IDEAs hosted a panel discussion and
a series of five seminars around the theme of imperialism,
its nature and impact, during the World Social Forum
(WSF) held in Mumbai, India, between 16 -21st January
2004. The objective of the continuous and connected
series of events was to draw attention to the problems
faced by different sections of our society, and capture
the wide range of impact that the current imperialist
neo-liberal policies are having on our world today.
Resisting
Imperialism: The Agrarian Crisis
The
first of the IDEAs seminars at the WSF was held in
partnership with the Bangkok-based Focus on the Global
South, and dealt with the crisis that the agrarian
sector is facing as a consequence of imperialist globalization.
Professor Jomo K. S. of the University of Malaya,
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Chairperson of IDEAs, as
well as Professor Erinc Yeldan from Bilkent University,
Ankara, Turkey, also on the executive committee of
IDEAs and who chaired the session introduced
IDEAs
to the audience. The speakers in this session included
Professor
Utsa Patnaik
from Jawaharlal Nehru University,
Chanida
Chanyapate Bamford
from Focus on the Global South,
Punyavati
from
All India Democratic Women's Association (AIDWA),
Professor Alicia Puyana
from La Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales
(FLACSO), Mexico,
Chittaroopa Palit
from the Narmada Bachao Andolan, and
Professor Abhijit Sen
from Jawaharlal Nehru University.
All the speakers were concerned about
how
the current focus of
globalization
is all about re-colonialisation of developing country
agricultural sector and pointed out the
immiserisation of the masses that is
taking place as a result of agricultural liberalization.
Resisting
Imperialism: Women and Economic Rights
The second seminar that IDEAs hosted
during the World Social Forum was the session focusing
on women and their economic rights in the current
context. The All India Democratic Women's Association
(AIDWA) and the International Association for Feminist
Economics (IAFFE) were the co-sponsors of this session.
The session sought to bring to the fore the problems
that are now faced by a relatively marginalized section
of society, in the wake of increasing withdrawal of
government activity and reduction in its social expenditure.
The central issue of the session concerned the economic
rights of women which encompass the right to food,
right to livelihood, right to housing, right to basic
necessities such as safe water, fuel etc. These have
been eroded by privatisation, reduced quantity and
quality of public provision and increased user charges
and other prices. The seminar intended to examine
coping strategies as well as the possibilities of
alternative policies to ensure the economic rights
of women and girls. The panel discussed the issue
with inputs from academics as well as from activists.
The speakers at the session were
Radhika Balakrishnan
from the Marymount Manhattan college, New York, US,
Hemlata,
Sudha
and
Mariam Dhawale
from the 'All India Democratic Women’s Association,
Anita Nayar
from the University of Sussex, UK and
Diane Elson
from the University of Essex, United Kingdom who is
also a member of the
IAFFE.
Resisting Imperialism:
Financial Fragility and Trade Volatility
All the speakers at the IDEAs session on Resisting
Imperialism: Financial Fragility and Trade
Volatility outlined the dangers of financial liberalization
as this will lead to an increase in speculation and
volatility in the financial sector where market signals
that are available to the firms and the ability of
private agents of taking market signals are the least,
and the risks of market failure are the greatest.
The speakers included
Prof.
Amiya Kumar Bagchi from the Institute of
Development Studies Kolkata;
Prof. Zhiyuan Cui
from East Asian Institute, National University of
Singapore and Wissenschaftskolleg Zu, Berlin;
Prof. C.P. Chandrasekhar
from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi;
Prof. Sushil Khanna
from Indian Institute of Management, Kolkata;
Prof. Sunanda Sen
from Academy of Third World Studies, Jamia Millia,
New Delhi; and
Prof. Erinc Yeldan
from Bilkent University, Turkey. Prof. Korkut Boratav
from Ankara University, Turkey chaired the
session.
Resisting
Imperialism: The World of Labour
All the speakers in this session agreed on how labour
faces a grave threat under the imperialist
globalization that is being forced upon most countries,
and we need to unitedly resist such efforts by international
capital to undermine the interests of the working
class in their search for increasing profits. The
speakers in this session comprised of
Subhashini Ali of AIDWA;
Prof.
Thomas Isaac, MLA from Kerala;
Dr.
Praveen Jha from JNU;
Ravi
Naidoo from Naledi, South Africa;
Prof.
V.K. Ramachandran from Indian Statistical
Institute, Kolkata; and
Prof.
William K. Tabb from Queen’s College, USA.
Prof. Utsa Patnaik from JNU chaired the session.
Resisting
Imperialism: The Impoverishment of Nation States
The session drew attention to the reduced ability
of governments in different countries to meet their
basic responsibilities for the provision of the socio-economic
rights of citizens that has emerged as a typical feature
of imperialist globalisation in the age of finance.
The objective of the seminar was to deconstruct the
elements of this enfeeblement of governments in different
countries to meet their basic responsibilities for
the provision of the socio-economic rights of citizens,
in terms of the reduced ability to raise tax revenues,
the fear of deficits, and the sale of valuable public
assets to private agents. The discussion also considered
the implications of these on different groups in society,
and especially on women in peasant and working class
households. The intent was also to show how these
patterns are the result of political choices by governments,
rather than inexorable economic laws, and how they
can be reversed with sufficient social and political
pressure.
The
chair for the session was Galip Yalman from Turkey.
The speakers at this session discussed the situation
in a wide range of countries. The panel included
Jimi Adesina
from Rhodes University, South Africa,
Alejandro Bendana
from the Centre for International Studies, Managua,
Nicaragua,
Remy Herrera
from Maison des Sciences économiques de l'Université
de Paris, France,
Nirmal Chandra
from the Indian Institute of Management, Kolkata,
India,
Todd Tucker
from the Centre for Economic and Policy Research,
Washington, USA and
Jayati Ghosh
from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India.
The Instruments
of Imperialism: War, Trade and Finance
IDEAs also hosted a panel discussion meant for an
extensive
audience of 4000 during the World Social Forum. In
this event, its partner organizations were the 'Initiative
for Policy Dialogue', New York, US and 'Focus on the
Global South', based in Bangkok, Thailand. The session
was chaired by Alicia Puyana from Mexico and the panelists
included
Samir Amin from Senegal,
Korkut Boratav from Turkey,
Diane Elson from UK,
Jomo K.S. from Malaysia,
Joseph Stiglitz from the US, and
Prabhat Patnaik from India.
The
intention of the discussion was to focus on the changed
character of imperialism and to analyse the workings
of national and international markets in the age of
'free' global trade and the dominance of finance.
The emphasis was on finance as a tool for dominating
developing country economies. This not only implies
severe deflation in developing countries with major
adverse consequences for ordinary people but also
the conversion of financial markets into sites for
primitive accumulation by means of corporate malpractices
and/or corporate crimes. Further, the new imperialism
has also been characterised by greater violence and
more specifically, war. Where other instruments of
domination have failed, war, as a threat or as a reality,
has been used. All the three instruments of trade,
finance and war have thus been used in conjunction
and in different combinations to subjugate the South.
While Joseph Stiglitz,
representing the 'Initiative for Policy Dialogue'
(IPD), New York, USA drew on the central theme around
which the World Social Forum revolves - that 'another
world is possible' and advocated that alternative
policies must be considered, Samir
Amin, from The 'Third World Forum' based in Dakar,
Senegal, advocated the view that developing countries
must de-link their economies
from that of the developed countries
to be able to implement alternative strategies. |