« Aba Aristid! » is the first stage
PAPDA DEMANDS THE IMMEDIATE RESIGNATION OF JEAN-BERTRAND ARISTIDE
PAPDA DEMANDS THE IMMEDIATE RESIGNATION OF JEAN-BERTRAND ARISTIDE
Nisrin Elamin at the World Social Forum is a tough act to follow. I hope that those of you who had comments on Nisrin's posts from Mumbai will send them directly to her or to "Grassroots Journal" via the link provided to the left. I hope you will also continue to check out our list of links, where we will be placing other analysis and reflections on this year's World Social Forum.
I'm Kevin Murray, Executive Director of Grassroots International. In the spirit of sharing GRI's experiences as a social change maverick among international NGOs, I will, over the next couple of weeks, reflect on our experience working in Haiti.
There are "ALARMING" new developments in the reconstruction processes in Sri Lanka which may also be the same in other affected countries.
Aid to Palestinian civil society organizations has always been a tough sell in the United States, but perhaps never as tough as it is today.
"[Water is] one of the world's great business opportunities. It promises to be to the 21st century what oil was to the 20th." Fortune, May 2000
More than 450 registrants, including activists, community workers and supporters of Grassroots joined us on November 15th for a full day of discussions and workshops and a chance to meet our d
The new world order on display in Iraq places new demands on the U.S. humanitarian community. The Wolfowitz-Perle doctrine of pre-emptive action against perceived external threats preserves a role for humanitarian intervention. In fact, it may make humanitarian response a growth industry. The role of relief organizations in Iraq raises many questions, however, and these questions deserve the continuing attention of the movement that sought to avoid this war in the first place.
In 1997, Grassroots International released a research study entitled "Feeding Dependency, Starving Democracy: USAID Policies in Haiti." Offering an in-depth examination of USAID development policies in Haiti, the study concluded that, as the title suggests, official aid actually damaged the very aspects of Haitian society it was allegedly trying to fix – namely it created a lack of democracy and too much dependency.