Difference between revisions of "New horizons of international and anti-racist solidarity: climate refugees, natural disasters, femonationalism/homonationalism and feminist/queer anti-imperialism, anti-austerity and labour"

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1. Lenin on self-determination (from my readings for the 2013 Ecosocialist School, in all three languages)
outline:
New horizons of solidarity:


2. 2003 FI World Congress, 'Resistances to Capitalist Globalization', (I.) The Battle for Solidarity, sections 3 (Globalization) and 4 (Solidarity)
anti-austerity/global justice, nature/climate and queer anti-imperialism
English: http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article175


3. My article on self-organization (from my readings for the 2013 Ecosocialist School in English
IIRE Ecosocialist School
 
Peter Drucker
 
5 December 2015
 
 
Introduction
 
Introduction to reporter: a queer anti-Zionist internationalist, between continents, with big gaps in expertise and experience – for you to fill in
Place of report in session
 
Aimed at deepening understanding of class and imperialism today (Léon, Alex), especially under neoliberal globalization
 
Climate change (Marijke, tomorrow Manuel), with a focus on consequences and responses
 
Homonationalism and queer anti-imperialism, paralleling and building on report on feminism and femonationalism (Nadia, and anticipating Penny)
 
Strategic questions: a 21st-century transitional approach (Catherine); internationalism today (Alex)
 
A very disparate report – with some red threads
 
Our Marxism: anti-economistic (citation from Lenin), founded on an open, plurilinear conception of history
 
Assessment of the period: fragmentation of working class and anti-imperialism by neoliberal offensive (‘new mode of bourgeois domination’, with two Achilles heels)
Need to build a new ‘infrastructure of dissent’ (Alan Sears on The Next New Left) – which is why new horizons of solidarity are needed (fragmentation or unity?)
 
Self-organization as key: by indigenous peoples, blacks, immigrant communities, LGBTIQ people – or in today’s report, by victims of austerity, victims of disasters, victims of imperialism
 
I. Anti-austerity/global justice
 
Weakening of international labour movement and alternative forms of solidarity
 
New challenges: debt crisis (from 1982 – and from 2008 in Europe) and ‘structural adjustment’
 
New openings after 1989: Zapatista rebellion (1994: NAFTA), Battle of Seattle (1999), first World Social Forum (Porto Alegre, 2001)
 
Initial strengths of global justice movement
 
Backing of new anti-capitalist forces (Brazilian PT/CUT/MST/Porto Alegre, Italian Rifondazione/FIOM)
 
New links in old movements (Via Campesina, World March of Women, trade union left)
 
Capacity to draw in new subjects (hijras at Mumbai WSF, 2004)
 
Capacity to respond to imperialist wars (Iraq, 2003)
 
Flexibility, diversity, horizontal ties (calls by Assemblies of Social Movements)
 
Multiplying Social Forums at continental, national and regional level
 
Modest but significant role of revolutionary Marxists (through unions, parties, CADTM)
 
Growing weaknesses of global justice movement
 
Right turns by left parties
 
NGOization, institutional weight of International Council
 
Limits of capacity to reflect new resistance movements (Occupy, indignad@s, Greeks, even Arab Spring (despite Tunis WSF in 2013))
 
Corruption by World Bank, governments, companies and fundamentalists (Mimoun Rahmani)
 
Divisions in the face of terrorism
 
Lack of effective coordination – by International Council or left wing
 
Alternative anti-austerity forums?
 
E.g. Europe Against Austerity, London, 2012
 
Problems: lack of global reach, organizational weight and active follow-up
 
Other experiences?
 
II. Nature/climate
 
Natural disasters (earthquakes/tsunamis – with socially determined damage, from Nicaragua to Nepal to Fukushima) and human disasters (floods)
 
… and in between, epidemics (AIDS, Ebola) and climate and its changes: rising sea levels, droughts (and the Arab Spring), extreme weather (hurricanes/typhoons)
 
Predictable disasters, glaring inequality (Pacific but not Indian Ocean alerts, Dutch but not Bangladeshi dikes)
 
Relief manipulated for military and geopolitical ends (polio vaccines to track al-Qaeda in Pakistan)
 
… and of course economic (from villages to resorts, Dutch water management technology, geo-engineering)
 
A popular alternative: neither power politics nor profits
 
From poor to poor, at lower cost
 
Prevention and sustainable aid
 
Neither caste-based, nor sectarian, nor partisan
 
Local roots, not parachutes
 
Self-organization of survivors
 
Ecological links (coastal and mountain vegetation) and social infrastructure (health)
 
Ongoing organizing among peasants and urban poor: linking the social and the political
 
Towards an international network of alternative relief efforts?
 
