| "The Hemispheric Social Alliance is a process for
strengthening our efforts to fight against the neoliberal model. Civil society is an
important political force in our countries and must be taken into account." Victor Baez - ORIT (Interamerican Regional Workers
Organization) |
| "I had the feeling when I left Costa Rica of being back in the era of Simon
Bolivar, caught up in the old dream of integrating the people of the Americas
but
now constituted differently. This time it is led by social organizations through movements
of farmers, campesinos, workers, community activists, women, academics and
environmentalists. Together they make up civil society throughout the hemisphere, in an
alliance. Graciela Rodriguez -
Brazilian Network for Peoples Integration |
| "In building the Hemispheric Social Alliance we are creating space,
opportunity and capacity for progressive civil society organizations of the Americas to
come together as equals to define new strategies and common targets. It is the new face
for solidarity for the millennium." Patty C. Barrera - Common Frontiers-Canada |
| "The HSA is a popular and constructive alternative. It will allow us
(popular sector, social organizations and trade unions) to unite forces and put the brakes
on the disastrous effects of neoliberal globalization" Marcela Escribano- the Quebec Network on
Continental Integration (RQIC) |
| "The building of the Hemispheric Social Alliance is an extremely ambitious
and complex process because of its range and diversity. At the same time, it represents
the only road to creating a true counterweight to modify, influence or at least curb the
anti-democratic agenda and social exclusion of our governments." Hector de la Cueva - the Mexican Action Network on
Free Trade (RMALC) |
| "Our
only hope for changing the rules of the game on globalization is to build a peoples
movement for just and sustainable trade and development. The Hemispheric Social Alliance
is a big step in that direction. The Alliance will help us to make connections among
peoples, issues and campaigns, not just to inform ourselves but to act in a united
way." Karen Hansen-Kuhn -
Alliance for Responsible Trade, USA. |
|
BUILDING A
HEMISPHERIC SOCIAL ALLIANCE IN THE AMERICAS DRAFT AGENDA (EngLish)
Council Meeting,
Toronto 4 + 5 Nov 1999
Borrador
de Agenda Reunión del consej
Toronto, 4 y 5 de Noviembre 1999
(versión español)
Over the past two decades, the economies of North, South
and Central America have steadily integrated. Free trade agreements have been vigorously
pursued by governments and business leaders, with little input from us, the people of this
hemisphere. Economic integration of our region has been catastrophic for us all. Our
economies are now wide open to foreign private investment and private corporations have
new rights to cherry pick the attractive investments. Meanwhile, our rights and
protections as citizens have been dramatically eroded. Wealth is now concentrated in the
hands of the few, leaving the vast majority in a devastating cycle of poverty and
violence. This new economic model, sometimes referred to as neo-liberalism" or
corporate rule", is undemocratic and exclusionary. It promotes free trade
agreements that deny citizens the right to participate in key economic and social policy
decisions. And it allows corporations to walk away from the economic and environmental
disasters they create. The results have made clear that we need to take leadership by
building an alternative development model and countervailing social force.
The idea of an Alliance was born at the Our Americas
Forum in Belo Horizonte, Brazil in May of 1997. At this Forum, running parallel to the
meeting of the Americas Trade Ministers and the Americas Business Forum, the 700 civil
society activists who attended agreed to mobilize their organizations and coalitions
towards building a broad-based movement throughout the hemisphere to confront the current
economic model and corporate rule. The idea of an alliance was further endorsed at the
Peoples Summit in Santiago Chile in April of 1998. Two thousand delegates met in
twelve sectoral forums, workshopping ideas for an alternative social and economic model in
the hemisphere. Labour, NGOs, trade coalitions, environmentalists and social movements
from most of the countries of the Americas came together in March of 1999 in Costa Rica to
give shape to the Hemispheric Social Alliance (HSA) and agree to some basic principles for
coordinating and building it. This alternative would be inclusive, democratic, ethical,
sustainable and humane, with full respect for diversity and ample space for citizen input.
