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QQ What role does globalization play in the
inequality between the Global North and South?
QA
Neo‑liberal economic restructuring has increased inequalities
between countries but also within each society. We are witness today
to an unprecedented concentration of income and wealth, which
is not an unforeseen consequence of economic globalization but
the result of deliberate public policies. The Global South, however,
is no longer a geographical category. Greece is an example of a
European country dependent on international finance institutions in
much the same way that once so‑called developing countries were.
QQ You say that economic and political processes render
some lives disposable—what do you mean by that?
QA
Take India for instance: since the country’s independence in 1947,
every year some 500,000 people—mostly small‑holder farmers,
agricultural workers, and fishing and forest‑dwelling communities—
have been forcibly displaced to make room for gigantic infrastructure
projects. They have become development refugees in their own
country. These people are regarded as “dispensable” by the state in
the sense that their livelihoods are destroyed, their lives disrupted,
and they are denied access to common property resources.
These populations are the human waste that is sacrificed at the
altar of an unsustainable model of incessant economic growth.
QQ The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs),
adopted last year, include aims to end poverty,
ensure access to employment, energy, and water, and
reduce inequality—all while preserving the environment.
What challenges do you see for achieving these goals?
QA
The SDGs will prove to be an important milestone, if they are
implemented the world over. Some of these goals are in conflict with
one another. Take the protection of biodiversity, for example, which
is often constructed as an antagonistic relationship between society
and nature. In the new global regime of biodiversity conservation,
nature is portrayed as a self‑regulating, pristine, uninhabited
wilderness that is threatened due to the wasteful resource use
by local populations. Thus access and traditional usage rights are
curtailed, and indigenous knowledge is devalued and marginalized.
The (post)colonial transformation of landscapes into “environment,”
“natural resources,” and “biodiversity” has enclosed the commons
in most regions of the Global South and often commercialized them.
QQ What needs to be done by international institutions
to make significant progress in achieving the SDGs?
QA Eliminating poverty will need an understanding of it that
goes beyond a merely economic one. One will need to take into
account possibilities of democratic participation, access to public
goods and infrastructure, as well as civil rights and a restoration
of a plurality of livelihoods. But these institutions also need to be
reformed as they have a serious democracy deficit, be it the EU
or other institutions. Unaccountability of international institutions
and powerful corporations along with stark asymmetries of
power between these and the nation‑states characterizes the
new architecture of global governance. This situation needs to be
remedied urgently if we are to realize global justice. +
Disposable lives, globalization,
&
Shalini Randeria
is rector of the Institute for
Human Sciences in Vienna and an
IIASA distinguished visiting fellow
blog.iiasa.ac.at/randeria-16
the future of
sustainability
zurĂĽck zum
Buch options, Band summer 2016"
options
Band summer 2016
- Titel
- options
- Band
- summer 2016
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2016
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine