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Showing posts with label New Internationalist magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New Internationalist magazine. Show all posts

Friday, 16 October 2020

Agenda for a Caring Economy

 A news 'scoop' that I was told about at Sandalls Newsagent, Sandall Road, Hereford HR4 told me of when I got my print copy of Hereford Times yesterday was that the November-December 2020 issue of New Internationalist magazine is now in print. (That 'scoop' has not yet made it to the New Internationalist home page!)

New Internationalist magazine, Nov-Dec 2020 cover



 In the 'editor's letter', Amy Hall writes:

Home Truths

 An innocent question: "How are you feeling about the care magazine?" my housemate asked me over coffee. "Angry" was my answer, in fact, I've spent a large part of the Covid-19 pandemic feeling this way, with the issue of care a major focal point of my rage.

 I'm vexed about the glaring inequality in who does care work and domestic labour — in the 'wider world' and in my personal life. I'm enraged about the lack of recognition and the disrespect often displayed for the (mostly) women and/or racialised people doing this work and how they, along with people who may need their care, are treated as expendable.

But there is hope: 2020 has demonstrated our interdependence and plenty of people have shown up to make sure people are cared for — friend or stranger. There has also been an outpouring of public appreciation. Over the peak of the pandemic here in Britain, Thursday evening's 'clap for carers' was a highlight for my nurse housemate and her three year old, who would bang on everyone's bedroom doors to remind us. Although many key workers loved it, for others the applause was hollow without concrete changens to their pay and working conditions.

This issue's Big Story explores care in its widest sense and its, often conveniently ignored, relationship with the wider economy. In the magazine we hear from people who are navigating this in a system which too often treats them with contempt.

Elsewhere in this edition, Stepanie Boyd reports from the Peruvian Amazon on how indigenous people, especially hard hit by the pandemic, are fighting for survival. Rahia Gupta makes the case for 'political blackness' and our food justice series questions the rise of food banks as a solution to world hunger.

And I know from my past as a Community Care magazine reader from 1998 to 2011 — ie, before it lost its interest for service user and unpaid carers' issues and focused more on the managerialism and privatisation agendas that Social Work Action Network (SWAN) opposes — and Green Party of England & Wales Spokesperson on Social Care between 2008 and 2011, of the enormous undervaluing of carers in the UK economy. One of the online articles that Community Care magazine website has not yet jetisoned is 

https://www.communitycare.co.uk/2009/07/16/change-the-terms-of-carers-allowance-to-allow-more-carers-to-work/

I was also in contact with CarerWatch, an online network of family-based carers. 


Carer Watch Blog homepage, 16 Oct 2020
The Carer Watch Blog was last update 6 March 2017 —
Testimony to the burnout carers experience under ever-increasing
"lack of recognition and the disrespect often displayed for the (mostly) women
and/or racialised people doing this work and how they,
along with people who may need their care,
are treated as expendable,"
as Amy Hall's New Internationalist editor's letter describes the issue



Further, I would mention that Gingerbread One Parent Families website alerted me to the fact that 1/7 of single parent families were family carers of disabled children, or were themselves disabled, while the Tory Conference spin kept asserting that the benefits system was overloaded with feckless teenage parents. Gingerbread sources for those figures? Department for Work & Pensions data!

Gingerbread: Single Parents Facts & Figures
Gingerbread: Single Parents Facts & Figures

Further, there is https://globalwomenstrike.net/

 

#Care Income Now - Global Women's Strike
#CareIncomeNow!
for all Caring Work for People & Planet


New Internationalist magazine print edition, priced at £7.45, can be ordered through good newsagents. 

New Internationalist: The Hidden Debt of Care
New Internationalist: The Hidden Debt of Care —
Covid-19 has pushed the world' caregivers to the limit and
beyond. Amy Hall explains how their work continues to be
undermined and undervalued

 

 

Alan Wheatley

 

Global economy as debtor's prison — Newint

This is the current lead article at New Internationalist magazine homepage:

It's official: The Global Economy is a Debtor's Prison - newint.org 20 Oct 2020
New Internationalist online lead story, 16 Oct 2020:
It's official: The Global Economy is a 'Debtor's Prison'

 This is the current lead story at New Internationalist magazine home page:

It’s official, the global economy is a ‘debtor’s prison’

As the World Bank and IMF sound the alarm on debts driven sky high by Covid-19 in some of the world’s poorest nations, Nick Dearden explains why debt ‘relief’ will not cut it – we need system change....

More at https://newint.org/features/2020/10/14/official-global-economy-debtors-prison

Monday, 14 October 2019

New Internationalist: The assault on Rojava

Turkey
Kurdish YPJ fighters embrace in Afrin, a city now occupied by Turkey since January 2018. Credit: Kurdishstruggle/Flickr
On 9 October, Turkey began a military invasion on northern Syria to attack the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). It’s an open secret that Turkey has been waiting in the wings for an opportunity to annihilate the Kurdish autonomous region Rojava in northeastern Syria, ever since it was established in 2012 while Assad’s attention was focused on the civil uprising, part of the Arab Spring, in the south.

