Right to Education

'Education is the most powerful weapons which you can use to change the world.' 


Nelson Mandela.

We've chose to fight for the right to education as we believe that education gives people across the whole world the chance to break the cycle of poverty: to live in a more equal world without discrimination, where everybody has the same chance to learn the same skills and enjoy the same success. To enjoy a better tomorrow. And all that makes it the perfect subject for poster for tomorrow to address.

The Competition

Our poster competition is open for entries from March 10 until July 10 2011, and as ever, it's free to enter. All you have to do is create a poster responding to our brief, then upload it on the poster for tomorrow website. The best posters (as selected by our jury) will be published in a book and exhibited around the world on a day for tomorrow, our annual exhibition day. You can download the brief here.



Ongoing Projects

We Stand With Ukraine


There is little that we can say about the horrendous situation in Ukraine that might make a difference. But we hope there is something that we can do to help.

To show our...

Free Patrick Zaki


The call for entries to “Free Patrick Zaki, prisoner of conscience”, a special edition of Poster For Tomorrow, will be open from 8 to 28 January. The competition is...

FAKE NEWS!


Fake news might feel like a recent development that has only come to prominence since the election of one politician who shall not be named, but the practice of spreading...

FAKE NEWS!

Fake news might feel like a recent development that has only come to prominence since the election of one politician who shall not be named, but the practice of spreading rumours and misinformation is as old as the printed word.

People have always twisted the truth, or simply told lies, to get what they want (or change the world). But now we have the ability to share information faster and wider than ever before. It used to be only a few media outlets or government sources that could shape public thought, but now everyone can.

And unlike the media or government, none of us are held accountable for what we post. As there are few laws or fines that can be thrown at us for posting lies, there is no incentive to act responsibly in the public sphere. Get likes (or votes) first, worry about potential consequences later. If the self-styled leader of the free world can’t be held to account for regularly tweeting and spreading blatant untruths, then what stops everybody else from doing the same?