One of the social enterprises I have helped over time is the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre, which has just launched a new portal for John Ruggie, Special Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General on business and human rights. Well worth a visit.
Archives for July 2009
100 Years Ago Today
He could almost have taken off with those moustaches alone
He may have collapsed his undercarriage 100 years ago today, when he landed on these shores after his first-ever flight across the Channel, but Louis Blériot was a prototypical example of Homo volans. The whole adventure, with a damaged foot incurred before the flight, was an example of coming in on a wing and a prayer, and only just ahead of competitors whose names failed to register in the historical record. But he certainly looked the part.
Wilton Park
Arrival Stairway Towards sunset Herbaceous Greenhouse Church Wiston House Graveyard Farm tanks Path Roots Path 2 South Down Way Chanctonbury Ring Fort Beeches Panorama Panorama 2 Panorama 3 Fort disappearing On the way down
Down to Shoreham-by-Sea yesterday evening, then taxi out to Wilton Park to speak at their British-German Forum 2009. The theme: Can we shape capitalism to suit our future? Because I was speaking late today, after lunch I climbed up to Chanctonbury Ring – and its Iron Age hill fort, dating from around the 6th to 5th centuries BC. Had been raining earlier, which made the ground very muddy and slippery in places, but the sun was out and the ascent was a joy.
Reaching the top of Chanctonbury Hill, it was glorious to turn onto the South Down Way and make my way across the saddleback to the fort. Don’t know who planted the beeches up there, but they’re a wonder. Long-haired types wandering around the fort with a giant metal detector, but I was rapt by the views across to the North Downs in the north – and to the sea in the south.
From up there, Wilton Park looked tiny – seen across the back of a whirling buzzard. Semi-miraculous to be receiving email on my BlackBerry so high above the landscape. And, now I think of it, to be listening tot h likes of Elbow and Leo Kottke (oddly, it’s Rings) as I type this in to my Mac Book Pro.
Then back down to do my session – on the role of big business and on philanthrocapitalism – with Michael Green, co-author with Matthew Bishop of Philanthrocapitalism: How the rich can save the world and why we should let them. We agreed on most things – and the debate after our presentations was very energetic. Regretted having to head back to the station and back into London, where storm clouds were piling up in purple black meringues.
From the Environment Foundation …
Windows Geoffrey Halina Supported Border 1 Tim Border 2 Ian Border 3 Kate Malcolm Ian 2
By train down to Newdigate, near Dorking, for a meeting of the Trustees of the Environment Foundation – hosted by Sir Geoffrey Chandler, a former Trustee, and his wife Lucy. Wonderful to deliberate the shift of focus of the Foundation as it morphs into the Foundation for Democracy & Sustainable Development under its Director, Halina Ward, as woodpeckers, nuthatches and tits queued to feed on the pergola outside the kitchen. An extraordinary proliferation of butterflies as we worked. Halina and her sister are working on a revamp of the Foundation’s website, which will reposition us in a pretty major way later in the year.
Not all the Trustees could make it: we had Malcolm Aickin, Ian Christie, Kate Burningham, Tim O’Donovan and myself, as Chairman. Later, as I waited at Dorking station with Halina, my phone went and it was the news I had been hoping from our C21 meeting last Monday. Invigorating.
Then back to London for the third birthday of Chinadialogue, held at the Institute for War & Peace Reporting in Gray’s Inn Road, which I attended with Sam, and where I took the picture below on the top floor, which captures some of my love of wood grain.
Facing the Future
Bad parent that I am, while Elaine went to Hania’s thirtieth birthday party, I found myself sitting in tropically warm, St James’s Palace, listening to Prince Charles on the Future – the latest Dimbleby Lecture.
While waiting under the Palace portico, I bumped into David Goodhart of our downstairs neighbours, Prospect magazine, who noted that 2 Bloomsbury Place was well represented. Later, sitting next to Jonathon Porritt in the audience, I wasn’t aware that we were being filmed, but very shortly after got a number of emails from people who had spotted me/us.
Sympathised with much of the speech, though at times felt it was uncomfortably self-referential, when the Prince is actually part of a much larger, non-HRH-branded set of movements. It also felt slightly weird to be lectured on the need to move beyond materialism and consumerism in a setting of such extraordinary opulence.
Overall, however, we are privileged to have him as a champion of these wonderfully diverse issues and causes, all of which – as he noted – are struggling to move from the fringes to the mainstream.