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Discussion note on social justice

by Francine Mestrum

Social Justice – Note for discussion

Social justice is a very broad concept. It includes many divergent phenomena, from inequality to health care and pensions, over gender, migration and racism. Many of these elements can also be examined on their own right, such as gender and structural racism, while others are consequences or causes of still more problematics. Just imagine the lack of health care because of an income deficit called poverty or the importance of social justice for matters of environmental sustainability. The interlinkages are many. Continue reading

International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples: time to uphold and enforce rights

We celebrate the cultural and linguistic richness of indigenous populations. We recognise their knowledge of the natural world that can provide leadership and guidance to preserve ecosystems in the face of the environmental climate crisis.

Read the article by ITUC

Here is why we are boycotting the UN Food Systems Summit

In September this year, the United Nations will host a Global Food Systems Summit in New York. The organisers of this summit are pitching it as a crucial debate of the decade which is to define the future of agriculture. They aim to bring together various stakeholders across sectors who play a role in the global food system.

Yet, the organised peasant and indigenous movements from Asia, Africa, Europe and the Americas that collectively represent most of the world’s small-scale food producers have called for a total boycott of this summit. In April this year, scores of scientists, researchers, faculty members, and educators who work in agriculture and food systems, also issued an open call to boycott the event.

Read the article by Elisabeth Mpofu

Workers’ rights and human rights

Read this extremely important contribution of Development Pathways on the importance of social security and trade unions

 

Whither the Washington Consensus?

Supposedly increased social protections may just be new words for old policies and a new ‘Washington Consensus’ may be in the making

Read the article by Francine Mestrum: Whither the Washington Consensus? | Wall Street International Magazine (wsimag.com)

Food and Nutrition

Please take note of this very important report of the Global Network for the Right to Food and Nutrition:

20210719_state-rtfn-report_2021_eng_v15.pdf (righttofoodandnutrition.org

Vaccination inequalities and the role of the multilateral system

The COVID-19 crisis has evidenced the fragility of the multilateral system to address a global health challenge. There are multiple reasons behind it. Since donations are not enough, a global solution to the pandemic would have required concerted actions in several fronts. The author suggests that, while examining how the proposed “pandemic treaty” might contribute to a global solution in future health emergencies, immediate actions are needed.

by Carlos M. Correa, South Center

Read the article

AEPF Statement on Bangladesh Factory Fire

The AEPF denounces the callous violation of safety norms in Bangladesh, where more than fifty workers lost their lives when a fire broke out in a sealed factory. The AEPF calls for accountability, compensation and immediate measures so that such tragedies do not occur.

AEPF Statement on Bangladesh Factory Fire – AEPF | Asia Europe People’s Forum AEPF

 

 

 

The Global Rights Index

This year’s ITUC Global Rights Index documents a shameful roll call of governments and companies that have pursued an anti-union agenda in the face of workers who have stood in solidarity providing essential work to keep economies and communities functioning.

The ITUC Global Rights Index is a benchmark against which we will hold governments and employers to account as we build a new social contract with jobs, rights, social protection, equality and inclusion and rebuild the trust that has been shattered by repressive governments and abusive companies.

If the Washington Consensus was really over, what would that look like for development strategy?

Recent years have witnessed a notable re-embrace of the state’s role in the economy, leading some to declare that the set of free market economic policy reforms widely known as the Washington Consensus has come to an end.

First popularized by U.S. President Ronald Reagan and U.K. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s, the Washington Consensus policies offered a set of policy guidelines for developing countries, many of which were struggling with high debt and high inflation at the time. These free market reforms included trade and financial liberalization, privatization, deregulation, the removal of capital controls, fiscal austerity (cutting public spending) in order to achieve strict targets for maintaining low inflation and low fiscal deficits, the adoption of independent central banks, and deregulating restrictions on foreign investment, among others. Broadly speaking, the policies sought to roll back the role of the state in the economy and unshackle the animal spirits of the free market. In the 1980s, adopting the policies became binding conditions for developing countries to receive debt relief and new lending by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, in the 1990s, the policies served as the basis for World Trade Organization (WTO) membership rules – and ever since then, the policies have become a cornerstone of the curricula in economics departments at universities across the world.

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