Showing posts with label UN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UN. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 January 2020

Humanity Care: UPGs and SDGs 7

Member Care Updates

Special News--January 2020

Issue 129
Member Care Updates
Expanding the global impact of member care
Working together for wellbeing and effectiveness


Special News--January 2020
Following Jesus Globally

The Global Pearl of Great Price
Applications for Member Care and Mission


The Pearl of Great Price
Detail from cover: 
Global Member Care Volume Two (2013)

Whoever serves me must follow me;
and where I am, my servant also will be.
My Father will honor the one who serves me
.

John 12:26 NIV 

Warm greetings!

In this Update we feature one item: a short article that we jointly authored, just published online in the Lausanne Global Analysis. In it we distill several of our core perspectives and strategies for staying current and relevant in view of the many new challenges and opportunities for serving Jesus in our world.


Following Jesus Globally: Engaging the World through Global Integration
--The article is also in French, Spanish, and Portuguese (official translations by the Lausanne Movement). We also link to a copy of the article which has a translation tool for 50 languages (not official translations by the Lausanne Movement).
--We list five suggestions at the end of this Update to stimulate discussions and applications of this article for mission and member care.
--We plan to host online round tables in 2020 as a way to further interact with colleagues about the themes in this article.

Please consider discussing and sharing this Update/article with your colleagues and networks. And join the conversation--consider 
writing a short comment at the end of the article. Many thanks!

See also:
--
Into the Communities of Unreached Peoples (MC Update, June 2019)
--
Righteous and Relevant Leaders (MC Update, June 2018)
--
Global Member Care Model—Seven Spheres (MC Update, February 2017)
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Our Special News-Updates 1) promote the wellbeing and effectiveness (WE) of staff and sending groups and 2) support the diversity of colleagues with member care responsibilities. The focus is on the mission sector with applications for/from the overlapping health, development, and humanitarian sectors.
Warm greetings from Geneva,
Kelly and Michèle

     
--Share your comments and resources on our MCA Facebook page 
--Send us your ideas and resources for future MC Updates
MCAresources@gmail.com


Featured Resources
Following Jesus Globally
The Global Pearl of Great Price
Applications for Member Care and Mission


UN photo (UNRWA)
Palestinian refugees in Yarmouk, Syria (January 2014)


Global Integration:
A framework for actively and responsibly engaging with our world,
collaborating locally through globally for God’s glory.

For the last 10 years we have been working increasingly across sectors (humanitarian, health, development, peace-security, United Nations) as psychologists in mission. Central to our work has been a simple, strategic framework which we call  Global Integration (GI). GI is a framework for actively and responsibly engaging with our world, collaborating locally through globally for God’s glory.
What's in the Article?
In Following Jesus Globally, we share our updated description of the GI framework and present the material in terms of three strategic “GI Directions” to carefully and prayerfully consider:

--Following Jesus into Humanity Care
--Following Jesus with Global Integrity
--Following Jesus as Global Integrators.

We conclude this short article with a checklist of seven “directional commitments” for engaging in our world strategically and relevantly, locally and globally. The 20+ end notes include many additional perspectives and resources too. 


What Does it Mean?
Some Applications for Member Care and Mission

Following Jesus Globally, like the GI framework itself, is meant to help us forge new relationships and pursue new opportunities for addressing major issues affecting our world and especially the Church-Mission Community’s work among unreached peoples. It supports our efforts for being salt and light for God’s glory; promoting the growth and development of workers in the context of sacrifice, stressful work, and prudent risk; calling upon our best selves--the common sense of our human belonging, identity, and mutual responsibility--as we seek to engage our precarious, perilous, yet precious world as followers of Jesus Christ.

Here are five areas of application for the GI Directions emphasized in the article (humanity care, global integrity, global integrators). How can these GI Directions help us to:

--Support mission workers and sending groups in their well-being and effectiveness?
--Equip mission workers and sending groups with tools and opportunities for their work?
--Equip member care colleagues who work with others besides mission staff?
--Support colleagues across sectors via materials developed in member care/mission?
--Stay informed about and pray for current and crucial issues facing humanity?

Notes
--For more ideas for applying GI Directions including across sectors, see the 
Volume 2--Application Section on the website for the Global Member Care book series.
--Here is a 
separate link a copy of the English version which provides a translation tool into 50 languages. These additional translations are separate from the three official-professional translations done for the Lausanne Movement’s Global Analysis (French, Spanish, Portuguese). We note that online translations are helpful yet have limits, as the technical terms and idioms, for example, are not always easily translated or understood. 


Wednesday, 16 December 2015

Global Integrators--23

GI Partnership:
At the Global Tables and in the Global Trenches

Image from the UN's Partnership for SDGs website

We think that the time is coming for a diversity of colleagues to join together intentionally, visibly, and practically on behalf of global integration (GI). GI put simply is how we skillfully integrate our lives and values on behalf of the issues facing humanity. Likewise we think that the time is coming for colleagues to carefully reflect and act on what it means to be good global learners-practitioners--to seriously consider what it means to be what we are calling global integrators (GI-People).
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You can make comments at the end of this entry.
See also our GI Facebook page to comment on
 the MC Updates and the GI Updates.
.....
The material below is from Staying Current-Navigating the News
(Global Integration Update, December 2015, Personal Reflections).
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To say “Your side of the boat is sinking” makes no sense in view of the fact that we are all passengers on the same precarious global boat. We must all do our part to make sure that the Sustainable Development Goals do not lapse into the Fatigue-able Development Goals or worse, morph into a set of Sustainable Survival Goals.
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We believe that a variety of people must be at the “global tables” in order to help shape and influence agendas, policies, and action in the “global trenches.” That includes people from all countries, sectors, and faith backgrounds, who are informed and skilled, and dedicated to the common good. The UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (Transforming Our World) explicitly encourages such diverse and competent involvement and encapsulates it in Sustainable Development Goal 17: “Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalize the global partnership for sustainable development.” (see also the partnership examples and updates at Partnerships Engagement for the Sustainable Development Goals)
  

