In 2018 Philanthropy for Social Justice and Peace (PSJP) started to facilitate a learning space for a cohort of philanthropy and development practitioners who wanted to increase the effectiveness and impact of their work. They identified themes such as dignity, community resilience, measuring change, sustainability, community philanthropy, leadership, power, among others, that they wanted to unpack. | Global Dialogue
An introduction to what happened at a typical eighteenth-century English election [15-minute read] Elections were a key component of a continual cycle of renewing and maintaining relationships between politicians and their constituents in the eighteenth century. The years between elections provided opportunities for politicians and political families to generate goodwill with their local communities through [...]Read More... from Georgian Elections: the Basics| ECPPEC
A beginner’s guide: would you have the vote in the 18th century? [10-minute interactive] [...]Read More... from Who could vote?| ECPPEC
Explore how many elections took place, and how many were contested [15-minute interactive] [...]Read More... from Contested Elections| ECPPEC
The ‘electorate’ is the group of individuals who were entitled to vote in an election. This is different from the number of people who actually cast their votes at a poll, a group which we might call…| ECPPEC
"The Tao that can be told is not the eternal Tao," says Lao Tzu when beginning the Tao Te Ching. Why is the Tao is difficult to explain?| Tao In You