The website of Initiatives of Change in the UK
This page is a home for articles from the IofC UK website's archives which are no longer available on the current IofC UK website.
The current IofC UK website may be found at https://iofc.org.uk
ITENS DISPONÍVEIS: 614
Can big business help to transform the world? This was the question addressed by the authors of Everybody's Business
This was the key theme for a screening of the film Beyond Forgiving in London
'The Soviet Union crumbled, apartheid in South Africa crumbled. So too will crumble the occupation of Palestine.'
Capitalism needs a conscience and alternative models of ownership
Carol Sarsfield-Hall spent her childhood in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, where her father was governor of Khartoum until his retirement
'There is no doubt that Mahatma Gandhi was the greatest man of the 20th century,' said author and journalist Graham Turner.
Creators of Peace in Oxford took a stall at the Festival to mark International Women's Day in Oxford on 8 March 2011.
K Haridas Nair from Malaysia reflects on new insights into the principle that 'Change starts with me'
A short film entitled 'Change: the BELA initiative' was launched at the Caux forum on Trust and Integrity in the Global Economy
A training course which helps participants reflect on big life questions was delivered in the Yorkshire Dales
Fuad Nahdi, of the Muslim magazine Q News, invited IofC's contribution at Muslim-Christian student debate
The Christian Cross Yearbook 2011, a 76-page magazine published in the UK, carried an article about the new film
On 10 December 2011 the IofC centre in London hosted its annual Christmas event, focussing on reasons for hope
The Malaga Charter to promote sustainable development and social justice, which IofC helped to draft, was launched in Spain.
Initiatives of Change UK’s Sustainable Communities Programme assisted the Filipino Club, based at Westminster Cathedral
The upskilling of local people in building bridges of trust across a diverse community is one aim of Hope in the Cities
The Lord Mayor of Nottingham, Councillor Michael Wildgust, called a multiracial gathering to a time of quiet reflection
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