See GGFNN resolution 2023
Resolution: | CHARTER OF THE GLOBAL GREENS |
---|---|
Proposer: | Global Greens Coordination |
Status: | Accepted |
Submitted: | 18/05/2023, 06:10 |
Resolution: | CHARTER OF THE GLOBAL GREENS |
---|---|
Proposer: | Global Greens Coordination |
Status: | Accepted |
Submitted: | 18/05/2023, 06:10 |
General Descritption: The Global Greens is the international network of Green
parties and political movements.
Insert Table of Contents
Charter Text:
Preamble
We, as citizens of the planet and members of the Global Greens,
United in our awareness that we depend on the Earth’s vitality, diversity and
beauty, and that it is our responsibility to pass them on, undiminished or even
improved, to the next generation
Recognising that the dominant patterns of human production and consumption,
based on the dogma of economic growth at any cost and the excessive and wasteful
use of natural resources without considering Earth’s carrying capacity, are
causing extreme deterioration in the environment and a massive extinction of
species
Acknowledging that injustice, racism, poverty, ignorance, corruption, crime and
violence, armed conflict and the search for maximum short term profit are
causing widespread human suffering
Accepting that developed countries through their pursuit of economic and
political goals have contributed to the degradation of the environment and of
human dignity
Understanding that many of the world’s peoples and nations have been
impoverished by the long centuries of colonisation and exploitation, creating an
ecological debt owed by the rich nations to those that have been impoverished
Committed to closing the gap between rich and poor and building a citizenship
based on equal rights for all individuals in all spheres of social, economic,
political and cultural life
Recognising that without equality between men and women, no real democracy can
be achieved
Concerned for the dignity of humanity and the value of cultural heritage
Recognising the rights of indigenous people and their contribution to the common
heritage, as well as the right of all minorities and oppressed peoples to their
culture, religion, economic and cultural life
Convinced that cooperation rather than competition is a pre-requisite for
ensuring the guarantee of such human rights as nutritious food, comfortable
shelter, health, education, fair labour, free speech, clean air, potable water
and an unspoilt natural environment
Recognising that the environment ignores borders between countries and
Building on the Declaration of the Global Gathering of Greens at Rio in 1992
Assert the need for fundamental changes in people’s attitudes, values, and ways
of producing and living
Declare that the new millennium provides a defining point to begin that
transformation
Resolve to promote a comprehensive concept of sustainability which
Affirm our responsibility to one another, to the greater community of life, and
to future generations
Commit ourselves as Green parties and political movements from around the world
to implement these interrelated principles and to create a global partnership in
support of their fulfillment.
Principles
The policies of the Global Greens are founded upon the principles of
Ecological Wisdom
We acknowledge that human beings are part of the natural world and we respect
the specific values of all forms of life, including non-human species.
We acknowledge the wisdom of the indigenous peoples of the world, as custodians
of the land and its resources.
We acknowledge that human society depends on the ecological resources of the
planet, and must ensure the integrity of ecosystems and preserve biodiversity
and the resilience of life supporting systems.
This requires
Social Justice
We assert that the key to social justice is the equitable distribution of social
and natural resources, both locally and globally, to meet basic human needs
unconditionally, and to ensure that all citizens have full opportunities for
personal and social development.
We declare that there is no social justice without environmental justice, and no
environmental justice without social justice.
This requires
Participatory Democracy
We strive for a democracy in which all citizens have the right to express their
views, and are able to directly participate in the environmental, economic,
social and political decisions which affect their lives; so that power and
responsibility are concentrated in local and regional communities, and devolved
only where essential to higher tiers of governance.
This requires
Nonviolence
We declare our commitment to nonviolence and strive for a culture of peace and
cooperation between states, inside societies and between individuals, as the
basis of global security.
We believe that security should not rest mainly on military strength but on
cooperation, sound economic and social development, environmental safety, and
respect for human rights.
This requires
Sustainability
We recognise the limited scope for the material expansion of human society
within the biosphere, and the need to maintain biodiversity through sustainable
use of renewable resources and responsible use of non-renewable resources.
We believe that to achieve sustainability, and in order to provide for the needs
of present and future generations within the finite resources of the earth,
continuing growth in global consumption, population and material inequity must
be halted and reversed.
We recognise that sustainability will not be possible as long as poverty
persists.
This requires
Respect for Diversity
We honour cultural, linguistic, ethnic, sexual, religious and spiritual
diversity within the context of individual responsibility toward all beings.
We defend the right of all persons, without discrimination, to an environment
supportive of their dignity, bodily health, and spiritual well-being
We promote the building of respectful, positive and responsible relationships
across lines of division in the spirit of a multi-cultural society.
This requires
Polical Action
1 Democracy
1.1 The majority of the world's people live in countries with undemocratic
regimes where corruption is rampant and human rights abuses and press censorship
are commonplace. Developed democracies suffer less apparent forms of corruption
through media concentration, corporate political funding, systematic exclusion
of racial, ethnic, national and religious communities, and electoral systems
that discriminate against alternative ideas and new and small parties.
