Live Below the Line

Live Below the Line is an annual anti-poverty campaign, which challenges participants to feed themselves on the equivalent of the extreme poverty line for five days.[1]

The goal of Live Below the Line is to raise widespread awareness by enabling participants to gain a small insight into some of the hardships faced by those that live in extreme poverty.

Live Below the Line also raises money for poverty reduction projects across the globe.[2]

The campaign began in Melbourne, Australia in 2010 and has since spread to the UK, USA, New Zealand, Canada, and Colombia.[3][4] In 2012 the campaign ran from 4 May to 8 May in Australia, and 27 April to 1 May in the UK and USA.[5] It launched in New Zealand September.[6]

History

The concept of Live Below the Line was born in the back yard of a Melbourne share house by two friends - Rich Fleming and Nick Allardice - over a few drinks one evening in late 2009. Both were passionate about fighting poverty, and had already been doing so for a number of years - but together they were worried at our ability to really understand at an emotional level the realities of extreme poverty.

One was from the Global Poverty Project, one from the Oaktree Foundation - and together they plotted the creation of a campaign that could simultaneously help tens of thousands of Australians begin to understand and connect with the issue of extreme poverty whilst also providing a platform for creating incredible change for the worlds' poor.

Seeing an incredible opportunity to engage huge numbers of people with the realities of extreme poverty whilst also achieving really substantial and significant outcomes in anti-poverty initiatives, they came together to create Live Below the Line.

Live Below the Line was officially born in June 2010, with the first campaign running from August 2–6. In its first year alone all expectations were exceeded, with over 2000 people participating, raising over $520,000.[7] By 2015 that amount had risen to $1,605,506.[8]

The Live Below the Line challenge has been taken by a number of international celebrities, including actors Hugh Jackman, Ben Affleck,[9] Tom Hiddleston, and singer Josh Groban.[10] Within Australia, the challenge has been taken by Federal Opposition Leader Bill Shorten,[11] former Federal Treasurer Wayne Swan,[12] actors Stephen Curry and Rhiannon Fish, Masterchef Australia winners Julie Goodwin and Kate Bracks,[13] musicians Lindsay McDougall and Sarah McLeod, radio hosts Alex Dyson and Veronica Milsom,[14] and 2011 Australian of the Year Simon McKeon.

Organizations behind the campaign

Global Poverty Project

The Global Poverty Project is an international education and advocacy organization working to catalyse the movement to end extreme poverty. The Global Poverty Project exists to increase the number and effectiveness of people taking action to end extreme poverty, to ensure that the world eliminates extreme poverty within a generation.

Using the world-class multimedia presentation 1.4 Billion Reasons, Global Poverty Project is raising awareness of our ability to end extreme poverty and demonstrate how every person can contribute to the end of extreme poverty. Global Poverty Project's mission is to inspire and empower everyday people in workplaces, schools, universities, churches and communities around the country to become leaders in the global movement to end extreme poverty.[15]

Oaktree

The Oaktree Foundation is Australia's first and largest youth-run aid organisation. Entirely run by young volunteers under the age of 26, Oaktree has over 150,000 members around Australia and has led some of Australia’s biggest poverty campaigns – including the 2006 MAKEPOVERTYHISTORY Concert in Melbourne, and the Roadtrip mobilisations in 2007 and 2010 which succeeded in securing a bipartisan commitment to increasing foreign aid.

Oaktree sees education as the key to enabling the worlds’ poorest individuals and communities to lift themselves out of poverty. As a result, Oaktree works across the Asia Pacific region – in places like East Timor, Cambodia and Papua New Guinea – to build schools, train teachers, and provide scholarships so that young people have access to quality education.[16]

How the line is calculated

In 2005 the World Bank defined the Extreme Poverty Line as $1.25 US a day - that is, someone would be considered to live in extreme poverty if they lived on an amount equivalent to somebody living in the United States, buying United States goods with US$1.25 a day. In 2011 (taking into account inflation and purchasing power), the equivalent amounts for the United States, Australia and United Kingdom are US$1.50, A$2 and £1 respectively.

The figure is determined by translating the 2005 figure into a local currency figure (using purchasing power parity) and then accounting for inflation since the 2005 date. A more detailed explanation of how the Australian figure was arrived at is available on the Global Poverty Project's site.[17]

Impact

Funds raised in the first Live Below the Line campaign are being used to fight poverty through education initiatives in the developing world and education and advocacy projects in Australia.[18]

Oaktree has invested over $400,000 into its international partnership work in Papua New Guinea, Timor-Leste and Cambodia. In particular this means:

This means that thousands of young people are getting access to an education for the first time - providing them with a means to lift themselves out of poverty.

The Global Poverty Project are using funds raised to empower a new generation of anti-poverty advocates within Australia:

The Global Poverty Project's education work will empower tens of thousands of Australian students, building the social movement required to see an end to extreme poverty within a generation, and supporting the change required to alter the systems that perpetuate extreme poverty.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/13/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.