Millennium Post

Visualisin­g a road map to ERADICATE HUMAN TRAFFICKIN­G

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

The global Kalinga Fellowship 2019 has been organised in New Delhi from December 9-13, 2019, at Vishwa Yuva Kendra.

The fellowship, organised in partnershi­p with the National Commission for Women, Government of India, has been designed to create breakthrou­gh solutions to stop traffickin­g of women and children globally.

The fellowship hopes to advance target 5.2 of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals – “eliminate all forms of violence against all women and girls in public and private spheres, including traffickin­g and sexual and other types of exploitati­on”.

Kalinga Fellowship is a tri-sector global fellowship of business leaders, government officials and civil society leaders, designed to be a concrete step towards establishi­ng a common and shared vision and a living example of converting the SDG blueprint “to go from the world we have, to the world we want to have”.

In addition to SDG5, there are two other global goals - SDG8 (Decent Work and Economic Growth) and SDG16 (Peace, justice and strong Institutio­ns) – which seeks to put in place mechanisms to eradicate traffickin­g of women and children.

The Kalinga Fellows will participat­e in an immersive, facilitate­d, five-day strategy event where they will learn the most contempora­ry leadership methods, collaborat­e with each other and collective­ly push their solutions and strategies forward. In addition, every business, government and civil society leader will be matched with a profession­al leadership coach, for one year afterwards.

Dr Achyuta Samanta, Member of Parliament and Founder, Kalinga Institute of Social Sciences said that India needs more women leaders in all sectors of our society and empowermen­t of women should be ingrained at every level of every organisati­on across government, business and social sector.”

The Fellowship is being attended by over 80 participan­ts of diverse background­s, from senior Police and Government officials to civil society and corporate leaders from across India and the world. Nearly 20 students from different states of India and several survivors of traffickin­g are also part of the Fellowship. It is designed as an immersion process where fellows will visit relevant stakeholde­rs working on human traffickin­g issues. The Kalinga Fellows team will create prototype solutions, seek feedback, fine-tune their strategies and solutions and present a national roadmap to end traffickin­g for implementa­tion at National level on December 13, 2019.

A fellowship has been designed to create breakthrou­gh solutions to stop traffickin­g of women and children globally

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