Category Archives: Economic Justice

The world’s richest governments are failing the world’s poorest people by not living up to promises on aid and trade.

Rio+20: Solidarity Economics

Caritas at Rio+20. Credit : Elodie Perriot/SC

Espanol

Solidarity can be the currency of an alternative economy agreed Caritas representatives at a panel event during Rio+20 Summit, the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development taking place in the Brazilian capital.

Caritas Brazil, France, Peru and Costa Rica and other staff of the Catholic confederation of aid agencies reflected on how to democratize economics so that it works for all humanity and for a greener planet.

Humberto Ortiz from the Church in Peru presented an overview on the impact extractives industries such as logging and mining were having on the Amazon basin. He urged for an economic model for Latin America that promotes solidarity and a green economy through dialogue between the public, private and civil society sectors and that policies must work on all levels. Continue reading

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Rio+20: interview with Caritas Latin America President

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Rio+20 round-up

By James Stella

On Sunday, 19 June, Caritas members attending the Rio+20 Conference on Sustainable Development enjoyed a memorable day when they participated in a Holy Mass with Archbishop Orani Tempesta of Rio de Janeiro at the Metropolitan Cathedral of Rio de Janeiro.

Dedicated to the patron saint of Rio de Janeiro, St. Sebastian, the conical shaped Cathedral is located in downtown Rio. Over 60 Caritas Members filled the Cathedral and their presence was noticeably visible as one could see them proudly displaying their Caritas Rio+20 bandanas.

After the mass a delegation of church and civil societies leaders held a press conference to outline their positions for the much anticipated Rio+20 summit. The delegation emphasised that despite the significant strides made since the advent of Conference 20 years ago, much still remains to be done for governments to embrace the green economy approach and to ensure individuals economic and social rights are preserved. Continue reading

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Rio+20: Development through Solidarity

Caritas hosted a side event on the 18 June on ‘Achieving Sustainable Development through Solidarity Economy: Outstanding Issues and Perspectives of “Converting” Economy into Ecology’.

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High hopes, low expectations for Rio+20

Holy Mass at Cathedral of Rio de Janeiro. Credit: CIDSE

By Roeland Scholtalbers, CIDSE Media and Communication Officer (CIDSE is working with Caritas at the Rio Summit), from Rio de Janeiro.

We have seen shy attempts by politicians to mend things, to address global challenges like poverty and climate change together. But our carbon-driven global economy has marched on in the meantime, increasing material well-being for some, but also fuelling economical, environmental and social inequalities. Climate change, which poses huge challenges to some of the world’s poorest communities experiencing increasingly extreme weather, is an obvious example. The exploitation of natural resources, which leaves the people of some of the world’s most resource-rich countries dirt poor, is another one. Continue reading

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Church hopes Rio +20 Summit will find path towards development

Archbishop Orani João Tempesta of Rio de Janeiro plants a tree at the start of events around the Rio summit

With the planting of a tree, the Brazilian Episcopal Conference, with bishops and priests from the Latin American church, began Mass in the Cathedral of St. Sebastian in the city of Rio de Janeiro.

The faithful prayed for a renewed commitment of world leaders to work for the elimination of poverty and the protection of nature at the UN Rio +20 conference beginning this week.

Archbishop Orani João Tempest of Rio de Janerio and Bishop Leonardo Ulrich Steiner, president of the Brazilian Episcopal Conference held the evnt in Spanish, French, Portuguese and English as a sigh of communion between the countries.

At the start of the Rio +20 Summit, Bishop Ulrich called on the conscience of world leaders and all people of good will to find an alternative development model based on ethics and responsibility for the environment and the human being, on justice, solidarity and the gospel values.

