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"Direct action: when and why?"- Dr Kumi Naidoo, Executive Director, Greenpeace International 

Oxford Martin School
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"We believe that intensifying peaceful civil disobedience is not only ethically justifiable but morally necessary," Greenpeace Executive Director Kumi Naidoo told The Independent last year. In his Distinguished Public Lecture for the Oxford Martin School, Dr Naidoo will look at when and why direct action should be deployed, drawing on recent campaigns such as last year's protest at an Arctic oil drilling rig, which saw activists arrested by Russian authorities and held for 100 days.
Dr Kumi Naidoo is the Executive Director of Greenpeace International. In addition to leading the organisation to critical campaign victories and augmenting its influence in international political negotiations, Naidoo has been responsible for promoting considerable growth and activity by Greenpeace in the Global South. He has also been influential in fostering further cooperation between Greenpeace and many diverse parts of civil society in the fight to avert catastrophic climate change and promote environmental justice.
Naidoo became involved in South Africa's liberation struggle at the age of 15 and as a result of his anti-apartheid activities, was expelled from high school. He was very involved in neighbourhood organisation, youth work in his community, and mass mobilisations against the apartheid regime. In 1986, Naidoo was arrested, charged with violating the state of emergency regulations and was forced underground for almost a year before fleeing to exile in England. During this time he was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford where he later earned a doctorate in political sociology.
After Nelson Mandela's release in 1990, Naidoo returned to South Africa to work on the legalization of the African National Congress. During the democratic elections in 1994 he directed the training of all electoral staff in the country and was one of the official spokespersons of the Independent Electoral Commission.
Naidoo was the founding executive director of the South African National NGO Coalition (SANGOCO), an umbrella body for the South African NGO community. Moved by the fact that South Africa has one of the highest rates of violence against women, he also served as convener of the National Men's March against Violence on Women and Children in 1997.
From 1998 to 2008, Naidoo was the Secretary General of CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation, which is dedicated to strengthening citizen action and civil society throughout the world.
Naidoo also chaired the Partnership for Transparency Fund that supports civil society efforts to fight corruption globally. He played a key role in proposing and supporting the creation of the civil society index, which is today a recognised tool to measure the health and impact of civil society. In 2010, Naidoo wrote Boiling Point: Can Citizen Action Save the World, which gestured towards the possibility of the Arab Spring and the Occupy Movement.
Naidoo has also served as a board member of the Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID), the world's largest gender justice network. In 2012 he was appointed to the UN Women's Global Civil Society Advisory Group.
In 2003 he was appointed by the former Secretary General of the United Nations to the Eminent Persons Panel on UN Civil Society Relations. He was also invited by the UN Secretary General recently to serve on the MEN ENGAGE Board, which seeks to get men involved around issues of gender equality and he served as President of the civil society alliance 'Global Campaign for Climate Action' (GCCA) from 2009 to 2012, of which Greenpeace is a founding member. Kumi Naidoo became Executive Director of Greenpeace International on November 15, 2009.
Oxford Martin School,
University of Oxford
www.oxfordmartin.ox.ac.uk

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7 сен 2024

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Комментарии : 7   
@AlxBrb
@AlxBrb 10 лет назад
Incredibly inspiring. Thanks!
@JamesADavies
@JamesADavies 10 лет назад
"Not giving your life, but giving the rest of your life". Inspiring words those!
@SergeiRomanoffelevenCubed
@SergeiRomanoffelevenCubed 9 лет назад
Kumi, by saying that your Hollywood movie star was just reading a script ... we plainly see that embracing that actor's ability to convey with smooth progression is distracted by the sight of that blasted script.
@bohnstube
@bohnstube 10 лет назад
According to Greenpeace co-founder Patrick Moore, who testified in front of a Senate committee, “There is no scientific proof that human emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) are the dominant cause of the minor warming of the Earth’s atmosphere over the past 100 years,” according to Moore’s prepared testimony. “Today, we live in an unusually cold period in the history of life on earth and there is no reason to believe that a warmer climate would be anything but beneficial for humans and the majority of other species.” Moore went on to point out that "“It is important to recognize, in the face of dire predictions about a [two degrees Celsius] rise in global average temperature, that humans are a tropical species,” Moore said. “We evolved at the equator in a climate where freezing weather did not exist. The only reasons we can survive these cold climates are fire, clothing, and housing.” “It could be said that frost and ice are the enemies of life, except for those relatively few species that have evolved to adapt to freezing temperatures during this Pleistocene Ice Age,” he added. “It is ‘extremely likely’ that a warmer temperature than today’s would be far better than a cooler one.” Indeed, cold weather is more likely to cause death than warm weather. RealClearScience reported that from “1999 to 2010, a total of 4,563 individuals died from heat, but 7,778 individuals died from the cold.” Only in 2006 did heat-related deaths outnumber cold deaths. In Britain, 24,000 people are projected to die this winter because they cannot afford to pay their energy bills. Roughly 4.5 million British families are facing “fuel poverty.” “The fact that we had both higher temperatures and an ice age at a time when CO2 emissions were 10 times higher than they are today fundamentally contradicts the certainty that human-caused CO2 emissions are the main cause of global warming,” Moore said. “When modern life evolved over 500 million years ago, CO2 was more than 10 times higher than today, yet life flourished at this time,” he added. “Then an Ice Age occurred 450 million years ago when CO2 was 10 times higher than today.” Even though poking at these totally brainwashed "cool kids" and the old hippies who still believe this old Al Gore piper-ed Chicken Little fairy tale does indeed have its charm, it really is sad that this lunatic thinking still exists.
@hiereg
@hiereg 10 лет назад
Alas, I guess I write in vain and you're nothing but a troll. But I won't let you write your "facts" unchallenged. "Climate change: 97% of climate scientists agree" It's called "scientific consensus". Check this climate.nasa.gov/scientific-consensus BTW Patrick Moore is, as far as I know, not involved with Greenpeace, not since 1986. He's supported nuclear energy since then, for example, and gets paid by companies he was once opposed to. Additionally it's not about "global warming", but more exactly "global climate change". Which means that some areas may get colder, other areas may get warmer. You try to construct with your numbers an impression that is quite different from reality, a reality which many people have to cope with. Did you even watch the lecture?
@bohnstube
@bohnstube 10 лет назад
Take your concerns up w/ Patrick Moore. I'm just not interested in senseless go-rounds with those who'll grasp at any straws simply trying convince anyone who'll listen to their nonsense, that "global warming", "climate change" or any other term that'll be dreamed up next to justify what is only a planet-wide wealth redistribution scheme, is indeed either real, and/or puts the earth in any kind of real danger. Bye now.
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