Julia Moulden is the author of We Are The New Radicals: A Manifesto for Reinventing Yourself and Saving the World, published internationally by McGraw-Hill, New York (2008).

A powerful new idea is sweeping North America: that “doing good” can mean more than volunteering and philanthropy. That how we earn our living can become the way we give back. We Are the New Radicals both reports on this emerging trend and will help create it — by awakening people from all walks of life and inspiring them to take their place in the movement that is changing the world. Julia offers practical advice for people who want to reinvent their work and gives answers to questions such as “What are my motivations?” “What skills can I leverage?” “Where is the greatest need?” and “How do I get there from here?”. She believes that in the next few decades, we have a remarkable opportunity — as individual human beings, and as an international family — to realize our full potential and, in doing so, to solve many of the problems that face us.

Her first book was a bestseller about another emerging trend. Green is Gold (HarperBusiness), the first green guide for business, was translated into six languages. Since 1985, she has written speeches for cabinet ministers, CEOs, and celebrities. Her clients include North America's leading organizations, including AstraZeneca, Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts, and Ford Motor Company. She is represented by Speakers' Spotlight: www.speakersspotlight.com.

Blog Entries by Julia Moulden

New Year, New Job, New Radical

Posted January 2, 2010 | 01:22 PM (EST)


What's a New Radical? Someone who's found a way to put the skills acquired in her career to work on the world's greatest challenges. Men and women like you and me who've discovered that how we earn our living can become the way we give back. (For more, please see...

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Here's What I'd Like To Hear More of In 2010

13 Comments | Posted December 26, 2009 | 09:51 AM (EST)


 


 


 


 


 


 






Silence. Allowing space for contemplation. For creativity. For whatever comes. Yes, John Cage is an inspiration for this post. An American composer, Cage was one of the leading figures in...

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What's Your Hobby?

9 Comments | Posted December 19, 2009 | 09:48 AM (EST)


Let me confess up front: I'm a Scots Presbyterian workaholic. I'm not quite Gekko ("Lunch is for wimps" was the immortal line of Michael Douglas' character in the 1980s film, Wall Street). Yet Thoreau's thought is always in the back of my mind, "As if you could kill time without...

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What Makes Us Wise II: The Defining Wisdom Project

12 Comments | Posted December 12, 2009 | 07:00 AM (EST)


"You Canadians!," my cabbie laughed as I climbed into the back seat and complained about the cold. "Always talking about the weather. In my country, we have two weather reports. 'Now it is the rainy season' and 'Now it is the dry season'."

That lighthearted exchange came to mind when...

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The Aging Population: A Silver Tsunami?

54 Comments | Posted December 5, 2009 | 07:00 AM (EST)


I just spent two days with some smart, thoughtful people, talking about something everyone knows is coming, but most of us are in denial about. No, not climate change. Our aging population. Here's a small slice: in 2000, there were 600 million people 60 and over worldwide. By 2025, that...

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Banks Giving: Now That's The Holiday Spirit!

11 Comments | Posted November 28, 2009 | 08:37 AM (EST)


Why is "Banks Giving" a headline we never expect to read? And isn't it time we acted in unison to do something about that?

Like you, I've grown increasingly uneasy about the money financial institutions are making. And the obscene bonuses paid to senior people (you can be sure that...

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Top 10 New Radical Gifts

4 Comments | Posted November 21, 2009 | 07:00 AM (EST)


Are you like me -- suddenly realizing that the holidays are only weeks away? And are you totally and completely convinced that you don't want to give the same old, same old this year? Then my favourite New Radical gift ideas might just come in handy. Hopefully you'll find something...

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Hijab For Sports: A New Radical Invention

40 Comments | Posted November 14, 2009 | 07:00 AM (EST)


When Elham Seyed Javad heard that five Muslim girls were ejected from a tae kwon do tournament in Montreal for wearing hijabs, she felt sick to her stomach. "I was in shock because I play a lot of sports myself - especially soccer - and to have to stop playing...

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Free Luxury: Help The Rich Learn To Live Like Us

15 Comments | Posted November 7, 2009 | 07:00 AM (EST)


The publications that are thriving these days are those whose readers are wealthy. New York Times columnist Roger Cohen, for instance, just wrote about Tatler, the gossip magazine about the lives of the very rich, which is doing well all over the world.

