Imagine that you are organizing a training, meeting, or conference about your local environment health care situation, or educational system. In the preparation phase, you ordered some nice t-shirts and tote bags with your logo on them as promotional items to give away. The global impact of this local event is connected to the production of the cotton used in the shirts and the bags.
Although you are organizing an event to support the environment, health care, or education, your event might have negative effects on a global level, which is the exact opposite of what you want to achieve. In this case, you could reduce the negative effects and even contribute to the global good by using fair-trade, organic cotton. Fair-trade items ensure that farmers receive a stable, usually higher salary than normal; organic cotton reduces the use of water and the amount of pesticides.[1]
Source: Facilitator handbook #1 Steps toward action[2]
Contents
References
- ↑ Making a simple pair of jeans takes around 8,000 liters of water. http://www.pan-germany.org/download/br_konv.pdf , Feb. 4th, 2016
- ↑ M. Gawinek-Dagargulia, E. Skowron, N. Zimmermann (Ed.): Steps toward Action; Empowerment for self-responsible initiative; Help your learners to discover their vision and to turn it into concrete civic engagement; Facilitator Handbook #1; MitOst Editions 2016
Matthias Haberl
Project manager for the Austrian development organisation Südwind, freelance trainer, facilitator and author of handbooks and on Competendo.
Block: Book: Steps toward action
Handbook
Kate Allen, Charlotte Dwyer
Global Youth Work
Activities for Global Citizenship
Scotdec and partners from C.E.G.A (Bulgaria), JKC (Lithuania), Future Worlds Centre (Cyprus), Südwind Agentur (Austria) and MTÜ Mondo (Estonia): Read more