Peace Brigades International Mexico Project is looking for volunteers to join their field team.
Volunteers in PBI come from different countries and backgrounds. All of them share a strong commitment towards non-violence and the believe in the capability of all people to contribute to make this world a fairer and more peaceful place.
PBI volunteers commit themselves to a minimum of a year of volunteering work in Mexico between the two Working Field Teams. in Chihuahua and Mexico City. PBI volunteers live and work together participating in all PBI work activities (physical accompaniment, advocacy, communications, security and protection training). Those arriving to Mexico with PBI will have the opportunity to join exploratory processes to expand PBI’s work in Mexico, opening new accompaniment processes to Human Rights Defenders.
To find out more and apply before 21 June, click here!
PBI Event: Blood of the Earth - Water defenders in Central America - Webinar
This webinar is free of charge, but please register to secure your place here.
Central America and Mexico are some of the most vulnerable places on the planet to the effects of climate change. Nevertheless, they are also home to massive megaprojects that threaten our planet’s most valuable resource – water.
In 2019, amid an historic drought, a documentary film crew travelled to Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras to allow water defenders to tell their stories of life, hope, and resistance. From dried riverbeds in Honduras and prisons in Guatemala, to communities under attack in Southern Mexico, their stories speak to the ferocity of megaprojects in their search for profits.
Participants in this webinar will receive a private link to watch this documentary before its official release, and listen to two human rights defenders who have accompanied these communities in their struggle.
We are delighted to be joined by two speakers from Latin America for this webinar:
Diana Pérez is a member of the Territorial Defence Area with the Mexican Institute for Community Development (IMDEC A.C.). IMDEC is an independent, autonomous Mexican civil society organisation, founded in Guadalajara, Jalisco in 1963. Its prime objective is supporting the defence of land and common goods, the refounding of democracy, and the full guarantee of human rights through education and popular education. IMDEC carries out its work accompanying processes directly in territories together with communities, citizens’ groups, civil society organisations and social movements as trainers and educators through national and Latin American political education programmes.
Julio González is an ecologist with Colectivo Madreselva, an activist group committed to the defence of nature from a political and social perspective. MadreSelva supports accompaniment proposals from populations who take up the defence of natural goods or who resist projects that damage the balance of nature and ecological processes. The collective strategically approaches the topic of ecology under the following thematic areas: forests and natural goods, the human right to water, hydroelectric projects, mining, defence of territory, ecological risk management, “buen vivir” and citizen participation.
This webinar will be chaired by PBI Ireland and co-organised by the Latin America Solidarity Centre (LASC). The presenters will be speaking in Spanish, and we will have simultaneous or consecutive interpretation into English (depending on technology).