According to President Erdoğan of Turkey, the Kurdish struggle for self-determination, in south-east Turkey, led by the PKK (Partiya Karkerên Kurdistanê) which is proscribed by the authorities as ‘terrorist’, is closely related to the PYD (Democratic Union Party) in Rojava.

There is no doubt that theirs is a shared ideology, one that has been formulated by their joint leader, Abdullah Öcalan, now in his 21st year of incarceration in a Turkish prison.  But the PYD’s organizing principle is democratic confederalism: a system of direct democracy, ecological sustainability and ethnic inclusivity, where women have veto powers on new legislation and share all institutional positions with men....

[Continue reading at https://newint.org/features/2019/10/11/assault-rojava ]

Friday, 30 August 2019

Debt slavery of a nation disastrous for planet Earth

I preface this intro to a New Internationalist magazine online article by stating that I am in favour of the UK remaining in the European Union. The EU is not perfect in my view, and should be reformed from within. And as a member state of the EU as well as being one of the G8 economies of the world, the UK potentially can help transform the EU as an agent to reverse Climate Catastrophe tipping point.

I note though that the EU's European Central Bank — together with the International Monetary Fund and World Bank — has operated like an economic and environmental criminal regarding the formulation of land usage for former Soviet Bloc nations Poland and the Czech Republic, toward orienting those nations' economies toward fossil fuel extraction and large scale farming for export.

Naomi Klein has written of how the Troica [IMF, World Bank and European Central Bank] perverted the prospects for the Polish economy by way of "debt slavery" of a nation. The events also form the backdrop to Andrzej Stasiuk's novel 'Nine'. See The Portrayal of Despair in Poland after 1989: Stasiuk's 'Nine' and Melanie Klein's 'The Shock Doctrine'.

For more on the EU's Common Agricultural Policy's impact on Poland, for example, see Compassion In World Farming's review of Julian Day Rose's 2013 book In Defence of Life. More recently, the 'Conference of Parties' [to an international agreement aimed at limiting global emissions of greenhouse gases] COP24 was hosted in Poland. You can read up at New Internationalist website of how the purpose of those talks was perverted by commercial sponsorship.
https://newint.org/search?key=cop24+poland+fossil+fuels&sort_by=search_api_relevance

More recently the impact of the European Central Bank on the Greek economy has become infamous in terms of the hardships of the Greek people, yet the environmental impact of such debt slavery is only just emerging, as Zoe Holman outlines at New Internationalist:

Greece opens its arms — and seas — to hydrocarbon giants








The Syriza Party leader was first elected on a promise to scrap the draconian terms for a bailout set by the European Union and the IMF. He later went back on his pledge, accepting the EU's mandated austerity measures.
One afternoon in early July, Jenny Pyliou looked out onto her land, part of a protected nature reserve in Thesprotia, northeastern Greece, to see a group of researchers for the Spanish energy company Repsol sticking rods with explosive devices into one of her fields. Her husband called the police,  who on arrival, instructed the workers to remove the instruments, noting that oil exploration activities had not be approved in the area.

The following day, the men returned to reinstall the devices, informing the Pylious that they were extremely costly and that the couple would be liable for any damage if they removed them. Such antics by the oil companies, who get up to them with relative impunity, are what Greeks can now expect more of following the government’s licensing in late June of major hydrocarbon exploration by oil giants ExxonMobil and Total.

‘Now that Pandora’s box has been opened, this issue is going to stay with us – one way or another, Greece will be labelled as an oil country,’ says Giorgos Velegrakis, a post-doctoral researcher on the history of oil in Greece at the University of Athens and a member of the nationwide Initiative Against Hydrocarbon Exploration. ‘This was out of the question a decade ago, but now you never know what will happen.’ ....

Former Finance Minister of Greece, Yanis Varoufakis, has written illuminatingly regarding the debt trap, and I commend:
Meanwhile, I believe that the current state of Greece surrendering its national sovereignty to major agents of Climate Catastrophe may give an indication of what might be included in Boris Johnson's ' 'bold new agenda' for the UK Parliament.

The HydroCarbon Industry is truly a nasty face of global industry despite all its greenwash

The purveyors of non-renewable energy from hydro-carbons seek to profit from the colder winters that global warming is bringing on: they have as much compassion for their customers as heroin and cocaine pushers have for theirs. There might not currently be laws against what they do, but ....

Much better for the UK and the globe are Fuel Poverty Action and its agenda.

I close with a youtube reference to an American tale of how mining destroyed a family home and its surrounds in western Kentucky. It's a Jean Ritchie song that I've treasured for over 40 years, and a much lighter song that she recorded with Oscar Brand, 'A Paper of Pins'.





Alan Wheatley