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Dialogue of Civilizations to Foster Cross-Cultural Understanding

Dialogue of Civilizations to Foster Cross-Cultural Understanding

Lecture of the World Public Forum “Dialogue of Civilizations” Founding President Vladimir Yakunin drafted for the interactive thematic debate on Fostering Cross-Cultural Understanding for Building Peaceful and Inclusive Societies at the United Nations Headquarters held on March 22, 2012 The lecture touches on the basic principles upon which the World Public...

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The New Social Media and the Reshaping of Communication in the 21st Century

The New Social Media and the Reshaping of Communication in the 21st Century

Lecture by the President of the I.P.O., WPF "Dialogue of Civilizations" ICC Member Dr. Hans Kechler at Doha Interfaith Conference At the invitation of the Doha International Center for Interfaith Dialogue (DICID), the President of the International Progress Organization (I.P.O.), Dr. Hans Kechler, delivered a special lecture on "The New Social...

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Addressing the Global Crises

Addressing the Global Crises

This is an edited text of the speech delivered by Prof. Kamran Mofid at the Concluding Plenary Session, Rhodes Forum, Sunday 9 October 2011 Reclaiming the Moral and Spiritual Roots of Economics: An Invitation to Dialogue Founding President, Dr. Yakunin, Madam Yakunin, Your Eminences, friends, colleagues, ladies and gentlemen, Once again, our Rhodes...

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Who are We? What is WPF – Dialogue of Civilizations?

Who are We? What is WPF – Dialogue of Civilizations?

At this concluding session—and with a view toward our 10th anniversary next year—it seems proper to ask:  What is WPF?  What kind of organization is WPF?  Now, on a purely formal level, this question can easily be answered:  it is an NGO (a nongovernmental organization) concerned with (committed to) the...

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Peace & Justice in Modern World

Imperialism didn't end. These Days it's known as International Law Imperialism didn't end. These Days it's known as International Law An Article by George Monbiot, British writer and political activist, published at "The Guardian" on April 30, 2012 A one-sided justice sees weaker ... Read more
The Russian Federation tested by Multipolarism The Russian Federation tested by Multipolarism An article by Tiberio Graziani, President of IsAG – Institute for Advanced Studies in Geopolitics and Auxiliary Sciences, director of Geopolitica, J... Read more
This is Spain's Destiny This is Spain's Destiny An Article by Javier Solana, President of the ESADE Center for Global Economy and Geopolitics, for El País, published at "The Guardian" on March 29... Read more

Solidarity Economies for Humane Society

Plutonomy And The Precariat Plutonomy And The Precariat An Arcticle by Noam Chomsky, Institute Professor Emeritus in the MIT Department of Linguistics and Philosophy, published at Outlookindia.com on May ... Read more
The World is Not Flat The World is Not Flat An Interview with Joseph Stiglitz, professor at Columbia University and a recipient of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, published at U... Read more
Goodbye, Neo-liberalism and Austerity. Hello, Democratic Socialism and Hope Goodbye, Neo-liberalism and Austerity. Hello, Democratic Socialism and Hope A Note by Kamran Mofid, Founder of the NGO "Globalisation for the Common Good Initiative", published at his Blog on May 7, 2012 Voters in France an... Read more

Sustainability of Modern World and Future

The Current Crisis Draws the Line Under the Basic Results of “Globalization” The Current Crisis Draws the Line Under the Basic Results of “Globalization” Opening address by Founding President of the World Public Forum "Dialogue of Civilizations" Vladimir Yakunin at the opening of the Plenary Meeting o... Read more
Decoloniality and the Communal Decoloniality and the Communal The second part of Interview with Walter Mignolo, William H. Wannamaker Professor and Director, Center for Global studies and the Humanities, Duke U... Read more
Science and Economics: A Call to Dialogue and Action Science and Economics: A Call to Dialogue and Action A Note by Kamran Mofid, Founder, Globalization for the Common Good Initiative, Member of the International Coordinating Committee of the WPF Dialogu... Read more

Alexander SaltanovAlexander SaltanovSpeech by Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs or the Russian Federation Alexander Saltanov at the Rhodes Forum plenary session

October 9, 2009, Rhodes, Greece

 

 

 

Esteemed participants of the Forum,

In addition to what S.V. Lavrov has noted in his greeting, I would like to say that your Forum is of special significance at this particular moment. As our President D.A. Medvedev said in his recent speech in Yaroslavl, at the Modern State and Global Security Conference, ‘politics is becoming an increasingly complex and science-intensive process’. To address new challenges of the times it is necessary to concentrate intellectual resources in the key areas to the greatest extent possible. It is not only that domination of one or several superpowers is a thing of the past – one or several intellectual centres can hold sway no longer. Future belongs to such flexible instruments, that help to understand the quickly changing reality and make recommendations, as your Forum which is attended by intellectuals, politicians, and public figures from several dozen countries.

Those challenges of the times, especially in the area of international relations, which I am particularly interested in, are manifold. Besides the global financial crisis, stability in the world is menaced, like in the past, by regional and local conflicts, terrorism, trans-border crime, food shortage and climate change.

These complex problems must be resolved in such a way as to preserve all the best that humanity has produced and, at the same time, to develop new mechanisms which would help to preserve global peace and bring about conditions for sustainable development.

Today it has become clear that the UN is what we all have in common. This is a life and time-tested mechanism, called upon to harmonize the interests of different states and peoples. Despite all the criticism, sometimes very harsh, including the one expressed at the latest UN General Assembly in New-York, it is evident that the UN should be not destroyed, but improved, by adapting it to new global realities, preserving its inter-state nature and inviolability of its Charter. The UN has no counterparts. It is the UN which serves as a source of the international law and it should retain this capacity.

It is a different matter that at the same time the old and new structures and formats are taking rise. They certainly cannot replace the UN, but may effectively contribute to performing both global and regional tasks. These mechanisms should be strengthened, as they allow to pool joint efforts to react to common threats, to mitigate the aftermath of crises and to increase sustainability of national economies. Generally speaking, such organizations contribute to further advance of democracy in the international relations. Can the civilization criteria serve as the foundation for such organizations – that’s one of the most interesting issues to be discussed at our Forum.

A paradoxical situation has now cropped in the world. We have to look for the formulae to solve the problems, relevant for today and tomorrow, such as promotion of multilateral disarmament, creation of WMD-free and WMD delivery-vehicle-free zones, including in the Middle East, providing of energy security. But we are pushed back by the legacy of the Cold War and the correspondent outline of interaction between different military and political blocks and structures, left from that time.

I mean, first of all, absence of a collective security system in Europe, which is still home to NATO, a system, which would correspond to the spirit of the time and the countries’ needs. At the same time we have a whole litany of conflicts in the Middle East.

The Arab-Israeli conflict, the most essential of them, has long become outdated. Either peoples, or the states of the region don’t need it. The fact that it is not settled yet impedes the long-standing integration processes in the region, at the same time causing extremism and terrorism, as well as the risks of inter-civilization clashes.

Thank you for your attention.

Speech by Alexander Saltanov at the Rhodes Forum plenary session

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