Sentences with phrase «against poverty society»

She has also worked as a legal advocate with Together Against Poverty Society (TAPS) in Victoria, and is currently a board member of PovNet.

Not exact matches

On the economic plane, we have a society in which there are some who have immense wealth as against many who live in abject poverty.
The alleged subordination of the gospel to Karl Marx is illustrated, for example, by charging that «false» liberation theology concentrates too much on a few selected biblical texts that are always given a political meaning, leading to an overemphasis on «material» poverty and neglecting other kinds of poverty; that this leads to a «temporal messianism» that confuses the Kingdom of God with a purely «earthly» new society, so that the gospel is collapsed into nothing but political endeavor; that the emphasis on social sin and structural evil leads to an ignoring or forgetting of the reality of personal sin; that everything is reduced to praxis (the interplay of action and reflection) as the only criterion of faith, so that the notion of truth is compromised; and that the emphasis on communidades de base sets a so - called «people's church» against the hierarchy.
But this positive definition is situated within the context of aid to support the struggle against poverty or as a response to needs not covered by society.
Martin Johnstone, Secretary of the Kirk's Church and Society Council, said: «Over recent years we have consistently spoken out against the growing scandal of funeral poverty.
The foreign debt continues to be an issue and new voices have began to sound the need to look for ways to face it; (ii) At the national level two questions are concentrating increasing attention: one is the reassessment of the necessary role of the state to correct the distortions of a runaway market (currently discussed in Europe and in the discussions about the role the initiatives of «an active state has played in the economic development of Asian countries); the other is the need for a «participative democracy over against a purely representative formal democracy: in this sense the need to strengthen civil society with its intermediate organizations becomes an important concern; (iii) the struggle for collective and personal identity in a society in which forced immigration, dehumanizing conditions in urban marginal situations, and foreign cultural aggression and massification in many forms produce a degrading type of poverty where communal, family and personal identity are eroded and even destroyed.
Keywords: Asia, Cambodia, CCC, CIVICUS, Civil society, Cooperation Committee for Cambodia, Cybercrime, Forum - Asia, GCAP, Global Call to Action Against Poverty, Human Rights, IFP, International Forum of National NGO Platforms, judicial independence, land grabs, SEACA, Trade Unions.
The Global Call to Action Against Poverty (GCAP) is a growing alliance that brings together trade unions, INGOs, the women's and youth movements, community and faith groups and others to call for action from world leaders in the global North and South to meet their promises to end poverty and inequality.GCAP's main aim is to achieve policy and practice changes that will improve the lives of people living in poverty.GCAP adds to existing campaigning on poverty by forming diverse, inclusive national platforms that are able to open up civil society space and advocate more effectively than individual organisations would be able to do on thePoverty (GCAP) is a growing alliance that brings together trade unions, INGOs, the women's and youth movements, community and faith groups and others to call for action from world leaders in the global North and South to meet their promises to end poverty and inequality.GCAP's main aim is to achieve policy and practice changes that will improve the lives of people living in poverty.GCAP adds to existing campaigning on poverty by forming diverse, inclusive national platforms that are able to open up civil society space and advocate more effectively than individual organisations would be able to do on thepoverty and inequality.GCAP's main aim is to achieve policy and practice changes that will improve the lives of people living in poverty.GCAP adds to existing campaigning on poverty by forming diverse, inclusive national platforms that are able to open up civil society space and advocate more effectively than individual organisations would be able to do on thepoverty.GCAP adds to existing campaigning on poverty by forming diverse, inclusive national platforms that are able to open up civil society space and advocate more effectively than individual organisations would be able to do on thepoverty by forming diverse, inclusive national platforms that are able to open up civil society space and advocate more effectively than individual organisations would be able to do on their own.
Category: Asia, End Poverty and Hunger, English, global citizenship education, Millennium Development Goals, NGO, Voluntary Association, Your experiences, Your ideas · Tags: Asia, Cambodia, CCC, CIVICUS, civil society, Cooperation Committee for Cambodia, Cybercrime, Forum - Asia, GCAP, Global Call to Action against Poverty, Human Rights, IFP, International Forum of National NGO Platforms, judicial independence, land grabs, SEACA, Trade Unions