I read the...

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Think It's Over Once You're 60? Check Out The Purpose Prize

11 Comments | Posted October 31, 2009 | 07:57 AM (EST)


This is the true story of a couple of ordinary Americans who thought, once they turned 60, that life would be uneventful. That maybe the marriage of their three children - and the grandchildren to come - would be the highlight. Instead, they've just won a prestigious award that honours...

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Math Is Not Hard: A Simple Method That Is Changing The World

160 Comments | Posted October 24, 2009 | 10:33 AM (EST)


"Math is the easiest subject for kids to learn."

Say what?

Yup, that's what John Mighton believes. And he's got everything he needs to back up this counter-intuitive assertion.

Let's start with the commonly-held view. "Math is hard." Even Barbie said it. We somehow grow up thinking that either you're...

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Even New Radicals Get The Blues

12 Comments | Posted October 17, 2009 | 07:35 AM (EST)


Last night, I sat at the top of my steps and wept. I cried over all the problems in the world. And for how tired I am. That's not something that's easy to admit, but I think it warrants saying.

What brought it on? That afternoon, I had coffee...

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Hopenhagen: Your Passport To The Climate Change Summit in Copenhagen

39 Comments | Posted October 9, 2009 | 09:31 AM (EST)


On December 7, leaders from 192 countries will gather in Copenhagen to determine the future of our planet.

They're all part of the UN Climate Summit, which aims to create a global climate treaty to replace the Kyoto protocol. Try to imagine who's going to be at the table, and...

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To Lake, With Love

Posted October 6, 2009 | 12:50 PM (EST)


There we were, two middle-aged, Prada-clad women with great haircuts, sitting in a boardroom. Between us on the table, her Blackberry buzzed relentlessly. She ignored it, I suspect, because her mouth was hanging open. Although I'd been her number one speechwriter for many years, somehow I'd never mentioned what I...

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What Am I Going To Do With The Rest Of My Life?

19 Comments | Posted October 3, 2009 | 10:02 AM (EST)


Have you asked yourself that question? I hear it from people all the time. First, it was baby boomers eager to shift from success to significance at midlife. But, more and more, it's coming from young people just starting their careers. It's a question that has never seemed more important....

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Linda Ronstadt On The Promise of Music

39 Comments | Posted September 26, 2009 | 09:22 AM (EST)


If you were interviewing Linda Ronstadt, would you be tempted to ask her to sing a few lines from your favourite song? Oh, I don't know, maybe "Silver Threads and Golden Needles"? Or "Heat Wave"? As soon as our conversation was set up, I started playing her music. A lot....

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Back To School For New Radicals: Share What You're Doing!

Posted September 18, 2009 | 11:00 AM (EST)


OK, budding New Radicals, tell me you don't want to be part of this.

Riders for Health has just announced that they're working with Stanford University's Graduate School of Business to demonstrate how reliable transportation can reduce preventable disease in Africa.

I've written about Riders for Health before....

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Reinventing The Compensation Wheel: Frustrated That Some People Make More Than You?

8 Comments | Posted September 11, 2009 | 12:24 PM (EST)


Bankers are looking over their shoulders these days. There have been calls for a cap on their bonuses - the issue was even discussed at the recent G20 summit - and there's little sympathy that these highly-paid folks report feeling like scapegoats.

It's no secret that some people earn more...

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When You Educate A Girl, Everything Changes

11 Comments | Posted September 5, 2009 | 10:49 AM (EST)


"Your eyes, it's a day's work to look into them." American composer and performance artist Laurie Anderson wrote the line that came to me when I first saw Cindy, the girl whose photograph appears at the top of this week's column.

She lives in Zambia, and is about to...

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Show Me the Money! Using Your Capital To Save The World At This Year's SOCAP Conference

5 Comments | Posted August 29, 2009 | 09:37 AM (EST)


Have you ever flown somewhere and, out of the blue, the captain makes an announcement that you're about to pass over, say, the Grand Canyon, and adds that people on the right side of the aircraft will have a great view? And then everyone from the left side leaps out...

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