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National - Event Notice Thursday January 01 1970 POSSIBILITIES 2011 National Social Forum
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event notice
Thursday February 03, 2011 09:33 by Volunteer - POSSIBILITIES 2011
Dalai Lama, Mary Robinson, Kila and more... POSSIBILITIES 2011 National Social Forum The forum will feature Tibetan Political and Spiritual Leader, His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, as well as contributions from former President Mary Robinson, Nóirín Ní Riain and the Irish music group Kila. There will also be a panel of grassroots change makers and campaigners and some very special guests yet to be announced.
by Danny - none Thu Feb 24, 2011 22:01
This is a very positive event that is happening in Dublin. It is appealing to the public at large and will inevitably influence many people to work towards a sustainable future. Smaller events that could have a more social forum feel could be organised by grassroot organisations to complement this event. It is locally where it all happens anyway this event in Dublin is for inspiration. |
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Jump To Comment: 1 2I'm not sure if the title is deliberately misleading or if it's just that the organisers haven't done their homework. There is a very important and internationally networked social forum process which looks nothing like this (as a very quick internet search can verify), organised around an important set of principles.
There is also a past history to the Irish Social Forum - even though it has been in abeyance for a few years now it's misleading to describe this as though it was the same thing.
To give a sense of what us ordinary mortals understand a social forum to be, here's the World Social Forum's charter of principles:
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1) The World Social Forum is an open meeting place for reflective thinking, democratic debate of ideas, formulation of proposals, free exchange of experiences and interlinking for effective action, by groups and movements of civil society that are opposed to neo-liberalism and to domination of the world by capital and any form of imperialism, and are committed to building a planetary society directed towards fruitful relationships among Mankind and between it and the Earth.
2) The World Social Forum at Porto Alegre was an event localised in time and place. From now on, in the certainty proclaimed at Porto Alegre that "Another World Is Possible", it becomes a permanent process of seeking and building alternatives, which cannot be reduced to the events supporting it.
3) The World Social Forum is a world process. All the meetings that are held as part of this process have an international dimension.
4) The alternatives proposed at the World Social Forum stand in opposition to a process of globalisation commanded by the large multinational corporations and by the governments and international institutions at the service of those corporations' interests, with the complicity of national governments. They are designed to ensure that globalisation in solidarity will prevail as a new stage in world history. This will respect universal human rights, and those of all citizens - men and women - of all nations and the environment and will rest on democratic international systems and institutions at the service of social justice, equality and the sovereignty of peoples.
5) The World Social Forum brings together and interlinks only organisations and movements of civil society from all the countries in the world, but intends neither to be a body representing world civil society.
6) The meetings of the World Social Forum do not deliberate on behalf of the World Social Forum as a body. No one, therefore, will be authorized, on behalf of any of the editions of the Forum, to express positions claiming to be those of all its participants. The participants in the Forum shall not be called on to take decisions as a body, whether by vote or acclamation, on declarations or proposals for action that would commit all, or the majority, of them and that propose to be taken as establishing positions of the Forum as a body. It thus does not constitute a locus of power to be disputed by the participants in its meetings, nor does it intend to constitute the only option for interrelation and action by the organisations and movements that participate in it.
7) Nonetheless, organisations or groups of organisations that participate in the Forum's meetings must be assured the right, during such meetings, to deliberate on declarations or actions they may decide on, whether singly or in coordination with other participants. The World Social Forum undertakes to circulate such decisions widely by the means at its disposal, without directing, hierarchizing, censuring or restricting them, but as deliberations of the organisations or groups of organisations that made the decisions.
8) The World Social Forum is a plural, diversified, non-confessional, non-governmental and non-party context that, in a decentralized fashion, interrelates organisations and movements engaged in concrete action at levels from the local to the international to build another world.
9) The World Social Forum will always be a forum open to pluralism and to the diversity of activities and ways of engaging of the organisations and movements that decide to participate in it, as well as the diversity of genders, ethnicities, cultures, generations and physical capacities, providing they abide by this Charter of Principles. Neither party representations nor military organisations shall participate in the Forum. Government leaders and members of legislatures who accept the commitments of this Charter may be invited to participate in a personal capacity.
10) The World Social Forum is opposed to all totalitarian and reductionist views of economy, development and history and to the use of violence as a means of social control by the State. It upholds respect for Human Rights, the practices of real democracy, participatory democracy, peaceful relations, in equality and solidarity, among people, ethnicities, genders and peoples, and condemns all forms of domination and all subjection of one person by another.
11) As a forum for debate the World Social Forum is a movement of ideas that prompts reflection, and the transparent circulation of the results of that reflection, on the mechanisms and instruments of domination by capital, on means and actions to resist and overcome that domination, and on the alternatives proposed to solve the problems of exclusion and social inequality that the process of capitalist globalisation with its racist, sexist and environmentally destructive dimensions is creating internationally and within countries.
12) As a framework for the exchange of experiences, the World Social Forum encourages understanding and mutual recognition amongst its participant organisations and movements, and places special value on the exchange among them, particularly on all that society is building to centre economic activity and political action on meeting the needs of people and respecting nature, in the present and for future generations.
13) As a context for interrelations, the World Social Forum seeks to strengthen and create new national and international links among organisations and movements of society, that, in both public and private life, will increase the capacity for non-violent social resistance to the process of dehumanisation the world is undergoing and to the violence used by the State, and reinforce the humanising measures being taken by the action of these movements and organisations.
14) The World Social Forum is a process that encourages its participant organisations and movements to situate their actions, from the local level to the national level and seeking active participation in international contexts, as issues of planetary citizenship, and to introduce onto the global agenda the change-inducing practices that they are experimenting in building a new world in solidarity.
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In other words, a real social forum is not simply a talking shop listening to Famous Nice People with a bit of space for Qs and As tacked on - it is a space for open and democratic debate.
It is not a ticketed event planned by 3 NGOs with no consultation with civil society, social movements, or other activists and announced as a done deal - it is the product of a serious discussion process.
It is not something where your options for "getting involved" are limited (according to the website) to providing grunt work for someone else's plan (Facebooking it, giving money, being a volunteer) but a place where everyone is able not just to speak from the floor but to create sessions, organise events and otherwise create some kind of living democracy.
"Be the revolution"? What kind of revolution are you thinking of?
Frankly I expected better from AFrI at least.
There is a good report "Learning from the US Social Forum" at
http://cacim.net/twiki/tiki-page.php?pageName=Learning%...Forum
for people interested in creating real social forums. As for this:
Messers.
Irish Social Forum process (2004) 0.04 Mb