World Social Forum at the Crossroads
Walden Bello
Source:Transnational
Institute @
http://www.tni.org/detail_page.phtml?act_id=16771
Foreign
Policy in Focus, 4 May 2007
After a disappointing World Social Forum
(WSF) in Nairobi, Walden Bello asks whether it is still the most
appropriate vehicle for the new stage in the struggle of the global
justice and peace movement.
A
new stage in the evolution of the global justice movement was reached
with the inauguration of the World Social Forum (WSF) in Porto
Alegre, Brazil, in January 2001.
The WSF was the brainchild of
social movements loosely associated with the Workers' Party (PT) in
Brazil. Strong support for the idea was given at an early stage by
the ATTAC movement in France, key figures of which were connected
with the newspaper Le Monde Diplomatique. In Asia, the Brazilian
proposal, floated in June 2000, received the early enthusiastic
endorsement of, among others, the research and advocacy institute
Focus on the Global South based in Bangkok.
Porto Alegre was
meant to be a counterpoint to "Davos," the annual event in
a resort town in the Swiss Alps where the world's most powerful
business and political figures congregated annually to spot and
assess the latest trends in global affairs. Indeed, the highlight of
the first WSF was a televised transcontinental debate between George
Soros and other figures in Davos with representatives of social
movements gathered in Porto Alegre.
The world of Davos was
contrasted to the world of Porto Alegre, the world of the global rich
with the world of the rest of humanity. It was this contrast that
gave rise to the very resonant theme "Another world is
possible."
There was another important symbolic
dimension: while Seattle was the site of the first major victory of
the transnational anti-corporate globalization movement -- the
collapse amidst massive street protests of the third ministerial
meeting of the World Trade Organization -- Porto Alegre represented
the transfer to the South of the center of gravity of that movement.
Proclaimed as an "open space," the WSF became a magnet for
global networks focused on different issues, from war to
globalization to communalism to racism to gender oppression to
alternatives. Regional versions of the WSF were spun off, the most
important being the European Social Forum and the African Social
Forum; and in scores of cities throughout the world, local social
fora were held and institutionalized.
The Functions of the
WSF
Since its establishment, the WSF has performed three
critical functions for global civil society:
First, it
represents a space -- both physical and temporal -- for this diverse
movement to meet, network, and, quite simply, to feel and affirm
itself.
Second, it is a retreat during which the movement
gathers its energies and charts the directions of its continuing
drive to confront and roll back the processes, institutions, and
structures of global capitalism. Naomi Klein, author of No Logo,
underlined this function when she told a Porto Alegre audience in
January 2002 that the need of the moment was "less civil society
and more civil disobedience."
Third, the WSF provides a
site and space for the movement to elaborate, discuss, and debate the
vision, values, and institutions of an alternative world order built
on a real community of interests. The WSF is, indeed, a macrocosm of
so many smaller but equally significant enterprises carried out
throughout the world by millions who have told the reformists, the
cynics, and the "realists" to move aside because, indeed,
another world is possible…and necessary.
Direct Democracy
in Action
The WSF and its many offspring are significant not
only as sites of affirmation and debate but also as direct democracy
in action. Agenda and meetings are planned with meticulous attention
to democratic process. Through a combination of periodic face-to-face
meetings and intense email and Internet contact in between, the WSF
network was able to pull off events and arrive at consensus
decisions. At times, this could be very time-consuming and also
frustrating, and when you were part of an organizing effort involving
hundreds of organizations, as we at Focus on the Global South were
during the organizing of the 2004 WSF in Mumbai, it could be very
frustrating indeed.
But this was direct democracy, and direct
democracy was at its best at the WSF. One might say, parenthetically,
that the direct democratic experiences of Seattle, Prague, Genoa, and
the other big mobilizations of the decade were institutionalized in
the WSF or Porto Alegre process.
The central principle of the
organizing approach of the new movement is that getting to the
desired objective is not worth it if the methods violate democratic
process, if democratic goals are reached via authoritarian means.
Perhaps Subcomandante Marcos of the Zapatistas best expressed the
organizing bias of the new movements: "The movement has no
future if its future is military. If the EZLN [Zapatistas]
perpetuates itself as an armed military structure, it is headed for
failure. Failure as an alternative set of ideas, an alternative
attitude to the world. The worst that could happen to it apart from
that, would be for it to come to power and install itself there as a
revolutionary army." The WSF shares this perspective.
