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ENGAGING CITIZENS AND LEADERS IN NEW WAYS
Citizens for
Global Solutions launched two new programs in Fall 2004, both designed to help
advocates of cooperative U.S. global engagement communicate more effectively
with elected leaders and the public.
Reframing U.S. Global Engagement Project
The Senate's failure to ratify the United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which enjoyed broad bipartisan support,
illustrates the increasingly frequent problems that proponents of cooperative
U.S. engagement in the international system have in making their case on Capitol
Hill.
In light of this, Citizens for Global Solutions, with support
from the Connect US Fund, coordinated an effort to develop a new framework
for talking about global issues with Congress.
By bringing together diverse actors to discuss the current problems they face in
communicating with Congress about international issues, the Reframing U.S.
Global Engagement project will develop a new set of common frames for NGOs and
activists.
+CLICK HERE to read about the results of this
research.
U.S. in the World Trainings
U.S. in the World: Talking Global Issues with Americans -
A Practical Guide, published by the
Rockefeller Brothers Foundation and the Aspen Institute's Global
Interdependence Initiative, is an important new tool in helping proponents of
cooperative U.S. global engagement make their case to the U.S. public.
Citizens for Global Solutions, with the assistance of the
Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, is conducting trainings on the guide with
our nationwide network of grassroots Partners Groups, House and Senate Staff,
citizens' groups and foreign affairs professionals in key cities throughout the
U.S., and partners in NGO networks.
+ Congressional Staffers: Learn how to schedule a training
today!
IM4HR: Instant Messaging for Human Rights
On May 6, 2005, Citizens for Global Solutions in collaboration with The Center
for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law at American University Washington College
of Law convened a workshop to explore how to most effectively talk to the public
about human rights issues. The workshop was an outgrowth of recent discussions
in which those concerned with civil rights, human rights, international law, and
US global engagement identified the need for a collaborative approach to getting
our messages heard.
This full-day interactive session involved advocates from over 15 organizations
with interests as diverse as immigration policy, environmental protection, penal
reform, religious action, homelessness, issues related to the Holocaust, and
human rights in general. The advocates explored ways of framing issues that make
their messages more effective and tie them into a larger movement. The messaging
research from US in the World – Talking Global Issues with Americans
served as a cornerstone in the process.
+CLICK HERE to read a copy of the outcome document.
Updated January 11, 2006
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