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Research Analyst: Social Policy for Inclusive Development

Job Description

The Research Analyst will work under the direct supervision of an UNRISD Research Coordinator. Specific duties of the position will vary as project needs dictate, and are likely to include the following:

Deadline: 
8 Mar 2015

Internship: Social Policy for Inclusive Development

The United Nations Research Institute for Social Development (UNRISD) is an autonomous research institute within the UN system that undertakes multidisciplinary research and policy analysis on the social dimensions of contemporary development issues. Through our work, we aim to ensure that social equity, inclusion and justice are central to development thinking, policy and practice.

Deadline: 
8 Mar 2015

Big Ideas Webinar: Migration and the Resilient City: Bristol

10am Eastern Time

Bristol boasts the strongest economy of any UK city outside London, and is one of the country’s fastest growing city. Like many dynamic, booming cities its growth includes rapid demographic change, increasing diversity and a growing gap in prosperity. How do resilient cities address the challenges of deepening social and economic inequality? Why is diversity, migration and inclusion essential to a conversation about city resilience and livability? As one of Rockefeller Foundation’s 100 Resilient Cities, a program intended to help cities “better address the increasing shocks and stresses of the 21st century,” Bristol has a unique opportunity to put social resilience into an urban agenda for economic vitality, innovation and sustainability. Join us for a Big Idea webinar to learn how Bristol is managing these complex community challenges and building its capacity to leverage diversity and the economic and social innovations that drive urban prosperity.

Register here

Speakers:

Di Robinson
Service Director, Neighbourhoods and Communities, Bristol City Council (Bristol, United Kingdom)

Di Robinson has worked in the public sector over the past 17 years, mainly delivering in the areas of Neighbourhood Management and Governance, Service Transformation and Community Engagement. Her current role as Service Director for Neighbourhoods with Bristol City Council includes managing the city’s Neighbourhood Governance agenda, Community Development, Corporate Equalities, Voluntary Community Investment, Libraries and Regulatory Services. Prior to this Di worked in a variety of roles within in the public, private and VCS sectors.

Ian Roderick
Director, The SchuIan Roderick smmacher Institute (Bristol, United Kingdom)
Ian is the director of The Schumacher Institute, an independent research and learning organisation working with the ideas of E.F. Schumacher, author of Small is Beautiful. The Institute is in Bristol, UK.
He has a BSc in Mathematics, an MSc in Operational Research and an MSc in Responsibility & Business Practice. He started his career at the Building Research Establishment before joining Rank Xerox International, eventually to head up strategic forecasting and business modelling. He then co-founded a successful software development company which was sold in 2000 leaving him free to pursue his interests in systems thinking, environmentalism and social justice. Ian is the Chair of the Resilience Action Group, Bristol Green Capital, the agency leading Bristol: European Green Capital 2015 agenda.

He was President of the UK Systems Society (2005 – 2008). He is co-founder of a charity called The Converging World and is on the board of Low Carbon South West.

Mary W. Rowe
Director, Urban Resilience and Livability, Municipal Art Society of New York City (New York, United States)

Mary W. Rowe is currently Director, Urban Resilience and Livability at Municipal Art Society of New York City, one of the country’s oldest and most successful advocacy organizations, working to promote the livability and resilience of New York City through effective urban planning, land use, design and civic engagement. Current initiatives include Re-Imagining the Civic Commons, supported by the Knight Foundation, to explore the ever-changing uses of shared places – civic assets including libraries, community centers, settlement houses, and public spaces – in contemporary cities, and the possibilities for new models that enhance their value, ensure their sustainability, and contribute to creating successful cities.

Mary also coordinates the MAS Global Network, a peer-to-peer learning platform connecting urban practitioners contributing to the livability and resilience of cities around the country, continent, and around the world. Previously, she spent five years learning about granular approaches to urban innovation while supporting the New Orleans Institute for Resilience and Innovation, a loose alliance of initiatives that emerged in response to the systemic collapses of 2005, in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Originally from Toronto, Mary worked closely for ten years with Avana Capital Corporation and the Maytree Foundation on a variety of urban focused initiatives, and began her career working for the federal government in Canada on policy connections between immigration and employment. She has a particular interest in self-organization in cities, as the underpinning of urban social, economic, cultural and environmental resilience, and is a contributor to several volumes on urban life.

Re-Weaving Local: Transition Towns & Timebanking

11:00am - 12:15pm Pacific Time

Please note: event listed in Pacific time. To participate in this free tele-seminar, please register online and you will receive call details via email.

The alternative currency known as Timebanking seeks to re-weave community in a similar fashion to Transition: from the bottom-up. At its core, Timebanks gather neighbors together to accomplish simple tasks for one another.  At first, this seems to be a simple concept, but the small acts of helping neighbors, reskilling, and volunteering in community are at the heart of making Transition work. Timebanking, as a bottom-up tool to solve the problems created by the mismatch of unmet needs and unused skills, provides the space for the work of building true community through co-creation (rather than co-consumption.)

The work of timebanking and the Transition movement are deeply allied.  This TeleSeminar with Marie Goodwin of Timebank Media and Transition Town Media, PA will help you imagine “the more beautiful world your heart tells you is possible” through the lens of both transition and time banking. Its goal is to help Transition activists learn about how these two movements, Transition and Timebanking, deeply augment one another and become powerful tools when combined that help to engage communities in the important work ahead of us all.

About Marie Goodwin:

I am an archaeologist by training, but found myself much more interested in the modern stories of our culture than any ancient ones being thought up by academics. In addition to stories, I'm interested in activism and transition. I am on a great team of community builders that is Transition Town Media, and with their support founded the Media FreeStoreand Timebank Media. I am also passionate about issues relating to local food, herbal medicine, traditional cultures, new-story education and local economic resilience. For my day-job, I work in the gift with author/philosopher Charles Eisenstein.

Twin Cities Canadian Co-op Tour

Do you have a passport and a passion for co-ops?

Join an international study tour between May 2-10

Head to Minnesota under the hospitality of The Co-operative Network to explore the diverse and rapidly growing co-op sector in America.

Tour Highlights Include:

- Welcome Social & Dinner
- Twins/White Sox Game
- Visit to Senior Housing Co-op
- Visit to People's Food Co-op and Dairyland Power Cooperative
- Cruise on Mississippi River
- Organic Farm visit to Peter's Farm
- Visit to Vernon Electric Cooperative

- Organic Valley Cooperative Warehouse Visit
 - Visit with HealthPartners Cooperative Office
-
CHS Fuel Co-op Refinery Visit
- Tour of Fort Snelling
- Meet with Minnesota Department of Agriculture
- Visit to Spire Credit Union
- Introduction to Cooperative Network
- Meet with Governor & Tour of Minnesota State Capital
- Social at Cooperative Network with Co- Minnesota
 - Visit with Work Senior Housing Cooperative
-
Meeting with Great River Energy
- Meet with Canadian Council General
- Visit with Land O'Lakes
- Tour of Fair State Co-op Brewery
- Social with Fair State Brewery & Co-op Bakery
- Meet with The Wedge
- Visit to Minnehaha Falls Park
- Social & Farewell Dinner

Take a glimpse at the TENTATIVE ITINERARY

Learn more ABOUT THE HOST and the CO-OP CLIMATE in Minnesota and Wisconsin

For more information

To stay up-to-date with plans on the tour, submit your EXPRESSION OF INTEREST to Lacey Chyz at lchyz at acca.coop

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