Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Monday, May 13, 2013
Project Charter
Here's a good read on project charters with a practical example: http://www.ciscopress.com/articles/article.asp?p=1400865
Photo: www.docstoc.com
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Sunday, April 14, 2013
A new earth, based on the Earth Charter, starting with my organization
Talks of ballistic missiles in North Korea (Starr,
Mullen and Sterling 2013), Africans starving, Americans wasting food, slavery
still exists, racism still exists, religious and gender discrimination still
exists. People living in poverty, people losing jobs, companies going bankrupt…countries
going bankrupt, countries in debt and countries with surplus, so many
contrasting events are happening in the world today. In the 21st
century where communication is free and open, numerous globalized organizations
exist and numerous meetings between nations take place to promote peace,
equality, and saving the environment, and yet still so many contrasting events.
We learn as children that fighting is not the
answer, yet an adult nation like North Korea (Starr et al. 2013) can take
actions to begin a fight in this day and age. Parents tell us do not waste
food, and yet Americans waste US$165 billion worth of food each year that can
feed about 25 million people (Woodruff, 2012). State of Food Insecurity in the
World (as cited by the World Food Programme n.d.) states “870 million people in
the world do not have enough to eat.”
Why is slavery and human trafficking still taking
place? How can one person place value on another? How can one country be so
rich and one be so poor?
The community, life, and future centered Earth
Charter intelligently tackles all corners of global life. It targets underlying
issues that cause these contrasting events and highlights solutions. All that’s
left is its adoption.
But whilst we wait on the nations we must start with
ourselves, individually, our families, our communities and our workplace. In
hopes that the spirit of living a global life will catch on and everyone will
see and believe that the only way forward is together, as a team, thereby
giving life to a new earth.
My place of work is a web development and marketing
agency, one of the many small businesses in Jamaica. Though small, taking on
principles of the Earth Charter can reach far and wide. Our contribution can
create a ripple effect that brings us closer to a world that works as one. We
can become individually and organizationally responsible for our environment,
community, political practices and social standards.
Appling the Earth Charter as our guide these are
some ways we can contribute:
Respect
and care for the community of life
Take care of our beautiful environment by practicing
the basics: practice proper garbage disposal, recycling, and planting trees. Garbage
is created everyday, we need to practice proper disposal whether in trash receptors
or recycling containers. Currently, at work, we have recycled a water dispenser
bottle to collect coins and we also use waste paper for notepads. Another
useful suggestion is to create garbage specific receptors for example, one for
paper, plastic and miscellaneous items. The company can also support local
organizations that push for a safer, cleaner environment such as the Jamaica
Environment Trust (JET) that carries out island wide beach cleanups to rid our
sea shore of waste.
Employees should help each other where possible as
we all strive to self actualize. Each employee has a different set of skills
and knowledge. We can exchange and share information so we all benefit from one
another’s brains and ultimately reach our full potential, at least professionally.
Ecological
integrity
In an effort to save
and preserve our endangered species and renewable resources, being a web and
marketing agency we can use technologies we work with to help spread this
message. Write and share articles on our websites as well as social network profiles
such as Facebook and Twitter, post information about them and send to clients.
We should also align our company with organizations that push for caring for
the environment and community, such as the JET and the National Environment and
Planning Agency. As part of our partnerships we should do what we can to help
support their efforts.
Social
and economic justice
Everyone was born equal, we are all humans, whether
male, female, transgender, black, white, yellow, heterosexual or homosexual.
Everyone deserves to be treated fairly and equally at all times; equal rights
for all man. We all have a right to food, shelter, work and play.
Our organization can work together to help feed the
hungry by, for example, having employees bring in monthly food donations that
we can distribute to local charities.
At the workplace employers should enforce equal
remuneration without discrimination, no man or woman should receive more pay
than another in the same position doing the same tasks. Employees should be
judged and rewarded on comparable standards.
Employees should not be forced to partake in any
religious ritual neither should their beliefs be disregarded or belittled. Individual
views on society and life choices should be respected.
Democracy,
nonviolence, and peace
As small as my company is, work is segregated and
information is kept secret. We need to make a greater effort to share pertinent
information amongst all and collaborate more. Freedom of expression should be
the order of the day and everyone’s contribution should be equally valued.
When conflicts arise we should aim for the source.
Gently raise the issue, talk it out and resolve in peace.
I plan to play my part because I believe in a world
that works together as one for the benefit of our lives now and for future
generations. As the Earth Charter says, I believe we need to have a “change of
mind and heart”, “global interdependence and universal responsibility” and also
that we need to “seek a new beginning”. A
new earth.
Photo: earthcharterus.org
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