‘Hope is like fire, and it must be stoked and tended to daily to keep the spirit and fight of movements.' Bill Omondi of Nobel Women and @bevwakiaga.bsky.social reflect on Kenya's 2024 protests and offer some thought on how INGOs can show real solidarity.
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/08/from...
Posts by Amit
"Policies are drafted about us but never with us. Aid is designed like architecture above our heads, and when it collapses, we are the ones buried in the rubble.' For #FP2P we spoke to poet and refugee Peter Kidi about his life and his art. frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/i-started-wr...
Amid the uncertainties of life in Ukraine's frontline regions, humanitarian activists are creating islands of stability and warmth. For #WorldHumanitarianDay, Vitaliia Kushmyruk shares the stories of three activists bringing comfort to their communities.
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/08/ukra...
We can't talk about palm oil without talking about land rights and colonialism. Our latest blog from @oxfamnovib.bsky.social shares insights from a recent panel discussion inspired by the documentary #ColonialDebris on palm oil and land rights.
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/08/you-...
The climate crisis is driving more bouts of devastating heat, yet much of the world is poorly prepared. Nuzhat Nueary introduces new Oxfam and FCDO research on the link between extreme heat and water scarcity, and gaps in humanitarian responses.
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/07/the-...
The Financing for Development conference let us down: now the fight for feminist economic justice continues.
The Seville event disappointed us on gender justice, debt reform and private finance - but it did open up opportunities to build on, says Rachel Noble
voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/07/fina...
Women in the Global South know exactly how to support their own communities – so why don’t we get behind them?
@oxfamgb.bsky.social CEO @halimabegum.bsky.social on our fund for grassroots women’s rights organisations, which has won two Charity Awards views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/07/wome...
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‘We fall, we rebuild, we dance again’: repression and resilience in queer Beirut.
If you want to understand the progress of LGBTQIA+ rights in Lebanon's capital, our nightlife is a great place to start, says Ghiwa Abi Haidar in a blog for Pride month. views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/06/we-f...
Let’s build a collective movement to win economic justice for carers, says @hannahwebster.bsky.social of @carefull.bsky.social.
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/06/lets...
@carers-week.bsky.social
‘I have two jobs: one that keeps someone alive – and one that I get paid for.’
Unpaid carers like me save the NHS billions, says Laura Barnes in a blog for Carers Week in the UK – yet our rewards include burnout and poverty views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/06/i-ha...
This Carers Week, we need to talk about racial justice.
Margaret Chiwanza introduces research revealing how carers in Scotland from Black and Minority Ethnic communities are being pushed into poverty and struggling in silence. views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/06/this... @oxfamscotland.bsky.social
As global humanitarian funding is slashed, here are six ways to back local leadership. Where can governments fill the gap? How can we improve peer support? Amy Croome on insights from a recent gathering in Nairobi of civil society leaders and Oxfam staff. views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/05/huma...
Global development needs a Plan B: could this be it? As powerful nations turn inwards and multilateralism falters, new coalitions must step in. Len Ishmael, @stephanklingebiel.bsky.social and @andypsumner.bsky.social explain ‘like-minded internationalism’ frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/global-devel...
A man and woman crouch in a dry, open field as they plant a young tree together. The man wears a beige vest and blue clothing, while the woman wears a colorful patterned dress and headwrap. Text above them reads "MAKE CHANGE HAPPEN," with the word "CHANGE" highlighted in green. At the bottom, a green banner reads: "REGISTER: bit.ly/OLCMakeChangeHappen" with logos for The Open University and Oxfam. The photo is credited to Diafara Traoré/Oxfam.
"It's the little things citizens do. That's what will make the difference. My little thing is planting trees," Wangari Maathai
What's your little thing? Join the #MakeChangeHappen course and grow your skills to drive positive social change.
Register: bit.ly/OLCMakeChang...
🚨 @unitetheunion.bsky.social has launched a campaign against Oxfam’s plan to axe and outsource staff roles — 265 jobs are at risk in total.
📣 Read more:
www.unitetheunion.org/news-events/...
✍️ Sign the petition:
actionnetwork.org/petitions/st...
#JobsPayConditions
Five ways to back enterprises that drive climate and gender justice. Women already lead innovation in the green economy. Here’s how to support their enterprises and ensure climate-friendly firms also boost gender justice. @oxfamnovib.bsky.social views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/05/five...
In a blog for today's International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia, activist Dumiso Gatsha considers how to support grassroots work towards LGBTQIA+ people's liberation, in a world increasingly hostile to their rights. views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/05/afri...
No logframe, no indicators and no workplan: what can we learn from a malnutrition project that is truly community-led? Stephanie Buell of Action Contre la Faim on a project in Senegal that backed communities to tackle malnutrition as they see fit frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/no-logframe-...
Peru banned child marriage: here are three ways longitudinal research helped make that happen.
Kath Ford on how Oxford’s Young Lives study made real policy impact based on robust data, influencing work and relationships built over years. @yloxford.bsky.social frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/peru-ban-chi...
Land is at the heart of women’s rights in the Global South: yet this year’s political declaration by the UN Commission on the Status of Women did not mention it. Naomi Shadrack on why we need to put land rights back on the global feminist agenda #CSW69 views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/04/land...
