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Progressio - Changing Minds, Changing Lives


women carrying logs on their heads
building a future for East Timor
© Nick Sireau/Progressio

Progressio has called on the British government to fulfil its responsibilities to the people of East Timor, following a quarter-century of violence during which the UK supplied arms to Indonesian forces that illegally occupied East Timor until 1999.

Church representatives from ten African nations have called for “targeted economic sanctions” to be imposed on Robert Mugabe’s ZANU-PF regime following a four-day ecumenical summit to discuss the Zimbabwe crisis.
Progressio today welcomed Pope Benedict XVI’s stark message on the environment, which warned of the perils of pillaging the planet’s natural resources.
Robert Mugabe election poster: 'Revolutionary yesterday, today and tomorrow. Vote Mugabe 2008, for principled, consistent and fearless leadership'Zimbabwean churches could provide the 'ultimate challenge' for practising Catholic Robert Mugabe as the African leader seeks to legitimise his recent re-election, Progressio's Steve Kibble writes in The New Statesman.

Events at Progressio

Greenbelt festival '08 (22 Aug 2008)
The Greenbelt festival will take place over the bank holiday weekend of 22 – 25 August 2008 at Cheltenham Racecourse and Progressio will be in the G-Source so come along and join in the fun!



Latest publications

Interact Summer 2008Progressio
Faith and HIV and AIDS. Plus articles on the crisis in Zimbabwe, justice for Timor Leste, and young people in Nicaragua.
Unless the grain of wheat shall die book cover. Image of a farmer in Azuay province, Ecuador.Sean McDonagh and Donal Dorr
In this Comment, Sean McDonagh and Donal Dorr argue that Terminator technology (the genetic modification of seeds so that they become sterile after the first planting) poses an unacceptable threat to poor and marginalised small-scale farmers and to the world’s environment, and is fundamentally wrong on moral and theological grounds.
Hombre somali pasando por delante de una bandera de Somalilandia.  © Stuart Freedman/PanosMark Bradbury
Since declaring independence from Somalia in 1991, the Republic of Somaliland has successfully managed a process of reconciliation, demobilisation and the restoration of law and order. This book - the most authoritative account to date of the birth and growth of Somaliland - explores why Somaliland has not followed Somalia into 'state collapse', and considers issues of post-conflict resolution and state-building that will be of relevance and interest to all concerned with peace and progress, not just in Africa but worldwide.

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podcasts

portrait of Lloyd SimwakaListen to Lloyd Simwaka talking about the role of faith leaders in tackling HIV and AIDS in Malawi (3 min 44 sec)

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other Progressio websites

SAY NO to terminator seeds - link to Progressio's seedsaver website
Progressio Ireland
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