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2011 Global Social Work Student Conference Silver School of Social Work – New York University 27 March 2011. www.globalsocialagenda.org. Abye Tasse - IASSW Charles Abbey - ICSW Gary Bailey – IFSW David N Jones – 2012 International Programme Committee New York City March 2011.
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2011 Global Social Work Student Conference Silver School of Social Work – New York University 27 March 2011
Abye Tasse - IASSW Charles Abbey - ICSW Gary Bailey – IFSW David N Jones – 2012 International Programme Committee New York City March 2011
3 International Organizations IASSW International Association of Schools of Social Work ICSW International Council on Social Welfare IFSW International Federation of Social Workers
Why are we doing this? The three organisations (IASSW, ICSW, IFSW) have set up a common platform to help steer The Global Agenda process And to support colleagues around the world in their deliberations and mobilisation initiatives
Vision for the Agenda process • To claim/reclaim the priority of social action • To create a collective voice of those in social work and social development and in social work education • To develop a process for setting a common agenda • To strategise the implementation of actions and to develop ways of monitoring, evaluating and improving our efforts
New Challenges - New Strategies The development of a Global Agenda gives us the opportunity to: • take stock of our past experiences • to articulate a new and crucial vision for engagement that can • mobilise our members, our partners and beyond
Purpose of 2010 & 2012 Global Congresses Begin a process of shared engagement in 2010 Stimulating a larger global movement Rebuilding confidence Focusing on implementation and action in 2012
Outcomes from Hong Kong 2010 Over 3,000 participants met in Hong Kong and agreed to launch a global movement to address the major challenges of our societies Major and relevant social issues that connect within and across our profession have been identified in The Agenda and provide a basis for consultation
Towards World Social Work Day 2012 • First draft – Hong Kong - June 2010 • Revised – September 2010 • Consultation – October 2010 • Review of responses – December 2010 – themes from feedback identified and disseminated (no revision at this stage) • Consultation – February 2011 • World Social Work Day – 15 March 2011 - world-wide discussion
Towards World Social Work Day 2012 Information and communication strategy - Global organisations stimulate engagement and ownership World Social Work Day 2012 - 20 March 2012 • The Agenda officially submitted to the United Nations Secretary General • Every Region submits The Agenda to continental organisations (African Union, ASEAN, European Union, Mercosur, etc.) • National groupings submit The Agenda to their governments
Communication and Mobilisation after WSWD 2011 • Revise Agenda statement taking account of feedback • Activate social networks • Commission publications • Develop materials to support debate • Strengthen lobbying, diplomacy and influence • Link with user groups
Universal Declaration of Human Rights - Article 25 “Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services, and the right to security in the event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his control. Motherhood and childhood are entitled to special care and assistance. All children, whether born in or out of wedlock, shall enjoy the same social protection” (1948)
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) ‘The MDG’s are global time-bound and quantified targets for addressing extreme poverty in its many dimensions - income, poverty, hunger, disease, lack of adequate shelter, and exclusion - while promoting gender equality, education, and environmental sustainability. They are also basic human rights - the rights of each person on the planet to health, education, shelter, and security as pledged in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN millennium declaration.’ Investing in Development: A Practical Plan to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals (2002)
Previous areas of local,national and global engagement • Poverty • Disaster prevention and intervention • Peace-building processes • Human rights • Challenges across the life cycle • Disabilities • Partnership with Service Users/ Consumers • Interdisciplinary practice and policy
The 4 themes • Social and economic inequalities within countries and between regions • Dignity and worth • Environmental sustainability • Importance of human relationships
Social and economic inequalities within countries and between regions Recent and continuing economic crisis Damaging interventions chosen in response (e.g. supporting financial systems while cutting social support and development) Absence of a social protection floor
Social and economic inequalities within countries and between regions Increasing rates of poverty and other forms of social inequalities Worsening marginalisation of populations and of the working poor Community disintegration
Dignity and worth • Human rights issues in relation to social, economic, cultural and political situations • Respect for diversity and different belief systems, especially indigenous and first people’s voices
Dignity and worth • Political instabilities, violence, dominations, erosion of peace building processes, • Terrorism and mode of responses by states and the modalities of handling global conflicts • Migration, refugees, trafficking, immigrants, immigration and ways of handling these issues
Environmental Sustainability • Disasters of natural and human origin - management & prevention • Involvement of local communities in developing responses • Implications for sustainable social development • Protecting physical environment • Proactive engagement with social, human and ecological development
Importance of human relationships Family and relationship issues and challenges across the life span emerge as a major concern in relation to the transformation of the world
Importance of human relationships For example • Children and families • Disabilities • Health and mental health • Ageing • Drugs and substance abuse • Violence within domestic and intimate relationships
Since the 2010 Hong Kong conference, numerous initiatives have taken place across the globe Feedback from the first consultation in 2010 demonstrated that issues identified in the draft Global Agenda are endorsed by the majority of the members who provided feedback Action since Hong Kong 2010
Feedback from the first consultation – additional topics Improving access to social work education Health issues Differing local and regional agendas Social protection mechanism for all Indigenous Peoples and UN Declaration Intergenerational Equity Gender All forms of Discrimination Knowledge generation and sharing
Feedback from the first consultation – additional topics Social and economic inequalities • conflictual and post-conflictual situations; vulnerability of people in low income countries to global pressures - individual & community • “social, health and economic inequalities within countries and between regions” • health consequences Dignity and worth of the person • religion and human rights issues; human rights issues in relation to social, health, economic, cultural and political situations Environmental sustainability • natural resources & healthy communities; environmental sustainability for health
Strategic challenge Can we agree on a set of priorities, or do we continue to develop others?
Together we build the agenda Together we face the challenge Together we thrive