Are you reading this?
Then you should take this survey. In other words, it’s for people who read aid blogs. We, the aid bloggers, want to know more about you!
Then you should take this survey. In other words, it’s for people who read aid blogs. We, the aid bloggers, want to know more about you!
…if you happen to feel as if you’ve “been trodding on the winepress much too long.”
Featuring the Museum of International Folk Art’s exhibit, “The Arts of Survival: Folk Expression in the Face of Disaster”—a great reminder of the resiliency of the human spirit in the face of tragedy.
Richard Moore, founder of Children in Crossfire in Derry, Ireland, discusses the figurative blind spots for many people as they become involved in aid work. Richard, who was literally blinded by a British soldier at the age of 10, also discusses the value of community and the power of vulnerability.
Highlights from my conversations with the great people I was able to connect with in Ireland – Alessandra Pigni, Richard Moore, Hans Zomer and Clare Mulvany – and thoughts on the opening of the Derry Peace Bridge.
Live tweet transcript from Oxfam’s “The Road to Busan: Ensuring Citizens Drive Their Own Development” session at the World Bank/IMF spring meetings…and a Beatle sings about development?
Calling for specific photographs to help make a video that will imitate the TOMS shoes video for the A Day Without Dignity counter-campaign.
Advice for people embarking on an aid career or any international do-gooder endeavor.
An eclectic collection of articles and posts on international development that did not receive their due tweets from me.