[Dialogue] 2020 summit in Canberra
Janice Ulangca
aulangca at stny.rr.com
Sat Apr 19 10:45:44 EDT 2008
2020 summit in CanberraThanks much for this good news, Jeanette. Exciting indeed! We could dream about something on this scale in the U.S. after a new president is elected. A pioneer working model is so helpful. ICA could have designed this! Are you sure you didn't whisper in some ears? Or maybe it was Brian.
Love,
Janice
----- Original Message -----
From: Jeanette Stanfield
To: Colleague Dialogue
Sent: Saturday, April 19, 2008 1:36 AM
Subject: [Dialogue] 2020 summit in Canberra
Dear Colleagues,
I am most fascinated with the event happening in Canberra this weekend.
It is the culmination of several months of community forums if you like all around Australia.
Shortly after the new Rudd government was elected, they announced a major ideas summit
on 10 key policy arenas including climate change, health, rural industries, economic growth, education , indigenous Communities, families, democratic reforms etc. toward 2020.
A youth summit was held last weekend in Canberra. 100 youth from very diverse backgrounds were chosen to attend. Before that 500 schools across the country had submitted their ideas. 10 big ideas
from that summit are now being taken by 10 youth delegates to this weekend. Young people also went away from event excited about what they could begin acting on in their own communities and networks.
Now this week a 1000 volunteers chosen from across Australian society are meeting in the 10 major
arenas to come up with key ideas and directions for the future. The co-chairs for each group include
a respected person in that field plus a cabinet minister charged with responsibility in the policy arena.
The opening was on tv this morning. It began with a welcome to country by an Aboriginal elder.
She reminded those who haven't always had a voice- that their ideas were just what were needed at
this time- including women. The second person who spoke was a young woman who is from a
Multi-racial family- one indigenous parent , the other a European Aussie. Her word was that the story of being Australian has to become larger. It has to include all the peoples of this great place if a new perspective and future can be created.
A young man whose family originally came from India to live in Australia spoke of the trends that
we are facing. "We are now in a time of globalization- a state of mind where we are fascinated by creating communities of debate and dialogue across the planet. His most addressing point was that the west no longer dominates the world. Its model of society in not sustainable for all the peoples of this planet. India and China are coming into their own. It is a time when we need to seek new answers. All certainties are gone. What is needed is ingenuity and creativity as we face the future. We can have poisonous debates which are just quarrels about the past and present and endanger the future or we can focus on the challenges for the future."
Tomorrow we will begin to hear about some of the big ideas that are beginning to emerge. Whatever happens, you sense that people in Australia are waking up from a time of cynicism and helplessness
to a sense that yes we just might be able to meet the major challenges of our time and be a part of the
democratic process for change. As Hawkins says in Blessed Unrest, we are in a time of moving from a world created by privilege to a world created by community (across time and space). Perhaps the 2020 summit is participating in creating that new world.
Cheers from down under. It is an exciting time to be living here.
Jeanette Stanfield
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