adobe indesign database Buy Adobe Illustrator CS5 for Mac OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe creative suite 3 contents adobe photoshop cs upgrade windows Buy Adobe Illustrator CS5 OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe indesign cs2 warez adobe indesign free downloads Buy Adobe Creative Suite 5 Master Collection OEM - Online Software Downloads Center open sourc corel draw adobe illustrator adobe photoshop free online tutorial Buy Adobe Flash Professional CS5 for Mac OEM - Online Software Downloads Center fonts for adobe photoshop cs adobe creative suite 2 Buy Adobe Flash Professional CS5 OEM - Online Software Downloads Center purchase adobe photoshop cs2 transparent colour gif in adobe photoshop Buy Adobe Photoshop CS5 Extended for Mac OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe indesign cs palettes adobe photoshop and not elements cs Buy Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 for Mac OEM - Online Software Downloads Center oem adobe photoshop cs2 download adobe photoshop 7.01 Buy Adobe InDesign CS5 for Mac OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe indesign xml adobe photoshop 6 upgrade Buy Adobe InDesign CS5 OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe cs3 keygenerator dreamweaver adobe illustrator tutorials post cards Buy Adobe Creative Suite 5 Master Collection for Mac OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe photoshop black and white images adobe creative free photo suite Buy Adobe Dreamweaver CS5 OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe illustrator course outline adobe photoshop elements 5.0 photo editing Buy Adobe Photoshop CS5 Extended OEM - Online Software Downloads Center adobe cs3 photoshop oem

Posts Tagged ‘Aotearoa New Zealand’

Globalisation — what are the negative impacts?

Tuesday, August 9th, 2005

Andrew Colgan

What is Globalisation?
Globalisation is the buzz word on everybody’s lips in the 21st century. But what does it mean? It basically means the world is getting smaller in just about every sense, except for geographically. Exchange is becoming more rapid, travel more feasible, communication faster and more accessible, advertising and media more widespread and movement of money more free-flowing.

Globalisation’s winners and losers
But globalisation is causing huge problems. Those who appear to be in control of the process (transnational corporations (TNCs), multilateral institutions and governments of wealthy industrialised nations) don’t seem to have the interests of everybody in mind. Consequently, economic and financial globalisation is happening at a rate disproportionate to all other developments. Economists and world leaders speak in terms of revenue, exchange, capital movement, structural adjustment and interest. Such concepts as emotion, cultural identity equality, environmental protection and social benefit seem to be foreign and are left out of the equation.

Some problems caused by Globalisation

The resulting problems are huge, and hit women, children and those on the periphery (especially in poorer countries) the hardest. These problems include:

  • Exploitation in employment — as well as appalling wages and working conditions, in many cases women and children are abducted and forced to work in oppressive factories or as sex workers.
  • The rise of the HIV / AIDS pandemic, displacement and longer working hours resulting in the orphaning and abandonment of children.
  • Neglect of the sick, illiterate, disabled and elderly as governments’ priorities shift towards economic growth and servicing of public debt.

The role of International institutions
The fate of many poorer or “developing” nations lies in the hands of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation (WTO). Claims that Structural Adjustment Programs (SAPs) are in the best interest of those poorer nations, and not simply for the benefit of the wealthy creditors of these International Financial Institutions (IFIs), are dubious at best. The liberalisation of trade by the WTO has meant a removal of tariffs. Now only governments which can afford to pay subsidies can protect their producers. The complexity of international trade often makes it difficult to understand how huge disparities come about. Some excellent examples are given in a Christian Aid video called “Nuts”.

The problems with Transnational Corporations
Transnational corporations (TNCs) are quietly gaining dangerously unaccountable political power in both rich and poor countries. For example:

  • Finland is home of the mobile phone company Nokia. This company is so big that it accounts for 2/3 of the stock exchange, 1/5 of all exports, a significant proportion of the country’s tax revenue and employs over 22,00 Finns. By threatening to remove production to another country, Nokia effectively holds the Finnish government to ransom and so has a great influence in its political decision making.
  • Wal-mart is a huge American department store. Its clothing range is produced in factories in Bangladesh, taking advantage of the fact that there are no minimum wage laws there. Wal-mart is 55 times the size of the entire Bangladesh economy. By threatening to remove production to another impoverished (and therefore cheap) country, it has negotiated a deal with the government so it no longer pays a single cent of taxes.

