Oxfam
Oxfam International is a group of 14 organisations working with over 3,000 partners in around 100 countries to find lasting solutions to poverty and injustice.[1] It brings these problems to public attention, sets programs to make changes, and provides help in major disasters, also promotes sustainable development and fair trade. It works directly with communities and seeks to influence the powerful to ensure that poor people can improve their lives with having a say in decisions that affect them. The principal belief is that people should have a respect for human rights and that will help alleviate poverty.[2]
Oxfam began in Oxford in 1942 as the Oxford Committee for Famine Relief. It was started by a group of Quakers (which included Marcus Tite), social activists, and Oxford academics.[3] This is now Oxfam Great Britain, still based in Oxford, UK. It was one of several local committees formed to support the National Famine Relief Committee. Their job was to get the British government to allow food through the Allied blockade for the starving people of Axis occupied Greece.
The first overseas Oxfam began in Canada in 1963. The committee changed its name to its telegraph address, OXFAM, in 1965.
Oxfam Media
Plaque commemorating first meeting of Oxfam in the Old Library, the University Church, Oxford
Oxfam clothing and shoe bank in the United Kingdom
Original Oxfam shop at 17 Broad Street, Oxford
Winnie Byanyima, 2013–2019 executive director of Oxfam International
Raymond C. Offenheiser, then Oxfam America President, with Rupert Murdoch at the 2006 Oxfam/MySpace Rock for Darfur event
An Oxfam cholera awareness-raising campaign in Mbandaka, Democratic Republic of Congo
Oxfam shop in Cirencester, England
References
- ↑ Statement from the Oxfam website.
- ↑ "WHO | Oxfam International". WHO. Retrieved 2021-10-09.
- ↑ Cecil Jackson-Cole from Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board. Archived 2009-12-11 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 22 October 2009.