HEINRICH BÖLL FOUNDATION

 

 

hbf

The Heinrich Böll Foundation is part of the Green political movement that has developed worldwide as a response to the traditional politics of socialism, liberalism, and conservatism. Our main tenets are ecology and sustainability, democracy and human rights, self-determination and justice. We place particular emphasis on gender democracy, meaning social emancipation and equal rights for women and men. We are also committed to equal rights for cultural and ethnic minorities and to the societal and political participation of immigrants. Finally, we promote non-violence and proactive peace policies.

To achieve our goals, we seek strategic partnerships with others who share our values. We are an independent organization, that is, we determine our own priorities and policies.

Our namesake, the writer and Nobel Prize laureate Heinrich Böll, personifies the values we stand for: defense of freedom, civic courage, tolerance, open debate, and the valuation of art and culture as independent spheres of thought and action.

We are based in the Federal Republic of Germany, yet we are an international actor in both ideal and practical terms. One of our most important areas of activity are our projects in developmental co-operation and international policy worldwide.

Currently, the Foundation maintains 24 foreign offices and is currently supporting about 130 projects in 60 countries on four continents.

Visit the English language website of the Heinrich Böll Foundation / Germany.

 
 

MIDDLE EAST OFFICE

The international work of the Heinrich Böll Foundation is geared towards seeking strategic partnerships with others who share our values. We believe in the inherent value of broadening and facilitating active participation of citizens, equal access and rights beyond gender and ethnic or religious affiliations, resolving conflicts peacefully and keeping development sustainable - in Germany and anywhere else in the world.

Yet, we are aware that positive change in the direction of these core values has to set out from the realities of the societies we are working with, and that strategies aimed at achieving sweeping changes in a short period of time are often unsustainable or even counterproductive.

Moreover, we believe that citizens and social actors are the primary and most important reference point when it comes to the priorities and the pace of such change in their own societies. Hence, our approach focuses on engaging with civil society organizations, civic initiatives and political activists throughout the region. Exchange and dialogue with these partners is the main inspiration for the priorities of our program. Likewise, a significant part of our actual work is lending support - through networking, facilitation and funding - to initiatives and projects conceived by our partners, in response to what they perceive as the pressing needs of their societies.

For any foreign organization, coming to the Middle East to promote an agenda for change means navigating troubled waters. Citizens of Arab countries have seen many attempts to bestow achievements of Western civilization upon their region, often with controversial results. Many have concluded that the interests and aspirations of the people who are subjected to such civilizing missions tend to come second at best. Contradicting foreign agendas - such as calling for democracy in one place and supporting repressive regimes next door -, condescending attitudes - such as considering a specifically Western European and North American trajectory of development and democracy as a universal model to be emulated - and the involvement of some Western Powers in the conflicts of the region all contribute to an atmosphere prone to misunderstandings or even resentment.

In such an environment, hbf puts a particular emphasis on the general commitment  that is guiding its approach to international cooperation: to work with local and regional initiatives on equal terms and in a democratic manner, and to develop and discuss common agendas with partner organizations attuned to local discourses, dynamics and priorities.

 
 
 

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OTHER VOICES

 Mahmood MamdaniOn Blasphemy, Bigotry and the Politics of Culture Talk

More readings available from the hbf translation project
Other Voices

UPCOMING

Power, Governmentality, Resistance and State of Exception in the Arab World
Beirut, August 29-30, 2008

 

Emerging Powers and the Middle East

Beirut, October 24-25, 2008 

DOSSIER

Iraqi Refugee Crisis

 

Climate Change and the Middle East

 

War in Darfur

NEW PUBLICATIONS

Cities of the South: Citizenship and Exclusion in the 21st Century

Edited volume published in cooperation with the Institute Français du Proche Orient (IFPO) by Saqi Books