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 | Sharing: A Growing Trend and a Path to Justice and Peace By Graham Peebles Redress, Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 16, 2012 
 The internet encyclopaedia Wikipedia, 
	launched in 2001 by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger, is a sharing phenomenon. 
	There are currently, according to Wikipedia itself, “over 22 million freely 
	usable articles in 284 languages, written by over 34 million registered 
	users and countless anonymous contributors worldwide, and visited monthly by 
	14 per cent of all internet users”. [emphasis added] In a further sharing 
	initiative, Wikipedia states that “in late March 2012, the Wikimedia 
	Foundation announced Wikidata, a planned universal platform for sharing data 
	between all Wikipedia language editions”, creating an expanded integrated 
	resource for data and information, freely available to everyone, potentially 
	anywhere in the world. International and intergovernmental 
	cooperation and sharing of data is most evident on environmental issues. The 
	Intergovernmental panel on Climate Change was set up by the United Nations 
	Environment Programme in 1988 and involves 120 countries. Thousands of 
	scientists work on a voluntary basis, writing and reviewing papers that are 
	summarized for key policy makers. Sharing between students and teaching staff is finding a place within many educational institutions. Group work within schools is the model increasingly being employed, helping to build relationships, encourage cooperation and balance somewhat the divisive effects of competition. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development) in its 2009 teacher evaluation report, concludes: “The expectation is that teachers engaging in reflective practice, studying their own methods of instruction and assessment, and sharing their experience with their peers in schools, becomes regular and routine part of professional life.” As this becomes the norm in schools, children will increasingly adopt the habit of sharing, encouraging broader social responsibility.Economic sharing The breakdown in the current, unjust 
	economic system, which is based on competition and separation, has led to 
	some radical experiments in social living, with sharing being a key 
	ingredient. 
 This extraordinary story has been replicated in a more modest fashion in Britain by Mark Boyle, also known as “the moneyless man”. Mark lived for a year without any cash and founded the Feeconomy Community and the online sharing website. According to Wikipedia “The Freeconomy Community has over 25,000 members in over 150 countries… allows people to share, moving away from exchange economies towards pay it forward philosophy.” “Freeconomy” functions through individuals offering skills and support to other members of the community for free, or in exchange for help they need. The community is completely open and operates through the internet. Pay it forward describes the process of, having received a good deed, one performs an act in kind to someone else, not paying the deed back but paying it forward, thereby sharing generosity of spirit through an act of gratitude expressed as kindness. This is a central idea within the “freeconomy” philosophy, based as it is on sharing.Sharing “stuff” and democracy Anyone who has spent time 
	in developing countries and returned to the West recognizes the waste and 
	overconsumption that has driven capitalism for decades, entrapping the human 
	sprit in the process. As a result, many in the (so-called) developed world 
	are simply awash with “stuff”. Instead of throwing away things no longer 
	needed, websites like 
	Freecycle and 
	Freegle offer a mechanism for reusing unwanted items, by passing them 
	onto someone else. As the Freegle site says, “Don’t throw it away – give it 
	away”. The community consists of around 1.5 million members in Britain and 
	around 350 “reuse groups” as they call them. The Freecycle Network, 
	originated in Tuscon, Arizona, in the USA in 2003 and now has a presence in 
	85 countries worldwide with almost nine million members in 5,000 
	communities. The first Freecycle group in Britain was set up in London in 
	October 2003, there are now 540 groups with 2,500,000 members. To reuse is 
	to share. It is an example of the pay forward economic idea, based as it is 
	on the virtue of generosity. The visionary
	Brandt 
	Report (BR), published in October 1981, “called for international codes 
	of conduct for the sharing of technology… global safeguards against 
	restrictive business practices and a new framework for the activities of 
	multinational corporations”. So far these measures have not been implemented 
	in any meaningful way, and the economic divisions between and within North- 
	South countries highlighted in the BR have widened. The failure to implement 
	the BR’s recommendations has led to the “missing out on vast possibilities 
	for international peace and development through sharing with poor nations 
	the benefits of the information revolution, 90 per cent of technology 
	ownership and use remains in developed nations, creating a global ‘digital 
	divide’”. Look closely with an open mind and you may see the early signs of such a world, for within the fogs of conflict and suffering there is hope and cause for optimism. The growing sharing initiatives are a herald of the new; they are to be welcomed and championed. Professor Frederico Mayor Zaragoza, a former director of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), in an interview with Share International, makes the case for peace through sharing: “We [the UN] exist to create, physically and intellectually, the conditions for peace. This implies real justice and sharing, not a simple distribution of aid and political patch-up.” 
 “Real justice” is concerned with the implementation of universally agreed human rights, with participation, consultation and, crucially equality and the fair distribution of the world’s resources. All are democratic ideals and all will be realized through expressions of sharing. Sharing equitably the world’s resources, many of which are to be found in developing countries, would be a giant step in establishing justice and dissipating tensions between wealthy countries and the developing nations. Benjamin Crème makes the point in The Art of Cooperation: “Sharing the world's resources will restore sanity to the world. It will make life happier for most people.” Furthermore: “Through sharing alone will justice be confirmed.“ Clearly it is unjust that 70 per cent of the world’s natural resources, 
	food, water, etc. are usurped and wasted by 30 per cent of the world’s 
	people, as is currently estimated to be the case. For example, the USA, with 
	just 5 per cent of the world’s population, consumes 25 per cent of the 
	resources – is this just, or even sane? Sharing of the world’s resources 
	equitably among the people, based on need, would be a giant step in 
	establishing justice. Professor Zaragoza goes on to say that “since the end 
	of the Cold War, the United Nations has been eroded because it has been 
	forced to divert from its essential core work – peace through justice, 
	meaning real sharing, cooperation, development, health, housing and 
	education”. Perennial values of goodness, justice, freedom and peace are the 
	aspirations of men, women and children everywhere; a key element in their 
	realization is, it seems, sharing, for without sharing justice remains 
	simply a dream, peace a fantasy. In a world which has long been saturated 
	with violence and suffering, mankind cries out for peace. Sharing is crucial 
	in fulfilling this long cherished ideal. Graham Peebles is Director of the Create Trust, a UK registered charity supporting fundamental social change and the human rights of individuals in acute need. | 
 
 
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