Are you a rich country trying to dodge paying for climate damage? Here are tactics that have worked for decades

Lyndsay WalshClimate Change, Drought, Influencing

As the Loss and Damage Collaboration launches a new report ahead of COP27, Lyndsay Walsh reveals the blocking tactics wealthy countries have used to avoid paying for climate loss and damage. But could COP27 be the moment they run out of excuses for delay?

As Oxfam turns 80, here are three big ideas that I think will shape its future…

Dhananjayan SriskandarajahInfluencing, Innovation, Power Shifts

Eight decades after Oxfam began with a meeting in an Oxford church, we must respond to challenges our founders could not have dreamed of, from re-imagining what an international NGO should be, to the need for totally new sources of funding, to the world-changing impact of technology, says Oxfam GB CEO Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah

Which governments really care about inequality? Not many, our new global index suggests

Anthony KamandeEconomics, Inequality, Research

As Oxfam launches its latest index that rates countries’ commitment to reducing inequality, Anthony Kamande reflects on how poor policy choices impacted his own family in Kenya, points out how ordinary people have lost out amid the pandemic and inflation, and highlights a few governments showing the way forward

In so many places, women’s mental health has been neglected for too long. Here’s how we’re working with communities to change that

Julian KoshGender, Health, Innovation

In a blog for World Mental Health Day, Julian Kosh looks at a pilot project to support survivors of abuse, trauma and cancer in Kenya and the Occupied Palestinian Territories. At its core is a ‘flexible funding’ approach that gives women’s rights organisations the freedom to test new approaches to mental health in the ways they think best

The injustice over vaccines is being replayed: as rich countries deny billions access to lifesaving COVID-19 treatments

Harry BignellHealth, Influencing, Rights

The World Trade Organisation decision in June – far from being the comprehensive waiver we campaigned for – outrageously omitted life-saving tests and treatments, says Harry Bignell. Now the UK and other rich countries must unblock access to medicines and diagnostics, or risk devastating global consequences