Thursday, 27 December 2007

Globalization

"The greatest challenge we face today is to ensure that Globalization becomes a positive force for all the world's people, instead of leaving billions of them behind in squalor. Inclusive Globalization must be built on the great enabling force of the market, but market forces alone will not achieve it. It requires a broader effort to create a shared future, based upon our common humanity in all its diversity."

From the Millennium Report.


The backlash to Globalization.


Clearly, not everyone is happy about globalization. Many people don't like globalization because it allows rich and powerful outside business interests to intrude into a local culture, overrides local traditions, and threatens a way of life. There were many who cheered for a French farmer who vandalized a McDonald's. Starbucks coffee shops have been favorite targets for people protesting globalization.


In more traditional societies, globalization threatens the cultural and religious underpinnings of society. In both industrialized and developing countries, many people feel threatened—and are threatened—by the globalization process. A globalized economy presents a myriad of challenges, from protecting local cultures to protecting the environment to protecting local jobs.


The backlash is very real. During the failed World Trade Organization talks in Seattle that were intended to further expand trading opportunities last December, thousands of demonstrators who agree on little else aside from a common dislike for globalization, caused major disruptions.

Labor Unions protested, fearing that a new trade agreement would provide an incentive for companies to move their jobs abroad. Environmentalists protested, fearing that global trade agreements would undercut domestic environmental safeguards. And there were nationalists, who feared that further globalization would diminish national sovereignty, and possibly lead to a loss of freedom, liberty or rights.

Whether it is viewed as an ominous juggernaut that crushes everything in its path, or whether it holds the promise of a better future, globalization is a phenomenon that is with us. Like the weather, it is, and will be, a source for endless discussion, but little can be done about it. But also like the weather, it is a force to which people can adapt.


The role and Responsibility of Corporations.


With their world-wide operations succeeding in maximizing profits, corporations have assumed extraordinary power, often far surpassing that of governments. With virtually no global rules or regulations, corporations have been able to operate with a free hand in the international marketplace, moving factories where labor costs are low and where resources are cheap.
But corporations themselves are finding out that there are limitations, even in this wild-west theatre of operations. With either a spark of conscience or a heads-up look at the bottom line, many corporations have learned that there are indeed limitations to what they can, and that there are responsibilities they must assume.
  • Some corporations have learned this the hard way. Union Carbide learned this when its chemical plant in Bhopal, India, spewed poisonous gases that killed 6,000 people. And Exxon learned this when its tanker, the Exxon Valdez, spilled 11 barrels of oil over the Gulf of Alaska, which caused the company’s sales to fall from U.S. $9.9 billion a year to US $.4.8 billion eight years later, plus an addition billion in clean-up costs.


Catastrophic incidents such as these are well-known and relatively rare. Yet there are growing networks of non-governmental organizations who have made it their business to publicize other corporate transgressions, such as poor environmental, labor, or human rights violations. To limit exposure to bad publicity which can severely limit profits, or in some cases, just to do the right thing, many companies themselves have adopted various codes of conduct in their global dealings.


To engage business and corporations in a dialogue on corporate social responsibility, the UN Secretary-General has proposed a nine-principle code of conduct for business—the Global Compact -- which is drawn from existing international agreements on the environment, human rights and worker rights. A wide range of corporations have pledged that they will adhere to these principles, some that have been extensively criticized for their past practices. One of those companies is the sneaker company Nike, which has been singled out for criticism on its labor practices in developing countries.
  • Philip Knight, the founder of Nike and its Chief Executive Officer said at a recent meeting at the UN on the Global Compact, "When we started the company that would eventually become Nike, I never dreamed that a small Oregon business selling sneakers from the trunk of an old Valiant would become a symbol of globalization. But it has."


He added, "In many ways Nike has become a fitting symbol for what is right - and what needs fixing - in an increasingly interdependent economy. We are small by multinational standards but manufacture in 50 countries. In each there are distinctly different legal, social, financial and economic systems. That means Nike, and thousands of other companies, have a monumental task: defining what our global responsibility is, and how to act on it, in many host countries."

Wednesday, 26 December 2007

Acronyms and Abbreviations

CARICOM:  Caribbean community.

CDERA:  Caribbean disaster and Emergency Response Agency.

CSME:  Caribbean single Market and Economy.

ECLAC:   Economic commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.

GEF:   Global environment facility.

GFATM:   Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.

ICT:    Information and communications technology.

IDB:    Inter-American Development Bank.

IMF:
        International Monetary Fund.

LAC:  Latin America and the Caribbean.

MDG:  Millennium Development Goals.

NGO:   Non-governmental organization.

OECS:    Organization of Eastern Caribbean States.

PAPEP:  Project for political analysis and Prospective Scenarios.

PANCAP:  Pan Caribbean partnership on HIV/AIDS.

PLWHA:  People living with HIV/AIDS.

PRODDAL:   Project on Development of Democracy in Latin America.

RBLAC:   Regional Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean (UNDP).

RCF:  Regional cooperation framework.

SIGOB:  Project for Governance systems.

SURF:  Subregional resource facility.

TRIPS:  Trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights.

UN:   United Nations.

UNDAF:  United Nations Development Agreement Framework.

UNDP:  United Nations Development Programme.

UNFCCC:   United Nations framework Convention on Climate Change.

UNAIDS:   Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS.

UNIFEM:  United Nations Development Fund for Women.

Source: Evaluation of UNDP’s Second Regional Cooperation Framework of Latin America and the Caribbean, 2002–2006. United Nations Development Programme.

Monday, 19 November 2007

The Role of the United Nations Organization.

Is it doing its job right?

  The United Nations System International organization is nowadays and without any question the most influential and important worldwide organism. This is mainly due to the fact that it unites many countries in a place where everybody can be heard. The “chief executives” are the most powerful countries which run and are in charge of the decision-making department of this organization.

  Its main target is to keep peace among all the nations and we have admitted that the objectives and goals that it has achieved through the years are remarkable and it has changed the reality of many people around the world, especially the weakest and the poorest.

  But we have got to take a moment and ask ourselves the following question: Is the United Nations Organization doing its job right? It has not always achieved what it is expected from it.

  When the decision-making relies on some of the most important nation-state such as USA, France and Germany which even though, their job is to promote and defend the organization objectives (such a Justice, development, peace, etc) and protect the world’s interests, it is not always what they do. Many of the countries which take part of this organization work for themselves and for their interests of their own country, not caring for the damage and pain they could cause somewhere else, out of their boundaries.

  I perceive example of this: The war in Iraq. When the United States of America, practically, walked over the United Nations and invaded Iraq despite the decision of the U.N to “end up” terrorism. In this case, the power that the U.N was supposed to have to avoid war did not work. The rules and procedures that they were supposed to follow and stick to, were respected by some of the countries, but not by the most powerful one which thought they were not the most appropriate ones, and did what it thought was a better way: war.

 What about its main principle?

  On the other hand, what it also seems unfair to me is the power-decision big gap existing between the big countries and the developing world. We do not find equilibrium when it comes to making decisions. This violates the most important principle of international law, which says: "All countries no matter how developed, they are, they have the same rights and must be treated as equal."

  This is why the United Nations Organization needs to reform some of these articles, aiming to make its structure and its institutions in general stronger, where the decisions take place through consensus.

  Finally, it is also necessary certain mechanisms to punish those countries that do not follow the statements and rules adopted by the UN and signed up by each country. In other words, it should be tougher, specially, with those countries that do not carry out the organization's decisions.

Sunday, 18 November 2007