The
World Social Forum (WSF) is alive and well. It just met in Dakar,
Senegal from Feb. 6-11. By unforeseen coincidence, this was the week of
the Egyptian people's successful dethroning of Hosni Mubarak, which
finally succeeded just as the WSF was in its closing session. The WSF
spent the week cheering the Egyptians on - and discussing the meaning of
the Tunisian/Egyptian revolutions for their program of transformation,
for achieving another world that is possible - possible, not certain.
Somewhere
between 60,000 and 100,000 people attended the Forum, which is in
itself a remarkable number. To hold such an event, the WSF requires
strong local social movements (which exist in Senegal) and a government
that at least tolerates the holding of the Forum. The Senegalese
government of Abdoulaye Wade was ready to "tolerate" the holding of the
WSF, although already a few months ago it reneged on its promised
financial assistance by three-quarters.
But
then came the Tunisian and Egyptian uprisings, and the government got
cold feet. What if the presence of the WSF inspired a similar uprising
in Senegal? The government couldn't cancel the affair, not with Lula of
Brazil, Morales of Bolivia, and numerous African presidents coming. So
it did the next best thing. It tried to sabotage the Forum. It did this
by firing the Rector of the principal university where the Forum was
being held, four days before the opening, and installing a new Rector,
who promptly reversed the decision of the previous Rector to suspend
classes during the WSF so that meeting rooms be available.
The
result was organizational chaos for at least the first two days. In the
end, the new Rector permitted the use of 40 of the more than 170 rooms
needed. The organizers imaginatively set up tents across the campus, and
the meeting proceeded despite the sabotage.
Was
the Senegalese government right to be so frightened of the WSF? The WSF
itself debated how relevant it was to popular uprisings in the Arab
world and elsewhere, undertaken by people who had probably never heard
of the WSF? The answer given by those in attendance reflected the
long-standing division in its ranks. There were those who felt that ten
years of WSF meetings had contributed significantly to the undermining
of the legitimacy of neoliberal globalization, and that the message had
seeped down everywhere. And there were those who felt that the uprisings
showed that transformational politics lay elsewhere than in the WSF.
I
myself found two striking things about the Dakar meeting. The first was
that hardly anyone even mentioned the World Economic Forum at Davos.
When the WSF was founded in 2001, it was founded as the anti-Davos. By
2011, Davos seemed so unimportant politically to those present that it
was simply ignored.
The
second was the degree to which everyone present noted the
interconnection of all issues under discussion. In 2001, the WSF was
primarily concerned with the negative economic consequences
of neoliberalism. But at each meeting thereafter the WSF added other
concerns - gender, environment (and particularly climate change),
racism, health, the rights of indigenous peoples, labor struggles, human
rights, access to water, food and energy availability. And suddenly at
Dakar, no matter what was the theme of the session, its connections with
the other concerns came to the fore. This it seems to me has been the
great achievement of the WSF - to embrace more and more concerns and get
everyone to see their intimate interconnections.
There
was nonetheless one underlying complaint among those in attendance.
People said correctly we all know what we're against, but we should be
laying out more clearly what it is we are for. This is what we can
contribute to the Egyptian revolution and to the others that are going
to come everywhere.
The
problem is that there remains one unresolved difference among those who
want another world. There are those who believe that what the world
needs is more development, more modernization, and thereby the
possibility of more equal distribution of resources. And there are those
who believe that development and modernization are
the civilizational curse of capitalism and that we need to rethink the
basic cultural premises of a future world, which they
call civilizational change.
Those
who call for civilizational change do it under various umbrellas. There
are the indigenous movements of the Americas (and elsewhere) who say
they want a world based on what the Latin Americans call "buen vivir" -
essentially a world based on good values, one that requires the slowing
down of unlimited economic growth which, they say, the planet is too
small to sustain.
If
the indigenous movements center their demands around autonomy in order
to control land rights in their communities, there are urban movements
in other parts of the world who emphasize the ways in which unlimited
growth is leading to climate disaster and new pandemics. And there are
feminist movements who are underlining the link between the demands for
unlimited growth and the maintenance of patriarchy.
This
debate about a "civilizational crisis" has great implications for the
kind of political action one endorses and the kind of role left parties
seeking state power would play in the world transformation under
discussion. It will not be easily resolved. But it is the crucial debate
of the coming decade. If the left cannot resolve its differences on
this key issue, then the collapse of the capitalist world-economy could
well lead to a triumph of the world right and the construction of a new
world-system worse even than the existing one.
For
the moment, all eyes are on the Arab world and the degree to which the
heroic efforts of the Egyptian people will transform politics throughout
the Arab world. But the tinder for such uprisings exists everywhere,
even in the wealthier regions of the world. As of the moment, we are
justified in being semi-optimistic.
ZNet