A Manifesto for Action
TRANSCEND MEMBERS, 22 Jul 2024
David Adams | Transition to a Culture of Peace – TRANSCEND Media Service
13 Jul 2024 – Last month’s blog requested your suggestions on how to relaunch a global movement for the culture of peace.
You responded handsomely and there are 10 suggestions printed at the bottom of the blog.
One of the suggestions came from David Hazen. In subsequent correspondence with him, and with the engagement of a third David, David Wick, we have come up with a more refined initiative, for which we again request your suggestions.
Request for proposal
Does the state of deadly world conflict suggest to you that after years of experience in the development of a culture of peace we must renew and amplify our efforts?
We are writing to you in the hope that you can help us develop an interactive system on the Internet that would inspire people around the world to take action for a culture of peace.
To begin this century, in the year 2000, the United Nations declared the International Year for the Culture of Peace. The UN adopted a resolution that defined the culture of peace and proposed 8 action areas: human rights, peace education, sustainable development, women’s equality, democratic participation, tolerance and solidarity, free flow of information and disarmament and security. During the year, 75 million people signed the Manifesto 2000 promising to work for a culture of peace in their daily lives. The paragraphs of the Manifesto corresponded to the programme areas of the UN programme of action.
But the culture of peace did not develop as we had hoped, and now we need it more than ever!
We propose taking up the Manifesto 2000 where it left off, renaming it the Manifesto 2025, gathering signatures once again and initiating action.
We need to go beyond signatures and inspire people to take action in their daily lives as part of a global movement for a culture of peace. We need an internet system that promotes this movement. It needs to be interactive.
Ideally, it could encourage small working groups to make a commitment to the culture of peace, beginning with an exchange of their own values, feelings, and experiences and leading to the development and implementation of actions. Such a system could be partly automatic including a way to upload photos and descriptions of their comments and actions so they could be shared with other groups, with an effective means to avoid spam content.
There would need to be a way to exchange questions and answers, and, although some questions could be answered automatically, others would require human intervention by the system managers.
To make the system grow, participants could be encouraged to promote other similar working groups, and there could be means for direct messaging between groups.
The system should be simple enough for people of all ages and levels of education to use and should be available in several languages.
The three of us, being from an older generation, have previously developed websites in which we tried to get interaction and discussion from readers, but we couldn’t make it work. It seems that the task of developing interaction and discussion on the Internet is not an easy task!
For that reason, we turn to you, members of a newer generation, for your advice and, if possible, proposals.
Do you know of any system on the internet that could succeed in developing the kind of interaction that would motivate people to take action for a culture of peace as described above? Or can you propose how to develop such a system?
We have enough resources to produce a website, but not enough to pay experts for its development.
The system should be based on the definition of the culture of peace in the UN Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace, and its everyday version in the Manifesto 2000, re-named the Manifesto 2025.
Click on the link here to read the UN Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace. Go to the bottom of the page to click on the language that you want.
Click on the link here to read the Manifesto 2000. And click on this other link to read where the 75 million signatures were gathered.
We look forward to your response, even if just to say that you will think about it.
Peace through struggle and patience,
David Adams, Culture of Peace News Network
David Hazen, Eugene City of Peace & Compassionate Action Network
David Wick, President, Pathways to Peace
Please feel free to send this request to anyone you think can propose an effective interactive system.
Again, as last month, the space is open below (after the French version) for you to enter your suggestions.
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Dr. David Adams is a member of the TRANSCEND Network for Peace Development Environment and coordinator of the Culture of Peace News Network. He retired in 2001 from UNESCO where he was the Director of the Unit for the UN International Year for the Culture of Peace. Previously, at Yale and Wesleyan Universities, he was a specialist on the brain mechanisms of aggressive behavior, the history of the culture of war, and the psychology of peace activists, and he helped to develop and publicize the Seville Statement on Violence. Send him an email.
Go to Original – decade-culture-of-peace.org
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