Arnoldas Pranckevičius gave us a rather controversial speech about the European Union. The experience gained during the years working in the European Comissi...
Aged 17, Deeyah fled from Norway confused, lost and torn between cultures. Unlike some young Muslims she picked up a...
Aged 17, Deeyah fled from Norway confused, lost and torn between cultures. Unlike some young Muslims she picked up a camera instead of a gun. She now uses he...
A short film for the Basingstoke and District Disability Forum raising awareness of physical and mobility...
A short film for the Basingstoke and District Disability Forum raising awareness of physical and mobility disabilities. For more information email us at info...
On 11/10/2012 U.S. Embassy Ljubljana proudly unveiled a new sculpture, "Flowers of One Garden," on the embassy...
On 11/10/2012 U.S. Embassy Ljubljana proudly unveiled a new sculpture, "Flowers of One Garden," on the embassy grounds at an event that included this speech ...
Sustainable development has been the red line in Kitty van der Heijdens'carreer. After working for the UN, she is...
Sustainable development has been the red line in Kitty van der Heijdens'carreer. After working for the UN, she is now director at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and ambassador for sustainable development. She will represent the Netherlands in the upcoming Rio plus 20 earth Summit in June 2012. An international conference organised by the UN 20 years after the first UN conference on sustainable development in Rio. At TEDxHaarlem Kitty van der Heijden will take us on a journey through international sustainable development conferences.
OFID has been partnering with UNESCO to fund education in some of the world's most vulnerable regions since 1985....
OFID has been partnering with UNESCO to fund education in some of the world's most vulnerable regions since 1985. This video highlights three OFID/UNESCO ini...
This final episode in our Investigating International Finance series explores the controversial ways in which global...
This final episode in our Investigating International Finance series explores the controversial ways in which global finance interacts with the developing world. Western financial firms can buy, restructure, and then sell off companies, often leaving them saddled with debt. We also look at 'land grabbing', the widespread selling and leasing of land in Africa to corporations, which can result in governments evicting local people from their land.
This is the fourth in a series of four videos investigating different areas of the international finance system. Each is a short introduction to a major challenge we face if we want to reform global finance and make it work for people and the planet.