http://www.alternet.org/stories/45979/
AlterNet:
Hopeful Signs For Global Justice

By Mark Engler, TomPaine.com. Posted December 28, 2006.

Despite the challenges presented by the current administration, the 
global justice movement has made impressive strides.

To read the headlines in the morning papers during these Bush years 
is too often an exercise in exasperation, as each day's new outrages 
seem to top the last. But hidden quietly on the inside pages, and 
rumbling through alternative news sources, there is also a more 
encouraging story: Despite the challenges presented by the current 
administration, the global justice movement has made impressive 
strides in recent years.

Arguments for trade and development policies that truly address 
poverty and serve working people have moved from the left margins 
into the mainstream of international debate. The paradigm of 
"neoliberalism" that dominated world development for two decades has 
been steadily losing legitimacy. And, in its wake, some important 
spaces for building alternatives have appeared.

Whether in the Democratic sweep of the midterm elections, in the 
eruption of domestic protests supporting immigrant rights, in the 
leftward realignment of Latin American politics, in the collapse of 
the Doha round of talks at the World Trade Organization, or in 
extended victories in issues like debt relief, these trends continued 
in exciting ways in 2006.

Given that Bill Clinton's Democrats were the party of NAFTA, and that 
the Dems continue to rely on big money from corporate America, many 
global justice activists have long grown skeptical that a push for 
real change can be led from Capitol Hill. While this view has merit, 
the Democratic landslide nevertheless represented a serious blow to 
the reactionary Bush administration, and you would have to be 
unusually jaded not to see any bright spots in the electoral sweep. 
In fact, in terms of trade and development issues, the midterm 
elections helped foster a major realignment within the Democratic 
Party away from a corporate globalization agenda.

As the watchdogs at Public Citizen have documented, seven seats in 
the Senate and 28 in the House changed hands from "free trade" to 
"fair trade" advocates, who support using international agreements to 
promote stronger labor and environmental protections. Important wins 
include those of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, a steadfast critic 
of neoliberalism, and Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown, long-time activist 
and author of Myths of Free Trade: Why American Trade Policy Has 
Failed. November 7 also produced numerous state- and community-level 
victories, bringing into office grassroots leaders who see their 
local work in an internationalist context. As just one example, 
longtime global justice champion Mark Ritchie, founder and former 
executive director of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, 
was elected as Secretary of State in Minnesota, and will be leading 
the effort to make the state a model for conducting clean and fair 
elections.

Another type of democracy -- more colorful and direct -- was on 
display in the streets this year. Most notably, 2006 witnessed a wave 
of massive demonstrations in favor of immigrant rights. In March, a 
750,000-person mobilization in Los Angeles staked a claim as an 
historic event, only to be topped by a march of over a million people 
in that city on May 1. Such demonstrations were mirrored throughout 
the country, and coordinated actions were held in over 100 cities 
nationwide in a matter of weeks. The demonstrations gave voice to 
some of the most marginalized members of our society: immigrants who 
help prepare our food, clean our hotels and homes, and care for our 
children. While it is not yet possible to discern the full political 
significance of the immigrant rights movement, the inspiring actions 
challenged us to see the connections between hardship abroad and the 
struggle for justice at home. And they suggested that a not-so-sleepy 
giant awaits politicians who promote exclusion and xenophobia.

It was also an election year throughout Latin America, and citizens 
in many parts of the region continued to reject pro-corporate models 
of economic "progress." Chileans elected their first woman president, 
Michelle Bachelet, a left-leaning doctor whose family was imprisoned 
by the Pinochet dictatorship in the 1970s. Voters in Brazil reelected 
former union leader Lula da Silva. And Hugo Chávez also won a 
decisive reelection in Venezuela, garnering broad support for his New 
Deal-style social programs. In Ecuador, voters chose economist Rafael 
Correa, an ardent opponent of the Washington Consensus, over a banana 
magnate who happened to be the wealthiest man in the country.

