Jason Rezaian – Iran & USA

Linked with A World Between, and with The Iran Media Service.

He makes frequent trips to Iran, and has made a variety of reports for the San Francisco Chronicle across different media, blending articles, blogs, video reports and podcasts to offer a rounder picture of news from Iran. He also serves as a guide to other Western journalists, most recently for Christopher Hitchens of Vanity Fair. His blog « Inside Iran » is currently featured on the San Francisco Chronicle’s website.

He says: ”I’ve also written many articles on Iran and produced and appear in a feature length documentary about Iran, and I am available to publications and television networks unable to send journalists to Iran … I am one of a very few United States citizens who is able to freely travel to and from Iran, and work there as well ».

Read: Holocaust Conference, Iran’s Holocaust cartoon exhibition, by:Jason Rezaian, December 13 2006.

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Jason Rezaian – Iran & USA

He is the Founder and Director of The Iran Media Service, founded in 2000.

Read: Tourists in a divided kingdom, Mosques, Starbucks found in Saudi Arabia, by Jason Rezaian, December 10, 2006.

He is a documentary filmmaker based in Marin, CA who runs a blog on sfgate.com called Inside Iran. (See SFgate).

He is also an Iranian-American freelance journalist whose work on Iran has been featured in Vanity Fair and the San Francisco Chronicle.

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María del Carmen Sarthes – Argentina

Linked with Catholics for the Right to Decide.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: “In order to be able to help raped and maltreated women, they first have to recognize themselves as victims of violence”.

She tells: « The priest said: be patient, your husband may have had a bad day. Wait on him with joy and make him some good food. That was in opposition to what the Gospel states which is that violence is violence and that it cannot be justified ».

She maintains: « It was verified the fact that women have to bear the responsibility over sexuality ».

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María del Carmen Sarthes – Argentina

She works for the Católicas pelo Direito de Decidir / Catholics for the Right to Decide.

She has been weaving for 23 years. Her name is María del Carmen Sarthes. She comes from Argentina. With this traditionally female activity, she weaves hope, fighting for the rights of women, children and adolescents. She supports raped and maltreated women, gives workshops and seminars about sexual and reproductive health and against violence. She marches, teaches, accompanies and continues weaving. She has a husband, four sons and female companions.

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Rahela Khatun – Bangladesh

Linked with The Bangladesh Environmental Lawyers Association BELA.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: « Earlier all I did was sit at home, cook and obey my husband’s orders. I never felt that I was of any worth! After joining this landless people’s group, I came out of the house, got to know other people and learnt the language of public speaking. Now, I do not think only about my own family, but also about the development of my country. Now, I am a person who can speak against injustice, mobilize people to join our struggle against corrupt machineries, and fight for poor peoples’ rights to life and livelihood ».

She also publicly raise questions: « Why should we not come out? We are not doing anything against the religion? » (The moulavi, head priest of the local mosque, warned Rahela’s husband, telling him that she was doing un-Islamic things, such as attending meetings with unknown men and going out on her own – bepurdah (without a veil). None of this served to stop Rahela.

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Rahela Khatun – Bangladesh (even in the original size of this photo you could not see her face – too dark / hidden).

She works for the Noai Landless Women Organization, and for the Deluti Landless Union Committee.

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Drucilla K. Barker – USA

Linked with Microcredit and Women’s Poverty, and with Good Governance and Participatory Development.

She is Professor of Economics and Director of Women’s Studies, Hollins University, Roanoke, VA 245020.

She says: ” … I don’t like to say what feminist economics is in that sense. I much prefer to think about what are some approaches that characterize feminist economics and define it by those approaches. Gender analysis is central to all these approaches. In other words, a recognition of the social construction of gender, and its intersections with ethnicity, class, nationality, sexual identity and so forth. So feminist approaches examine the ways in which the organization of the economy, especially the gender division of labor, reflects, reproduces and transforms these social hierarchies. Feminist approaches do not privilege the market, but rather examine other ways that societies provide for their material well-being. Thus they recognize that economies are not populated by disembodied actors, but rather by historically situated subjects ». (Interview on Wellesley College).

