Pambazuka News Fahamu Pambazuka News

Search Pambazuka

PUBLICATIONS ASSISTANT, FAHAMU

We are looking for an enthusiastic, hardworking and committed individual to work as publications assistant for a dynamic, pan-African organisation based in Oxford. If you have excellent copyediting and proofreading skills and have experience in design and desktop publishing, then we want to hear from you.
Full details available in pdf format or by request to fahamujobs@googlemail.com. Closing date: 28 July 2008.

Pambazuka News Broadcasts

Pambazuka broadcasts feature audio and video content with cutting edge commentary and debate from social justice movements across the continent.

See the list of episodes.


AU MONITOR

This site has been established by Fahamu to provide regular feedback to African civil society organisations on what is happening with the African Union.

TOP 10 AWARD

For the third consecutive year (2005, 2006, 2007), Pambazuka News has been voted by subscribers and voters around the world as one of the "Top 10 Who Are Changing the World of Internet and Politics" in an award organised by PoliticsOnline and World E-Gov Forum.
"This prestigious award seeks to recognize the innovators and pioneers, the dreamers and doers who bring democracy online. This year marked the toughest year ever in choosing the 20 finalists."
Thank you to all of you who voted for Pambazuka News, our readers, writers and contributors. This is your award. Congratulations to you all.

PoliticsOnline

Vacancy Advertising rates on Pambazuka News

The rates shown below are for a four week advertisement

Band A - Charities, NGOs and Non-profit organisations with turnover of less than $200,000: $50.00
Band B - Charities, NGOs and Non-profit organisations with turnover of $200,000 - $1,000,000: $150.00
Band C - Charities, NGOs and Non-profit organisations with turnover of more than $1,000,000: $350.00
Band D - Government or Private Sector companies: $500.00

To place an advertisement email: info [at] fahamu [dot] org.

We are willing to waive the charges for not-for-profit organisations in Africa with limited income.

Fahamu Books

China’s New Role in Africa and the SouthDorothy-Grace Guerrero and Firoze Manji (ed) (2008) China’s New Role in Africa and the South: A search for a new perspective.

Hakima Abbas (ed) (2007) Africa’s Long Road to Rights: Reflections on the 20th Anniversary of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights / Long Trajet de l’Afrique vers les Droits: Réflexions lors du 20ème Anniversaire de la Commission Africaine des Droits de l’Homme et des Peuples.

Patrick Burnett & Firoze Manji (eds) (2007) From the Slave Trade to ‘Free’ Trade: How Trade Undermines Democracy and Justice in Africa.

Issa Shivji (2007) Silences in NGO Discourse: The Role and Future of NGOs in Africa.

Visit the full list of Fahamu books

Donate To Help Pambazuka Continue!

Help make sure that subscribers in Africa get Pambazuka News free: every $5.00 helps to ensure a subscription for one year. So donate generously to ensure Africa's best social justice newsletter gets to where it's needed.

Subscribe

Pambazuka News reaches approximately 60,000 people every week. Join the struggle for social justice in Africa - subscribe now!

del.icio.us

Vist Pambazuka News@del.icio.us. Our page on the del.icio.us social bookmarking website.

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Features

World Social Forum: just another NGO fair?

Firoze Manji (2007-01-26)

http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/features/39464

Printer friendly version


The World Social Forum, which took place in Nairobi, Kenya for the first time in Africa, was supposed to be a forum for the voices of the grassroots. But Firoze Manji writes that, despite the diversity of voices at the event, not everyone was equally represented.


As one would expect, WSF was highly heterogeneous. There was a lot going on. At one level no one can deny the diversity of people from all parts of the world. WSF seemingly reflected the heterogeneity of civil society internationally: there were initiatives from grassroots women’s organisations, from feminists, social movements, small and large African organisations, international (or is it ‘multinational’?) organisations, donors and funders, grantees, activists, hustlers and the hassled. There were vociferous anti-capitalists and anti-(capitalist) globalisation meetings and discussions, as one would expect of an event that evolved out of the need to assert an alternative to imperialist globalisations of the Davos kind. And there were those whose politics could reasonably be viewed as part of the civil society infrastructure of modern-day imperial expansion.

But to describe only the diversity would be to miss the real, and perhaps more disturbing, picture. The problem was that not everyone was equally represented. Not everyone had equal voices. This event had all the features of a trade fair – those with greater wealth had more events in the calendar, larger (and more comfortable) spaces, more propaganda – and therefore a larger voice. Thus the usual gaggle of quasi donor/International NGOs claimed a greater presence than national organisations – not because what they had to say was more important or more relevant to the theme of the WSF, but because, essentially, they had greater budgets at their command. Thus the WSF was not immune from the laws of (neoliberal) market forces. There was no levelling of the playing field. This was more a World NGO Forum than an anti-capitalist mobilisation, lightly peppered with social activists and grassroots movements.

And the sense of the predominance of neoliberalism was given further weight by the ubiquity of the CelTel Logo – the Kuwaiti owned telecommunications company that had exclusive rights at the WSF; a virtual monopoly provided to a hotel that provided food at extortionate prices that most Kenyans, if they were allowed in, could hardly afford. And rumours were rife that the business of catering involved people in high places winning exclusive contracts. Hawkers, on whom most of Nariobians depend for providing everything from phone cards to food and refreshment were for a while excluded physically (as well as financially) from entering the China-built Moi Sports Stadium in Kasarani, the venue for the WSF. And it was only when frustrated activists took direct action to occupy the offices of the organisers that a more liberal policy for entry was implemented.

This was the first full WSF held in Africa (Mali was host to one of the polycentric WSF’s last year). But the forum was marked by the under-representation of social activists from Africa – or indeed from the global south. Inevitably this reflected on how debates and discussions were framed. Pambazuka News staff had hoped that this space would be the basis for forging a broader radical pan-Africanism. But that was, sadly, not to be. The white North, with it hegemonic parochialism, was over-represented. Social movements from the South were conspicuous by their numerically small presence at the forum.

Probably the most consistently heavily attended forum throughout the week was that organised by the Human Dignity and Human Rights Network which had the largest tent, and held meeting after meeting throughout most of the week, with a caste of well known speakers. But like most of the events at WSF, the set-up of the meetings was of a traditional platform of speakers with the audience being talked at rather than being engaged in discussion. While we heard the experience of both survivors of human rights abuses and human rights defenders, there was little political analysis.

And that probably catches the sense of most, thankfully not all, of the WSF events: there was lots of talking and sloganeering. There was much discussion about policies and alternatives to existing policies. But one couldn’t help feel the absence of politics. It’s as if many believe that nice policies (or human rights legislations) get made by nice people. But the reality is that what ends up as policy is the outcome of struggles in the political domain – fundamentally between the haves and the have-nots. But in a week in which the voices of the have-nots were under-represented, I guess we should not be surprised by the absence of politics.

I think everyone was disappointed by the surprisingly low turn-out: estimates of 30,000 to 50,000 people attended, compared with an expected crowd of 150,000. What made so many keep away in droves? Despite asking many this question, I have found no satisfactory reasons offered.

* Firoze Manji is director of Fahamu and editor of Pambazuka News

* Please send comments to editor@pambazuka.org or comment online at www.pambazuka.org


Readers' Comments

Let your voice be heard. Comment on this article.




ISSN 1753-6839 Pambazuka News English Edition http://www.pambazuka.org/en/

ISSN 1753-6847 Pambazuka News en Français http://www.pambazuka.org/fr/

ISSN 1757-6504 Pambazuka News em Português http://www.pambazuka.org/pt/

© 2008 Fahamu - http://www.fahamu.org/