UN SDG Action Campaign joins The Global Hack team to beat COVID-19

The UN SDG Action Campaign is inviting solutions creators from every corner of the world to participate in the upcoming biggest hackathon that has ever been held.

Together with the organizers – the Hack the Crisis movement community, EU commission and Ideo and many more – the Campaign is calling for one million problem solvers to join #TheGlobalHack from April 7 to 12 and harness the positive power of solidarity and coordinated action to tackle this global challenge together.

COVID-19 is the greatest challenge that the world has faced since the formation of the United Nations.

It is also a very unique situation as the whole world is tackling the same problem at once, together. Creative and transformative solutions are needed to respond to the speed, scale and severity of the pandemic, as well as its societal and economic disruptions.

The series of national hackathons, which are currently being organized around the world, provide the collaborative environment to create, test and validate solutions through rapid prototyping.

The Global Hack will amplify this potential by featuring different tracks that will focus on finding solutions to a variety of the most pressing global issues, aligned to key SDG areas of focus.

Among them is the Solidarity in Action track, launched by the UN SDG Action Campaign to provide a platform for the co-creation of solutions that harness this collective strength of humanity to first beat the virus and then change the world for the better.

“Now is the time to mobilize the global community and invite people from every corner of the world to work together and find solutions that can have a massive impact to tackle this global crisis, and build a better future for people and for the planet“, says Marina Ponti, Director of the UN SDG Action Campaign.

Participants will come from all sectors including representatives from business, academia, government, civil society, the creatives, media and tech industries. In just 48 hours, they will work on solutions for predefined challenges in teams of 6-12 people with diverse skill-sets, insights and expertise.

“We hack for the people we don’t know and will never meet. We hack for the first responders, the grandmothers, the newborns, boomers, and the millennials. We hack because we are all living in one small village in this new world. We are not European, American, African, or Asian. We are human. And we will hack, because we, humans, love”, says Marko Russiver Founder of Guaana and initiator.

The deadline to register, propose a challenge or join a team for The Global Hack is April 7.

Participation is voluntary and driven by the mission to build solutions that can be developed and scaled to meet the challenge at stake.