III. Queer anti-imperialism
 
Crisis, the fraying safety net and scapegoating
 
The concept of homonationalism
 
Same-sex practices in pre-colonial Africa and the Islamic world
 
Colonialism, imported heteronormativity (Joseph Massad) and revolutionary secularism
 
Tolerance (Paul Mepschen) and gay normality
 
Homonationalism: a dimension of homonormativity
 
Examples: Islamophobia, pinkwashing
 
Homophobia today: colonial persecution in anti-imperialist packaging
 
‘The Gay International’? reality of imperialist influence in Saudi kingdom and Iraq
 
Global and anti-racist solidarity
 
Regional queer organizing from Latin America to Asia
 
Palestinian Queers for BDS; HELEM in Lebanon and solidarity against Israeli invasion
 
Queer organizing in immigrant communities
 
Against Islamophobia: Denmark; Judith Butler in Berlin
 
Africa: LGBTIQ networking and the debate on aid conditionality
 
Towards a global queer anti-imperialism?
 
Conclusion: towards a 21st-century transitional approach founded on a global vision of liberation
 
 
1. Lenin, [["The discussion on self-determination summed up"]] Collected Works Volume 22, pp.355-356
 
2. [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article175 2003 FI World Congress, 'Resistances to Capitalist Globalization', (I.) The Battle for Solidarity, sections 3 (Globalization) and 4 (Solidarity]
 
3. [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7016 Peter Drucker, Self-organization, self-emancipation and identity: What can we learn from indigenous peoples, blacks and lesbigays?]


I. Social Forums
I. Social Forums


4. 2015 Declaration of the Assembly of the Social Movements, WSF, Tunis
4. [http://cadtm.org/Declaration-of-the-Assembly-of,11452 2015 Declaration of the Assembly of the Social Movements, WSF, Tunis]
English: http://cadtm.org/Declaration-of-the-Assembly-of,11452
 
5. Mimoun Rahmani on WSF 2015
English: http://cadtm.org/The-abuses-of-the-World-Social


5. [http://cadtm.org/The-abuses-of-the-World-Social Mimoun Rahmani on WSF 2015]
II. Solidarity with Disaster Victims and Climate Refugees
II. Solidarity with Disaster Victims and Climate Refugees


6. Pierre's 2006 report
6. [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article1830 Tsunami, Katrina, Kashmir: Elements of Political Reflection on a series of natural disasters]
English: http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article1830


7. Pierre's 2014 report
7. [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article31632 Climate refugees: new social movements, new responsibilities of solidarity]
English: http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article31632


III. Feminist and Queer Anti-Imperialism
III. Feminist and Queer Anti-Imperialism


8. Excerpt from 2016 FI 16th World Congress Role and Tasks resolution (from my readings for the 2013 Ecosocialist School, in all three languages)
8. Fourth International, [[ "Excerpts of the resolution Role and Tasks of the Fourth International" ]] , 2010 World Congress


9. (English) Excepts from Warped [attached file]
9. [[http://4edu.info/images/9/9a/Ecosoc_2015_readings_Peter_Warped.rtf Excerpts from Peter Drucker: Warped. Gay Normality and Queer Anticapitalism]]


9. (French and Castilian) My article on Arab sexualities (from my readings for the 2013 Ecosocialist School)
10. [http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/1962 Peter Drucker, Arab sexualities]


10. (French and Castilian) Paul Mepschen on the politics of belonging (from my readings for the 2013 Ecosocialist School)
11. [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1673 Paul Mepschen, Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands]

Latest revision as of 16:05, 30 November 2015

outline: New horizons of solidarity:

anti-austerity/global justice, nature/climate and queer anti-imperialism

IIRE Ecosocialist School

Peter Drucker

5 December 2015


Introduction

Introduction to reporter: a queer anti-Zionist internationalist, between continents, with big gaps in expertise and experience – for you to fill in Place of report in session

Aimed at deepening understanding of class and imperialism today (Léon, Alex), especially under neoliberal globalization

Climate change (Marijke, tomorrow Manuel), with a focus on consequences and responses

Homonationalism and queer anti-imperialism, paralleling and building on report on feminism and femonationalism (Nadia, and anticipating Penny)

Strategic questions: a 21st-century transitional approach (Catherine); internationalism today (Alex)

A very disparate report – with some red threads

Our Marxism: anti-economistic (citation from Lenin), founded on an open, plurilinear conception of history

Assessment of the period: fragmentation of working class and anti-imperialism by neoliberal offensive (‘new mode of bourgeois domination’, with two Achilles heels)

Need to build a new ‘infrastructure of dissent’ (Alan Sears on The Next New Left) – which is why new horizons of solidarity are needed (fragmentation or unity?)

