Tag Archives: christine campeau

Caritas workshop at World Social Forum

By Christine Campeau

This was my first time at the World Social Forum and I must admit, I had no idea what to expect from this event. However, I didn’t expect it would have been this disorganised.

The Universite du Chiekh AntaDiop that housed the event was still filled with students writing exams. The daily programmes were not posted until midday, well after half of the workshops should have already taken place. Plus, once the workshop locations were announced, most of the classrooms were still full of students writing their exams.

As rumour has it, there were so many strikes by both students and teachers that the exam season was still in full swing. The government tried to force the university to clear the rooms but students protested that they should be able to write their exams (rightly so). So while the university and the government battled it out, students protested and the WSF participants presented their workshops in hallways and free corners of the campuses.

It was a real shame to have this many participants walking around in circles desperately looking for daily programmes that were yet to be printed.

But where there’s a will, there’s a way. The Caritas workshop on Climate Change and Forced Migration was planned for the morning of Tuesday 8 February. Eight speakers had prepared excellent presentations and we weren’t about to let disorganisation stand in the way of information sharing.

Abbé Tine and I met at the WSF early in the morning to get any sense of where our workshop would take place. After 30 minutes and no response from the president of the WSF, we decided to take matters into our own hands and convert the Caritas tent into an auditorium.

Within one hour, we had 60 chairs from the Caritas office, a projector, tables, a translator booth with two interpreters, microphones and headsets all ready to go. I can’t describe what a feat this was and how happy I was to see it all come together. Despite the late start, our Caritas workshop filled the tent with an audience of 80-100 people, all eager and willing to contribute to the discussion.

The workshop introduced case studies from Niger, Bangladesh, and Senegal, and models for addressing the problem from Cambodia and Zambia.

It really was a perfect example of how things can be accomplished when people believe in something; all in line with the spirit of the WSF.

Caritas members continued to pull together their efforts throughout the week and were living proof of what we’d chanted during the opening march: “Another world is possible” as long as we are dedicated to making it happen.

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Filed under Economic Justice, World Social Forum 2013

Cancun climate summit: What’s in a name?

Christine Campeau at a Caritas hosted Holy Mass for climate justice. It was a side event to the climate summit in Cancun. Credit: Alberto Arciniega/ Caritas Mexico

By Christine Campeau, Climate Change and Food Security Advisor

Caritas has always worked to serve the poor and most vulnerable people around the world. However ‘who’ those vulnerable people are has come under question at the climate negotiations here in Cancun.

Certain developing countries feel that they are being left out of the group and, as a result, risk losing out on their share of the limited climate funding available that has been made available.

Some countries have challenged the difference between the Bali Action Plan classification of vulnerable countries which includes Small Island Developing States (SIDS), Least Developed Countries (LCDs), and African countries and the list that is found in Article 4.8 of the UNFCCC which includes a much more comprehensive list of eligible countries. Continue reading

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Cancun Climate talks: I heart Kyoto Protocol

I love KP stunt at the Cancun climate talks. Credit Christine Campeau/Caritas

By Christine Campeau, Climate Change and Food Security Advisor Palazzo San Calisto

We were greeted at the CancunMesse convention centre today with an offer to have our picture taken while standing in a heart, holding an ‘I love KP’ sign (KP is short for Kyoto Protocol). And we did. People lined up one by one to show their devotion for the legally binding treaty that is set to expire shortly.

This stunt in support of the Kyoto Protocol came in retaliation to the harsh statement made by Japan on Monday when it announced that it would ‘not inscribe its target under the Kyoto Protocol under any conditions or under any circumstances’. Yes, you heard it correctly. Continue reading

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Filed under Cancun Climate summit, Climate change, Copenhagen Summit

Fungus among us

 

Christine Campeau and Caritas Mongolia Team with cultivated mushroom. Credit Christine Campeau/Caritas

 

By Christine Campeau

If you were a farmer with a nine months growing season, how would you feed your family during the other 3 months of the year? One option would be to purchase food. But what if you had no money? Some farmers sell off their livestock for food, but what if you didn’t have any livestock to sell? Farmers may be able to borrow from their community, but then that leaves them indebted and constantly struggling to keep their heads above water.

