Newsroom

Young people gather for QUNO’s Summer School in Geneva

25th July 2023

Image[4]

QUNO Geneva’s annual Quaker UN Summer School (QUNSS) hosted 23 participants from various countries recently, connecting them to the United Nations eco-system.

Participants gathered from July 3 to 14 at Quaker House in Geneva. Their open-mindedness, curiosity, and willingness to learn meant this year’s cohort was brimming with rich questions that inspired multiple in-depth discussions. This year was the first in-person QUNSS since Covid-19 started in early 2020. It was also one of the most diverse in QUNSS gatherings in its history, due in part to bursary support from Quakers in Britain and Switzerland.

Participants, aged 19 to 27, joined QUNO Geneva from 12 different countries: Bolivia, Cyprus, Ghana, Jordan, Kenya, South Africa, Switzerland, Togo, Uganda, the United Kingdom, the United States of America and Vietnam. They also came from diverse faith, cultural, and economic backgrounds. Over the programme’s two weeks, participants were introduced to topics connected to QUNO’s work, engaged in educational role-play exercises, spoke to experts on some of the world’s most pressing issues, and visited multiple international organisations in person.

During the first week, participants were introduced to QUNO, the UN system, and how QUNO’s work embodies Quaker values in multilateral spaces.

A visit to the Human Rights Council offered participants the opportunity to observe an interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the Environment and see firsthand the heart of international human rights governance. QUNSS focused on QUNO’s programmes, including peace and disarmament, which opened an opportunity for participants to learn about negotiation and mediation skills.

Participants put these new skills to the test during a water sharing negotiation role-play before concluding the day with a human rights and arms control panel. In addition to visiting the home of the IPCC, on our climate change day, participants had a chance to again use their negotiation skills during a negotiation role-play focused on loss and damage from climate change.

One participant said they found the experience an “interesting, unique and Quakerly practice”. The first week concluded with a discussion about human rights and migrants, including insightful panels on meaningful migrant participation and a workshop on health and migration. At the weekend during QUNSS, participants had the opportunity to see parts of Geneva’s Old Town, visit the local beach, and host a communal multicultural barbeque.

The second week of QUNSS started with an introduction to sustainable and just economic systems, and plastic pollution.

A visit to the World Trade Organisation and an exercise on trade as a mechanism for peace gave participants hands-on opportunities to engage with this topic. The week continued with a visit to the International Red Cross Museum and the International Committee of the Red Cross where participants learned more about the history of international humanitarian work. Numerous experts joined QUNSS during the week on panels to discuss their work as young professionals, and to reflect on the importance of intersectionality. The week concluded with a formal UN tour, an informative Q&A session between participants and QUNO staff, and an activity on how to respond to contemporary challenges. Participants and staff then celebrated the summer school’s conclusion with reflections about their experiences, what knowledge they gained, and a closing barbeque.

QUNO Geneva wishes participants all the best with their future endeavours and hope to keep contact with them too!

Explore more

Humanitarian Challenges in Myanmar: Navigating Conflict and Crisis

Humanitarian Challenges in Myanmar: Navigating Conflict and Crisis

On 9 July, the Quaker United Nations Office hosted a private briefing on Myanmar’s humanitarian crisis in the aftermath of the devastating 7.7 magnitude earthquake that struck on 28 March 2025. At Quaker House, Gum San Nsang, Secretary of the Kachin Political Interim Coordination Team, briefed UN diplomats. With the monsoon season threatening to worsen the humanitarian crisis, he emphasized the need for the international community to address aid distribution issues, reminding them that “each day later is a day worse than before.”  In his remarks, Gum San noted that the distribution of humanitarian assistance has been exacerbated by the dwindling control of the military junta that seized control during a coup in 2021. He explained that the military has prevented aid from reaching parts of the country not under its control, while diverting aid to its own stockpiles.  Beyond the focus on humanitarian issues, Gum San also addressed the ongoing conflict situation between the military and armed resistance groups. He highlighted that the struggle to control the mining of rare earth minerals represents a major driver of conflict, especially in northern Myanmar.  Currently, the UN’s Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) estimates that 20 million people, over one […]

