The QCEA Blog
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Covers thoughts and comments from staff and volunteers at the Quaker Council for European Affairs. The Quaker Council for European Affairs brings a vision based on the Quaker commitment to peace, justice, and equality to Europe and its institutions.
The QCEA Blog
2M ago
When asked what keeps her going at a recent Church and Peace conference in Brussels, Olga Karach, a Belarusian human rights defender who supports conscientious objectors, said that Alexander Lukashenko, the repressive president of Belarus, believes she has power to ..read more
The QCEA Blog
6M ago
My name is Andrew, I am a History teacher in Britain. The government provide a framework for what History they expect schools to teach, known as the national curriculum, but there is only one topic that schools are legally required to teach. The Holocaust ..read more
The QCEA Blog
6M ago
Last month, I traveled to Bonn, Germany, for the June Climate Talks at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The Subsidiaries Bodies (SB) gather twice a year, in June in Bonn and at the Conference of Parties (COP) at the end of the year. This year, the June SB session focused on climate finance, a challenging but necessary theme for reaching agreements and enabling more ambitious climate action.
As I have been working for QCEA for a year, my work focused primarily on the European level. Although I have previously witnessed international negotiations, this was my ..read more
The QCEA Blog
8M ago
In the run up to the EU elections, there has been a great deal of press coverage about which parties and people will or will not work with the far right. Most polls predict a rise in the number of MEPs representing far right parties in the new EU parliament. Civil society organisations are worried that their influence will diminish or even be curtailed if the parliament shifts to the right. Politicians and civil society are also afraid that any attempt to engage with far right politicians will lead to them being accused of condoning hate speech and thereby losing supporters.
There is no doubt ..read more
The QCEA Blog
9M ago
The interview of Vitaliy Alekseyenko
I am Ukrainian, but I was born and spent my youth in Uzbekistan. There I had the opportunity to undergo alternative service instead of military service. At birth, I was baptized in the Orthodox Church. When I grew up, I saw that they did not live there in love, as Jesus taught. There was a lot of stress in life, in particular due to misunderstanding in my family. The Holy Spirit directed me to seek truth and healing in Christian literature. I fasted, observed the Sabbath, and suddenly it was as if I were born again. At that time, there was no normal income ..read more
The QCEA Blog
1y ago
“Get very clear about the kind of world we would like and then start living that way.”
– Marshall B. Rosenberg
In a world often marred by conflict, misunderstandings, and strained relationships, the need for effective communication has never been more pressing. Nonviolent Communication (NVC) emerges as a transformative approach to fostering empathy, understanding, and harmonious connections.
The current state of global communication
Non-discrimination and equality are fundamental principles of any democracy. Election campaigns serve as critical indicators of commitment to these values, makin ..read more
The QCEA Blog
1y ago
By Saskia Basa, QCEA’s Migration and Peace Coordinator
“They will burn us,”
“Organise to catch them!
The mountains are full of them”.
These words were uttered by a man who, dressed in green camouflage, kidnapped 25 migrants in Evros, northeastern Greece, a region that has been ravaged by wildfires for more than two weeks in the month of August. The man circulated a chilling video where he filmed himself inciting Greeks to round up people on the move, and then directed the camera at his kidnapees, people escaping persecution, poverty, human rights violations or armed conflicts.
Civil societ ..read more
The QCEA Blog
3y ago
By Céline Monnier
Image by Javier Hirschfeld via Getty Images
“Language shapes our mindset and determines what we think”, said the linguist Benjamin Whorf. Benjamin Whorf is often associated with the linguistic relativity theory which states that the grammatical and verbal structures of a person’s language influence how they perceive the world. So, does that mean that the language we speak exacerbate inequalities, particularly related to gender? If so, could our policy responses around gender neutral language mitigate this effect? Let’s find out.
Language reinforces bias
Image by Mona Chalabi ..read more
The QCEA Blog
3y ago
by Saskia Basa
There is no question that the push for inclusion of women in security and defense sectors is gaining traction. In the 21 years that followed the UN Security Council Resolution 1325, over 80 countries have released national action plans to increase representation of women in peacebuilding and security sectors. Despite great evolution in the Woman, Peace and Security agenda, it has not escaped criticism over the omission of an intersectional perspective, which recognises how gender interacts with other identity markers such as sexual orientation, gender identity, socioeconomic st ..read more
The QCEA Blog
3y ago
QCEA reads is a new series reviewing books related to QCEA’s values and work on peace, justice and equality. Working in Brussels on EU policy, policy briefs to read are some of the most common literature we are exposed to but they can be technical, abstract with little connection with everyday life. Fiction, essays, poetry etc. give us insights into people’s lives and how they experience the consequences of policies.
QCEA reads is a deliberate choice to broaden our horizon beyond the “policy bubble”, to keep our work grounded in lived experience and the felt impact o ..read more