Category: Africa, Asia, Central America, Child Health, Combat HIV / AIDS, End Poverty and Hunger, English, Environmental Sustainability, Europe, Gender Equality, global citizenship education, Global Partnership, Maternal Health, Mercosur, Middle East, Millennium Development Goals, NGO, North America, Oceania, Private Institution, Public Institution, Refugee and displaced, South America, Transversal Studies, Universal Education, Voluntary Association, Your experiences, Your ideas · Tags: 23rd Century, awareness, Che Guevara, Climate Change, Colombia, Eduardo Galeano, Education, El Salvador, Environment, Environmental, Environmental Sustainability, extreme poverty, future, future we want, FW de Klerk, GCAP, Global Call to Action against Poverty, Global Citizens Movement, global citizenship, global citizenship education, Global Education Magazine, Human Rights, Human Rights Education, human rights - based approach to education, human traffic, humanism, humanity, Iberoamérica, José Martí, Latin America, Luther King, Marta Benavides, Mercosur, Mexico, Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize, Peacebuilding, poverty, rural areas, Siglo XXIII, Simón Bolivar, social change, Social Development, solidarity, South Africa, South America, sustainable development, UNESCO, UNHCR, United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, women, Women Rights, world, World Future Society, World we want, woPoverty and Hunger, English, Environmental Sustainability, Europe, Gender Equality, global citizenship education, Global Partnership, Maternal Health, Mercosur, Middle East, Millennium Development Goals, NGO, North America, Oceania, Private Institution, Public Institution, Refugee and displaced, South America, Transversal Studies, Universal Education, Voluntary Association, Your experiences, Your ideas · Tags: 23rd Century, awareness, Che Guevara, Climate Change, Colombia, Eduardo Galeano, Education, El Salvador, Environment, Environmental, Environmental Sustainability, extreme poverty, future, future we want, FW de Klerk, GCAP, Global Call to Action against Poverty, Global Citizens Movement, global citizenship, global citizenship education, Global Education Magazine, Human Rights, Human Rights Education, human rights - based approach to education, human traffic, humanism, humanity, Iberoamérica, José Martí, Latin America, Luther King, Marta Benavides, Mercosur, Mexico, Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize, Peacebuilding, poverty, rural areas, Siglo XXIII, Simón Bolivar, social change, Social Development, solidarity, South Africa, South America, sustainable development, UNESCO, UNHCR, United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, women, Women Rights, world, World Future Society, World we want, wopoverty, future, future we want, FW de Klerk, GCAP, Global Call to Action against Poverty, Global Citizens Movement, global citizenship, global citizenship education, Global Education Magazine, Human Rights, Human Rights Education, human rights - based approach to education, human traffic, humanism, humanity, Iberoamérica, José Martí, Latin America, Luther King, Marta Benavides, Mercosur, Mexico, Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize, Peacebuilding, poverty, rural areas, Siglo XXIII, Simón Bolivar, social change, Social Development, solidarity, South Africa, South America, sustainable development, UNESCO, UNHCR, United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, women, Women Rights, world, World Future Society, World we want, woPoverty, Global Citizens Movement, global citizenship, global citizenship education, Global Education Magazine, Human Rights, Human Rights Education, human rights - based approach to education, human traffic, humanism, humanity, Iberoamérica, José Martí, Latin America, Luther King, Marta Benavides, Mercosur, Mexico, Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize, Peacebuilding, poverty, rural areas, Siglo XXIII, Simón Bolivar, social change, Social Development, solidarity, South Africa, South America, sustainable development, UNESCO, UNHCR, United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, women, Women Rights, world, World Future Society, World we want, wopoverty, rural areas, Siglo XXIII, Simón Bolivar, social change, Social Development, solidarity, South Africa, South America, sustainable development, UNESCO, UNHCR, United Nations, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, women, Women Rights, world, World Future Society, World we want, worldlogy
One way to fight against the effects of poverty and promote a greater overall society was to give additional aid to students most at risk for success in the education institution.
Friends of the Earth groups have fought long and hard to make this initiative a reality and it's a testimony to the work done by African civil society in the fight against energy poverty
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