PHM in South Australia

From PHM Oz
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Added photos from GHW2 Launch)
(SA Launch of Global Health Watch 2)
Line 58: Line 58:
 
''Global Health Watch 2'' is a significant resource for health professionals and social activists, covering a comprehensive range of topics and drawing attention to the politics of global health and the policies and actions of key actors. It makes clear the need for global health advocates to engage lobbying key actors to do better and to do more, while resisting those who do harm.  
 
''Global Health Watch 2'' is a significant resource for health professionals and social activists, covering a comprehensive range of topics and drawing attention to the politics of global health and the policies and actions of key actors. It makes clear the need for global health advocates to engage lobbying key actors to do better and to do more, while resisting those who do harm.  
  
[[Image:GHW2 Launch Liz Harris.JPG|thumb|left||Liz Harris]]
+
[[Image:GHW2 Launch Liz Harris.JPG|left||Liz Harris]]
[[Image:GHW2 Launch John Coveney.JPG|thumb|left|Prof John Coveney]]
+
[[Image:GHW2 Launch John Coveney.JPG|left|Prof John Coveney]]
[[Image:GHW2 Launch Paul Laris.jpg|thumb|left|Paul Laris]]
+
[[Image:GHW2 Launch Paul Laris.jpg|left|Paul Laris]]
[[Image:GHW2 Launch Panel.jpg|thumb|left|The panel]]
+
[[Image:GHW2 Launch Panel.jpg|left|The panel]]
 
<br clear="all" />
 
<br clear="all" />
 
  
 
== Navigating the Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community - a Workshop with David Korten ==
 
== Navigating the Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community - a Workshop with David Korten ==

Revision as of 07:18, 25 March 2009

Maude Barlow in Conversation - Saturday 4th April 2009, 1pm-3pm

A unique opportunity for anyone with an interest in the politics of water and in particular the common right to water.


The Community Water Summit Action Committee has pleasure in announcing the visit of Maude Barlow to Adelaide on Saturday 4th April 2009. This visit has been arranged in conjunction with Imprints Booksellers of Hindley Street and Maude's publicist in Australia Black Inc. Maude will be fresh from the Australian Water Summit being held at Darling Harbour Sydney from 1-3 April 2009 and the World Water Forum currently being held in Instanbul Turkey. Maude Barlow's "Right to Water" address to the UN Panel on Emerging Issues – 10th December 2008


Maude Barlow in Conversation
Saturday 4th April 2009, 1 pm – 3 pm
Grainger Studio
91 Hindley Street, Adelaide


Bookings Essential – Cost $10
(Tickets are non-refundable & Pre-payment is required)
Tickets from Imprints Booksellers
107 Hindley Street, ADELAIDE SA 5000
Ph (08) 8231 4454 or books@imprints.com.au


Maude Barlow is the author of Blue Covenant – The Global Water Crisis and the Coming Battle for the Right to Water. A recipient of Sweden’s Right Livelihood Award (the “Alternative Nobel”) and a Lannan Cultural Freedom Fellowship, Maude Barlow is head of the Council of Canadians, Canada’s largest public advocacy organisation, and founder of the Blue Planet Project. She is the author of sixteen books and is on the board of Food and Water Watch and the Interna­tional Forum on Globalisation. She was recently appointed as the first Senior Advisor on water issues by Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann, President of the 63rd session of the United Nations.

“Maude Barlow has for decades been a leading voice for water sustainability and justice. In Blue Covenant, she shows us the way.” – David Suzuki


Facilitator - Professor Rhonda Sharp (Hawke Research Unit - University of SA)

Panel Members

Professor Diane Bell – River, Lakes and Coorong Action Group

Julie Pettett – CEO Conservation Council of SA

John Caldecott – President Friends of Gulf St Vincent

Peter Laffan – Chairperson Save Our Gulf Coalition

Darian Hiles – Chairperson Australian Civic Trust Inc

Dr. Ian Douglas – Fair Water Use (Australia)


SA Launch of Global Health Watch 2

The South Australian Launch of Global Health Watch 2 – An Alternative World Health Report (GHW2) was held on the 4th of December at Flinders University. This event was jointly organised by Flinders University, People’s Health Movement, Australia and the Public Health Association (SA Branch). The GHW2 was launched by Professor Fran Baum, Head of the Department of Public Health, Flinders University, and Co-chair of the Global Steering Council of the People’s Health Movement. This was followed by an interesting and pertinent presentation from Mrs Elizabeth Harris, Director of the Centre for Health Equity Training Research and Evaluation, on unemployment and the health system response. A response to the launch was provided by President of the Public Health Association, SA Branch, Professor John Coveney. The final presentation was from Mr Paul Laris, who discussed the strategic directions and plans for PHM SA in 2009. This Launch was attended by about 50 people from academia, Government, the NGO sector and civil society.


Global Health Watch 2 is a significant resource for health professionals and social activists, covering a comprehensive range of topics and drawing attention to the politics of global health and the policies and actions of key actors. It makes clear the need for global health advocates to engage lobbying key actors to do better and to do more, while resisting those who do harm.


Navigating the Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community - a Workshop with David Korten

On July 16, 2008. PHM Oz together with the Conservation Council of SA and Flinders University presented a free workshop aimed at small health and environment groups, social campaigners and people interested in a sustainable future. Numbers were limited and the event quickly became fully subscribed. Dr. David C. Korten is the author of The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community. His previous books include the international best-seller When Corporations Rule the World; and The Post-Corporate World: Life after Capitalism. Dr. Korten is co-founder and board chair of the Positive Futures Network, which publishes YES! A Journal of Positive Futures; founder and president of the People-Centered Development Forum; a founding associate of the International Forum on Globalization; a board member of the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies (BALLE); and a member of the Ventures Network, and the Club of Rome. He holds MBA and Ph.D. degrees from the Stanford Business School, has thirty years experience as a development professional in Asia, Africa, and Latin America and has served as a Harvard Business School professor, a captain in the US Air Force, a Ford Foundation Project Specialist, and a regional adviser to the US Agency for International Development.


In the workshop David set out the key arguments from his book The Great Turning: From Empire to Earth Community. He explained that the linked global crises of climate change, the end of cheap oil, global financial collapse and widespread social disintegration were marking the end of a long and deeply destructive era of human history. This era was characterised by a dominator, male and imperial ethos. Carried to its logical conclusion in the face of these unambiguous signs of unsustainability, this ethos will lead to a suicidal, ‘last- man-standing’ destructive demise for humanity. The alternative is to make ‘the great turning’ to a model based on cooperation and partnership, community, local autonomy and civic participation.


Korten was challenged by the workshop participants and asked whether, given the analysis he had presented, it was not already too late. His response was a pragmatic one. We cannot afford to believe that – for if we do, we do nothing, and it is too late. Only by acting as if we can make the great turning a reality do we have any chance of creating a sustainable and just human society. Events in the few months since his visit seem to support this approach. The global financial crisis (as predicted by Dr. Korten) heightens our alarm, while the election of Barack Obama brightens our hopes. At a local level, the workshop brought together a diverse group, one David Korten would see as a local community working together towards the great turning. David Korten’s talks can be seen on YouTube.


Please email PHM SA for more information or to be included in the South Australian mailing list.

Read about PHM SA past news and events

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox