Hunger and extreme poverty are among the worst scourges of humankind. One of the UN Millennium Development goals has been to halve the number of hungry people in the developing countries by 2015. As it looks, the world is far from reaching that target. “The target date is drawing near, but the targets themselves are not".1
The idea that millions of people will have died from want by 2015 whereas there will be extreme wealth for others is unacceptable.
There are people and organizations working in the field of charity making noble attempts to alleviate hunger and extreme poverty. Yet, in order to eventually eradicate hunger and extreme poverty, fundamental structural changes are needed.
Innumerable ideas as well as elaborate tools and methods to bring about such structural changes do exist. Furthermore, there is an awakening civil society. The combined efforts of organizations and individuals of this critical civil society can and should open ways towards the eradication of hunger and extreme poverty in the shortest amount of time possible.
This is what must be done:
A global civil society that realizes its capability of being a motor for change will have strong impacts on world politics and could eventually generate a new type of political leadership that would appropriately restructure the United Nations (UN) to include an empowered global civil society. This conviction sets the basis and the justification for the project introduced in this paper.