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Reuters
Reuters
Entertainment
Matthew Green

'Global Citizens' Assembly' to seek climate change solutions ahead of U.N. talks

FILE PHOTO: Environmental activist and campaigner Mya-Rose Craig, 18, holds a cardboard sign reading "youth strike for climate" as she sits on an ice floe in the middle of the Arctic Ocean, hundreds of miles above the Arctic Circle, September 20, 2020. REUTERS/Natalie Thomas

People around the world will have a chance to deliberate about responses to climate change under plans to convene a "Global Citizens' Assembly" to inform U.N. talks in Glasgow next year, organisers said on Thursday.

The project https://globalassembly.org aims to build on similar initiatives in countries such as Ireland, France and Canada, where citizens' assemblies have given politicians space to act by generating ambitious proposals on divisive issues.

FILE PHOTO: Asiyatu Chibwana deliberates with fellow participants at a citizens' assembly held at Salima South in Chipoka, Malawi November 5, 2020. ALL HANDS ON/Madalitso Banda/Handout via REUTERS

"Young people are not just frustrated by rising temperatures and declining ecosystems. We're also frustrated by the constant recycling of outdated political solutions," said Susan Nakyung Lee, 19, a South Korean student working on the project.

The plan is to launch a core virtual assembly made up of 1,000 people chosen by lottery from around the world, in spring or early summer, to run for several months ahead of the U.N. COP26 talks in November.

Organisers are working with other groups to hold local events around the world to broaden participation and build a lasting platform to host deliberations on climate change.

Advocates say citizens' assemblies can provide a counterweight to hyper-partisanship and disinformation on social media by convening people outside of adversarial political systems to call in expert testimony.

Oscar-winnning actor Mark Rylance provided a voiceover for a crowdfunder film, and organisers are enlisting celebrities from Senegalese rappers to British rock stars to raise awareness.

Although the assembly has no power to compel governments, supporters hope its recommendations will carry enough moral authority to influence policymakers.

"The Global Citizens' Assembly for COP26 will be the biggest ever process of its kind -- building new relationships between people across the world, but also between citizens and leaders," said Nigel Topping, named a U.N. climate champion by the British government.

(Reporting by Matthew Green; Editing by Peter Graff)

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