Search Results for: living questions
Loving the questions V
Last semester’s reflections from teaching “Storytelling and Communicating for Change” in the University of Vermont Masters of Leadership for Sustainability program.
Loving the questions
Reflections from teaching “Storytelling and Communicating for Change” in the University of Vermont Masters of Leadership for Sustainability program.
My people
Decolonization is recognizing, interrogating, and challenging the forces/impact of domination, oppression, and external control in our lives (bodies, families, organizations, institutions, systems) that remain today.
Keep going in (Part IV)
“How do we help people understand: you don’t have to cling, you don’t have to dominate, you don’t have to hide, you don’t have to confine yourself.” PART IV of interview with Onyango Otieno
Back home
“COVID-19 and the climate crisis are asking me to move towards everything that home offers.”
Welcome to the uncertainty
7 ways I can “show up” to help shift how the global development sector fundamentally operates during and after COVID-19
Serving with Cultural Humility
“…cultural humility [is about] accepting the invitation to engage in a lifelong commitment to self-evaluation and self-critique, while becoming a student of those I serve.” A guest post by Silvia Austerlic.
The invitation: This is what it feels like (Part II)
Deep shifts in our consciousness as do-gooders are happening. Consider invitations as an opening for transformation.
6 ways to create more ethical fundraising stories
It’s not enough to simply share stories of “the poor” to raise money; we also need to care HOW we share their stories. A guest post by Melissa Pack
You’re invited: Healing Solidarity
An online (and free!) conference about reimagining international development, September 17-21.
De-colonising development is both personal and political
“Decolonising development is a complex process…It invites us to consider how we perpetuate colonial practices in our everyday work, and whether we do enough to challenge these methods of learning, working and doing.” A guest post by Grace Labeodan
The cost of diversity without inclusion
A guest post by Rosebell Kagumire on being a Black woman and working in a white male-dominated aid industry.