Campaigning to shout about

It takes all sorts, and all kinds of action, to get decision-makers to listen – and actually do something. So go on. Make a dent in poverty, any way you can.

Campaigners erect the visual 'million faces' petition at the UN in December 2006. Photo: Oxfam

Online petitions

More than one million people signed our petition to control the arms trade – a trade fuelling conflict and misery in poor countries the world over. The result? In October 2006, the UN voted to begin work on an historic Arms Trade Treaty.

 

Photo: Oxfam

Easy guide

Easy guide

How and why we campaign for change

Campaign with us

Campaign with us

Start making a difference right now

Together, WECAN!

Together, WECAN!

Grass roots campaigning to end violence against women

Peter Coulam, a Make Poverty History campaigner from Hull. Photo: Toby Adamson

Direct action

See anyone you know? More than 225,000 people encircled Edinburgh in 2005 ahead of the G8 Summit in Gleneagles. Politicians agreed to cancel some poor countries’ debt and increase aid. Brilliant, but well short of what’s needed.

 

Photo: Toby Adamson

We Can Changemaker Beauty Ara (right) at work in her community in Bangladesh. Photo: G.M.B. Akash

Grass roots

Popular support for the ‘We Can’ campaign in South Asia is helping to create five million ‘Change Makers’ to stop violence against women. The specially trained activists are now challenging and changing attitudes wherever they live, person by person, street by street.

 

Photo: G.M.B. Akash

Campaigners perform a stunt calling on Starbucks to honour its commitments to Ethiopian coffee farmers. Photo: Oxfam

Email actions

In 2007, Starbucks voiced their opposition to moves by the Ethiopian government to trademark its best coffee beans and get better prices for poor coffee farmers. Oxfam challenged them – and 96,000 campaigners pressed the company, mostly via email, to sign a deal. Starbucks soon signed it.

 

Photo: Oxfam

Campaign stunt complete with live vulture outside the vulture fund court cage. Photo: Androulla Kyrillou

Media work

When a ruthless ‘vulture fund’ company demanded $55 million from Zambia to repay a ‘bad’ debt they’d acquired for just $3.3 million, Oxfam flew into action to stop them. Breaking the story with Newsnight and the Financial Times, we spread the news all the way to Downing Street and The White House. Prime Minister Brown and President Bush want this kind of thing to stop. With their influence, it just might.

 

Photo: Androulla Kyrillou

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