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Power Shift | Can dialogue truly shift power?

‘People need to be listened to, and when they come in with their own stories, that is a form of power.’

This is a header image showing the guests from a podcast episode on a podcast called "Power Shift". On the bottom left are the names of the guests: Degan Ali, Executive Director of Adeso and Lina Srivastava, Founder of the Center for Transformational Change. And on the Right you see headshots of Degan and Lina.

People affected by crises, and the people who respond to them, have been calling for change and equity for years, but for every reform pledge in Geneva or New York, there’s little movement in Yangon or Juba.

Changing an entire sector is a tall order. But how can an entire system change? In reality, it has to begin with conversations between people.

For months, The New Humanitarian and the Center for Transformational Change sent out invites to people across the power spectrum in the aid world: heads of international humanitarian agencies, environmental and refugee rights activists, you name it. The goal? To set up one-on-one dialogues between people with the power to make decisions and mobilise resources and people who are affected by such decisions.

“People need to be listened to, and when they come in with their own stories, that is a form of power,” argues Lina Srivastava, Power Shift’s moderator and founder of The Center for Transformational Change. 

In this first episode of Power Shift, host Melissa Fundira, Adeso executive director Degan Ali, and Srivastava set the stage for conversations to come by highlighting how power inequalities prevent us from addressing humanitarian crises adequately and fairly, and by discussing whether dialogue can ever truly shift power. 

Guests

Degan Ali, executive director of Adeso

Lina Srivastava, founder of The Center for Transformational Change and Power Shift moderator


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Are you or anyone you know interested in participating in future Power Shift conversations? Email us with the subject line ‘POWER SHIFT”.

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