Yes Maria,
there are actualy a few moe thees which are relevant.
THe exclusion of disability is consistant within the setting of the social
forum.
The european social forum in Florence did the same things (see there
closing documents). And I am a critic of the world social forum and the
steering committee (which of course has no disabled people as members) for
a long time.
It is a reflection that we are seen as a mdical not a social justice
problem. That why it is so important to have a different type of
definition in the UN convention than e are normaly described.
Cheers
Gregor
On Thu, 10 Jul 2003, Maria Barile wrote:
> Hi
> In each area disability is relevant. There are at 4 issues
>
> where disablement is inherent :
> Genocides and crimes against humanity
> Genetic Engineering, Patenting life forms
> Access to knowledge for the third world
> Information Technology: Opportunities and Challenges
>
> I don't recall the exact quote, but an Italian CO in the1960/70 Danielo.
> Dolci said that if the leaders don't invite you, you just go. Don't bring
> guns, bring bread (or seeds). (he was making reference to an ongoing fight
> in Sicily. Those of you who want/can go, go bring your knowledge, force
> the issue, share the knowledge.
> Maria
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "anitravi" <[log in to unmask]>
> To: <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Thursday, July 10, 2003 12:58 PM
> Subject: Rhetorics of inclusion
>
>
> So much for inclusion
> I reproduce the list of suggested themes for world social forum iv
> The word disability is conspicuous by its absence
> Anita ghai
>
>
> The broad themes and sub-themes for WSF 2004 will be:
> 1) Militarism, War and Peace
> · US Militarist Agenda and Resistances
>
> · Against global and permanent war
>
> · Identities and Peoples Right to Determination
>
> · Growing militarisation of society; impact on women
>
> · Imperialist war and control of resources
>
> · Role of United Nations and war
>
> · Agression on Iraq and consequences
>
> · Palestine: a continuing war
>
> · Building culture of peace
>
> · Genocides and crimes against humanity
>
> · Global disarmament and nuclear weapons
>
> · International law and war
>
> · Peace, well being and regional cooperation
>
> · Self determination and nationalities
>
> · State terrorism: Civil and Political Rights
>
> 2) Media, Information, Knowledge and Culture
> · Against merchandising information, culture and media
>
> · Media concentration and loss of pluralism
>
> · Media and the commodification of women
>
> · Sponsorship and Censorship
>
> · Alternate media
>
> · War and media - manipulation of images and "embedded" journalism
>
> · Art and social transformation
>
> · Culture of dissent
>
> · Role of culture: youth and the marginalised
>
> · Privatising science and knowledge
>
> · Community's loss of knowledge through patenting
>
> · Genetic Engineering, Patenting life forms
>
> · Access to knowledge for the third world
>
> · Information Technology: Opportunities and Challenges
>
> · Media as an instrument of exclusion and a space for democratic
> struggle (social audit of old and new media, changing content and form,
> state-owned media vs. public broadcasting)
>
>
>
> 3) Democracy, Ecological and Economic Security
> Debt, finance and trade
> · Critical examination of the IMF, WB, WTO - Institutions of
> Capitalist Globalisation
>
> · Scope of selective de-linking with respect to national development
>
> · Breaking the power of financial markets
>
> · Politics of Aid
>
> · Illegitimacy and Burden of Debt
>
> · Bilateral and regional trade, investment processes and its impacts
>
> · NAFTA and other bilateral treaties
>
> · Fair trade
>
> · Participatory economics
>
> · Solidarity Economics
>
> · Agreement in Agriculture (AOA) and Food Sovereignty
>
> Sustainable and democratic development
> · Land and agriculture
>
> · Privatising basic services: energy, water, transport and
> telecommunications
>
> · Livelihoods and Natural resources - access, entitlements, etc.
