We’ll have a stall at Banbury Canal Day, where we’ll be chatting about our current campaign Carbon Capital. Banbury Canal Day is well worth a visit if you live in the area; there will be horse & cart rides, a falconry display, a food market and lots more. Come and find us in Spiceball Park.
October group meeting, Tue 8 Oct
The Oxford WDM group meeting will take place on Tuesday 8th October in the (wheelchair-accessible) Panel Room at Oxford Town Hall. Non-members are always welcome to come along and meet us. We might also go to the pub afterwards!
Reflections of a departing director
Deborah Doane is stepping down as director of WDM after nearly four and a half years as director. She has written a blog post about what she’s learnt during that time – including the surprising insight that cheeky one-off actions can achieve just as much as diligent behind-the-scenes lobbying! Read her blog post here: http://www.wdm.org.uk/blog/small-beautiful-cheeky-and-inspiring
September meeting
Join us at Oxford Town Hall to help us plan an exciting autumn. We’re meeting at 7:30pm in the (wheelchair-accessible) Plowman Room. We often head to a nearby pub for a drink afterwards. Why not come along? Non-members welcome too.
Summer social a success
The Oxford WDM summer social was a chance for the group to spend some time together without discussing too many serious issues – and sample the delicious pies available at the Victoria Arms on Walton Street. Members from all over Oxfordshire came to share a drink and a chat, and we even had two visitors from Australia.
If you have any ideas about where our next social should happen, or what it should involve, please get in touch on oxfordwdm@gmail.com.
Aid: what are Western countries getting wrong?
The speaker at our July meeting was Helen Magombo, who advises Oxfam on development policy. She spoke chiefly about the impact of policy decisions on her home country of Malawi. Her view? “We need to get more sassy, more radical” on aid. We need to push harder to ensure that aid money goes to the right places.
Right now, said Helen, there are huge transparency issues around aid. A lot of money actually goes to UK-based companies, which means it never reaches the Malawian economy because it never leaves the UK economy. She is fighting for the proposed 0.7 % target, which would mean that 0.7% of the UK’s national income is spent in aid. But just as important as the amount itself is how much of it goes to the country being aided.
The 2010-2012 UK aid withdrawal had a huge negative impact on Malawi, said Helen. It happened because of a diplomatic spat, but the effects were devastating. (The UK is Malawi’s largest direct aid donor.)
One of the questions from the floor was “What do we [as Westerners trying to help] get wrong?” Helen suggested that groups like WDM in the UK need to connect more with similar groups in Africa and other countries. We shouldn’t assume that a poor country doesn’t have a thriving voluntary sector.
She also busted the myth that an aid-dependent country equals a country where people don’t work: “In Malawi, people are getting up from 3am trying to make a living.”
Helen now plans to return to Malawi and stand for election to parliament.
