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Archive for the ‘SOCIAL MEDIA- NON PROFIT’ Category

The world is suffering from hunger, aren’t you a part of it?

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An estimated 1.02 billion people in the world go hungry.

Each year, 3 million under-five children die because they are undernourished.

But we can end hunger. If you don’t know how to, there are people who’ve already come up with the possible sources to show us how to http://www.institutenotes.org/

Written by DIVINISTA

April 2, 2010 at 12:37 am

BE STUPID with Diesel – Social Media Campaign-

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In the campaign, “stupid” actually means “brave,” Ireland says. “It’s a brand new renaissance for the company,” he says. “We’re really getting back to what Diesel is all about. ‘Be Stupid’ is not an ad campaign, it’s a manifesto.”

http://www.diesel.com/be-stupid

Written by DIVINISTA

March 28, 2010 at 5:51 pm

The Face of Human Rights

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http://www.amazon.com/Face-Human-Rights-Walter-K%C3%A4lin/dp/3037780177
Cardboard Boxes and Plastic Tents — Housing Rights as a Human Right

In Afghanistan, political turmoil and war have displaced and broken many of the country’s families and lives, forcing people to live in abandoned houses or buildings. In a photograph taken in 2002, an Afghan mother prepares food on the cement kitchen floor of a deserted house for her young son. The walls are peeling and vandalized, the windows covered in pieces of cardboard — and the house is little refuge from the world outside.

Is the protection of homes, and the right to housing, a human right? In “The Face of Human Rights,” the editors state that the “right to housing is a right to adequate accommodation.”

Rights to prevent the infringement of private housing are essential in upholding human dignity and privacy.

In the United States alone, there are at least 700,000 people without a home, and in Latin America, there are 40 million children estimated to be living on the streets. The right to a protected home is overlooked, but it is a right that is fundamental to living as dignified human beings.

In Las Norias, Spain, Morroccan laborers live in plastic and carboard tents, sleeping and cooking in the flimsy walls as best they can. In another image, an aging Japanese man slowly settles himself into a sturdy cardboard box, hangers hanging from the cardboard sides, the lids of the box propped up to lengthen the walls.

Homes in many countries are no longer places of safety, but places of danger and discrimination instead. In 1992, one man described the destruction of his neighborhood during the Serbian Siege of Bijelhina.

He said, “One of the men in the Yugoslav army uniform then sprayed the house with machine gun fire and the second uniformed soldier threw one hand grenade through the window and one through the door. The grenades must have fallen near the gas bottles because the house exploded and burned to the ground.”

Although the right to housing is not absolute, it is still crucial for governments to protect its people and the homes they live in. In Sri Lanka, Mary Nona, a 37-year-old woman, leaves her home everynight around 5:00 or 6:00 pm to another village in order to avoid the possible night attacks from the Tamil Tiger insurgency. She has been doing this for ten years, taking her pillow and gathering her things for the night away from home. “This is our life,” she says. “We are used to it.”

About the Editors

Walter Kälin is a Member of the UN Human Rights Committee since 2003 and is Representative of the UN Secretary General on the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons since 2004. He is also a Professor of constitutional and international Law at the Faculty of Law of the University of Bern, Switzerland.

Judith Wyttenbach is an academic assistant in the Institute of Public Law at Bern University. She teaches at the Lucerne School of Social Work and has written and spoekn on women’s and children’s rights.

Lars Müller manages a visual communication studio in Switzerland since 1982. He has been teaching since 1985.

Written by DIVINISTA

March 28, 2010 at 2:16 pm

Take Part- Members Project From American Express

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Members Project® from American Express has joined with TakePart to bring you opportunities to make a difference in the lives of others, one step at a time. Take your first step: go to the link: takepart.com/membersproject

Cast your vote every week to help decide which five charities will receive funding from American Express. Voting is open to everyone and there will be five new winners every three months.

Find a volunteer opportunity that’s right for you, and you could be rewarded for your time.

Make a donation with your American Express® Card, or donate Membership Reward® points. You can choose from over a million charities.

Written by DIVINISTA

March 28, 2010 at 3:01 am

Read it, Think it, Play it, EVOKE it- A crash course in changing the world

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Social reality game designer, Jane McGonigal, has been proving to the world for awhile now that video games don’t have to be a waste of time and on March 3rd, with the debut of her latest work, EVOKE, she’s going to do it again.

EVOKE is like SIMS on steriods. You think it’s difficult raising a virtual family in a virtual city? Try virtually saving the world. Through this crash course on social change, you will learn what it takes to move mountains: collaboration, creativity, insight, entrepreneurship, networking, sustainability – and most importantly – stamina. In ten weeks, EVOKE players will receive ten missions based in Third World Africa -that address some of the world’s toughest problems: poverty, hunger, global warming, water security, conflict, disaster relief, health care, education, and human rights.

To succeed, players will have to know much more than just how to maneuver the joystick. McGonigal explains her project as a way “to connect young people in Africa to their counterparts in the developed world in order to empower them to start tackling the world’s difficult issues.” With that in mind, anyone can – and everyone should – play. Not only can you acquire global awareness and critical thinking skills, players will also have the opportunity to apply these assets in the real world.

Those who successfully complete all ten missions in ten weeks will receive certification by the World Bank Institute as a Social Innovator of the Class of 2010. Top players can earn online mentorships with experienced social innovators and business leaders from around the world, as well as scholarships to share their vision for the future at the EVOKE Summit in Washington DC.

Free to play and open to anyone, on March 3rd, EVOKE is sending out an urgent call:

“The Network needs a new hero” and that hero could be you.

Written by DIVINISTA

March 28, 2010 at 2:52 am

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