The
Ten Key Values were drafted by the
U.S. Green Party in 1984. They form the philosophical basis for the platforms of the
Green Party in the
United States and
Canada. They include and expand upon the
Four Pillars of the Green Party originated in Europe and practiced by the
worldwide green parties. The
Global Greens Charter[?], signed by many of these parties in Australia in 2001, was based on the Ten Key Values.
There are many different explanations of what these terms mean, and many policies that represent examples of the principles in action, but the terms themselves are constant:
- Social Justice, e.g. harm reduction rather than zero tolerance[?]
- Community-Based Economics[?], e.g. LETS
- Nonviolence, e.g. via de-escalation[?], peace processes
- Decentralisation, e.g. via Bioregional democracy
- Future Focus/Sustainability, e.g. measuring well-being impact over seven generations
- Feminism, e.g. Health security[?] especially for mothers and children
- Personal and Global Responsibility, e.g. moral purchasing
- Respect for Diversity[?], e.g. via fair trade
- Grassroots democracy, e.g. via electoral reform
- Ecological Wisdom, e.g. ending human-caused extinction
Requests are being made for permission to distribute existing explanations of what these values mean. Examples should be drawn from U.S. and Canadian Green Parties - other examples can illustrate the Global Greens Charter[?]
External explanations:
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terms of the GNU Free Documentation License