In an era of anti-rights, how do we hold the line for gender justice? What can the UK do to ensure the switch to renewable energy leaves no one behind? How can firms truly value women's work? Find out in our March round-up of Oxfam blogs and research mailchi.mp/oxfam/mar25
The UK’s Chancellor is driving disabled people deeper into poverty: she must think again, says Samuel Thomas of anti-poverty charity @z2ktrust.bsky.social
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/04/uk-c...
A graphic announces a new discussion paper from Oxfam titled "A (More) Feminist Approach to Principled Humanitarian Aid." The background is textured orange, with bold white text reading "DISCUSSION PAPER." The overview, written in white italics, highlights that there has been very little discussion of feminist discourse in the humanitarian sector, the shift in aid actors' approaches considering decolonization and gender justice, and the paper's aim to explore a feminist perspective in humanitarian aid. On the right, there is an image of the discussion paper cover featuring a photograph of refugee women walking in a rural setting. At the bottom, a green button provides a link to read more. The Oxfam logo is in the lower right corner.
Historically, there has been little discussion of feminism within the international humanitarian system. Our latest discussion paper aims to change that by exploring what a feminist approach to principled humanitarian aid might look like practically.
policy-practice.oxfam.org/resources/a-...
Amid a growing water crisis for billions, no one is stepping up to deliver the funding needed to avoid a catastrophic future. Jo Trevor sets out the need for smart water financing – the focus of an Oxfam event this Friday at the Marmalade Festival, Oxford. frompoverty.oxfam.org.uk/why-water-se...
Austerity is creating fertile ground for the far-right: instead the UK must invest to fix its social infrastructure, says @ajbrooker.bsky.social of @womensbudgetgrp.bsky.social views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/03/aust... #SpringStatement
Graphic promoting a case study titled 'From Exploited to Unemployed: The Women in Leicester Left Behind by Fast Fashion Outsourcing.' The background is bright pink with a textured design. An olive green 'NEW' banner appears at the top left. The overview highlights personal accounts from five women working in garment and textile factories in Leicester, UK, illustrating how migrant women in global supply chains face intersectional vulnerability to exploitation. The right side shows the case study cover image which features an illustration of three women holding protest signs reading 'Brands Must Practice What They Preach,' 'Support Garment Workers,' and 'Women, Cost of Living, Struggle to Survive.' The Oxfam logo and a trigger warning for content appear at the bottom. A link to read more is displayed at the bottom.
Graphic promoting a case study titled 'Tea Leaves a Mark: The voice of survivors of sexual and gender-based violence in Kenya’s tea estates.' The background is green with a textured design. The overview highlights the challenges faced by female laborers in Kenya’s tea estates, including sexual and gender-based violence, precarious employment, and systemic inequality. It emphasizes the resilience of women navigating exploitation and calls for reforms like strengthening reporting mechanisms, mental health support, fair wages, gender equity in leadership, and unionization. The graphic features the case study cover image which includes lush green tea plants with a landscape in the background and includes logos of Wangu Kanja Foundation and Oxfam. A link to read more is displayed at the bottom.
The business briefing features case studies highlighting how patriarchal norms and inequitable practices amplify vulnerabilities and ruin lives.
From Exploited to Unemployed: policy-practice.oxfam.org/resources/fr...
Tea Leaves a Mark: policy-practice.oxfam.org/resources/te...
The era of anti-rights: what can you do about it?
With movements to roll back gender rights on the rise, Kelly Mundy and Rachel Noble explain why the fight to protect them is more vital than ever and set out three things we can do to support them. views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/03/era-... #IWD2025
No one should be left behind in the shift to a greener future. As the world transitions to renewable energy, we risk simply swapping one unjust system for another. Natalie Shortall on a new Oxfam paper that calls on the UK to get behind a “just transition”. views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/03/no-o...
This #IWD2025, our Oxfam campaign calls on states to reassert their commitment to gender justice, bodily autonomy, and sexual and reproductive health and rights, say Lata Narayanaswamy and Amina Hersi. #PersonalToPowerful
views-voices.oxfam.org.uk/2025/03/hold...
A graphic promoting a new briefing paper from Oxfam titled "Personal to Powerful." The background is textured yellow with white and black text. The heading reads "BRIEFING PAPER," and an overview in white and yellow text discusses the failure of states to uphold commitments from the Beijing Declaration and Platforms for Action (BPfA), highlighting systemic economic inequality and threats to feminist and LGBTQIA+ movements. To the right, there is an illustration of diverse women in colorful clothing under a night sky with a stylized sun. The paper’s title and a tagline, "Holding the line for gender justice in the face of growing anti-rights movements," are displayed below the illustration. A taped-paper effect is used to frame the artwork. At the bottom, there is a "READ MORE" section with a link to the full briefing paper. Oxfam's logo appears in the lower right corner.
30 years since the Beijing Declaration, what progress have we made in the fight for gender justice? Our new paper, #PersonalToPowerful, finds that government inaction and unjust systems are halting our progress. Read the full report here: policy-practice.oxfam.org/resources/pe...