CONTENTS

Introduction

1.    A commitment to favouring the poorest and most vulnerable

2.    Actively redressing social and economic injustices and inequalities

3.    Welcoming the stranger and valuing displaced and marginalised people

4.    Seeing people, their dignity and rights as the solution not the problem

5.    Moving from punitive ‘welfare’ to a society where all can genuinely fare well

6.    Promoting community and neighbourhood empowerment

7.    Food, education, housing and sustainable income for all

8.    Care for planet and people as the basis for human development

9.    Investing in nonviolent alternatives to war and force as the basis for security

10.  Transparency, honesty and accountability in public and economic life

Further Reading

Authorship

About Ekklesia

Copyright notice

* Read and download the full paper (*.PDF Adobe Acrobat document) here: http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/sites/ekklesia.co.uk/files/ten_values_in_eu_debate.pdf   

Further resources from Ekklesia on the EU referendum: 
*What kind of European future? (Ekklesia, 13 June 2016) – http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/23160
* Assessing Christian contributions to the EU referendum debate (Ekklesia, 20 June 2016) – http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/23188
Ten principles to guide voting in the EU referendum and beyond (Ekklesia, 21 June 2016) – http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/23194
* Ekklesia’s EU referendum briefing and commentary: http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/eureferendum