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Drucilla K. Barker – USA

The value of the 1997 increase in the federal minimum wage has been fully eroded. The real value of today’s federal minimum wage is less than it has been since 1951. Moreover, the ratio of the minimum wage to the average hourly wage of non-supervisory workers is 31%, its lowest level since World War II. This decline is causing hardship for low-wage workers and their families. We believe that a modest increase in the minimum wage would improve the well-being of low-wage workers and would not have the adverse effects that critics have claimed.

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Rina Amiri – Afghanistan & USA

Linked with Women Likely to Suffer Most in Central Asia’s Turmoil, with Muslim Women As Symbols and Pawns, with the Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan RAWA, and with The Women Waging Peace Network.

She says: « I felt destroyed within seeing that, my adopted country (USA) and my homeland (Afghanistan) were at war. »

Read: The Fear Beneath the Burka, by Rina Amiri, The New York Times – March 20, 2002.

She says also: “As a child in this climate of fear, I was confused and felt anger. From a secure, warm and loving family life, I suddenly learned that the world could lack any element of control ».

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Rina Amiri – Afghanistan & USA

She works for The Women Waging Peace Network.

Listen to her audio/ watch her video on OnlineNewsHour.

Read: Afghanis in the Driver’s Seat, Rina Amiri addresses Afghanistan’s current status.

Rina Amiri has been preparing since she was a child for her present dynamic role as a peace builder and reconstruction strategist in her devastated homeland, Afghanistan. It is a role she has longed for, and to which she has been passionately committed for as long as she can remember. Yet before the events of September 2001, it seemed inconceivable that she could return to her country, devastated by decades of invasion, clan warfare, drought, and famine.

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Virginia/Ginny Shrivastava – India

Linked with ASHTA SANSTHAN.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: ”It is a long way from Canada to working at the Indian grassroots with tendu patta (tobacco leaf) collectors and widows, and clashing with the authorities – but Ginny is finally home ».

Nobel Peace Prize nominee in Kingston to receive 2005 Queen’s Alumni Achievement Award, November 01, 2005, Kingston, ON – The Queen’s University Alumni Association recognized the outstanding accomplishments of Dr. Virginia (Ginny) Shrivastava Arts’63 by presenting her with the 2005 Alumni Achievement Award at a special ceremony in Kingston held at the University Club at Queen’s. Friends, family, and faculty and classmates from her Queen’s days were also on hand to celebrate this moment. (Read all on Queen’s University).

Read: Widow’s Stories, Kamal Patik age 40, A Leader in the Association of Strong Women Alone, Rajasthan, is the widow of the late Kailash Patik. (Read her story on widows rights).

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Virginia/Ginny Shrivastava – India

She works for ASHTA SANSTHAN, for the Association of Strong Women Alone ASWA (named on GlobalHRs.org), and for the Budget Analysis Rajasthan Center BARC.

Virginia/Ginny Shrivastava, born Dobson, was born in Canada on 9 August 1942, the day Gandhi started the “Quit India Movement” to throw all foreigners out of India. She has been working with women in Rajasthan since 1970. The main driving force behind the Association of Strong Women Alone, a registered society of low-income single women, Ginny has focused on building the leadership capabilities of grassroots women. Also actively involved with tribal groups, Ginny mobilized them to pressure the government to give them minimum wages for collecting tendu patta (tobacco leaves), and helped them form a Tendu Patta Cooperative.

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Hazel Henderson – England & USA

Linked with The Politics of Money, and with Good Governance and Participatory Development.

She is Author, Independent Futurist, Worldwide syndicated columnist, she advocates for and consults on equitable ecologically sustainable human development and socially responsible business and investment. She act in over thirty countries. In 1996 she co-created the Country Futures Indicators as an alternative to Gross Domestic Product. She is born 1933 in Bristol, England.

Read: The Nobel Prize that isn’t.

She says: ”Women know how much time, love and effort goes into raising a child. When war arises, all that is reduced to nothing … this is why women’s active participation in conflict resolution is of great importance … We have the power to alter our destiny … If we can recognize that change and uncertainty are basic principles, we can greet the future and the transformation we are undergoing with the understanding that we do not know enough to be pessimistic ».

Read: Iraq, the Dollar and the Euro.

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Hazel Henderson – England & USA

She says also: « It doesn’t take a genius to pump up the GNP [of a developing country] by burning down rainforests, using slave labor and social repression to keep things in place. GNP values, for example bombs and bullets, since they are things that are produced for money (It) does not value the environment. It values salaries paid to teachers, but it does not value what people know – how educated they are. It places no value on `human capital,’ meaning people. It does not even place a value on the public infrastructure ».