The mission
The Hemispheric Social Alliance is a forum where
progressive organizations and movements from around the Americas can gather, strategize,
share information and plan joint actions. As the base and strength of this movement grows,
we will be in an even better position to fight for an alternative and democratic
development model for our societies.
What the Hemispheric Social Alliance hopes to achieve
The broad objectives of the HSA are to:
- Strengthen civil society within and between countries in
the Americas;
- Be recognized as a dynamic movement which can mobilize its
members and where the different views and positions of civil society can be represented;
- Implement agreed upon common strategies while, at the same
time, respecting diversity;
- Support and strengthen the efforts of the different
sectors at the local, national and regional levels;
- Promote the enforcement of the basic standards approved by
the International Labour Organizations (ILO);
- Promote and campaign for the enforcement of all rights
already recognized in the many international instruments, covenants and declarations
already signed.
Who can participate
All social justice organizations who can identify
with and adopt the principles and objectives of the HSA, whether directly or through
national and sub-regional coalitions, are invited to participate. You may already be
participating through your church or union.
How the Alliance is organized
At its first meeting in Costa Rica in March, 1999,
members of the HSA elected a Coordinating Group whose members are:
Common Frontiers Canada, Civil Society Initiative on
Central American Integration (ICIC), Quebec Network on Continental Integration (RQIC),
Alliance for Responsible Trade (USA), Mexican Action Network on Free Trade (RMALC), Latin
American Congress of Rural Organizations (CLOC), the Brazilian Network for Peoples
Integration (REBRIP) and the Interamerican Regional Workers Organization (ORIT).
Strategies
For the initial building of the Hemispheric Social
Alliance, we have identified two parallel strategies:
- to impact the official integration process by lobbying,
making policy proposals, influencing public opinion, developing media strategies;
- to build broad-based support for the Alliance with the
trade union movement, environmentalists, landless people and homeless people, womens
organizations and all other social movements, especially those most marginalized by the
present economic model.
Ideas for moving the Hemispheric Social Alliance
forward
The HSA is not short of ideas! Below is a list of
some of the initiatives under discussion...
Ideas for developing and promoting the HSA
- Organize yearly meetings of the Hemispheric Social
Alliance.
- Establish a secretariat for the Alliance to deal with day
to day issues and communications.
- Set up a Hemispheric Social Alliance E-mail List.
- Gain visibility, since this is the key to making the
Alliance real for the local organizations and their membership.
- Expand the participation of organizations in the different
regions of the Americas , e.g. Andean, Southern Cone and Caribbean regions.
- Promote dialogue with organizations and coalitions from
other parts of the world.
Ideas for programmes
- Develop an alternative social agenda.
- Adopt a common strategy which also respects diversity.
- Continue to develop, to discuss and debate, to add and to
modify Alternatives for the Americas, a document drafted for the Alternative Forum
at the 1998 Peoples Summit in Santiago, Chile.
- Map the existing organizations in each country along with
the actions they are taking.
- Share information and feedback through the Alliance: local
regional - global.
- Monitor the negotiation process and any positions taken or
agreements signed by our respective governments with full dissemination of that
information to the Alliance.
- Launch campaigns at all levels under the umbrella and with
the support of the Alliance.
- Develop labour and social indicators that can be tracked,
in conjunction with the Social Watch initiative already underway.
- Raise awareness of the effects and impact of economic
integration on the day to day lives of our members and the population at large.
How you can get more information
Contact Common
Frontiers
.
Introducing the Hemispheric Social Alliance E-mail
list!
A list to link activists and organizations working on
issues of social justice and trade in the Americas. Get updates from the coalitions and
activists from Brazil, Mexico, Chile and other countries of the Americas. This is a tool
to build and keep the Hemispheric Social alliance members connected!
Please note that this list is being conducted in SPANISH.
To join the list:
E-mail: comfront@web.net
|