>
> · Climate change - Kyoto Protocol
>
> · Bio-safety and GM foods
>
> · Governance, accountability and peoples resources
>
> · Dumping of hazardous wastes
>
> · Biodiversity
> · Peasantry and village economy under globalisation
> · Urban development and displacement of the poor
> · Feminisation of Poverty and immigration
>
> · Innovative models of sustainable livelihoods
>
> · Forests, Land, Air, Water: Democratic control of common goods
>
> · Regulation and de-regulation: removing democratic controls
>
> · Corporate Accountability
>
> World of Labour and Work in Production and Social Reproduction
> · Creating and distributing wealth differently: monetary, budgetary
> and fiscal policies in favour of employment
>
> · Work and the logic of profit
>
> · Closing of industries, relocation of production and the trade union
> movement
>
> · Trade union movement and the informal and small scale sector
>
> · Migrant labour and protectionism
>
> · New technologies of product automation: impact on women and men
> workers
>
> · End of work and other theories
>
> · Abolishing the wage system: liberatiing workers or liberation from
> work
>
> · Valuation of social reproduction and housework
>
> · The trade union movement within the construction of the global
> social movement
>
> Social sectors -- food, health, education -- and social security
> · Impact of service sector liberalisation/GATS
>
> · Entitlements, social security and the "safety net": ensuring
> universal access
>
> · Social Security, pensions and medical welfare
>
> · The marginalized and their access to social security and the safety
> net
>
> · Privatisation of and Merchandising health and education
>
> · Child Rights
>
> · Politics and agenda of population control and use of reproductive
> technologies
>
> · Food Security of communities and households and public distribution
>
> · Employment, Job Security, Pension Schemes, VRS
>
> · Reproduction, Health and Sexual Rights
>
>
> 4) Exclusions, Discrimination, Dignity, Rights and Equality
> Nation, State, citizenship, law and justice
> · State, Civil Society and the disadvantaged (Dalits, indigenous
> peoples, religious/ethnic/linguistic minorities)
>
> · Changing institutional and legal frameworks for labour and peasant
> rights in the context of globalisation
>
> · Loss of economic sovereignty under globalisation
>
> · Privatisation, Liberalisation and impact on the disadvantaged
>
> · Rise of the right, legitimisation of majoritarianism and
> intolerance of minorities
>
> · Race, migration and citizenship
>
> · Effect of globalisation on legal and institutional frameworks of
> decision making
>
> · Militarising the state and erosion of civil liberties/human rights
>
> · Disability and discrimination
>
> · Trafficking in women and children
>
> · Refugees, displaced persons, IDP, cross-border migration, racism
> and human rights
>
> · Alternative visions, practical experiments and struggles for
> inclusive, plural and radical democracy
>
> · Autonomy, separation, reconciliation
>
>
> Caste, race and other forms of descent/work based exclusions
> · Caste, race and other work/descent based discrimination: exclusions
> in the market and in governance
>
> · Community/group specific (dalits, indigenous peoples, tribals and
> ethnic religious, national and other minorities): analyses of the new and
> emerging forms of exclusions
>
> · Gender related exclusions and 'double' exclusion of women from
> marginalised communities
>
> · Ending affirmative action in education and work
>
> · New voices in social movements
>
> Religion, culture and identities
> · Communalism -- Religious sectarianism and exclusions -- and
> religiosity
>
> · Globalisation, homogeneity and pluralism
>
> · Cultural imperialism and shaping subordinate identities
>
> · Globalisation and cultural resistance
>
> · Fundamentalism and Sexual Identities
>
> · Re-enforcement of stereotypes
>
> Patriarchy, Gender and Sexuality
> · Patriarchy and capitalism
>
> · Law and women: the global scenario
>
> · Personal, constitutional law and human rights
>
> · Women and men: from equality within the law to equality in reality
>
> · Against the sexual division of labour
>
> · Liberty of women within society
>
> · Forms of resurgrnt patriarchy
>
> · Right to sexual orientation: from claims for rights to the
> assertion identities
>
>
>
> ita ghai
>
> ________________End of message______________________
>
> Archives and tools for the Disability-Research Discussion List
> are now located at:
>
> www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/disability-research.html
>
> You can JOIN or LEAVE the list from this web page.
>
> ________________End of message______________________
>
> Archives and tools for the Disability-Research Discussion List
> are now located at:
>
> www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/disability-research.html
>
> You can JOIN or LEAVE the list from this web page.
>
Dr. Gregor Wolbring
webpage: http://www.bioethicsanddisability.org
Member of the Executive of the Canadian Commission for UNESCO
(CCU)
Biochemist at the Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Faculty of Medicine University of Calgary,Alberta,Canada
Adjunct Assistant Professor for bioethical issues
at the Dept. of Community Rehabilitation and Disability Studies
Faculty of Education University of Calgary, Alberta Canada
Adjunct Assistant Professor with the John Dossetor Health Ethic Center,
University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Founder and Executive director of the International Center for
Bioethics,Culture and Disability
Founder and Coordinator of the International Network on Bioethics and
Disability http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Bioethics/join
Phone 1-403-220-5448
Fax 1-403-283-4740
e-mail [log in to unmask]
Mailing address:
Dr. Gregor Wolbring
Dept. of Medical Biochemistry
Faculty of Medicine
University of Calgary
3330 Hospital Drive NW
T2N 4N1
Calgary Alberta Canada
________________End of message______________________
Archives and tools for the Disability-Research Discussion List
are now located at:
www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/disability-research.html
You can JOIN or LEAVE the list from this web page.
|