The world is facing multiple and diverse challenges that know no boundaries and are impacting the lives of millions of people. To tackle them, we need to engage in international cooperation, share knowledge and jointly promote sustainable and just solutions. As a driver of change, civil society has a key role to play – worldwide.
Forming part of a global civil society spanning nearly 90 countries, “Brot für die Welt” (Bread for the World) works with more than 1,500 partner organisations to empower disadvantaged people to lastingly improve their lives. In collaboration with them, the relief agency is committed to bringing about global change and fighting hunger, poverty and the impacts of climate change. We speak out in favour of a just world.
However, for months now development cooperation has been the target of public criticism in a way it has never been before. Legitimate discussions about priority setting or how to assess the impact of specific measures have been replaced by sweeping vilification. At its heart, this appears to be an attempt by right-wing populists to portray global solidarity as naive and damaging for Germany. For decades people have generally agreed that active development policy is an important part of Germany’s responsibility in the world; this consensus is now being undermined to some extent in a political climate fuelled by election campaigning. This is short-sighted and wrong.
What we need is more cooperation, not less. This is certainly true when it comes to climate policy: every tonne of carbon emissions that can be cut anywhere in the world will benefit the planet’s climate in general. It also applies to food policy: if we sell our subsidised surplus food at low prices in countries of the Global South, we will hinder their development and their ability to feed their populations without relying on imports – which is essential to ensure their crisis resilience. We also need more cooperation to make the world a safer place: good development cooperation helps prevent conflicts and safeguard peace.