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East London Times (ELT) > Opinion > Standing Up, Speaking Out: Why Representation Matters Now More Than Ever
Opinion

Standing Up, Speaking Out: Why Representation Matters Now More Than Ever

Dr Alina Vaduva
Last updated: March 27, 2026 3:31 pm
Dr Alina Vaduva
54 seconds ago
Senior Lecturer UEL -
@DrAlinaVaduva
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Standing Up, Speaking Out: Why Representation Matters Now More Than Ever

We are living through a moment of deep public discontent. Across societies, we see the troubling resurgence of racism, xenophobia, and division. In such times, it becomes essential, not optional, to reflect on our values and to ask ourselves what kind of society we truly want to live in.

Contents
  • Why our rights, voices, and communities must never be taken for granted
  • A call to action against hate, division, and the erosion of shared values
  • From representation to resilience: standing up for what truly matters

Why our rights, voices, and communities must never be taken for granted

Freedom, democracy, and the right to be heard are not permanent guarantees. They are achievements that were hard won through the struggles of those who came before us. Women, ethnic minorities, and countless others have fought not only for rights on paper, but for dignity, recognition, and equality in everyday life. These gains were never inevitable, and they should never be taken for granted.

I was born on the other side of the Iron Curtain, and the memory of communism is not abstract to me, it is deeply personal. I still remember the Romanian Revolution, when young people took to the streets and paid with their lives for the simple idea of freedom and democracy. Those images, those sacrifices, never truly leave you. And today, they feel more vivid than ever. As I watch the suffering in Ukraine, the devastation in Syria, where hundreds of thousands have lost their lives over the years, and the ongoing violence in Lebanon, where recent conflicts have already claimed over a thousand lives and displaced millions, I am reminded that the fight for freedom is still being paid for in human lives. From Iran to countless other places, people continue to stand up—often at immense personal cost—for rights many of us risk taking for granted. These are not distant tragedies; they are powerful reminders that democracy is fragile, and that its defence requires courage, unity, and memory.

As an immigrant, one of the defining attractions of the United Kingdom for me was its historic commitment to human rights, inclusiveness, and the rule of law. It has long stood as a place where diversity is not merely tolerated, but valued. Nowhere is this more visible than in East London, a community built on difference, resilience, and shared aspiration. Here, diversity is not a challenge to overcome; it is our greatest strength.

A call to action against hate, division, and the erosion of shared values

Yet social cohesion cannot be assumed to endure on its own. It must be actively protected. When human rights are questioned, when hate speech becomes normalised, when discrimination is minimised or ignored, we all have a responsibility to respond. Silence is not neutrality, it is complicity.

We must be unequivocal. NO to hate. NO to those who profit from division. NO to abuses of power. NO to sexism, Islamophobia, antisemitism, xenophobia, and racism. NO to discrimination in all its forms.

But saying “no” is only part of the task. We must also actively build the society we believe in, one grounded in sustainability, social justice, democratic values, and inclusion. A society where the most vulnerable are protected, where equity is pursued, and where every voice matters.

From representation to resilience: standing up for what truly matters

Representation is central to this vision. It is through representation that communities are seen, heard, and empowered. It is through participation that democracy remains alive. As an educator and a public servant, I strongly believe that we must encourage more people to step forward, to join unions, to stand in local and national elections, to contribute to charities and non-governmental organisations, and to stand for their faith and community groups. Civic rights were not secured from the comfort of the sidelines, and they will not be preserved from there either.

Today, those rights feel more fragile than they have in recent memory. That is precisely why we must remain united in defending them. The future will not be shaped by those who withdraw, but by those who stand up.

Now is the time to stand, for our values, for our communities, and for each other!

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Dr Alina Vaduva
ByDr Alina Vaduva
Dr Alina Vaduva is a Senior Lecturer in Business Strategy at the University of East London, specialising in artificial intelligence, digital governance, and sustainable innovation. She has authored several publications on AI's role in public services and higher education, including articles in The Conversation and Open Access Government. As a member of the UK Parliament’s Science and Technology Committee, she has contributed evidence on AI policy and strategy. Dr Vaduva also served as an Expert Evaluator for the European Innovation Council, assessing frontier technology proposals. Her work bridges academic research with practical policy, advocating for AI systems that align with European values and democratic oversight.
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