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One of the main challenges in working internationally [in GI] is how best to convey important perspectives and arrive at consensus given the diversity of people/organizations around the world who are involved or want to be involved in global affairs. This challenge includes how to make room at the global table and in the global trenches for perspectives/agendas that are influenced by one’s own national, sectoral, institutional, and/or personal interests as well as one’s world view (and which may or may not contribute towards the common good).

It is often pointed out by people of faith that the Agenda is highly secularized and does not include God and dependence on God in the picture. While this is true, it can be argued that this “omission” is a necessary reality given humanity’s diversity and the need to find common ground (vs it being humanistic arrogance or anti-religious). We believe it is important to understand, apply, and critique the Agenda (just like other global efforts/affairs) according to one’s own world view and beliefs-values. Our
CORE Member Care weblog is currently dealing with these issues, as part of the “Global Integrators” series. Two of the main assertions are the importance of personal transformation for social transformation and the importance of moral development for sustainable development.

The Agenda in our view is a crucial rallying point for the world community to truly make a difference on the horrific conditions in which so many fellow humans live. Two stats in particular come to our minds: one billion urban slum dwellers; 1.5 billion people living in settings exposed to violence and conflict that threaten their physical and mental integrity. There are many more stats like these of course that shine light on conditions of great need, vulnerability, and exploitation in our world, including forced migration, human trafficking, gender-based violence, gender inequality, maternal health and safety, education, corruption, and many other areas addressed by the Agenda.

Is the Agenda part of some conspiracy to weaken national sovereignty, undermine one’s freedom or faith, or usher in an authoritarian world order? Not in our view. Which is not to say however that this Agenda, like similar global efforts, should not be carefully monitored and critiqued, including the extent that it goes after the systemic influences/structures that prop up global injustices and inequities. And which is not to say that the Agenda, like any good thing, could not be somehow high-jacked for ill-intentions. Keep in mind that the Agenda is NOT a legally binding document or treaty, or something being forced on people or governments.  It certainly has moral weight and major influence (and so it should) but it is fundamentally a voluntary set of consensually derived aspirational goals in light of the serious issues facing humanity-planet.

Having just come back from a trip that included connecting with urban refuges in the Middle East and the poor in Africa—people in desperate situations—we frankly do not have much patience for armchair criticisms that trivialize or denigrate the work of the humanitarian-development sector. We appreciate and affirm the combined efforts of the UN, governmental, and civil society sectors and its dedicated personnel who take risks and make sacrifices often at great personal cost. We do however appreciate informed critiques (including our own!) and know that there is much room for improvement and at times for confrontation within the humanitarian-development sector. (see the
World Humanitarian Summit website for many examples, including the September 2015 synthesis report Restoring Humanity: Global Voices Calling for Action)
 
Excerpts from Transforming Our World (September 2015)
We finish with some core quotes from the Agenda that relate to partnership—to encourage us all as we seek to work together in GI at the global tables and in the global trenches.
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 “We are determined to mobilize the means required to implement this Agenda through a revitalised Global Partnership for Sustainable Development, based on a spirit of strengthened global solidarity, focussed in particular on the needs of the poorest and most vulnerable and with the participation of all countries, all stakeholders and all people.” (Preamble)

“The scale and ambition of the new Agenda requires a revitalized Global Partnership to ensure its implementation. We fully commit to this. This Partnership will work in a spirit of global solidarity, in particular solidarity with the poorest and with people in vulnerable situations. It will facilitate an intensive global engagement in support of implementation of all the Goals and targets, bringing together Governments, the private sector, civil society, the United Nations system and other actors and mobilizing all available resources.” (paragraph 39)

"We the Peoples" are the celebrated opening words of the UN Charter. It is "We the Peoples" who are embarking today on the road to 2030. Our journey will involve Governments as well as Parliaments, the UN system and other international institutions, local authorities, indigenous peoples, civil society, business and the private sector, the scientific and academic community – and all people. Millions have already engaged with, and will own, this Agenda. It is an Agenda of the people, by the people, and for the people – and this, we believe, will ensure its success.” (paragraph 52)
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Note for this weblog entry:
We also want to mention the need to address global injustices and global inequities related to the current global governance systems--a central issue which relates to but is not sufficiently addressed by  SDG 10: "Reduce inequality within and between countries." For example with regards to health, consider this perspective: "Power asymmetry and global social norms limit the range of choice and constrain action on health inequity; these limitations are reinforced by systemic global governance dysfunctions and require vigilance across all policy arenas....Global governance for health must be rooted in commitments to global solidarity and shared responsibility; sustainable and healthy development for all requires a global economic and political system that serves a global community of healthy people on a healthy planet. " (The Lancet-University of Oslo Commission on Global Governance for Health, The Lancet, Feb. 2014,  p. 5)