It also mentioned that governments might be inclined to organise referenda to counteract the «perception that the EU is an «elite - driven» project,» as it notes that notion has been lingering since the start of the recession as «voters increasingly associat [e] the EU
project with austerity, rather than a source of union and prosperity.»
Not exact matches
While much is made of the continuity between Jeremy Corbyn, John McDonnell, Diana Abbott and others
with the legacy
projects of the Labour left, and the absurd attempts by self - proclaimed «moderates» to conjure up the ghost of the early 1980s; the far more significant phenomenon is the discontinuity
with the establishment consensus about
austerity economics, and the development of economic policies by John McDonnell and his team which commit a future Labour government to calibrated state intervention for a capitalist economy that works.
Disillusionment
with what was once called «the
Project» is almost total in the face of grinding
austerity, a double - dip recession that has already lasted 18 months and a jobless rate of 12.2 % and rising.
Exhibitions of his work include Mirror City (curated by Stephanie Rosenthal), Hayward Gallery, London; This is Visual Sociology, Goldsmiths, London;
Austerity & the Body, AutoItalia South East, London; Flow (
with Eric Bell and Kristoffer Frick), Peles Empire, London; Competing Temporalities, Carlos / Ishikawa, London; Consumme, Henry Kinman Gallery, London; When People are Silent Stones Speak, GIG, Copenhagen, Denmark and Speak, Memory, N / V
Projects, London.
It suggests three major changes: 1)
project and policy preparation need to reflect higher risks, where vulnerability assessments and greater use of climate scenario modelling are combined
with a better understanding of interconnections between smallholder farming and wider landscapes; 2) this deeper appreciation of interconnected risks should drive a major scaling up of successful «multiple - benefit» approaches to sustainable agricultural intensification by smallholder farmers; 3) climate change and fiscal
austerity are reshaping the architecture of public international development finance.
People can read about it at theleap.org, which is really about connecting the dots between racial injustice, climate change,
austerity, migration justice, and developing a holistic, transformative agenda, which I think is most urgent — the most urgent
project for progressives
with or without climate change.