The widening gap between the rich and poor
Despite extensive plundering of the world’s natural resources, this wealth has been shared less and less equally and extreme poverty remains. The gap between rich and poor is growing on a local and an international level:

  • The richest 20% of the world’s population enjoy 86% of its resources while the poorest 20% must survive with a little over 1%.
  • The 225 richest people in the world have the equivalent income to the poorest 2.25 billion.
  • The world’s 3 richest people have fortunes equivalent to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of the world’s poorest 36 countries.
  • 200 million children never start school (3/4 of these are girls). The amount needed to send these children to school each year is less than the amount spent on cosmetics in the USA and less than half the amount spent on ice-cream in Europe.


The Homogenisation of a Global Youth Culture

The growth of advertising and the entertainment media is contributing to the rising of a homogenous global youth culture. In New Zealand it is now estimated that we see on average over 3000 advertisements every day. Young people are made to feel insecure through “image advertising” and then told consumption is the answer to their insecurities. The result is a rise in individualism and a lack of compassion and care for others. People are encouraged to care more about money and image than family and community. Perhaps this plays a part in the high youth suicide rate in New Zealand. The other adverse effect of this global youth culture is that we are seeing people all around lose their unique cultural identities in pursuit of a branded western culture. In many ways, diversity is fighting a losing battle against globalisation.

LEARN MORE

Try googling any of these subjects and you’ll find heaps of articles and discussion — but here’s a selection to start you off…

Sweatshops
Corporation Watch — exposing sweatshops
Article in A World Connected
The feminist perspective

Child labour
Human Rights Watch
UNICEF

Trafficking
Human Rights Watch
United Nations

HIV and AIDS — stats, info, aid agencies etc
Young People and AIDS
UN Report (June 2005) on the impact on young people

International Financial Institutions (IFIs)

Watching the IFIs
US Network for Economic Justice

Debt
Jubilee Debt Campaign
Article in Global Issues on Debt

Corporations
Corporation Watch — holding corporations accountable
Corporate Watch

TAKE ACTION!

  • Read an article on this by the same author, Andrew Colgan : Youth Response to Globalisation

Flooding in New Zealand and Around the World: A Comparison of Environmental Extremities

Monday, August 1st, 2005

Kate Thompson

In February 2004, Wellington and the Manawatu region were affected with the worst flooding in recorded history. Then in July of the same year, the eastern Bay of Plenty region was hit even harder. They were subjected to severe flooding and they then had to cope with a consistent attack of earthquakes that lasted for a number of days, adding insult to injury. flooded house

In comparison to the natural disasters happening around the world, the New Zealand floods and earthquakes appear insignificant. Although there were two women who died in the Bay of Plenty region, the Bangladesh floods claimed the lives of at least 628 people and 1,627 died in South Asia in 2004, according to the English newspaper the Independent. The devastation that covered nearly two thirds of Bangladesh in water left Bangladeshis desperate for food and shelter.

This is not to say that people in the Bay of Plenty didn’t also suffer from the harsh blow of rain and earthquakes that was inflicted upon them. Around 2000 people were forced from their homes and had to receive emergency accommodation after they were evacuated. The situation in South Asia, however, far outstripped our own again in this department. There were literally millions of South Asians who had their homes destroyed, were exposed to water born disease (such as diarrhoea) and were quite simply living in poverty.

Just like in New Zealand, transport paths in Bangladesh were closed because of the sheer extent of flooding that occurred. The worst was in the capital, Dhaka where sewage systems collapsed and boats became the dominant form of transport.

