Algı Operasyonu /psikolojik Manipülasyon.(2).......
Tarih İnsanlık Dersi Konusunda Avrupa‘ yı da Türkiye‘ ye de yazacak...
Gördüğümüz gibi hep beraber dünyanın en cömert yardım sever halklarını belirleyip paylaşmışlar...
Türkiye'den tek bir kelime yok...Türkiye'nin esamesi okunmuyor.....Varsa yoksa küresel oyun kurucular...
"Biz ne kadar yardim severiz" Efendim "İngiltere Avrupa'nın en cömert en yardımsever ülkesi imiş....".... ama işte ...İlk önce World Economic Forum https://www.weforum.org/ Raporu hazırlayıp servis yapıyor...BBChttp://www.bbc.com/ alıyor sonra The Guardian ...Gördüğümüz gibi bir tek vasat "araştırma" ile tüm dünyada bir algı nasıl yaratılır bunun örneğini hep bereber görme olanağına kavuşuyoruz.....Tarih Boyunca Sömürgecilik Yapmış İngilizler..Şaka gibi......
.Bu arada bir not: Dünya yardım sever halklar sıralamasının 2015 versiyonunda Türkiye 128.sirada gösterilmiş...!
Son Söz:Tarih göçmenler köprü altında kalamasın diye taş koyan Avrupa'yı da ,3 milyon insana kapı açan Türkiye'yi de yazacak...
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/10/this-map-shows-where-the-world-s-most-generous-people-live
https://www.theguardian.com/international
Annual global survey shows Myanmar is more generous and volunteering is more common in Turkmenistan than in the UK
Children in Myanmar, where, for the second year running, people have been rated the most generous in the world in Caf’s giving index Photograph: Nyein Chan Naing/EPA
Tuesday 25 October 2016 11.02 BST Last modified on Tuesday 25 October 2016 11.03 BST
We think rather smugly of ourselves in the UK, and in the west as a whole, as charitable souls. So it can come as something of a shock to learn that the world’s most generous folk are in Myanmar, that Iraqis are those most likely to help a stranger and that volunteering is most common in Turkmenistan.
These are the findings of the latest world giving index, compiled annually by the Charities Aid Foundation (Caf) from survey data drawn up across the globe by Gallup. And while Caf puts a positive spin on it – “UK most generous in Europe” – the harsh truth is that Brits are not getting noticeably more selfless.
In fact, the UK is this year down two places to eighth in Caf’s overall generosity league table, which combines cash giving, volunteering and helping strangers. It’s seventh on donations alone, but doesn’t make the top 10 on either of the other two yardsticks.
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It’s easy to make light of such findings: the Gallup data is based on much more wide-ranging surveys, usually of 1,000 people a time, in more than 140 countries. There are no doubt methodological uncertainties in comparing directly a telephone-based survey in the UK with face-to-face interviews in Turkmenistan or Sri Lanka (fourth on volunteering, fifth overall).
But these results do chime with other evidence suggesting that the UK is, at best, holding its own on giving and helping. Economic recovery since the crash of 2008 has certainly not brought any explosion of magnanimity.
According to the most recent version of Caf’s own UK Giving survey, the number of people donating to charity is dropping: whereas in 2014, 44% said they had given in the previous four weeks and 70% in the previous 12 months, the corresponding proportions in 2015 were 42% and 67%.
In its latest Civil Society Almanac, the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) notes that charities’ income from individuals – which includes legacies, membership fees and takings at charity shops – rose 7.7% in 2013-14 compared to the previous financial year. But the total was still below the peak of 2010-11.
On volunteering, the Cabinet Office’s Community Life Survey for 2015-16 indicates that 41% of people volunteer “formally”, through groups, clubs or other organisations in the course of a year - down from 42% in 2014-15.
Taking account of “informal” volunteering, defined as providing help to someone who is not a relative, the 2015-16 figure looks better, at 70%, and is indeed up from 69% in 2014-15. But this is hardly an increase to dine out on.
Nick Ockenden, NCVO’s head of research, thinks we should look at the positives. “I would call it a stable picture rather than flatlining,” he says. “It’s certainly not a bad thing.”
He concedes, though, that charities have come to rely much more on individual giving and volunteering since government funding – particularly grants – nosedived when austerity followed the 2008 crash. His team is currently crunching the 2014-15 numbers for the next edition of NCVO’s almanac, anxious to establish if the sector’s overall income rise registered in 2013-14, the first for four years, was continued.
One intriguing aspect of the picture is that the huge growth in opportunities to give, whether online or at bank cashpoints, does not appear to have generated any significant net growth in donations.
“People are still going to chuck a pound in the bucket or buy raffle tickets,” says Ockenden. “Sometimes there’s a tendency to think that technology replaces everything that came before, but it doesn’t – it’s just about giving people, especially young people, other mechanisms to do so.”
While the UK and the rest of Europe tread water in Caf’s global giving index, Africa emerges this year as the continent showing the biggest increase in generosity. Disasters and adversity appear to have spurred good deeds, with Nepal and Libya featuring strongly as well as Iraq.
John Low, Caf chief executive, says such selflessness is humbling and reflects an in-built human desire to give and help others. “Governments should encourage that spirit of generosity and create the environment in which a strong civil society can flourish, allowing people to reach out to those less fortunate than themselves.
“Unconditional gifts of time and money are a life-changing force for good in the world. As people become more prosperous and economies grow stronger, we have an opportunity to build an ever stronger culture of giving right across the world.”
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This map shows where the world’s most generous people live
Image: REUTERS/Thomas Peter
Written by
Alex GraySenior Writer, Formative Content
Published
Tuesday 25 October 2016
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If you live in Myanmar you are much more likely to give money to charity than if you live in China.