What
is interesting is that there has hardly been an attempt by any group
or network to "take over" the WSF process. Quite a number
of "old movement" groups participate in the WSF, including
old-line "democratic centralist" parties as well as
traditional social democratic parties affiliated with the Socialist
International. Yet none of these has put much effort into steering
the WSF towards more centralized or hierarchical modes of organizing.
At the same time, despite their suspicion of political parties, the
"new movements" never sought to exclude the parties and
their affiliates from playing a significant role in the Forum.
Indeed, the 2004 WSF in Mumbai was organized jointly by an unlikely
coalition of social movements and Marxist Leninist parties, a set of
actors that are not known for harmonious relations on the domestic
front.
Perhaps a compelling reason for the modus vivendi of
the old and new movements was the realization that they needed one
another in the struggle against global capitalism and that the
strength of the fledgling global movement lay in a strategy of
decentralized networking that rested not on the doctrinal belief that
one class was destined to lead the struggle but on the reality of the
common marginalization of practically all subordinate classes,
strata, and groups under the reign of global capital.
What
Constitutes "Open Space"
The WSF has, however, not
been exempt from criticism, even from its own ranks. One in
particular appears to have merit. This is the charge that the WSF as
an institution is unanchored in actual global political struggles,
and this is turning it into an annual festival with limited social
impact.
There is, in my view, a not insignificant truth to
this. Many of the founders of the WSF have interpreted the "open
space" concept in a liberal fashion, that is, for the WSF not to
explicit endorse any political position or particular struggle,
though its constituent groups are free to do so.
Others have
disagreed, saying the idea of an "open space" should be
interpreted in a partisan fashion, as explicitly promoting some views
over others and as openly taking sides in key global struggles. In
this view, the WSF is under an illusion that it can stand above the
fray, and this will lead to its becoming some sort of neutral forum,
where discussion will increasingly be isolated from action. The
energy of civil society networks derives from their being engaged in
political struggles, say proponents of this perspective. The reason
that the WSF was so exciting in its early years was because of its
affective impact: it provided an opportunity to recreate and reaffirm
solidarity against injustice, against war, and for a world that was
not subjected to the rule of empire and capital. The WSF's not taking
a stand on the Iraq War, on the Palestine issue, and on the WTO is
said to be making it less relevant and less inspiring to many of the
networks it had brought together.
Caracas versus Nairobi
This
is why the 6th WSF held in Caracas in January 2006 was so bracing and
reinvigorating: it inserted some 50,000 delegates into the storm
center of an ongoing struggle against empire, where they mingled with
militant Venezuelans, mostly the poor, engaged in a process of social
transformation, while observing other Venezuelans, mostly the elite
and middle class, engaged in bitter opposition. Caracas was an
exhilarating reality check.
This is also the reason why the
Seventh WSF held in Nairobi was so disappointing, since its politics
was so diluted and big business interests linked to the Kenyan ruling
elite were so brazen in commercializing it. Even Petrobras, the
Brazilian state corporation that is a leading exploiter of the
natural resource wealth of Latin America, was busy trumpeting itself
as a friend of the Forum. There was a strong sense of going backward
rather than forward in Nairobi.
The WSF is at a crossroads.
Hugo Chavez captured the essence of the conjuncture when he warned
delegates in January 2006 about the danger of the WSF becoming simply
a forum of ideas with no agenda for action. He told participants that
they had no choice but to address the question of power: "We
must have a strategy of 'counter-power.' We, the social movements and
political movements, must be able to move into spaces of power at the
local, national, and regional level."
Developing a
strategy of counter-power or counter-hegemony need not mean lapsing
back into the old hierarchical and centralized modes of organizing
characteristic of the old left. Such a strategy can, in fact, be best
advanced through the multilevel and horizontal networking that the
movements and organizations represented in the WSF have excelled in
advancing their particular struggles. Articulating their struggles in
action will mean forging a common strategy while drawing strength
from and respecting diversity.
After the disappointment that
was Nairobi, many long-standing participants in the Forum are asking
themselves: Is the WSF still the most appropriate vehicle for the new
stage in the struggle of the global justice and peace movement? Or,
having fulfilled its historic function of aggregating and linking the
diverse counter-movements spawned by global capitalism, is it time
for the WSF to fold up its tent and give way to new modes of global
organization of resistance and transformation?