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- The work of peacebuilding is not as headline-snaring as building up the military to fight wars. Governments are now spending $2.4-trillion annually on their militaries, but only $24-billion—that's one per cent—on humanitarian aid.
- The work of peacebuilding is not as headline-snaring as building up the military to fight wars. Governments are now spending $2.4-trillion annually on their militaries, but only $24-billion—that's one per cent—on humanitarian aid.
- The booming voices of the militarists claiming peace can only be won through more arms carry a lot of weight. Those like UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres who argue that the world needs a return to the UN Charter’s peace-building principles rather than more military spending cannot be heard in the clamour.
- The booming voices of the militarists claiming peace can only be won through more arms carry a lot of weight. Those like UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres who argue that the world needs a return to the UN Charter’s peace-building principles rather than more military spending cannot be heard in the clamour.
- Jeffrey Sachs, the renowned senior UN adviser and author, said the key lesson that we can learn from Kennedy 'is to fashion the future out of our rational hopes, not our fears.'
- Jeffrey Sachs, the renowned senior UN adviser and author, said the key lesson that we can learn from Kennedy 'is to fashion the future out of our rational hopes, not our fears.'
- Hope is rooted in our spirit. It is not a tangible thing we can put on the table to bargain over. Hope is a vision of the future, former senator Doug Roche writes in his latest book.
- Hope is rooted in our spirit. It is not a tangible thing we can put on the table to bargain over. Hope is a vision of the future, former senator Doug Roche writes in his latest book.
- Escalating global conflict in Israel and Gaza raises the question of whether 'our world is becoming unhinged,' to use the phrase of the beleaguered UN Secretary-General António Guterres. When people’s minds are inundated with the brutalities of cascading atrocities they need to be reminded that the darkness of violence must not kill hopes for peace, writes Doug Roche.
- Escalating global conflict in Israel and Gaza raises the question of whether 'our world is becoming unhinged,' to use the phrase of the beleaguered UN Secretary-General António Guterres. When people’s minds are inundated with the brutalities of cascading atrocities they need to be reminded that the darkness of violence must not kill hopes for peace, writes Doug Roche.
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