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This book is based on Stephen Hill's direct experience working in the United Nations for many years as consultant and over a decade as full time Member of Staffbased in Indonesia and part-time in Paris, serving as United Nations Regional Director for Science for Asia and the Pacific as well as Principal Director and Ambassador of the United Nations Agency UNESCO (the UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) across South East Asia.
It was not always a quiet life. Stephen had to handle the negotiations and aftermath of two of his own UN staff taken hostage in 1996 for five months by freedom fighters into the jungles of West Papua; the May 1998 Revolution in Indonesia where he had to escape his house at 2.00am through mobs and fires while his own security staff had changed into civilian clothes and run off down the street to escape, then evacuate everyone else, but stay to report to the UN Security Council and liaise with the incoming Transition Government. In the early 2000s, Stephen needed to escape Indonesia, under UN Security instruction, from the terrorist organisation, Abu Sayyaf from Mindanao, the Southern Philippines, when they sent a Hit Squad down through Manado and across Sulawesi towards Jakarta to assassinate him in Jakarta because of his collaborative work throughout Mindanao's previous fundamentalist Islamic conflict zones, amongst other things, bringing literacy to 7,000 villagers, mainly women, building nine radio stations with community support across religious lines, and introducing basic education into Islamic Schools previously teaching only the Koran and Arabic.
This book captures all of this rather exciting life but delivers a message from experiencethe Power of Community and Cultural Empowerment in successful United Nations Action to bring positive change into the world.
Explains the critical role of UN organizations in bringing peace and freedom to the world Is the first biography by a former high ranking UNESCO diplomat from Australia Explains how UNESCO facilitated freedom of press and education in Indonesia
Auteur
Stephen Hill is a polymath, qualified at research level and experienced in both natural and social sciences, and Professor of Sociology at age 30 at the University of Wollongong, Australia, now Emeritus Professor. Over his career, he was also awarded and founded the Australian Research Council's Centre of Excellence in Research Policy (1990 to 1995), served part-time as Australia's Foundation Chairman in APEC, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Organization (1990 to 1995), and has consulted broadly through Asia for international agencies and countries since 1965. Meanwhile, he has been a prolific writer with many research articles across numerous disciplines and over 20 published books. His central objective over his career has been to foster knowledge for the sake of peoples' empowerment and welfare. He served full time as the United Nations Regional Director for Science for Asia and the Pacific while in parallel as Ambassador and Field Director of the UN organization, UNESCO, the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, across South East Asia.
Texte du rabat
This book is based on Stephen Hill s direct experience working in the United Nations for many years as consultant and over a decade as full time Member of Staff based in Indonesia and part-time in Paris, serving as United Nations Regional Director for Science for Asia and the Pacific as well as Principal Director and Ambassador of the United Nations Agency UNESCO (the UN Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization) across South East Asia. It was not always a quiet life. Stephen had to handle the negotiations and aftermath of two of his own UN staff taken hostage in 1996 for five months by freedom fighters into the jungles of West Papua; the May 1998 Revolution in Indonesia where he had to escape his house at 2.00am through mobs and fires while his own security staff had changed into civilian clothes and run off down the street to escape, then evacuate everyone else, but stay to report to the UN Security Council and liaise with the incoming Transition Government. In the early 2000s, Stephen needed to escape Indonesia, under UN Security instruction, from the terrorist organisation, Abu Sayyaf from Mindanao, the Southern Philippines, when they sent a Hit Squad down through Manado and across Sulawesi towards Jakarta to assassinate him in Jakarta because of his collaborative work throughout Mindanaös previous fundamentalist Islamic conflict zones, amongst other things, bringing literacy to 7,000 villagers, mainly women, building nine radio stations with community support across religious lines, and introducing basic education into Islamic Schools previously teaching only the Koran and Arabic. This book captures all of this rather exciting life but delivers a message from experience the Power of Community and Cultural Empowerment in successful United Nations Action to bring positive change into the world.
Contenu
Introduction: Death and Life the United Nations Way.- Walking in the Door.- Learning to Walk the Diplomatic Path.- Settling Into an Expatriate World.- Jungle Hostages I: Capture.- Jungle Hostages II: Negotiating Peoples' Lives Across Cultures.- Jungle Hostages III: A Deeply Troubled Resolution.- Flying Pigs The Start of a Voyage into the Future.- Lighting the Way Building the Future for Indigenous People of West Papua.- The Critical Importance of Local Engagement and Listening.- Changing Things in the Real World Learning from the Edge.- Community Empowerment Lessons from Peace Building and Urban Environment Initiatives in Poor Communities.- Revolution - Lead Up.- Revolution NOW.- Revolution Aftermath.- Opportunity out of Challenge Opening Up Media Freedom.- The Time was Right - Basic Education Reform.- Tsunami The Day the Ocean Moved.- The Human Story of the Tsunami.- Preparing for Another Tsunami.- Bridging the Two UN Cultures Reform for the Future.- Final Wrap The Force of Cultural Empowerment.