The World Solidarity Project believes that labor unions and workers must cross the border in the world economy. Every day we are doing important research to build international partnerships between labor leaders and scholars and to improve labor standards and working conditions around the world. Multinational companies can avoid labor and environmental regulations across national borders. Factory workers, clothing workers, farm workers, migrant workers, miners workers paid for it. Only by uniting around our common interests, we can challenge enterprise control.
A panel discussion on overseas research and global solidarity was held on April 5 and people gathering interested in the discussion "What is global solidarity and how to nurture it?" Part of the inspiration for the panel discussion came from the 1997 US Catholic bishop's statement "Calling Global Solidarity" and some of the panelist's personal discussions on this topic. All team members have experience on global solidarity. Dennis Beach led Central America research and solidarity trips and served as the Board of Directors of the SHARE Foundation, a Solidarity Solidarity NGO in the United States of America, Patricia Cespedes-Schueller was a Peruvian theologian, May; Priest
In 1997, American Catholic bishops created a pastor's letter titled "Global Solidarity: The International Challenge of the United States of America". In Paris, they reflect an important element of global solidarity based on the teachings of our Catholic religion. Their conclusion at the beginning of the 21st century in 1997 is that these doctrines are often unknown, unprecedented, or unnoticed. This challenge should be accepted not only by large organizations and institutions, but also by all believers and all Catholics. Everyone has its own responsibility established with baptism, and it is represented by everyday choices and actions. The parish also plays an important role in sacraments and education as a common place of prayer and action in pursuing global solidarity.
In recent years, the reasons for global solidarity have been theoreticalized and conceptualized, and many believe that we need the concept of global solidarity. However, the question remains. What stimulates the efforts of the international community and the nation state? Our focus is to lay the foundation for solidarity for global health inequality. We will explore which factors can promote global solidarity in the context of healthy immigration and outline the possible forms of this solidarity. Firstly, we believe that the only rational conceptualization of people highlights their interdependence. We use human concept as "ecological discipline" and explain the fact that such concept implies the movement of nurses from low to middle income countries to more rich countries.