QUNO attends the IPCC Plenary in China

QUNO attends the IPCC Plenary in China

This March, QUNO Representative for the Human Impacts of Climate Change participated in the 62nd Session of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). This was held from 24 February – 1 March 2025 in Hangzhou China QUNO under FWCC has been an accredited observer of the IPCC since 2017.  We seek to uphold transparency and the integrity of the science, encourage clear messaging on urgent, transformative and rights-based climate action, and ensure clear messaging on risks to some climate options/technologies which fail to transform root causes and/or pose high risks to people and biodiversity.  To date we are the only active independently accredited faith-based organization at the IPCC. We present a report of QUNO work at the IPCC, and interventions given during the intensive meetings in China. Image by: ENB IISD

QUNO and the UN Climate Change Conference in Bonn

QUNO and the UN Climate Change Conference in Bonn

QUNO Geneva’s Human Impacts of Climate Change (HICC) team, Lindsey Fielder Cook and Johan Cavert, were intensely active at the UN Climate Change meetings in Bonn. These Subsidiary Body meetings (SB62) were held by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) from 16-26 June and are in preparation for the upcoming COP in Brazil. This is the 13th year QUNO has offered quiet diplomacy dinners to a group of high level negotiators from a diverse group of countries. In addition to this effort, QUNO was engaged in negotiations, in two preparatory Constituted Bodies, in several inter-faith efforts, in two press conferences, an off-the-record meeting with climate scientists, in human rights advocacy, in Paris Agreement celebrations (see photo), and in the distribution of QUNO publications on climate science findings. Our work at the SB62 Conference began weeks earlier, in Constituted Body meetings on both Loss and Damage and the Katowice Committee of Experts (Response Measures).  Additional preparation included support to the Interfaith Liaison Committee (ILC), which creates spaces for interfaith voices in climate negotiation spaces, and helping draft the Interfaith Call to Action, which was signed by a range of Quaker organizations.   As the SB62 began, we started with an […]

Introducing the G20 Peer Reviews

Introducing the G20 Peer Reviews

On 25 September 2009, the Leaders of the G20, at their annual Summit (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA), issued a joint statement committing themselves to “Rationalize and phase out over the medium term inefficient fossil fuel subsidies that encourage wasteful consumption”. Over the next several years, the G20 members themselves conducted an exercise in self reporting of their fossil fuel subsidies and reform commitments. Those efforts achieved limited success, with variable degrees of transparency and levels of ambition. (See the two reports by Doug Koplow from November 2010 and June 2012.) By early 2012, however, the OECD had launched its Inventory of Estimated Budgetary Support and Tax Expenditures for Fossil Fuels, which provided far more details than were available in the G20 Members’ self reports. That the G20 should conduct voluntary peer reviews of their reform efforts was proposed by the OECD during Russia’s presidency of the G20, in 2013. The OECD had long and generally positive experiences with peer reviews, so it was a logical tool to recommend. The proposal was accepted and formally established in paragraph 94 of the G20 Leaders’ Declaration issued during their 2013 Summit (6 September 2013, St Petersburg, Russia): “We reaffirm our commitment to rationalise and phase […]

Quaker Solidarity with Indigenous Peoples at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues

Quaker Solidarity with Indigenous Peoples at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues

Every April, the United Nations bustles with activity and energy as Indigenous representatives from around the world convene in New York for the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues (UNPFII). Since its establishment in 2001, the Permanent Forum has offered a crucial opportunity for representatives of Indigenous Peoples to assemble to share best practices and strategize for the advancement of their human rights under international law. Canadian Friends Service Committee holds the mandate from the world body of Friends, through Friends World Committee for Consultation, to lead engagement on Indigenous Issues at the UN. During the Forum, CFSC works in partnership with members of the Coalition for the Human Rights of Indigenous Peoples (the Coalition) to advance Indigenous rights globally. QUNO assists CFSC and the advocacy of Indigenous representatives by offering Quaker House as a welcoming space to gather outside UN meetings. This year, Quaker House hosted caucuses of Indigenous youth; Indigenous representatives; and the Coalition for discussions on the Forum’s theme and on Indigenous peacebuilding.   The 24th UNPFII took place under the theme, “Implementing the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples within United Nations Member States and the United Nations system, including identifying good practices […]

Job opportunity: Director, QUNO Geneva

Job opportunity: Director, QUNO Geneva

The Quaker United Nations Office in Geneva is looking for its next leader. If this could be you, please read the job pack and consider applying. You must be a member of the Religious Society of Friends to be eligible for this role. Application deadline: Friday 18 July 2025.