- United Religions Initiative
Articleissues
notable = August 2008
primarysources = August 2008
refimprove = August 2008The United Religions Initiative (URI), founded by Bishop
William E. Swing (The Seventh Bishop of the Diocese ofCalifornia of the Episcopal Church), was inspired to bring people of diverse faith into cooperation for peace by the example of the work of nations of the world throughUnited Nations working to bring peace. The movement to found it began in1996 , culminating in the signing of the United Religions Initiative Charter in2000 . [cite web| url=http://www.uri.org/About_URI.html#charter| title=United Religions Initiative Charter]"The purpose of the URI is to promote enduring daily interfaith cooperation, to end religiously motivated violence, and to create cultures of peace, justice and healing for the Earth and all living beings."
The URI emphasises a decentralised, grass roots structure that includes not only representation of the world's major religious organizations, but also other voices not often heard. It complements the work of and collaborates with other local and international interfaith organizations, such as the
Council for a Parliament of the Worlds Religions .Fact|date=August 2008Organizational Design
The URI is composed of over 300 [As of December 2005; source: direct correspondence with URI Executive Director Charles Gibbs] Verify credibility|date=August 2008 Cooperation Circles (CCs) – groups of 7 or more individuals dedicated to the URI Preamble, Purpose, and Principles (collectively, the Charter). For administrative purposes, these CCs are divided into 8 regions:
* Africa
* Asia
* Europe
* [http://www.uri.org/americalatina Latin America & the Caribbean]
* Middle East & North Africa
* [http://www.uriccs.org Multi-regional]
* [http://www.uri-na.org North America]
* PacificEach region elects 3 Trustees to sit on the Global Council (GC), which functions as the Board of Directors for the United Religions Initiative, Inc. (a California
501(c)(3) non-profit organization). The GC is elected every 3 years; the most recent elections were held in 2005. In addition as serving as the fiscal agents for the global URI, the GC sets policy formal policy and approves new member CCs. The GC is defined by the URI Charter and Bylaws as primarily an advisor to the local CCs, rather than a command-and-control body.Fact|date=August 2008References
External links
* [http://www.uri.org United Religions Initiative] URI's Homepage
* [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0963789759 "The Coming United Religions"] Book by URI founder Bishop William Swing
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guUKh7GuTVg "Be a Peacebuilder"] A video on Youtube about URI
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