140 research outputs found

    Capitalism’s Crisis and our Response

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    Bandung: The Event (Professorial Lecture by Walden Bello)

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    This essay is a distillation of thoughts triggered by various requests to consider the significance of the Bandung Conference during the 60th anniversary of the historic event in 2015

    Contemporary Conflicts in the Asia Pacific Region: Professional Lecture by Walden Bello

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    The Asia Pacific has entered a period of intense destabilization. This has multiple causes, but in my view, there are three principal causes of instability: (1) the so-called US Pivot to Asia; (2) China’s aggressive territorial claims in the South China Sea West Philippine Sea; and (3) resurgent right-wing nationalism in Japan

    The crisis of the NICs: fundamental, not transitional

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    "In sum, it is undeniable that the NIC strategy of export-oriented growth delivered high-speed growth over the last 25 years. However, a lethal conjunction of international and internal developments is leading to the unravelling of the NIC model, leaving ailing tigers stranded on the perilous zone between the developed and underdeveloped worlds. It will take a new, bold set of economic policies to keep them from sliding back to the Third World in the 1990's ..." - pages 3-

    Development in the era of climate change: How an interdisciplinary perspective illuminates the road ahead

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    I have been asked to speak on the relevance of an interdisciplinary approach to the question of climate change. The way I would like to approach this issue is to first discuss two topics extensively. The first is the role of China in global climate politics. The second is the implication of the current global economic downturn for climate policy. I will then draw out some of the implications of these two related topics for an interdisciplinary approach

    Past as global trade governance prelude: reconfiguring debate about reform of the multilateral trading system

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    This paper peers backwards into the history of the multilateral trading system and its development over the past half century as a means of considering what may lie beyond the horizon for the future of global trade governance. Its purpose is to underscore the necessity and urgency for root-and-branch reform of the multilateral trading system. It achieves this by comparing and contrasting the global trading system of 50 years ago with its modern-day equivalent and its likely future counterpart half-a-century hence. In so doing, the paper throws into sharp relief not only the inadequacies of global trade governance today but also the damaging consequences of not fundamentally reforming the system in the near future, with a particular emphasis on the past, present and future development of the world’s poorest and most marginalised countries

    Capitalism and Earth System Governance: An Ecological Marxist Approach

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    Growing recognition of the Anthropocene era has led to a chorus of calls for Earth System Governance (ESG). Advocates argue that humanity's newfound sociotechnical powers require institutional transformations at all scales of governance to wield these powers with wisdom and foresight. Critics, on the other hand, fear that these initiatives embody a technocratic impulse that aims to subject the planet to expert management without addressing the political-economic roots of the earth system crisis. This article proposes a more affirmative engagement with existing approaches to ESG while also building on these critiques. While advocates of ESG typically ignore the capitalistic roots of the earth system crisis and propose tepid reforms that risk authoritarian expressions, their critics also have yet to systematically consider the potential for more democratic and postcapitalist forms of ESG. In response, I propose an ecological Marxist approach based on a structural analysis of capitalism as the primary driver of the earth system crisis and an "ecosocialist" vision of ESG that subordinates the market to democratic planning at multiple scales. I argue that an ecological Marxist perspective is needed to foreground the structural political-economic constraints on earth system stability, though existing approaches to ESG can in turn inform ecosocialist strategies for global institutional design and democratization

    Lost opportunities in HIV prevention: programmes miss places where exposures are highest

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    Background: Efforts at HIV prevention that focus on high risk places might be more effective and less stigmatizing than those targeting high risk groups. The objective of the present study was to assess risk behaviour patterns, signs of current preventive interventions and apparent gaps in places where the risk of HIV transmission is high and in communities with high HIV prevalence. Methods: The PLACE method was used to collect data. Inhabitants of selected communities in Lusaka and Livingstone were interviewed about where people met new sexual partners. Signs of HIV preventive activities in these places were recorded. At selected venues, people were interviewed about their sexual behaviour. Peer educators and staff of NGOs were also interviewed. Results: The places identified were mostly bars, restaurants or sherbeens, and fewer than 20% reported any HIV preventive activity such as meetings, pamphlets or posters. In 43% of places in Livingstone and 26% in Lusaka, condoms were never available. There were few active peer educators. Among the 432 persons in Lusaka and 676 in Livingstone who were invited for interview about sexual behaviour, consistent condom use was relatively high in Lusaka (77%) but low in Livingstone (44% of men and 34% of women). Having no condom available was the most common reason for not using one. Condom use in Livingstone was higher among individuals socializing in places where condoms always were available. Conclusion: In the places studied we found a high prevalence of behaviours with a high potential for HIV transmission but few signs of HIV preventive interventions. Covering the gaps in prevention in these high exposure places should be given the highest priority
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