WOW 2013 - Individuals can change the world

10 March 2013

Every issue needs a spokesperson. Yes, it does help if they are already a well known public figure or they hold a position of established power but sometimes when circumstance dictates, a single everyday person can be thrust into a position of leadership.

To change the world you need a good reason, the belief that you can make a difference and the resolve to stick with that belief even when the going gets tough.

Speaking within the session entitled International Activism, Sarah Brown began by stating that "politics is personal". She believes that "if women are not safe" from harassment of all kinds then they will be restricted in their efforts to "fulfil their potential".  We should be equipping girls with the skills and confidence to take the opportunities that come their way. I fully believe that this statement works over and above gender but we were at a conference about women and certainly in other cultures girls do not have the same access to, and freedom within, education as we have in the UK.

Sarah Brown
Sarah continued by pointing out that education allows people to understand their own health and well-being.  This was very much reflected by the ladies of SEWA in the earlier session on economy. Access to education can be the gateway to learning about water, sanitation, common preventable disease and resource management. Once these issues are being addressed, a community's standard of living is likely to improve vastly; they will gain greater independence and become sustainable in the long term.

Next up, Baroness Valerie Amos who believes that social media has allowed women to connect with each other to share and discuss issues that their location, circumstance or culture may have otherwise prevented. Valerie has experienced the stories of countless women through her work with the UN and says she often feels helpless when their circumstance are presented to her.


Particularly hard to listen to was the story of a woman who was trying to come to terms with the fact she had physically sold her daughter. The woman had felt this was the only option available to her to shield her daughter from the abuse she was likely to receive without the security of male protection.

Gordon Brown followed, speaking passionately about the need to address equality in educational rights. I'd only ever seen Gordon speak on television about political issues when he was Prime Minister. I have to say that after seeing him speak at WOW, I have a much greater respect for him.

Gordon Brown
He spoke about the need for true gender equality, acknowledged his wife, Sarah as his friend and mentor before admitting that for real change to happen, "men must change". He conveyed his belief that men and boys must both be taught and ultimately realise that women are of equal importance to them. Not a threat to their position but an equal and balancing one.

Ziauddin Yousafzai

Finally Ziauddin Yousafzai took to the lectern to speak of a girl's right to an education. If you are not sure who he is, then apart from a peace campaigner, he's the father of Malala, whose story you can read about via the link at the end of this post.

"Some cultures have fathers in search of a son... they do not celebrate birthdays of daughters."

Ziauddin quoted the old saying that behind every great man is a woman but said that he believes women need to take a step forward and stand side by side with men. Ziauddin lives by his own words too. "I honour my daughter as a personal and as an individual. My wife is not my property and I honour and trust her." Ziauddin added that a men's world is troublesome and full of wars suggesting that giving more 'space' to women would bring about a more prosperous and peaceful world. Men command and control. Women are more about collaboration and inclusion.

Ziaddin finished with his words for the future. Honour. Trust. Educate.

If you'd like to see the full session, you can! The Southbank Centre kindly filmed it.

Sarah Brown is patron of the White Ribbon Alliance, founder of PiggyBankKids, Chair of Global Business Coalition for Education and tweets from @SarahBrownUK.

Valerie Amos is UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator and tweets from @ValerieAmos.

Gordon Brown is former Prime Minster of the UK and for more on his latest projects visit his website.

Ziauddin Yousafzai is an education activist and peace campaigner from Pakistan whose daughter was shot for wanting the right to an education. You can learn her story here or follow the campaign using twitter hash tag #iamMalala

WOW 2013 - Economy and Value

9 March 2013

When I first found out about the Women of the World Festival [WOW2013] I admit my first thought was lots of women saying men are rubbish and women should be more assertive in being overtly womanly or more 'ballsy'.

My friend had been to a pre-event though and told me that it wasn't all bra-burning and proclaiming from the roof tops. I purchased a ticket and now I'm glad I did.

As a side note, I've already realised that the bra-burning myth is largely a media driven construct to make women thinking for themselves seem like a crazy, dangerous notion. Also it was the Daily Mail who coined the term 'suffragettes' to describe the members of the Women's Suffrage Party. Initially seen as a slightly belittling nickname, the women involved embraced it as it helped gain valuable public attention.

The BBC's economics editor, Stephanie Flanders opened by admitting that she 'doesn't always think of economics in gender terms'. More important to her is the fact we have a 'financial crisis on our doorstep' and many people don't even understand the difference between reducing our deficit and reducing debt. Our government is striving to reduce the deficit and are keen to tell the public they are doing so, while in the background our debt has grown and will keep growing. The economies of former emerging markets like China and India are growing with great speed and their impact in the world market will influence the balance of the future.

Stephanie Flanders

Stephanie pointed out it is micro things that effect our standard of living rather than the bigger issues addressed in the news. 'Ten years ago there was no facebook, no smart phones, no kindles, no Sky Plus. I is very interesting that these things are not seen as luxuries during our current recession. It isn't just the rich who are buying smart phones either, they are mainstream commodities.

Governments are beginning to realise that having a greater number of women in the workplace could be very good for GDP. In Japan, encouraging more women into work could solve the country's economic crisis.

Cathy Turner, an executive from the world of banking, joined the debate saying that women present in the workforce changes it's dynamic. Women generally tend to borrow less to invest in business and, while unlikely to experience the growth and results boom generated by males, their businesses tend to become sustainable in the long term. I personally think this calls into question your reason for the business in the first place. If your intention is to make money as soon as possible then I can see why males do business in the way they do. However if you are genuinely trying to offer a service or product which can improve lives then maybe we should take the female path.