It is in these moments of comparison that we can truly appreciate just how well off we really are in New Zealand when it comes to enduring the extremities of the elements.

LEARN MORE

The Bay of Plenty Council information on Tsunamis and flooding
Flooding in Bangladesh

Life under the Taleban

Thursday, October 9th, 2003

Before escaping to New Zealand, AMINA LAFARAIE, and her family were forced to hide from the Taleban in the city of Kabul in Afghanistan. This is her story of her experience.

I was thirteen when we had to leave our home and hide. My heart was pounding heavily. My mother was pale and shaking, my sisters and brother crying. My father sat quietly in a corner.
“What if they come again?” Mum asked weeping.
Just a few minutes ago we could have lost my father. They would have taken him away and we would not, ever, see him again.
The soldiers were at the neighbour’s house. They were searching all homes. They wanted cars, men to send to battlefields and money.
This time, by some miracle and Almighty God’s protection, they missed this house. But the door might be knocked or broken anytime.

We had to escape.

In hiding…
I was sick but could not go to the hospital. Fortunately my aunt’s husband was a doctor. He came to check me three times a day.
It was 5:00 pm. I had a high fever and felt my entire body burning. I lay down in the old room.
Outside, it was grey and raining. As if the sky knew my situation and was shedding tears for me. Inside, three buckets were placed under the ceiling cracks from which water was seeping. The paint of the faded green walls had pealed off.
I looked at my father’s troubled face. He was forty-seven, but seemed years older. He was sitting beside me reading a book.
Tears glistened in Mum’s tired brown eyes as she placed ice towels on my forehead, hands and feet. I thought back to the day we had to come here.


City of the Dead People

The next day we woke up early. It was September 27, 1996 — three days after my thirteenth birthday.
We were listening to the radio. It did not start with the usual national anthem. We all knew what had happened.
Our beautiful city was now in the hands of strangers. They made it a prison for us.
Every woman was forced to wear the Burqa — covering herself from head to toe. No education or job for females. No music, television or any sort of entertainment for old or young.
After a few months the Kabul City became known as the City of the Dead People.

Hidden from the world
My parents, two sisters, brother and I had to live in this one room. During the war the windows had broken. Only thin plastic shielded us from the cold winter wind.
All day long we sat in this small room studying, reading storybooks, playing with each other, only occasionally glancing out the window. We could not even go out to the yard — the neighbours may see us and inform the Taliban.
It was even worse when a guest visited our relative. We had to sit in one spot for hours without moving around the room or talking. Only a curtain separated the living room from the room we used.
We did not like this place. We wanted to go home. We wanted our normal lives back. We had committed no crime. Why were we being tortured?
We planned to go back home, but then another tragedy happened.
The Taliban had gone to our house asking for my father. My uncle did not tell them of our whereabouts.
He was arrested. They imprisoned him in another city, hundreds of miles away from home, where we had no relatives or friends to visit him.
After this incident we had no choice. We had to stay hidden from the whole world. We could not let them know where we were. They would come and take my father away from us, forever.
The doorknob turned. My aunt’s husband was there for my check-up. He greeted me with a gentle smile, but the trouble and pain in his eyes and tightened face told us all he was worried.
I was lying in my deathbed. I was expected to close my eyes any minute and never have them open again.
“Will I ever enjoy the pleasure of freedom?” was a question recorded in my mind and played repeatedly…

Freedom
I feel warm tears running down my cheek. My heart is aching as I am remembering that horrible time in my life.
The feeling is still strong. It was the most difficult time in my life. It is hard to forget — it is part of me and my identity. It makes me appreciate much more the new life in New Zealand I have begun.
My family and I are free and happy now. We have a future to look forward to. I leave the porch and enter the house. I will call my friend and have a long nice chat.

Check out her interview with Paul Zoubkov on Amina’s life in New Zealand, memories of Kabul and the recent war in Afghanistan.
This article was written as part of Global Focus a collaborative project of Tearaway Magazine and the Global Education Centre. It was first published in Tearaway magazine and is reprinted here with their permission