I didn’t post last week’s topic: it was mil­it­ary sexual slavery and dealt with Japan­ese com­fort women and Bos­nian rape camps and I didn’t really need to dis­cuss what I was doing. I used a tutorial tech­nique called the jigsaw to get dif­fer­ent groups to dis­cuss aspects of the issues, then split them into a new con­fig­ur­a­tion of small groups to con­trast and com­pare on the wider topic, fit­ting together the ‘jigsaw’. It seemed to work well and was more con­struct­ive, I think, for a topic that threatened to become deeply depress­ing and dis­heart­en­ing. In the end, I got them to con­nect what hap­pens in war time with what hap­pens in peace­time and to talk about the ways we can change peace­time social­isa­tion to affect war-time beha­viour. They came up with an inter­est­ing obser­va­tion I hadn’t actu­ally made before: that rape, pros­ti­tu­tion and forced mar­riage in peace­time is more likely to be done to you by someone you know, while in war time it is more likely to be done by a stranger.

This week’s topic is right on my area of interest: the global eco­nomy and women’s rights, together at last. As many of you know, I’ve been involved with the protest move­ment against glob­al­ised cap­ital since at least the J18 Car­ni­val Against Cap­it­al­ism in 1999, then the fight against the Mul­ti­lat­eral Agree­ment on Invest­ment (MAI) which we won (amaz­ingly), then to S11 in 2000 at the World Trade Centre at South­bank and up to the G20 protest in Novem­ber 2006. My fem­in­ism goes back to my high school days and my public par­ti­cip­a­tion to Reclaim the Night marches in the early 90s. Now that I think about it, the Reclaim the Streets car­ni­vals in New­town and Glebe in the early 90s could be framed as anti-cap­it­al­ist, anti-con­sumer­ist car­ni­vals too.

This week’s read­ings include one of my heroes, Vandana Shiva. My plan is to show the stu­dents the video from The Story of Stuff, talk a little about free trade and its impact on rural eco­nom­ies and women (either left behind as men move to the cities to find work after tariff removal guts the primary pro­duc­tion of the coun­try or moving them­selves to work in factor­ies and the vicious cycle of urban poverty this pro­duces as the coun­try is less and less able to provide for its own needs); the gut­ting of sub­sist­ence and sus­tain­able eco­nom­ies; the privat­isa­tion of water in places like Bolivia (before Mor­ales, obvi­ously, and have people heard what’s going on this week with Mor­ales, Chavez and the US gov­ern­ment???); and then ask them to make the con­nec­tions between first world luxury and this. I don’t need to go into the his­tory, because Sheila did Adam Smith, Milton Fried­man, John Maynard Keynes, the Bretton-Woods insti­tu­tions (WTO, IMF, World Bank) and then did some of the fem­in­ist response from a the­or­et­ical perspective.

To me, this topic is one we’re really making head­way with – the global envir­on­mental move­ment is con­nect­ing with the global indi­gen­ous move­ment is con­nect­ing with the global anti-cap­it­al­ist/so­cial justice move­ment and I feel power­fully pos­it­ive about our impact. If you want a primer on the move­ment, a book I read last year and found inspir­ing was Blessed Unrest: How the Largest Move­ment in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw It Coming by Paul Hawken.