Cathy Turner

Cathy also quoted some telling statistics. 70% of part time jobs are currently held by women and at senior management level, we are still mainly represented by our male counterparts.

Then followed the passion of Jamuben Ayar and her colleague Savita Patel from SEWA (Self Employed Women's Association). Jamuben has been involved with SEWA after being approached in the 1970s. She is now overseer of 20,000 women and her daughter was the first in her village to graduate from school paid for by Jamuben's earnings.

Jamuben Khangabhai Ayar [on the left] and Savitaben Patel

To explain, SEWA has helped Indian women to realise the value of their intricate embroidery work, previously created only for home use or as gifts for their daughters when they were married and leaving the parental home.

An average salary at the time for a male Indian worker was 50 rupees per day and for a female, dispute the fact many were farm labourers, just 10 rupees per day. The villagers were migratory in times of drought and faced periods with little work. They were also used to 'middle men' contractors taking their skills for a very low return. The women didn't even know the true value of their home confined skills. SEWA offered Jamuben and her fellow workers 250 rupees for an embroidery order on the promise that they would do a good job.

They did and it's turned out well for vast amounts of women. In a society where the men would traditionally 'own' the money, women could now decide how they wanted to spend their earnings.

The first choice of many women was to use the money to send their children to school. With the reassurance of regular work, the community stopped migrating and started training and education programmes. Education gave them the opportunity to solve issues like sanitation, proper education for their children and then chance to have two meals a day.

Money brings power, the power of choice. In the case of the Indian ladies, they were being treated as viable people who could be respected as they were now controlling the purse strings. The tradional way would be to refer to things in the context of the alpha male relative to the person/item. This is (man)'s son/daughter/goat/house. The power shift caused a shift in context. Now identifications are made with references to Jamuben herself. Jamuben's son/daughter/goat/house.

To say their story is insipiring sounds flippant. It highlighted to me the importance of valuing yourself and doing so by valuing the skills you command. Everyone has skills and the key is recognising them and realising their true worth.

If you wish you'd seen the full session for yourself, you can, as the Southbank kindly filmed it!



For more from Stephanie Flanders, she tweets from @BBCStephanie and writes for the BBC here.

Beautiful Book Covers

9 February 2013



Back in the times where books were all bound in similar styles and materials I agree that you couldn't judge a book by it's cover. A tatty book may be that way through neglect or through extensive use by eager readers!

Now things are different. Very often you can judge a book by it's cover. The publishers will have looked for illustrators/designers working in a style sympathetic to the book's content or desired target audience. Your eye will naturally be drawn to the symbolism of things you like. This symbolism then becomes a language between your brain and the book publishers.

As social preferences evolve, so does the language. You'll notice if your library has many old* books that you may find it harder to judge whether you'll like the book because the visual language used is not one you're familiar with.

*old as in copies printed before you were able to read

If you fancy challenging yourself to read something different then pick up a book with a cover you'd normally skip straight past. You might find a hidden gem or unlock a whole new genre you didn't know you cared about.

Below is my collection of book covers I consider to be beautiful which I will add to over time, as and when they catch my eye. If we have similar tastes then I think you'll enjoy them!

 illustrator Sarah Gibb



designer Kirk Benshoff


designer James Alexander at Jade Design


 designer Peter Saville


designer Alan Fletcher




That'll be milk, bread and a recommendation please

16 December 2012

If like me your irritation at miscellaneous minutiae would give Jon Richardson a run for his money then I think you'll enjoy these recent ads for Google Analytics.


Fans of Fresh Meat will appreciate the guest appearance in this quest for milk!


Better than sliced bread - as long as you don't want it today.


And may I recommend...

Small and fluffy but with big ambitions

2 October 2012


When you are a child you are taught to look up and imagine shapes and stories presented to you by their various forms. They'll catch your eye as the sun shines through at sunset or sunrise. You can tell the direction of the wind by watching them hurry along like commuters journeying to work.

Clouds come in all shapes and sizes but it's often the small cute ones that claim their fair share of the commercial limelight.

A few years ago I was delighted by the Pixar short Partly Cloudy.



Earlier this year Danny Boyle's dramatic opening ceremony for the Olympic Games 2012 in London gently gathered the audience's attention and interest with fluffy clouds on strings guided around the running track.


Then today, we have the Guinness cloud, who is clearly 'made of more'!



Our desire to personify inanimate objects works particularly well with clouds as they don't share our physical human constraints. Apart from the Pixar short which goes some way to create our own forms in the material of another. I think in a more natural sense their movement conveys ideas more akin to our freedom of thought.

Exciting new things!

9 May 2012

It's always great to work on new projects especially ones where you get to test out new skills and make exciting discoveries along the way.

This is the video I have worked on for gleambook.com and it was great fun to make. Never before has my afternoon's brief been to source the perfect 'ding'.

Working with succinct, well targeted copy helped to give the film a firm foundation. The style and tone of the gleambook brand really lends itself to this type of animation.

You can find the official link with more details on the gleambook blog 



I recommend viewing in HD if your connection can stand it!

How books are born

1 April 2012

Picked this up from my twitter feed today and it is beautiful. So thanks to @gleambook for sharing and here is Birth of a Book, a short video celebrating the craftsmanship and care taken in creating the humble book.



Birth of a Book from Glen Milner on Vimeo.


The video was filmed at Smith-Settle Printers, Leeds, England for the Daily Telegraph.