by Martin Saunders | May 14, 2020 | Opinion
It has taken me 40 years to accept my privilege as a white, middle-class man. I hated this idea. Hated it. Because I’ve always prided myself on something – that I am a good guy, one of the proverbial good guys in fact. I help other people. I empower women and people...
by Jonathan Langley | May 13, 2020 | Opinion
“I have the power!” is a quote not brought up often enough at the Global Leadership Summit or in the Harvard Business Review. It seems to me the definitive quote on power relations considered through a Marxist, feminist, post-colonial or Christian lens. It was, of...
by Hannah Watson | Sep 4, 2019 | Opinion
Nobody is against education. Except that Malala Yousafzai was shot in the head by the Taliban for daring to learn. Except that where 750 million adults around the world remain illiterate, two-thirds are women. Except that the number of children with disabilities...
by Jonathan Langley | Jan 10, 2019 | Opinion
A revolutionary holding a book by Donald Trump, riding an eagle and raining money may not be your idea of what freedom looks like – but it is someone’s. Probably a lot of people’s if democratic votes are to be believed. For some of us, freedom finds its perfect...
by Kang-San Tan | Sep 24, 2018 | Opinion
Our theology and practice will need to change if our mission is to be relevant in tomorrow’s world. Our world today is undergoing tremendous changes. What is the shape of future mission from Britain? I want to reflect on four crucial issues that will determine the...