDRIP Blog Updates

The Rights of the Lubicon Must be Protected

April 6, 2011

“My grandmother and mother have a trap line of their own on which they go hunting and snaring but it is rare that they will bring any rabbits, moose, deer, prairie chickens, or even bears back home…With all these roads,…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights

Pumped Up: How Canada Subsidizes Fossil Fuels at the Expense of Green Alternatives

February 15, 2011

KAIROS’ 60 page 2011 study “Pumped Up: How Canada Subsidizes Fossil Fuels at the Expense of Green of Green Alternatives” demonstrates that the fossil fuel industry receives subsidies amounting to 1billion dollars a year from the federal government — resources…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

SpOILer?

January 6, 2011

There is a lot of talk of oil in Juba. The referendum on splitting up the country which begins on Sunday will begin to clarify positions on who benefits from the considerable oil revenues of Sudan. It won’t be the…

Post filed in: Africa, Ecological Justice

Drawing a Line in the Sand

December 15, 2010

Why Canada needs to limit tar sands expansion and invest in a green economy

Post filed in: Ecological Justice, Indigenous Rights

A KAIROS Partner’s Views on the Climate Talks

December 7, 2010

Today I sat down with Javier Balderas, a KAIROS partner from the Tepeyac Human Rights Centre in Oaxaca, Mexico to learn about how climate change is being experienced in one of Mexico’s poorest states. Javier described how the campesinos and…

Post filed in: Indigenous Rights

Idealism or Political Pragmatism: What should youth bring to the UN climate change negotiations?

December 4, 2010

This post is a guest reflection from Maggie Knight, Canadian Youth Delegate in Cancun. I came to the UN climate change negotiations with mixed ideas about what I as a young person can offer to the process. Yesterday was Young…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

On the Way to Cancun

December 1, 2010

Friday I depart for the UN climate talks in Cancún, Mexico. I hope to meet many of KAIROS’ southern partners from networks such as Oilwatch and Acción Ecológica as well as human rights campaigners from the Centro Tepeyac in Oaxacas to…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

KAIROS Briefing Paper #26: Decisive Action Vital at Cancún Climate Talks

November 25, 2010

One year after the failure of UN climate talks in Copenhagen, KAIROS has released a Briefing Paper calling for decisive action as negotiations resume in Cancún, Mexico. The paper contrasts the Canadian public’s desire for urgent action with a lack…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Voices Unheard

June 28, 2010

June 28, 2010 Canada’s Indigenous peoples, threatened human rights workers in Congo and Colombia, HIV-infected mothers in Malawi, and Pacific Islanders whose homes and livelihoods are being destroyed by rising waters due to climate change —are among the strong articulate…

Post filed in: Indigenous Rights

Sustainability: Embodying an Ecological Worldview

June 27, 2010

Today the word “sustainability” can be heard on the lips of economists, environmentalists, politicians, and industrialists alike. Does “sustainability” mean the sam e thing to all of them? When economists talk about sustainable growth they are usually referring to the…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

2010 Peoples’ Summit: Building a Movement for a Just World

June 21, 2010

From June 18 to June 20 people from all over the world came to Toronto for the 2010 Peoples’ Summit to talk with and learn from one another in this time leading up to the G20 Summit. They came because they…

Post filed in: Ecological Justice

Reflections on returning from the Eastern tour

June 18, 2010

We have just arrived back from the Eastern tour. It has been such a privilege to accompany Naty and Isaiah over last few days. They are both powerful and inspirational speakers, able to convey the devastating impacts of climate change…

Post filed in: Africa, Latin America