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George Monbiot – England

Linked with World Changing.com, and with Other Economies are Possible!

Read: Get ready for more future shock.

George Monbiot is the author of the best selling books The Age of Consent: a manifesto for a new world order and Captive State: the corporate takeover of Britain; as well as the investigative travel books Poisoned Arrows, Amazon Watershed and No Man’s Land. He writes a weekly column for the Guardian newspaper…
… He is currently visiting professor of planning at Oxford Brookes University. In 1995 Nelson Mandela presented him with a United Nations Global 500 Award for outstanding environmental achievement. He has also won the Lloyds National Screenwriting Prize for his screenplay The Norwegian, a Sony Award for radio production, the Sir Peter Kent Award and the OneWorld National Press Award. (See his blog Monbiot.com).

Read this commentary (pull down the page to find it): In War On Terror, America Embraces The Very Evils It Claims To Confront.

George Monbiot (born January 27, 1963) is a leftwing journalist, author, academic and environmental and political activist in the United Kingdom who writes a weekly column for The Guardian newspaper. (wikipedia).

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George Monbiot – England

He says: « For me, perhaps the best way, potentially, is to develop the perspective put forward by Paulo Friere in The Pedagogy of the Oppressed (http://www.marxists.org/subject/education/freire/pedagogy/index.htm), where the popular educators are themselves educated by the population. On the one hand, you help them to develop a perspective, an understanding of their own oppression, where power lies and what the problems are, and then as they advance that understanding they transmit their perspectives upwards, through the social levels, to the intellectuals ». (Weekly-Al-Ahram)

Read: January 4, 2007, Breaking News About Exxon Funding Lies.

Read: Their beliefs are bonkers, but they are at the heart of power.

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Victoria Curzon-Price – Switzerland

Linked with Complaint on Swiss Taxes, and with Economic Growth and Unequal Wealth Distribution.

She defends a neo-liberal economy, with a state giving all freedom to markets, with low taxes and with the protection of privat possession for economic owners.

Current functions: she is
President of the Mont Pelerin Society (since 2004);
Professor of economics at the University of Geneva, Switzerland (since 1992), (and on wikipedia;
Professor at the Graduate Institute of European Studies, Economics Section (since 1984);
Academic director and president of the board of directors of the
Institut Constant de Rebecque (since 2005), (and on wikipedia.
She is also in the Advisory Board of the Free Society Institute, as in the Advisory Board of the Institute of Economic Affairs iea.

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Victoria Curzon-Price – Switzerland

Listen to her audio at the Prague Conference on Political Economy, April 2006.
Pull down to ‘Economics of Development’ and click on the audio item.

She writes: ”A defence of inequalities based on property rights takes the debate onto an entirely different level. Thus for Locke the right to material property is only one aspect (but an inherent and inseparable aspect) of individual property rights which encompass the right of possession over one’s own body, one’s right to freedom of thought and conscience, and the right to the fruits of one’s own efforts. Interference by others with any one of these freedoms is a violation of property rights in the broadest sense and is felt to be deeply unjust. Conversely, I have no right to interfere in other people’s property rights. According to Locke, this rule makes for social harmony.

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Azra Hasanbegovic – Bosnia and Herzegovina

Linked with the Association “ŽENA BIH”, Mostar, with Bosnia and Herzegovina, Hopes Betrayed, and with Trafficking Women and Children.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: « Everyone has duties to the community in which a free and integral development of one’s personality is possible ».

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Azra Hasanbegovic – Bosnia and Herzegovina

She works for Žena Bosnia and Herzegovina/Žena BiH.

Since the beginning of the armed conflict in Mostar in April 1992, Azra Hasanbegovic helped organize small groups that assisted people most badly struck by the war. She initiated the women’s association Žena BiH, whose main mission is to struggle for women’s right to work. She also established the Agency for Free Legal Aid and Services and an SOS hotline. At the same time, she worked on documentation of the suffering of Mostar and Prozor women and submitted a detailed report to the United Nations Commission on Human Rights.Since the beginning of the armed conflict in Mostar in April 1992, Azra Hasanbegovic endeavored to establish a life, “a bit close to normal,” in a city suffering from chaos.

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