Activism Alive and Well in New York City
by Jen Hambleton
March/April 2002
Volume 39, Number 2
The World Economic Forum (WEF), held annually in Davos,
Switzerland, has been a natural focus of protest for the movement against
corporate-driven globalization for the past few years. At the forum,
the heads of one thousand of the largest corporations meet with government
leaders to discuss economic policy issues and ski the Alps, giving corporate
leaders a broad forum in which to promote their policy agenda. The WEF
website (weforum.org) proudly states that it was in Davos that the World
Trade Organization was born. When the decision was made to move the
meetings to New York this year, purportedly in support of the effort
to rebuild the city after September 11, protest organizers were not
far behind.
At the same time, in the weeks preceding the planned
protests against the World Economic Forum in New York, the mood in New
York was on a lot of people's minds. There were concerns about the enormous
police presence that was planned. At the National Conference on Organized
Resistance, held at American University the weekend before, the subject
came up often in workshops and hallway conversations. In the discussions
I heard, most felt that while we should make an extra effort to be respectful
and cautious in our tactics. Yet it was of critical importance that
we not let the events of this past fall keep us from registering our
dissent regarding "business as usual" at the WEF.
I made the trek up to New York for the weekend of February
2nd for simple reasons: I do not feel that the CEO's and CFO's of the
world's largest corporations should have more intimate access to government
leaders than you or I do. Many activists went to speak out about specific
issues of social and economic justice and corporate and governmental
accountability. At Saturday's permitted march, one group of activists
rolled the stump of an old redwood, farmed from a forest in northern
California by the family that owns the GAP, through the streets on a
cart, urging a boycott of the company. Another group was there to protest
the US government's continued one-sided support in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict. Still others, pots and pans in hand, chanted in support of
the people of Argentina.
Estimates of the number of marchers varied wildly. CNN
reported 2,000 (no one's sure which march they saw, but it certainly
wasn't the one I was at), while numbers as high as 30,000 were reported
on the New York Indy Media website. 12-15,000 is an estimate I have
heard repeatedly, both from organizers in New York and activists here
in Washington. One thing is sure: the crowd was widely varied across
ethnic and age spectrums, a good sign for a movement that is so often
portrayed as too young and too white.
The mood of the march varied throughout the day and throughout
the route. The police presence was, indeed, daunting. Near the beginning
of the march, several smaller marches converged to join the main group,
as had been planned. The police suddenly pushed their way into the crowd
during this process, invoking confusion and fear. Along the march route,
the left side of the street was blocked off to allow the police easy
movement, and marchers were required to stop for nearly every stoplight
along the route. This, combined with cold weather and a lack of communication
from one end of the march to the other, left many feeling frustrated.
On the other hand, given the seemingly insurmountable
obstacles faced by the organizers, what they were able to pull off was
pretty amazing. Unions and NGO's that have traditionally lent their
financial support to these events were, for the most part, not present
for this one. The police changed the parameters of the march permit,
as well as the actual route, right up until the last minute. That the
organizers were still able to draw thousands to the march and to workshops
and other events held throughout the weekend, and keep all of it relatively
peaceful and positive, is a testament to their infallible energy and
drive. The activists who took part, as well, were inspiring: Ingenious
banners and signs, music and dancing by the local Rhythm Workers and
others, and exceptionally creative chants sustained our collective energy
throughout the day.
Starhawk, a leading figure in the social justice movement,
put it this way: "In a climate in which the police are widely seen as
heroes and the very thought of protest is suspect, getting that many
people out on the streets has to be seen as a victory. We reclaimed
some political space, asserted our right to dissent, and hugely raised
the social costs for the World Economic Forum. We forced the incipient
police state to reveal itself, and actually changed the tone of the
news coverage so in the end, New Yorkers were asking whether the Forum
had any business coming to town, and whether it was the kind of thing
we want to support, anyway."
Protest works. Massive protests against top-down, corporation-driven
globalization throughout the world in the past several years have had
an impact on bringing the issues of economic inequality and environmental
degradation to the forefront of the discussion on globalization. While
in past years, the meetings of the WEF have been explicitly about free
trade at all costs, this year the agenda had a decidedly different tone.
The title for this year's meeting was "Leadership in Fragile Times:
A Vision for a Shared Future." From the WEF website comes this summary
of the Forum's goals:
For many years, bridging the divides has been an important focus
of World Economic Forum activities. Based in part on Forum task forces
and initiatives, the discussions in the Annual Meeting 2002 will examine
how to foster public-private partnerships that promote economic development
with social equity and how to increase efficiently deployed resources
for infrastructure, basic health and education, public institutional
capacity and private sector development. These are prerequisites for
narrowing gaps that not only are morally unacceptable but also pose
an underlying threat to stability.
Topics of discussion included reforming the IMF and World
Bank, delivering an AIDS vaccine to Africa, and the impact of global
climate change. While it is telling that these issues have made it to
the table at meetings of the corporate and governmental elite, we should
continue to be wary of so-called "solutions" now being promoted by those
who in so many cases have been at the root cause of so many of the problems
the world currently faces.
The World Bank and IMF will be meeting here in Washington
during the weekend of April 20-21. Protests to coincide with the meetings
are already being planned. Events are also being planned for that weekend
in protest of Plan Columbia, the School of the Americas (now called
the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation), and the
war on terrorism. New York was one of the movement's first opportunities
to prove that protest is possible in this post September-11 world, and
a necessary means of asserting our rights in a democracy. The events
coming up in April provide us with another important opportunity not
to be missed.
For more information on the events happening this
spring and how you can get involved, check out www.GlobalizeThis.org,
www.soaw.org, www.columbiamobilization.org,
www.a20stopthewar.org