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Joel Katz
Outreach Blogger
14 June 2010

After so many days beavering away in the Actionaid office in downtown Dhaka, working with AA Bangladesh’s dream team to get their blog up and running, we’re finally out in the field.

Yesterday, literally. Today – more concrete jungle, than lush cane fields. Oh rural Bangladesh, how I miss thee.

But I digress. Mind’s drifting back to the serenity. Oh the serenity…

Today we hop in van with Hasan, Amir and Towfic – los tres amigos Bangladeshi, and take off for Mohammadpur, in the city’s west. We were here last week for the dusty but thrilling 1Goal soccer match.

We arrive at the office and, as usual, a very formal setting awaits – like King Arthur’s round table, but kids instead of knights. We’re meeting with the Community Journalist’s Group (CJG). Sharna talked about CJGs yesterday, and it’s an awesome initiative. Read the rest of this entry »

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TOTO Challenge #3 required the shortlist fundraise for Project TOTO to help us reach our $10,000 target.

This challenge was not just about testing each nominee’s creativity, network of influence and social media skills, but was also a practical necessity.

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TOTO Challenge#2 required the shortlist to create 60-second video blogs on how technology could be used to fight poverty.

This was arguably a much more difficult challenge for the shortlist than the previous blog challenge, for a number of reasons.

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Below is ActionAid’s third and final challenge to the Project TOTO nominee shortlist. Nominees have until Friday, 29 January 2010 to complete this challenge.

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Below are the responses to TOTO Challenge #2 (60 second video on how technology can help fight poverty) from our Project TOTO shortlist.

To help ActionAid judge these clips, please post a comment at the bottom of this post telling us which video you liked most and why.

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When ActionAid asked our Project TOTO shortlist to blog about the link between climate change and poverty, we really didn’t know what we’d get back.

In the end, we received nine well crafted blogs that reflected the huge diversity of people in our shortlist. We had climate change sceptics, climate change converts and climate change champions.  We also had discussions about horse poo. Read the rest of this entry »

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The below post is from Laurel Papworth in response to TOTO Challenge #1

DISCUSSING CLIMATE CHANGE

Hmmm. “climate change” – does anyone NOT have an opinion? Even if it’s “I wish they’d shut up about climate change” it’s still on our radar, in a big way.  We have the time and education and resources to debate the issue in the pubs, loungerooms, bars, gyms, and on Twitter. If we want to. Our choice. Yet not every country has the luxury of being able to stop and discuss global issues at a local level.

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The below post is from Harriet Riley in response to TOTO Challenge #1

poor polar bear

The Poor Poor Polar Bears: Far from being a problem for other species, climate change is already robbing people in developing nations of their homes and livlihoods

It’s good to be back in Copenhagen for the COP15. This is the place I came to two years ago trying to answer one simple question; how do you run a functional society? Being happy, prosperous and good-looking to boot is something the Danes have always been famous for, and this stable home-life has freed them up to play advocate on the international stage for more generous aid projects and green development. No doubt these were the people to answer my question. But my quest left me mildly unsatisfied –it was one of those ‘simple’ questions, after all, the type that only the United Nations, ancient Greek philosophers and myself ever seem to bother with– and I’m hoping that this time, at the climate summit, I can find a better answer.

In early 2008 I found myself seated with 99 other bright-eyed young people in an airy lecture theatre of the CPH Business School. We are attending the Copenhagen Consensus Youth Forum hosted by the infamous Bjørn Lomborg of ‘Sceptical Environmentalist’ fame. In front of us, a panel of Nobel Prize winning economists nodded and hummed as they tried to explain, in terms we would understand, just what was wrong with our complicated world.

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The below post is from Sharna Bremner in response to TOTO Challenge #1

I need you to do me a favour. Why, you ask? You don’t know me, why on earth should you do anything for me? Well, maybe you shouldn’t. But just indulge me.

Close your eyes and imagine, if you will, an attack like the one that occurred in the United States on September 11, 2001 happening each and every week. Horrific right? According to the World Health Organization (www.who.int) approximately 150,000 people died in the year 2000 from causes that were directly related to climate change.

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The below post is from Joel Katz in response to TOTO Challenge #1

Chacaltaya’s days are numbered. Nestled away in the Bolivian Andes, the glacier has existed for 18,000 years, but over the last two decades most of it has melted away.

Chacaltaya glacier

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