Latest posts from Share The World’s Resources

Read below the most recent content from STWR that includes our editorials, articles, book publications and events. Additional guest content can be viewed by clicking ‘latest posts’ on the main menu above. To keep informed of our activities, please sign up to our newsletter here

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The people’s responsibility to stand in solidarity with the poor

Blog / 9th January 2013

Oxfam’s chief executive makes some thought-provoking observations about transitioning to a sustainable and just world, and points towards an important question: what will it take to spur a mass engagement of ordinary people around the need to end poverty and social injustice?

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The climate deal sham: only sharing can break the deadlock

Article / 17th December 2012

The recent climate talks in Doha were held as if in an alternative reality to distressing developments across the world. But there still remains hope and optimism because there is no possibility of preventing runaway climate change without global sharing and justice.

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The emerging debate on global sharing

News / 17th December 2012

In the last newsletter of 2012, STWR highlights some recent events and discussions on rethinking the global economic order and scaling up sharing in our societies, and stresses the importance of everyone getting involved in the emerging debate around global sharing.

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The human right to the earth

Blog / 13th December 2012

As the United Nations community continues to flesh out a new set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to be unveiled next year, NGO representative Alanna Hartzok proposes “a commons rent approach to public finance for the SDGs based on an ethic of fairly sharing the value of the earth”.

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Why poverty? Because we do not share resources

Blog / 8th December 2012

The recent documentary and debate series called ‘Why Poverty?’ highlighted the extreme differences in living standards and life chances around the world, and once again emphasised that there can never be an end to poverty until the world’s resources are more equally shared.

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