Learn

Lesson travel

We organize national and international educational travels for the purpose of helping you discover how global injustice affects humanity. You will see first hand people and communities experiencing difficulty in accessing basic needs and unequal service delivery.

Learning never stops—there is always a first time with everything for everyone. We take pride in teaching the world about social justice through our conferences and in doing so we also learn and get better in what we do. We educate people that want to be advocates of social justice. The volunteers that help us on the movement to end global injustice, also have a lot to learn.

What is global injustice and why it affects people?

Global injustice, also known as international inequality is simply inequality between countries of the world and in extension between people across countries. Humanitarian crises like hunger, poor water quality, displacement, climate change, multidimensional poverty, and the digital divide are mostly experienced by people facing unequal service delivery.
History tends to prove that developed countries provide aid to people in developing and least developed countries rocked by crises unequally.

Aid provision should not be based on what you can do for yourself as a nation that attracts or benefits us, to warrant us to provide aid to you. Rather, it is important that we understand that suffering impacts humans equally and be compassionate with our actions without looking at what differentiates us. We also call on people in power in every jurisdiction around the world to use public resources and make life better for the people they lead.

Who faces global injustice?

Most small economies tend to be left on their own to go through the effects of natural disasters, man-made disasters, and climate change. A lot of people in these countries also experience multidimensional poverty that affects health, education, and living standards; and the digital divide. Victims of flooding, war, or terrorist attack are most likely to have basic needs of life accessibility problems.

Restoring hope, building dignity

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