12th biennial consultation on urban ministry. city of tshwane 15-18 August 2018 -organise now!8/13/2018
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On 25 and 26 May 2015, over 400 people gathered in a city centre museum to contemplate pathways out of homelessness. The gathering included officials and politicians, researchers and practitioners, business and police, but what made it significant was that 50% of the gathering consisted of homeless people themselves.This event profiled street homelessness in a new way and helped to create momentum and visibility for a challenge in the City of Tshwane never before tackled collaboratively.
Out of a city budget of 248 billion South African Rand, only 650,000 were available to address homelessness in 2014. This was indicative of the way in which homelessness was not addressed collectively. Institure of Global homeless to end homelessness by 2030 READ THE ORIGINAL ARTICLE City of Tshwane Becomes Fourth of 10 cities worldwide to commit to end homelessness by 20305/8/2018 The City of Tshwane is joining a global campaign to end street homelessness by 2030. Homelessness is a global challenge, with an estimated 100 million people worldwide living without shelter. The Institute of Global Homelessness at DePaul University, Chicago, is launching a campaign to help 150 cities work toward ending street homelessness by 2030. The City of Tshwane has now committed itself to be among the first vanguard cities in a global movement to end homelessness. On the 15th of March 2018 the City of Tshwane is announcing its commitment to join some 10 vanguard cities across all six continents, working with its local partners and the Institute of Global Homelessness toward “A Place to Call Home” for all who are currently living on the streets of our city. “The City of Tshwane is leading by example and will help other cities around the world to take action to end street homelessness,” said Kat Johnson, director of the Institute of Global Homelessness. The campaign, A Place to Call Home, will begin with a small group of vanguard cities across all six continents. Each city will commit to achieving a goal by the end of 2020: either an end to street homelessness, a reduction in street homelessness, or a goal specific to a population of people living on the street. The Institute of Global Homelessness will help these cities as they set goals, strengthen or develop their data collection systems and identify areas of improvement. They will take those findings and share them with other cities, with the ultimate aim of reaching 150 cities who will end street homelessness by 2030. The City of Tshwane, with its key partners, has committed itself to implement a strategy to “advance the social, economic, spatial and political inclusion of street homeless people, thereby ensuring their enhanced and holistic freedoms” (State of the City Address by the Executive Mayor Solly Msimanga, 2016). In recent years, a social contract was entered into by the City of Tshwane, in partnership with the Tshwane Homelessness Forum, the University of Pretoria and the University of South Africa. This contract gave effect to a collaborative research project, titled Pathways out of Homelessness, and a policy and strategy on street homelessness was prepared for adoption by the City. “There is an emerging global movement to end homelessness, and A Place to Call Home helps cities and countries to work collaboratively to tackle the problem worldwide,” said Johnson. Homelessness looks different everywhere, and agreeing on definitions of homelessness had slowed down these types of collaborations in the past, explained Johnson. In 2015, the Institute of Global Homelessness released a framework that defines different types of homelessness so that international collaborators can work from the same definition. ( Institute of Global Homelessness) READ MORE READ INSTITUTE OF GLOBAL HOMELESSNESS |
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