In this discussion of social justice and collaboration, we will look at ways in which global citizenship can help address all-island challenges. In particular, we examine development education, now more commonly known as global citizenship education, and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The discussion also looks at ways that an individual’s learning journey can be transformed into wider societal change.
Salome Mbugua is a researcher, gender equality activist and human rights advocate. She is the founder and former CEO of
AkiDwA, the migrant women’s group, with over twenty years of experience working with underrepresented groups.
Bayan Smith is the public engagement officer at
Children in Crossfire, who have been responding to the rights and needs of children caught in the crossfire of poverty, injustice and inequality.
Karen Jeffers is a freelance facilitator and consultant in the charities sector in global citizenship education. After five years working in Latin America in conflict and post-conflict settings, she returned to Ireland in 2014 and established the Irish branch of the international human rights organisation,
Peace Brigades International. In 2020 she also co-founded
Síolta Chroi an organisation based in County Monaghan that ‘
envisions a more connected world where ecosystems are restored and thriving. Humans are working in cooperation with wider nature and one another’.