A number of parents seem to be worried about our society's focus on consumption and acquiring things to   enhance happiness. At the same time, many of us have grown up in cultures where we have been told to feel   guilty about acquiring things, and as a result we sometimes have a conflicted attitude towards money and   things. We want money, yet feel guilty about having things. Or, we tend to hoard things once we get them,   insecure that they will be taken away from us. Read More...
 
     

  What MotherNurture argues is that children and young people, with their allowances and earnings and other   initiatives can spend on both consumer goods and can spend on the satisfaction of giving by sponsoring   mothers in poor countries. These women will be the the sponsored mothers of the young people.

 
     
  This project understands that children are becoming more aware of development issues at a very young age.   We have also seen that the concept of helping mothers strikes a chord in children of all ages.Our main   objective is to offer opportunities to children and young people to improve the lives of mothers in a way that   offers clear benefit to mothers. Read More...
 
     
  Youth-----mothers----mothers’ children---- sustainable planet
  In the 1980s, the Brundtland Commission report suggested that sustainable development involves meeting the   needs of the current generation without compromising the ability of the next generation to meet its needs.

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  The project also aims to contribute to the academic literature on morality in children and young people as well   as to the literature on parenting, and on building strong relationships with people across countries and   cultures.Some of the well-known authors who have already written extensively about the growth of different   intelligences in children and young people are Robert Coles, Martin Seligman Howard Gardner and Danie   Goleman.