Taking back our communities from tourism post COVID – a nine point plan
TAAF lifts up a 9-point plan to reset tourism to a new form of tourism that is based on human rights, justice, equity, local sovereignty, and sustainable development.
TAAF lifts up a 9-point plan to reset tourism to a new form of tourism that is based on human rights, justice, equity, local sovereignty, and sustainable development.
We hear from Catalina Balla (Chile) about the work that the COLECTIVA network is doing related to related to challenging the false dilemma many governments are leading us to: that of either health or that of privacy, and 8...
Governments and corporations have historically used crises as opportunities to introduce new policies that would otherwise be impossible to pass, normalizing them in a new status quo. We speak to Sahar Vardi (Israel) about the new work being done...
Statement from Karibu partner Kairos Palestine on the plans of the Israeli government to annex the West Bank.
Hellen Grace Akwii-Wangusa from Uganda reflects on how the global COVID-19 pandemic has exposed a number of unjust holes in our current economic and political system, while giving a unique opportunity to build a new system that is more...
Digital meeting on COVID-19, how this affects our shared efforts for justice and equality, and what it could mean for future activism, social movements and the World Social Forum (WSF) processes
A delegation from the EcuVoice network in the Philippines is at the UN, lifting up the voices of those directly affected by human rights violations during a session of the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva.
Marcelo will be speaking with a number of Karibu's partners globally about their experiences with struggling for systemic change - both resisting and rebuilding.
Social movements around the world have raised serious concerns that the new emphasis on "blue growth" can actually be understood as a form of "blue colonization". Joey Tau (Papua New Guinea) of the Pacific Network on Globalization (PANG)...
We are living in a dramatic and brutal time in history for social movements around the world. Karibu's secretariat reflects on this as we move into a new decade.