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"AlterGlobalizations: Another
World is Possible" Workshop, August 4 - 12, 2004
Center for Global Justice
in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico founded
by Steve Martinot and Sarah Begus
From Aug. 4th to 12th, 2004, 130 people from 8 countries
participated in a workshop in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, on alternatives
to corporate globalization. Sub-titled "Another World is Possible,"
the workshop included academics, activists, social workers, political
theorists and others from Mexico, the United States, Cuba, Nicaragua,
Argentina, Colombia, Rwanda and Italy. The bilingual, Spanish/English,
workshop addressed issues of political and workplace democracy, cosmopolitan
and global consciousness, as well as the impact of global markets and
international corporate capitalism on local social and economic realities.
People who attended the workshop are members of a large variety of organizations:
social justice organizations from the San Miguel de Allende area; cooperativistas
from the neighboring state of Hidalgo; cooperativistas from Nicaragua;
academics from the US and Mexico City; philosopher-activists from Cuba,
as well as political activists from many places, among them New York
City, San Francisco, Yucatan, and Buenos Aires.
At the end of workshop, participants agreed on the need
to continue work and study on the issues addressed. The result was the
founding of an international center for research and learning in San
Miguel de Allende, to be called the "Center for Global Justice."
The workshop meetings ranged over a wide variety of subjects.
There were discussions on the theory and practice of cooperative enterprises,
on the abuse and conservation of water resources in Mexico, on the influx
of genetically modified corn into Mexico and its threat to Mexican culture
and infrastructure. The depletion of the aquifer in the semi-arid region
of the state of Guanajuato was examined. Workshop participants attended
sessions led by cooperativistas from the states of Yucatan and Hidalgo,
and from Nicaragua. Several sessions were devoted to local development
projects in Cuba. Women from independent worker cooperatives in the
San Miguel region told of their struggles to create economic independence
through the development of new organizations, and new products and markets,
as a necessary response to the massive migration of men to the North
in search of jobs. The women also discussed the cultural and social
costs to themselves and their families resulting from this migration.
These discussions of the economic and social realities of Mexico, one
of the Third World countries most impacted by the United States corporate
capitalism, provided a strong inverse perspective on corporate globalization
and its injuriousness.
Workshop participants discussed theories of the restructuring
and conservation of common goods, of different concepts of socialism
(in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union), and of how those
concepts are related or relevant to the contemporary struggles against
corporate globalization. Other workshop sessions addressed the development
of local political consciousness, popular participation in governance,
and advances in higher education in Cuba. There were also discussions
of the necessity for multiple interpretations of class structures and
class relations in a hemisphere marked by a history of colonialism,
privatization, and structures of racialization.
Interspersed with the substantive and multi-faceted discussions
of current economic and social conditions, workshop participants also
focused on issues of conference process. This was seen as an important
concrete step toward the realization of an alternative social reality
based on equity and non-hierarchical structures and interactions. The
schedule of events was repeatedly punctuated by discussion directed
toward group self-awareness and self-critique, as part of the common
project for the workshop by all participants. Attention was called to
a need to shift discussion protocols or paradigms, in order to work
towards equal participation by all those present. The workshop, as a
body, looked for better ways for people to address one another and to
learn to acknowledge and honor the heterogeneity of the group. A commitment
was made to work on these process issues without accusation, without
acrimony, and in a spirit of moving toward cooperation. This oscillation
between the concrete discussion of issues and internal dialogue was
neither planned nor patterned; it occurred spontaneously. While some
felt a certain resistance to this unusual and improvised movement, most
found it ultimately necessary, productive, and positive.
An important part of this process of self-awareness was
the gathering of women as a specific movement within the meetings. This
was sparked by two main factors: the preponderance of men at the workshop
who often tended to dominate sessions; and by the inspiration provided
by the participation of the women's cooperative organizations of the
region of San Miguel. The women at the workshop met periodically, drew
up lists of protocol proposals to guarantee equal participation of women,
and proposed procedures to prevent or guard against the discrimination
against anyone, on any grounds. As a result, the women's caucus set
a tone of equality and equity for the meetings as a whole. Though this
work was positive, at the end of the workshop, everyone agreed that
the process of achieving political conjunction across cultural and linguistic
differences had only begun. The workshop body made a commitment to incorporate
into the founding of the Center for Social Justice the principle of
equity across gender, class, race, age, culture, geography and other
hierarchies. This commitment includes equity in all aspects of the Center:
conferences, programs, research agendas, language, administration and
governance.
The workshop participants, as founding members of the
Center for Global Justice to be located in San Miguel, established a
number of provisional governing and administrative bodies for the Center.
These include a coordinating committee, a conference planning committee
and a communications committee. Plans have been made to establish a
development committee for the purpose of raising operating and program
funds for the Center, and an Advisory Council to contribute to the program
planning and governance of the Center.
Since the Center will include members of a wide variety
of geographical locations, much of its administrative work will be carried
out via internet meetings and communications. Initial funds have been
raised to hire a part-time person to begin the Center's administrative
work. A more permanent structure and governance will be elected and
established at the next conference of the Center, planned for next year.
The Center will provide a learning program and a place
for research and writing. It will serve as a networking center for activists,
scholars and researchers to share and pool their work, their information,
and their resources. It will attempt to coordinate travel to politically
interesting places, and to thereby extend the network of activist connections.
Another founding principle of the Center is a commitment
to integration into the life and activities of the town and region of
San Miguel de Allende, whose residents will be encouraged to participate
in all Center activities and programs. Part of this commitment will
be an ongoing effort to address social and economic conditions of the
area. Towards this end, a pilot program is currently being planned to
initiate a series of community assessments in some of the poorer communities
of the State of Guanajuato, particularly indigenous communities. Working
with existing social service organizations like CASA, a
San Miguel organization, field work is planned to be carried out by
teams of interviewers that pair researchers (mainly graduate students)
with local youth to conduct family surveys in the communities. Community
assessments will be made through interviews carried out by center investigators
and community members in a mutual effort to identify existing and potential
community resources with the ultimate goal of having baseline information
for further development of alternative community enhancement programs.
With programs such as this pilot community assessment, the Center will
not only situate itself as a learning and research environment in the
San Miguel region, but will also actively contribute to improving the
quality of life for residents of the region.
The August 2004 workshop and the subsequent founding of
the Center for Social Justice in San Miguel de Allende has generated
a great deal of energy and enthusiasm for broad cooperation among many
people in many countries for concrete progress towards envisioning and
establishing an alternative global reality of economic and social justice.
Through its connections to Mexico and other parts of the western hemisphere,
its broad and radical thinking at both the intellectual and activist
levels, its multiple focus on critiquing contemporary global political
developments, and its vision of social and political alternatives for
a more humane and democratic world, the Center will seek to exert a
positive influence on the unfolding of world events.
For more information about the Center for Global Justice,
its programs and activities, or to become a member, contact: Cliff DuRand
via email: Cliff@GlobalJusticeCenter.org
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