Perhaps the most impressive of the leaders has been Evo Morales, the 
first indigenous president of Bolivia. Morales, who took office in 
January, has since shocked the international business press by 
actually delivering on his campaign promises. Bolstered by 
well-organized social movements, the Morales government initiated the 
nationalization of Bolivia's oil and gas assets on May 1. The process 
culminated in early December, when the government signed agreements 
with foreign energy companies giving it majority control over oil and 
gas extraction and directing over half the profits toward the public 
good. Given that the majority of the country's population lives in 
poverty and has benefited little from living in a resource-rich 
nation, these efforts are both overdue and welcomed. In late 
November, Morales' party went further by passing an ambitious land 
reform bill that seeks to right an historic injustice by breaking up 
some of the enormous estates left over from colonial times and 
redistributing as many as 20 million hectares to campesinos who work 
the land.

Political realignment in Latin America, coupled with years of popular 
pressure elsewhere in the developing world, has dramatically changed 
the tenor of international trade discussions. During July 
negotiations in Geneva, the Doha round of talks at the World Trade 
Organization collapsed as developing countries stood up to U.S. and 
European double standards on agricultural subsidies. While the Bush 
administration regularly sings the praises of unfettered "free 
trade," it in fact supports lavish subsidies for domestic 
agribusiness -- to the tune of $23 billion dollars a year, the great 
majority of which goes to our country's largest mega-farms. Delegates 
from poorer nations demanded significant cuts to these subsidies 
before they would agree to further liberalize their economies. 
Needless to say, the rich countries were resistant, and amidst this 
hypocritical display the talks fell apart.

While deadlock at the WTO does not guarantee a fairer system of 
global trade, Doha's demise stopped a bad WTO deal from going 
forward, at least for the time being. If world leaders take the hint, 
discussion should turn toward creating a system of trade that values 
grassroots self-determination and more justly distributes the 
benefits of international commerce.

Other advances suggest that such an agenda might not be far out of 
reach. On the issue of debt cancellation, the globalization movement 
has already succeeded in reshaping policy. Advocates effectively 
publicized the injustice of forcing nations with sick and 
malnourished populations to send large portions of their national 
budgets to rich countries in the form of payments on unsustainable 
foreign debts, many of which were accumulated by past dictators. In 
2005, after a decade of pressure from grassroots groups, world 
leaders agreed to cancel debts of 18 impoverished nations to the IMF 
and World Bank. Debt cancellation has often proven to be one of the 
most effective forms of aid, allowing countries to use their own 
resources to meet social needs. But the 2005 agreement did not go far 
enough: it left out major regional banks like the Inter-American 
Development Bank (IDB), the leading multilateral lender in Latin 
America.

Members of the Jubilee debt coalition continued to push to cancel 
debts from the IDB, and this November they made another breakthrough. 
The IDB agreed to a deal canceling debts of five of the poorest 
countries in the Americas. If properly implemented, the agreement 
will eliminate obligations of up to $768 million for Bolivia, $365 
million for Guyana, $1.1 billion for Honduras, $808 million for 
Nicaragua, and $468 million for Haiti. No doubt, there's more to be 
done to ensure that cancellation comes in full, without delays and 
without strings attached. Yet efforts to push for greater progress 
should be propelled by the recent string of wins.

Thousands of similar campaigns stood up to local injustices, 
challenged corporate power, and provided the energy that ultimately 
unseated presidents. As we are reminded daily of the hard realities 
that persist in an era of executive excess and superpower militarism, 
their victories might seem disparate and few. But they have shown 
that they can accrete and build, gradually bridging the divide that 
separates us from once-distant possibilities: the death of 
neoliberalism, the political re-creation of the Americas, the end of 
extreme poverty, a democratic globalization. The quiet wins of 2006 
together remind us that change is more possible than we might 
sometimes despair -- and that it is not entirely naive to invest hope 
in the promise of a new year.


Mark Engler is a commentator for Foreign Policy in Focus. He can be 
reached via DemocracyUprising.com.


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