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Archived material from the IofC UK website

The website of Initiatives of Change in the UK

This page is a home for articles from the IofC UK website's archives which are no longer available on the current IofC UK website.

The current IofC UK website may be found at https://iofc.org.uk

ITEMS AVAILABLE: 650
The power of art to transform.
English musician Kathleen Johnson Dodds talks to Ann Rignall about song-writing, India and Renewal Arts
Rob Lancaster from Canberra, Australia, has been accompanying Rajmohan Gandhi on his Voyage of dialogue and discovery.
How to start to bring healing to a divided country?
Is it possible for one individual to make a change in today’s world?
Over Easter weekend 2016, a million citizens participated in and witnessed a rebirth of their nation.
Addressing an audience at the Initiatives of Change Centre in London, Dr Mukarji, Director of Christian Aid, vented his exaspera
Last week terror struck in Britain - but there were also initiatives that could counter the despair which leads to terrorism.
The Church Times (14 March 2014), carries a review of Dr Philip Boobbyer’s book, The Spiritual Vision of Frank Buchman
Charity chair speaks up for the poor in UK society.
Farmers must be able to grow honest and healthy food. The consumer needs to pay a fair price, argues Hennie de Pous-de Jong
The UK’s first peace circle, in London in April and May 2007, gathered women born in eight countries.
The aim of righting historic wrongs in Jamaica
Today America seems to have declared war on the poor, writes Rob Corcoran in 2012
Agriculturalist Paul Craig and his wife Marguerite returned to Britain in July after spending four years in the Solomon Islands.
The election of President Obama represents a significant moment.
Over 500 MBA students packed into a huge auditorium in Pune, India, to hear Michael Smith, Head of Business Programmes for Initi
Mark Boobbyer, head of South Africa's historic Tiger Kloof school, writes about their work of producing future leaders.
the remarkable success of Gandhian anti-graft campaigner Anna Hazare means that Indians can once again be proud.
Could the famous, and the not-so-famous, go beyond the search for fame and fortune to a quest for heroism?
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Language

English

Publishing permission
Granted
Publishing permission refers to the rights of FANW to publish this text on this website.