We’re building a movement for a just recovery

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We can’t go back to business-as-usual after the COVID-19 pandemic. That’s why we’re building a movement for a #JustRecoveryforAll  that puts people first.

Read the principles of a Just Recovery

Join Us

Hundreds of organizations endorse the Principles of a Just Recovery.

As we continue to respond to the COVID-19 health crisis and prepare to rebuild, organizations across Canada want governments to know that we cannot go back to the way things were. For years, we have witnessed the results of chronic underinvestment and inaction in the face of the ongoing, pre-existing crises of colonialism, human rights abuses, social inequity, ecological degradation, and climate change. Now, the COVID-19 crisis is forcing governments and civil society alike to reckon with the inadequacies and inequities of our systems.

This moment is a reminder that the status quo can and must be disrupted. We are standing on the threshold between the old world and the next and we must choose to build the future we want.

 

As governments and institutions begin to make plans to “recover” from the COVID-19 emergency, civil society groups across Canada have come together to demand that these plans build the resilient future we need for all people and ecosystems. Recovery efforts must not take us backward; they must accelerate the transition towards a more healthy, sustainable, and equitable society.To do so, we have identified six Principles of a Just Recovery. These principles stretch us beyond immediate, emergency responses to consider how we might “build back better” so that our economy supports all people, instead of people working to support the economy. Instead of sacrificing people or the planet for short-term profits, these principles guide us to a society that prioritizes resilience and wellbeing. All recovery plans should meet these essential criteria in their design, implementation, and evaluation.

6 Principles for a Just Recovery

Put people’s health and wellbeing first. No exceptions

Health is a human right and is interdependent with the health and wellbeing of ecological systems.

Recognizing this, ensure that all policies and programs address the social, economic and environmental determinants of health and are responsive to the climate emergency, which is, in itself, a health crisis. Learn from the pandemic: develop policies and make investments that keep communities and workplaces, particularly those on the frontlines, safe.

Increase the resilience of our health and social systems – expand and invest in health services, social services and frontline services everywhere. Ensure services are public, culturally safe, linguistically appropriate, and accessible to all without discrimination based on status, location, or circumstance – including to Indigenous peoples living on and off reserve, people in remote communities, migrants, and undocumented people.


Strengthen the social safety net and provide relief directly to people.

Strengthen the social safety net and provide relief directly to people

Focus relief efforts on people – particularly those who are structurally oppressed by existing systems.

Prioritize redistributive policies and social services that meet the immediate and long-term needs of all people and eliminate social, economic, and wealth inequalities. Rebuild a single-tier immigration system with permanent resident status for all.

Prioritize the needs of workers and communities

Support must be distributed in a manner consistent with Indigenous sovereignty, a climate resilient economy, and worker rights, including safe and fair labour standards and a right to unionize. Improved conditions for essential service workers must be maintained beyond this crisis.

Bailout packages must not encourage unqualified handouts, regulatory rollbacks, or regressive subsidies that enrich shareholders or CEOs, particularly those who take advantage of tax havens. These programs must support a just transition away from fossil fuels that creates decent work and leaves no one behind.

Build resilience to prevent future crises

We cannot recover from the current crisis by entrenching systems that will cause the next crisis.

We must invest in sustainable infrastructure and build resiliency within communities, ensuring that people can access public essential services, meet their basic needs, and engage in cultural and artistic expression.

Recovery plans should move us toward a diversified economy and systems that reduce social and economic inequity; that respect the limits of the planet; that protect land, water, and air; that uphold human rights and rights of Indigenous peoples; that support people who are not in the workforce to thrive; that create decent jobs; and that foster social, emotional, and cultural health and resiliency from infants to elders.

Build solidarity and equity across communities, generations, and borders

In a globalized world, what happens to one of us matters to all of us.

A Just Recovery must be guided by the principles of equity, solidarity, and sustainability across domestic and international relations. Recovery plans must honour and expand human rights, including the rights of Indigenous peoples, and advance gender equity while opposing authoritarian regimes and oppressive systems.

Emergency expenditures and measures must not be used as an excuse to subvert or suspend human rights, to centralize or reduce checks and balances on power, or to revert to austerity, protectionism, xenophobia, racism, ableism or pre-pandemic systems that sustain structural inequalities.

Canada has the historical obligation and the resources to ensure that, both domestically and internationally, funding and resources are provided to enable individuals and communities to thrive, engage in democratic institutions, and assert their rights and live with dignity.

Uphold Indigenous Rights and work in partnership with Indigenous peoples

A Just Recovery must uphold Indigenous Rights and include the full and effective participation of Indigenous Peoples, in line with the standard of free, prior, and informed consent.

Indigenous Peoples require sustained resources and investments that stimulate Indigenous economies, create healthy communities, and protect the lands and waters. Indigenous communities need investment in infrastructure, along with social and health services.

In recognizing Indigenous sovereignty, communities must have control over their housing, water, food, and energy. A Just Recovery must include robust renewable energy policy that ensures Indigenous ownership and equitable partnership of renewable energy projects in Indigenous homelands.

Indigenous laws, values, customs, and traditions must be recognized and upheld, including the need for the implementation of the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in all jurisdictions.

About

These principles were developed by organizations working together from communities across the country. Collectively, we are committed to a just future that puts the health and wellbeing of ALL peoples and ecosystems first, and builds a more equitable, resilient, and sustainable society.

Building on the foundation of these shared Principles of a Just Recovery, we invite organizations across the country to share their specific policy recommendations informed by the lived experiences and voices of the communities they work with and represent. We offer these principles as a shared platform by which we can amplify one another’s voices and work together towards a more resilient and just world that puts people and ecosystems first.

These Principles were adapted from the International Principles for a Just Recovery to address the specific Canadian context, as well as demonstrating alignment with the international community.

TAKE ACTION

Join the Movement for a Just Recovery


If we can bring together enough of our neighbours and friends and convince them to talk to their neighbours and friends about why we need a Just Recovery, we can build a movement that no politician can ignore.

Spread the Word

We need all hands on deck to win the fight for a Just Recovery. Luckily, we’re working with campaigners across the country who are already getting to work. You can take action to support campaigns for a Just Recovery.

Support the campaigns

Hundreds of organizations have endorsed the Principles for a Just Recovery — and we’re growing every day.

Endorse the principles

Art is a key way we can build connections, tell our story, and demand change. Even if many of us cannot leave our homes, we can still create powerful art together. We’ve put together an art kit so you can make your own Just Recovery window art and banners, and colouring pages to print and colour in to share the 6 principles for a Just Recovery.

Just Recovery Art Kit

About the Artist: Corrina Keeling

Multidisciplinary artist Corrina Keeling uses music, illustration, digital projection, and theatre to create containers in public spaces that allow us to reflect and participate more meaningfully in complex conversations about power and inequity, justice and accountability, and place and belonging. She’s curious about how to invite people to embrace the kind of discomfort that’s necessary for healing and change, and hopes her work, both in process and content, can embody the qualities she sees as some of the best medicine for these strange times: curiosity, deep listening, imagining what’s possible, and the practice of graceful mistakes. Corrina believes clothes without pockets are a feminist issue and a complete waste of time, and she spends the majority of her free time trying not to take herself too seriously, and also looking for her headphones.

Blogs

E-Rally for a Just Recovery

Welcome to the overflow room for the June 23rd Just Recovery e-rally. Keep scrolling for the recording of the event.