For farmers in Krapeur Troum village, a village commune approximately 25km from Phnom Penh in Cambodia, the solution came in the form of a fungus. Mushroom growing, which can be done throughout the year in combination with their seasonal farming, offers a secure source of income to buy the basic necessities during the lean period. So what’s the secret recipe?
Continue reading

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Filed under Climate change

Women and climate justice

By Augustin Baroi, Caritas Bangladesh

By Christine Campeau, Climate and Food Security Analyst

Women are hit harder by climate change than men. Religious and social restraints are two factors that mean they have a limited capacity to adapt.

Due to lack of education and child rearing obligations, 70-80% of female workers in Asia are dependent on the land for their livelihoods.

Ms. Maria Michael, Caritas Pakistan is a 21 year-old farmer who is well aware of discrimination. In rural communities where illiteracy is high, cultural beliefs still dominate as the rule of law.  Since women’s social status is directly linked to their right to own and control land, customary practices have been a focus of debate.

However, land ownership is not a complaint for Ms.Michael. No one from her family, not even a man, is able to gain ownership of the 12 acres plot of government-owned land that her family has been farming for over a century near Sargodha, Pakistan. However, she is well aware of the additional burden that women in her community face in their daily lives. They walk miles to the fields to farm, they work the crops all day, then they walk long distances back to begin their second shift as primary care giver.

In an effort to empower women, Ms. Maria Michael mobilizes women in her area to participate in sustainable agriculture activities. She hosts workshops to educate women on effective organic farming. When the Livelihoods program team based in the Sargodha district organized a cattle festival, Ms. Michael went door to door to encourage women farmers to participate, bringing together over 30 women to benefit from the training. From her time as an active member of Farmer Field School in Rice crops, she has a good knowledge of organic pest control methods.

Mrs Michael uses these skills to guide her family on the best ways to deal with the pests problem in their fields and how to compost to get the greatest yield from their crops. Within the household, Ms. Michael teaches women how to build their own smokeless stoves to reduce the inhalation of smoke. Needless to say, this bright, young women was definitely the best placed to share with the participants of the Southeast Asian Farmers’ (SAFaR) Conference 2010 the increased vulnerability that women face.

Across Asia, a lot of women work as farmers. Since climate change will cause poorer harvests for the most important crops, women in these countries are highly vulnerable. Firstly, climate change will greatly decrease the availability and predictability of women’s food supply. Secondly, womens’ income largely depends on what they grow, and therefore a meager harvest means less income from themselves and their families.

Climate change also often impacts the areas that are the basis of livelihoods for which women are responsible. For example, women usually fetch water, fodder, firewood and sometimes food in poor households. They therefore  have to work harder to find these things when they become scarce.. As primary caregivers, women may see their responsibilities increase as family members suffer more illness due to the fact that climate change will exacerbate their exposure to vector borne diseases.

Climate change may also lead to increasing frequency and intensity of floods and deteriorating water quality. Climate change will impact the availability of water so women will need to travel greater distances to collect water. This will also increase risks to their personal safety and reduce the time spent on leisure activities and in school.

Women living in informal settlements are particularly vulnerable to frequent extreme events of flooding.

To date there has been little women-focused work that specifically looks at climate change mitigation. Therefore, there is a need for analysis of to the impact of floods, droughts, diseases, and other environmental changes and disasters on women, and how they can be protected.

While it may still take a long time for us to fully understand the problems and potential for the role of women in climate change, Ms. Maria Michael will continue to work to minimize inequality and marginalization and to empower the women in her community.

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Filed under Caritas news, Climate change