Self-organization as key: by indigenous peoples, blacks, immigrant communities, LGBTIQ people – or in today’s report, by victims of austerity, victims of disasters, victims of imperialism

I. Anti-austerity/global justice

Weakening of international labour movement and alternative forms of solidarity

New challenges: debt crisis (from 1982 – and from 2008 in Europe) and ‘structural adjustment’

New openings after 1989: Zapatista rebellion (1994: NAFTA), Battle of Seattle (1999), first World Social Forum (Porto Alegre, 2001)

Initial strengths of global justice movement

Backing of new anti-capitalist forces (Brazilian PT/CUT/MST/Porto Alegre, Italian Rifondazione/FIOM)

New links in old movements (Via Campesina, World March of Women, trade union left)

Capacity to draw in new subjects (hijras at Mumbai WSF, 2004)

Capacity to respond to imperialist wars (Iraq, 2003)

Flexibility, diversity, horizontal ties (calls by Assemblies of Social Movements)

Multiplying Social Forums at continental, national and regional level

Modest but significant role of revolutionary Marxists (through unions, parties, CADTM)

Growing weaknesses of global justice movement

Right turns by left parties

NGOization, institutional weight of International Council

Limits of capacity to reflect new resistance movements (Occupy, indignad@s, Greeks, even Arab Spring (despite Tunis WSF in 2013))

Corruption by World Bank, governments, companies and fundamentalists (Mimoun Rahmani)

Divisions in the face of terrorism

Lack of effective coordination – by International Council or left wing

Alternative anti-austerity forums?

E.g. Europe Against Austerity, London, 2012

Problems: lack of global reach, organizational weight and active follow-up

Other experiences?

II. Nature/climate

Natural disasters (earthquakes/tsunamis – with socially determined damage, from Nicaragua to Nepal to Fukushima) and human disasters (floods)

… and in between, epidemics (AIDS, Ebola) and climate and its changes: rising sea levels, droughts (and the Arab Spring), extreme weather (hurricanes/typhoons)

Predictable disasters, glaring inequality (Pacific but not Indian Ocean alerts, Dutch but not Bangladeshi dikes)

Relief manipulated for military and geopolitical ends (polio vaccines to track al-Qaeda in Pakistan)

… and of course economic (from villages to resorts, Dutch water management technology, geo-engineering)

A popular alternative: neither power politics nor profits

From poor to poor, at lower cost

Prevention and sustainable aid

Neither caste-based, nor sectarian, nor partisan

Local roots, not parachutes

Self-organization of survivors

Ecological links (coastal and mountain vegetation) and social infrastructure (health)

Ongoing organizing among peasants and urban poor: linking the social and the political

Towards an international network of alternative relief efforts?

III. Queer anti-imperialism

Crisis, the fraying safety net and scapegoating

The concept of homonationalism

Same-sex practices in pre-colonial Africa and the Islamic world

Colonialism, imported heteronormativity (Joseph Massad) and revolutionary secularism

Tolerance (Paul Mepschen) and gay normality

Homonationalism: a dimension of homonormativity

Examples: Islamophobia, pinkwashing

Homophobia today: colonial persecution in anti-imperialist packaging

‘The Gay International’? reality of imperialist influence in Saudi kingdom and Iraq

Global and anti-racist solidarity

Regional queer organizing from Latin America to Asia

Palestinian Queers for BDS; HELEM in Lebanon and solidarity against Israeli invasion

Queer organizing in immigrant communities

Against Islamophobia: Denmark; Judith Butler in Berlin

Africa: LGBTIQ networking and the debate on aid conditionality

Towards a global queer anti-imperialism?

Conclusion: towards a 21st-century transitional approach founded on a global vision of liberation


1. Lenin, "The discussion on self-determination summed up" Collected Works Volume 22, pp.355-356

2. 2003 FI World Congress, 'Resistances to Capitalist Globalization', (I.) The Battle for Solidarity, sections 3 (Globalization) and 4 (Solidarity

3. Peter Drucker, Self-organization, self-emancipation and identity: What can we learn from indigenous peoples, blacks and lesbigays?

I. Social Forums

4. 2015 Declaration of the Assembly of the Social Movements, WSF, Tunis

5. Mimoun Rahmani on WSF 2015

II. Solidarity with Disaster Victims and Climate Refugees

6. Tsunami, Katrina, Kashmir: Elements of Political Reflection on a series of natural disasters

7. Climate refugees: new social movements, new responsibilities of solidarity

III. Feminist and Queer Anti-Imperialism

8. Fourth International, "Excerpts of the resolution Role and Tasks of the Fourth International" , 2010 World Congress

9. [Excerpts from Peter Drucker: Warped. Gay Normality and Queer Anticapitalism]

10. Peter Drucker, Arab sexualities

11. Paul Mepschen, Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands