Jacques Agboton <jsapublishing@WEBTV.NET>: Fwd: How the Net

Sat, 2 May 1998 16:57:35 -0700
kpmoseley@juno.com

See this! kpm

--------- Begin forwarded message ----------
From: Jacques Agboton <jsapublishing@WEBTV.NET>
To: LEONENET@MITVMA.MIT.EDU
Subject: Fwd: How the Net killed the MAI (fwd)
Date: Fri, 1 May 1998 22:09:19 -0400

--WebTV-Mail-1582693893-3741

African Brothers and Sisters,

Even when you have "given one ear" to this subject, here is a
development to know.

--WebTV-Mail-1582693893-3741

From: "Chris Gethin" <CGETHIN@consint.org>
To: GKD@tristram.edc.org
Date: Thu, 30 Apr 1998 17:01:46 +0000
Subject: How the Net killed the MAI (fwd)
Sender: owner-gkd@tristram.edc.org
Reply-To: gkd@tristram.edc.org

Thought this example would be of interest and demonstrate some of the
power of ICT for movements such as the consumer movement. Consumers
International will be launching an internet lobbying and information
campaign next week aimed at influencing the decision on the labelling
Genetically Modified Foods at the International Standards making body
Codex Alimentarius late in May.

For more information please contact me.
-----------------

From: Chantell Taylor <ctaylor@citizen.org>
<mai-not@essential.org>
Subject: How the Net killed the MAI

How the Net killed the MAI

Grassroots groups used their own globalization to derail deal

Wednesday, April 29, 1998
By Madelaine Drohan

PARIS -- High-powered politicians had reams of statistics and analysis
on why a set of international investing rules would make the world a
better place.

They were no match, however, for a global band of grassroots
organizations, which, with little more than computers and access to the
Internet, helped derail a deal.

Indeed, international negotiations have been transformed after this
week's successful rout of the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI)
by opposition groups, which -- alarmed by the trend toward economic
globalization -- used some globalization of their own to fight back.

Using the Internet's capability to broadcast information instantly
worldwide, groups such as the Council of Canadians and Malaysia-based the
Third World Network have been able to keep each other informed of the
latest developments and supply information gleaned in one country that
may
prove embarrassing to a government in another.

By pooling their information they have broken through the wall of
secrecy that traditionally surrounds international negotiations, forcing
governments to deal with their complaints.

"We are in constant contact with our allies in other countries," said
Maude Barlow, the Council of Canadians' chairwoman. "If a negotiator says
something to someone over a glass of wine, we'll have it on the Internet
within an hour, all over the world."

The success of that networking was clear this week when ministers from
the 29 countries in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development admitted that the global wave of protest had swamped the
deal.

"This is the first successful Internet campaign by non-governmental
organizations," said one diplomat involved in the negotiations. "It's
been
very effective."

The OECD, which represents largely the major industrial economies,
yesterday halted the negotiations aimed at developing international rules
for foreign investment, similar to those for trade in goods. It is
unclear
when, or even if, the OECD will try again.

The irony in this outcome is that the OECD, which has been an ardent
advocate of globalization and has done much research into its effects,
did
not recognize that advocacy groups would use cyber-globalization to
further their own ends.

OECD secretary-general Donald Johnston conceded that the OECD was
caught
flat-footed: "It's clear we needed a strategy on information,
communication and explication," he told a press conference.

The OECD's efforts to harness the Internet have not caught up in
colour,
content and consumer friendliness to those of the advocacy groups.

For example, the OECD report released this week on the benefits of
opening markets to trade and investment is a compilation of statistics
and
analysis written in language more readily understood by economists than
by
the average person. Instead of finding examples of real people who have
benefited from globalization to help trade ministers make this case, the
report repeats many of the same statistics on economic growth, investment
and the dangers of protectionism.

By comparison, hundreds of advocacy groups, in attempting to galvanize
opposition to the MAI, used terms and examples that brought their message
home to the public. Their sites on the Internet's Worldwide Web are
colourful and easy to use, offering primers on the MAI that anyone could
understand.

Canadian Trade Minister Sergio Marchi has taken the OECD to task for
its
poor communications effort, although he agrees some of the blame must be
shared by the member governments. He said the lesson he has learned is
that "civil society" -- meaning public interest groups -- should be
engaged much sooner in a negotiating process, instead of governments
trying to negotiate around them.

Ms. Barlow of the Council of Canadians, which says it has more than
100,000 members, called the OECD report on the benefits of globalization
"pathetic." In an interview in Paris, where she was taking part in a
protest against the MAI, Ms. Barlow said the immediacy of the Internet
has
changed the dynamics of advocacy campaigns.

She is a veteran of the campaigns against the Canada-U.S. free-trade
agreement and the North American free-trade agreement. The Internet was
not in widespread use when those campaigns were conducted.

Today, however, advocacy groups make sure useful information ends up in
the right hands right away. "If we know something that is sensitive to
one
government, we get it to our ally in that country instantly," she said.
"I
don't think governments will ever be able to do these kind of secret
trade
negotiations again."

For example, when the Council of Canadians got its hands on a draft
version of the MAI last year, it immediately posted it on its Web site
and
made sure allies around the world knew it was there through E-mail
correspondence.

The Internet also provides a low-cost way for groups in the Third World
to get their message out and keep on top of developments. "All they need
is one computer," Ms. Barlow said.

The major Internet sites of these advocacy groups provide hyperlinks
to
others involved in the campaign, as well as phone numbers and E-mail
addresses, and often bibliographies of relevant books.

It adds up to a powerful tool that the advocacy groups are using to
better effect than governments and the OECD at the moment. Ms. Barlow
predicts that this advantage may not last now that the OECD members have
seen its potential. "They'll be revving up their PR machines."

But so are the advocacy groups. The next stage, she said, is to start
making suggestions about what should be in trade agreements, rather than
just opposing what the negotiators propose.

The groups are already trading ideas on solutions, and another aspect
of
globalization -- the growing spread of English -- is easing their way.
"Pretty well everybody speaks English," said Ms. Barlow.

"It's the universal language."

Tony Clarke, director of the Canadian Polaris Institute, stresses that
anti-MAI groups such as his are not against all aspects of globalization
-- their use of the Internet itself is proof of that.

"We're against this model of economic globalization," he said,
referring to the MAI. "But the global village, the idea of coming
together
and working together, is a great dream."

Related Web sites

The Council of Canadians and the Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development:
www.canadians.org
http://www.oecd.org

Chris Gethin (Mr)
Development Manager
Consumers International
24 Highbury Crescent
London N5 1RX
Tel: +44 171 226 6663 x202
Fax: +44 171 354 0607
email: cgethin@consint.org
Website: http://www.consumersinternational.org

--WebTV-Mail-1582693893-3741--

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