That’s according to the 2016 Global Civic Engagement Report by Gallup, which lists Myanmar as the most generous country, and China as the least.
The report was based on a survey which asked 145,000 people in 140 countries whether they had donated money to charity, volunteered their time to an organization, or helped a stranger in need within the past month.
The most popular form of civic engagement was helping a stranger or someone they didn’t know. Almost one in four respondents, 44%, said they had done so in the last month.
Fewer than one in three, 27%, said they had donated money, and even fewer, one in five, or 20%, had volunteered their time.
If you transpose the figures onto the global population you’ll see that, in 2015, 2.2 billion had helped a stranger in need in the past month, nearly 1.4 billion had donated money to a charity, and almost 1 billion had volunteered their time to an organization.
However, some countries were far more generous than others.
Image: Gallup
Among the top 10 most generous countries are the United States, Australia and New Zealand. Indeed, the study found a strong correlation between the per capita GDP of a country and how civic-minded its citizens are.
That said, not all of the top 10 countries could be considered wealthy. Sri Lanka, which came in fifth behind New Zealand, and Indonesia, which was in seventh place, ahead of the United Kingdom, both have middle-income status.
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Among the least generous were Greece, Yemen and the Palestinian Territories – all of which have suffered economically or are suffering conflict. The report also looked at the correlation between the economic and political conditions of the countries that gave and the amounts they gave. It found that many of the populations that are least civically engaged are those that have suffered economic and political upheaval.
Within the individual questions, the answers varied. The people most likely to help a stranger were in Libya, 79%; Somalia, 77%; and Malawi, 75%. The least likely were in China, 24%; Cambodia, 25%; and Japan, 25%.
The countries where people were most likely to volunteer time to an organization were Turkmenistan, 60%; Myanmar, 55%; and Indonesia, 50%.
The countries where people are most likely to donate money are Myanmar, 91%; Indonesia, 75%; and Australia, 73%. The least likely were Morocco, 4%; Yemen, 5%; and China 6%.
What are people’s motivations for helping?
Myanmar has a strong Buddhist tradition, which encourages donating and volunteering. The country came first or second in all three categories, with a massive 91% of people in Myanmar saying they donated money to charity.
The case for China is an interesting one. Despite having the world’s second largest population of billionaires, with 335 calling it home according to the 2015 Forbes China Rich List, the Chinese are ranked among the least generous in all categories.
Part of the reason, according a report by the UN, is that China has not historically had philanthropy as part of its culture. Those wishing to set up a charitable foundation face a mountain of paperwork, and recent scandals involving public charities have made the general public less trusting of them.
However, it does look like things are changing. At the end of 2015 there were over 4211 foundations in China, a 60% increase from just five years ago, and the UN says that data show that the overall number of citizens who decide to donate to charity is growing every year.
Why is civic engagement important?
The Gallup report says that encouraging citizens to share responsibility for the problems facing their communities and getting them to participate in solving them is one of the most important tasks for global leaders.
When leaders understand what motivates people to invest their time, effort and talent to benefit strangers, they create “massive economic value and enormous reserves of well-being for everyone involved,” it concludes.
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http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-37762753
3 hours ago
Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionDespite the violence in Iraq, they are considered the most welcoming people in the world
A war-torn state and a country ruled by an oppressive military junta for decades are home to the world's most generous people, research suggests.
People in Iraq are the kindest to strangers, while Myanmar's residents give the most away, according to the CAF World Giving Index 2016.
In the last month, eight in 10 Iraqis have helped someone they don't know, with Libyans helping almost as many.
During the same period, 91% of those in Myanmar have given money to charity.
In comparison, 63% of Americans - the second most generous overall - have donated money, with 73% helping a stranger.
The annual ranking places Myanmar, previously known as Burma, at the top of the list for the third year in a row, with more than half the population donating time and 63% helping a stranger.
The report said the generous giving reflected the practice of "Sangha Dana", where the country's Theravada Buddhist majority donate to support those living a monastic lifestyle.
The overall table, which takes into account financial donations, help offered to strangers and volunteering, ranks the UK as the most generous place in Europe, the United Arab Emirates in the Middle East, Kenya in Africa and Guatemala in Latin America.
China is named as the least generous country.
However, the poll only takes into account the responses of 1,000 people on average in each of the 140 countries, and the Charities Aid Foundation acknowledges there is margin for error.
But it is the kindness of Iraqis and Libyans to complete strangers in the face of years of conflict and terrible violence which stands out in the list.
BBC correspondents are unsurprised by the findings, as both countries have long traditions of hospitality to those they don't know.
The world's 10 most generous countries | ||
---|---|---|
Rank | Country | Overall generosity |
1 | Myanmar | 70% |
2 | United States | 61% |
3 | Australia | 60% |
4 | New Zealand | 59% |
5 | Sri Lanka | 57% |
6 | Canada | 56% |
7 | Indonesia | 56% |
8 | United Kingdom | 54% |
9 | Ireland | 54% |
10 | United Arab Emirates | 53% |
"Though often initially suspicious of foreigners they do not know, Libyans have an intrinsically generous culture," explained BBC North Africa correspondent Rana Jawad.
"In my experience this became more apparent after Gaddafi was overthrown from power; decades of anti-Western rhetoric and the police-state nature pre-2011 gave a distorted impression of Libyan hospitality - they were not unkind then, but just fearful of being helpful to foreigners or Libyan strangers.
"After the revolution, Libyans became vastly more welcoming of strangers and demonstrated it on every occasion they could. The persistent state of conflict since has probably contributed to the current ranking because in the absence of state authorities, civilians only have each other to turn to for help."