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World Social Forum: Brazil January 25-30, 2001

The World Social Forum will be a new international arena for organizing against neoliberal policies and for building economic alternatives that prioritize social justice. It will take place every year in the city of Porto Alegre, Brazil, during the same period as the World Economic Forum, which happens in Davos, Switzerland, at the end of January.

The World Social Forum will provide a space for building economic alternatives, for exchanging experiences and for strengthening South-North alliances between NGOs, unions and social movements. It will also be an opportunity for developing concrete actions, to educate the public, and to mobilize civil society internationally. read more

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UN Corporate Partnerships (11/00)

Transnational Resource & Action Center, September 2000

Executive Summary

Secretary General Kofi Annan has encouraged all UN agencies to form partnerships with the private sector. The centerpiece of this initiative is his Global Compact, launched with the agencies for environment (UNEP), labor (ILO) and human rights (UNHCHR) in July, 2000. This report argues that corporate influence at the UN is already too great, and that new partnerships are leading down a slippery slope toward the partial privatization and commercialization of the UN system itself.  The Secretary General’s office and UN agencies such as UNICEF, UNDP, WHO, and UNESCO are partnering with corporations known for human, labor and environmental rights violations.  The Global Compact and its cousin partnerships at other UN agencies threaten the mission and integrity of the United Nations. read more

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Haiti’s Trail of Broken Promises (8/00)

The eradication of the Haitian Creole pig population in the 1980s is a classic parable of globalization. Haiti’s small, black, Creole pigs were at the heart of the peasant economy. An extremely hearty breed, well adapted to Haiti’s climate and conditions, they ate readily available waste products, and could survive for three days without food. Eighty to 85 percent of rural households raised pigs; they played a key role in maintaining the fertility of the soil and instituted the primary savings bank of the peasant population. Traditionally, a pig was sold to pay for emergencies and special occasions (funerals, marriages, illnesses), and, critically, to pay school fees and buy books for the children when school opened each year in October. read more

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Nukes and Globalization (8/00)

The creation of a single global economy through globalization is undermining international peace and security. The loss of national sovereignty, increased financial instability, the rise of transnational corporations, and the increasing power imbalance in favor of the US and its Western allies are promoting nuclear proliferation and derailing nuclear disarmament.

The global economy is limiting the influence of the nation-state, while transferring power to corporations, financial markets, and multilateral organizations such as the World Trade Organization and International Monetary Funds (IMF), all of which are incapable of promoting diplomacy and international peace and security. read more

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WTO – Shrink or Sink! (5/00)

The Turn Around Agenda

It’s time to turn trade around. In November 1999, the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Third Ministerial Meeting in Seattle collapsed in spectacular fashion, in the face of unprecedented protest from people and governments around the world. We believe it is essential to use this moment as an opportunity to change course and develop an alternative, humane, democratically accountable and sustainable system of commerce that benefits all. This process entails rolling back the power and authority of the WTO. read more

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Uncensoring Globalization (5/00)

On the morning after the April 16 rally and street protests in Washington, DC, staged to draw public attention to the destructive policies of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF), the national press was still missing the point. In a Washington Post Style section feature, for example, one writer defined the A16 mobilization as "get-your-greedy-corporations-out-of-my-old-growth-tree-day." That was about as close as any Post reporter came to explaining why more than 30,000 people had descended on the nation’s capital, or why it was necessary to arrest more than 1200 people and militarize over 20 city blocks. read more