History of Activities
Since the inaugural meeting in Nyon, Switzerland in July 2008, the group have met in Lisbon (October 2008), in Madrid (March 2009), and in Istanbul (August 2009). These meetings were hosted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in each country and More information...

 
 
  • Recent Posts
    • March 27th, 2013
      Forward Thinking hold meetings in Cairo and Alexandria, 26-28 February 2013

      Oliver, Julian and Edward held a series of meetings in Cairo as part of the Egyptian Political Economic Dialogue Proc.....
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    • March 27th, 2013
      The Director and Nyon Process Manager hold meetings in Tunis, 22-24 February 2013

      Oliver McTernan and Julian Weinberg travelled to Tunisia to hold a series of meetings across three days. Over the cou.....
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    • March 27th, 2013
      Foward Thinking delays planned trip to Tunisia, February 8th

      Forward Thinking planned to travel to Tunisia from the 12th-15th of February for a series of bilateral meetings with .....
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    • March 27th, 2013
      The Ninth Nyon Process Meeting, Cordoba, 21st- 23rd January 2013

      The Ninth Nyon Process Meeting, hosted by the Casa Arabe, was held in Cordoba from the 21st-23rdMore information...

    • March 27th, 2013
      Forward Thinking travels to Berlin for third parliamentary dialogue, 13th December 2012

      Forward Thinking held the third meeting of the European – MENA parliamentarians’ dialogue process it has .....
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The Nyon Process is a project of dialogue-to-action facilitated by Forward Thinking, the United Nations Alliance of Civilizations with the support of a number of European governments that seeks to engage four key constituencies at the intersection of religion, politics, and social activism:
  1. Foreign policy advisors and analysts from Western European Governments
  2. Foreign policy advisors and analysts from the United States
  3. Religio-political activists from the United States and Europe (particularly Evangelical Christians and Muslim activists)
  4. Religio-political activists from predominantly Muslim countries.

The aim is to bridge the gap that exists between religious and secular worldviews that sometimes lead to misguided or ill-informed policy-making. To the extent that projects result from this dialogue process, it is those that have the prospect of some political consequence –as distinct from strictly interfaith understanding – that are prioritized for support and follow-up.

 
 
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Blog
July 30th, 2010
Protected: Vietnam’s national news channel features IGE’s work

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