Strategy Forum


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FPIF Materials

After Marrakesh
By Paul Baer and Tom Athanasiou
December 2001

FPIF Discussion Paper #6
Global Economic Governance: Strategic Crossroads*
By Tom Barry
September 2001

FPIF Discussion Paper #5
Strategy and Self-Activity In the Global Justice Movements
By Patrick Bond
August 2001

FPIF Discussion Paper #4
Bonn and Genoa: A Tale of Two Cities and Two Movements
By Tom Athanasiou and Paul Baer
August 2001

FPIF Discussion Paper #3
Progressive Unilateralism?
U.S. Unilateralism, Progressive Internationalism, and
Alternatives to Neoliberalism

By Ian Robinson
November 2000

From Debt Relief to Debt Repudiation, From Jubilee 2000 to Jubilee South: For a New North South Engagement

Nearly two years after Seattle and after demonstrating the clear ability to disrupt intergeovernmental meetings and force changes in at least the rhetoric of government officials regarding globalization, the 'anti-globalization' movement faces a new set of strategic questions. These contributions offer varying perspectives on a range of strategic issues, from the role of violence and property destruction, to the balance between national- and international-level strategies for change.

 

Other Materials

On the Question of Violence

Reflections on Violence, by Ken Kalturnyk, Canadian Dimension (July/August 2001)

 

Alternatives

 

Miscellaneous

Anarchism and the Anti-Globalization Movement, by Barbara Epstein,
Monthly Review (September 2001)

The Terrain of Social Justice, By Sam Gindin, Canadian Dimension
(July/August 2001)

Anti-globalization and its discontents, By Raghu Krishnan and B.
Skanthakumar, in collaboration with the CD Collective, Canadian
Dimension (March/April 2001)

The Battle After Seattle: A Working Paper for Strategic Planning &
Action on the WTO
, By Maude Barlow & Tony Clarke (January 31, 2000)

 

 

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