Read the post in Spanish

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Let’s take the bread and share it

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis Policy and Advocacy Director

I start with a loaf of bread: Our daily bread. We need to share it and more importantly provide people the seeds, knowledge and resources to grow it in an often hostile environment. At Mass following the opening day of the Future without Hunger Congress in Vienna, we were reminded by Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez that we should be bringing light to people. This light might be still small but if enough people share it, it will become bright. Continue reading

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Un avenir libéré de la faim n’est pas une utopie

Cardinal Rodriguez during his speech in Vienna. Photos by Ryan Worms/Caritas

Par Ryan Worms

« La faim dans le monde n’est pas une fatalité, c’est une tragédie qui pourrait être évitée. » Par ces mots, le cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga, président de Caritas Internationalis, a mis de l’avant le constat qui mobilise les participants du Congrès sur la faim dans le monde et la sécurité alimentaire durable, organisé par Caritas Autriche, Caritas Internationalis et Caritas Europe et qui s’est ouvert aujourd’hui à Vienne.

Trente-cinq experts de plus de 20 pays sont venus mettre en commun leur expertise sur les causes structurelles de la faim dans le monde et débattre avec 700 délégués en provenance de différentes Caritas, d’organisations de la société civile, de gouvernements et d’institutions internationales. L’objectif de Caritas est de définir les actions à mettre en œuvre pour construire un futur libéré de la faim et dans lequel le droit à l’alimentation soit pleinement respecté. Continue reading

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As the crisis in Greece worsens, Caritas helps Athens’ immigrants

Caritas Greece is working hard to help people who are suffering from the country’s financial difficulties. At a refugee centre for immigrants living in and near Athens, Caritas serves 300 meals a day, offers Greek and English lessons, provides vaccinations for children, and gives out relief kits with clothes, blankets and baby milk.

The charity has been receiving larger numbers of Afghans, Middle Easterners and Africans. Because of the financial crisis, many Greeks are now employing only Greeks, so many immigrants are more in need than ever.

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Related story in French

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CAFOD response to Final G20 communique

CAFOD response to Final G20 communique

CAFOD’s lead economics analyst Christina Weller said:

The kindest interpretation of the results of the Cannes summit is that it’s a work in progress; a more realistic one is that when it came to critical global issues the richest nations on Earth decided to decide later.

The communiqué is short on substance, ideas and commitments – saved, in part, only by the ambitious agenda of the French presidency which meant some critical issues at least got an airing at the G20 table.

As a result the G20 discussed two important reports on innovative financing – the World Bank and International Monetary Fund report on climate finance and the Gates’ report on innovative finance, but the only real commitment is to return to them again later.

We are thankful that the door on these issues is still ajar, and perhaps pushed a little wider open, but it isn’t the firm commitment that many were hoping for.

The ‘global strategy for growth and jobs’ has taken up the majority of discussion time at the two-day summit. David Cameron thinks this was “rightly…the most pressing concern of the Summit”.

But there is little that’s new on financial regulation or the system for managing exchange rates – the core business of the G20 and an underlying cause of continuing problems in the global economy.

Whilst we agree that fixing crises in G20 countries matters for the poorest who will suffer from the fall-out; if that is all that the G20 can cover, then its future is not bright.

Given the brief attention given them, development issues did make a happy appearance in the final communique – with sections on food security, climate change and addressing the challenges of development. But there is little for poor nations to celebrate.

For example, the G20 recognises the long-overdue need for infrastructure investment in poor countries – with two thirds of the population in sub-Saharan Africa lacking access to electricity. However, by picking out eleven large-scale pet projects and pushing private investment, the G20 risks doing more harm than good.

We know that where returns are small, oversight is weak and local communities are not consulted, impacts of private sector investment in infrastructure have had negative impacts on the poorest. The G20 needs to acknowledge these lessons and adapt its much-needed infrastructure plan to include rural roads, health centres and other vital local investments that support poor people’s livelihoods.

A lot of critical discussions have simply been pushed back – the Gates report has resulted in the G20 agreeing that new sources of funding being found for development and climate change should happen ‘over time’. Climate change gets a political nod that the G20 want something to happen at Durban but all we learn about the promising World Bank and IMF report on climate finance was that they had bothered to read it.

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