The Greens
2 Equity
2.1 The differences in living standards and opportunities in the world today are
intolerable. Third world debt is at an all time high of US$3.7 trillion while
Organisation of Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries give just
0.31% of GNP in aid. The richest 20% of the world's population has 83% of global
income while the poorest 20%, including nearly 50% of the world's young people,
share barely 1% and 2.6 billion people live on less than US$2 a day. 60% of the
world’s poor are women. 130 million children never attend school while 800
million adults can neither read nor write, two-thirds of them women Population
growth has slowed but world population is projected to grow from 6.1 billion in
2000 to 8.9 billion in 2050, an increase of 47%. Human Immunodeficiency Virus
(HIV) and tuberculosis (TB) infections remain severe problems.
The Greens
3 Climate Change and Energy
3.1 The climate crisis is both greatest challenge facing the global community
and the greatest opportunity for humanity to rethink how we live, in a way that
is socially just and within the Earth's ecological limits. The Greens are
committed to limiting global temperature rise to no more than 1.5 degrees above
pre-industrial levels. Global emissions will need to peak well before 2020 to
have a chance to stay within this temperature limit.
The Greens
4 Biodiversity
4.1 Healthy ecosystems are essential to human life, yet we seem to have
forgotten the relationship between nature and society. Extinction rates are 100
to 1000 times higher than in pre-human times. Only 20% of the Earth's original
forests remain relatively undisturbed. 80% of fish stocks are already depleted
or in danger of being overfished. Invasions by non-native plants, animals and
diseases are growing rapidly. Habitat destruction and species extinction are
driven by industrial and agricultural development that also exacerbates climate
change, global inequity and the destruction of indigenous cultures and
livelihoods. Agricultural monoculture, promoted by agribusiness and accelerated
by genetic modification and patenting of nature, threatens the diversity of crop
and domestic animal species, radically increasing vulnerability to disease.
The Greens
5 Governing economic globalisation by sustainability principles
5.1 Fifty-three of the 100 biggest economies in the world today are
corporations. With the collusion of governments, they have created a legal
system that puts unfettered economic activity above the public good, protects
corporate welfare but attacks social welfare, and makes national economies
subservient to a global financial casino that turns over $US3 trillion per day
in speculative transactions. The Global Financial Crisis has increased
volatility and insecurity in all economies, with the most significant impact on
poorer individuals, groups and countries. The IMF and the World Bank have
contributed to this crisis rather than been part of the solution; the
prerequisites on which they are based are not fit to create a global,
sustainable and just economic system.
The Greens
6 Human rights
6.1 Denial of human rights and freedoms goes hand in hand with poverty and
political powerlessness. Millions suffer discrimination, intimidation, arbitrary
detention, violence and death. Three-quarters of the world's governments have
used torture in the last three years.
The Greens
7 Food and water
7.1 Hundreds of millions of people remain undernourished, not because there is
insufficient food but because of unequal access to land, water, credit and
markets. Genetically modified organisms (GMOs) are not the solution, because the
immediate problem is not production but distribution. Moreover, GMOs pose
unacceptable risks to the environment, independent smaller farmers, and
consumers, as well as to the biodiversity that is our best insurance against
agricultural disaster. Water shortages loom, both in above-ground systems and
subterranean aquifers. Deforestation of catchments takes a devastating toll in
landslides and floods, while desertification and degradation rapidly are
expanding. One bright spot is the rapid growth of organic agriculture
The Greens
8 Sustainable planning
8.1 Consumption in industrialised countries is excessive by any measure, and
largely responsible for environmental decline. Newly industrialising countries
are also increasing their consumption, which will add significantly to the
ecological pressure.
Changing to a green economy - which mimics ecological processes, eliminates
waste by re-using and recycling materials, and emphasises activities that
enhance the quality of life and relationships rather than the consumption of
goods - brings a promise of new jobs, industries with less pollution, better
work environments and a higher quality of life.
The Greens
9 Peace and security
9.1 We understand peace as being more than the absence of war. To strive for
peace has always been at the core of the Green agenda. The causes of conflict
are changing. The impacts of climate change, competition for water, food and
resources will become increasingly significant. The distinctions between war,
organised crime and deliberate large-scale abuses of human rights are becoming
progressively blurred. Since 2001 the 'war on 'terror' has also led to the
erosion of human rights in the name of security. The arms trade is growing and
globalising, nourished by a unique exemption from WTO rules against subsidies.
As a global network, we have a vital role to play in strengthening the links
between community organisations working for human rights and peace, and
supporting and shaping the emerging concepts and institutions of global
governance.
The Greens
10 Acting globally
10.1 The Global Greens are independent organisations from diverse cultures and
backgrounds who share a common purpose and recognise that, to achieve it, we
must act globally as well as locally.
The Greens
See GGFNN resolution 2023
Comments
Dominic WYkanak:
Bob Hale:
Promotes the First Nations Indigenous Tribal Peoples' rights and custodianship