The conflict
over the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) is a struggle
between different blocs, argued John Hilary, Executive Director of the NGO War on Want and Honorary Professor at
Nottingham University, in a presentation at the Centre for the Study of
Social and Global Justice (CSSGJ) on Monday, 24 November. This not, however,
between Europe and the USA or Europe together with the USA against Asia, but
between capital on the one hand, and labour, the environment and the people on
the other. In this blog post, I will discuss key points of John Hilary’s
presentation covering the contents of TTIP, its dangers as well as the mounting
resistance against it.
Thursday, 27 November 2014
Friday, 21 November 2014
Forget a ‘fair wage for a fair day’s work’?
Struggles between trade unions and employers are first and foremost
about wages. What constitutes a ‘fair wage for a fair day’s work’? Indeed, one
of trade unions’ biggest success has been to obtain higher wage levels by
organising workers into a collective social force, ready to go on strike
together if needed. Calls for an increase in the official minimum wage or a
living wage are equally over concerns of what constitutes proper remuneration
for particular services of labour offered. In this post, I will critically
examine the potential of struggles for higher wages for broader changes to
inequality and injustice in society.
Thursday, 13 November 2014
The Struggle for Public Water in Italy
On 9 October, I
gave the paper ‘Sic Vos Non Vobis’ – ‘For You, But Not Yours’: The struggle
for public water in Italy at the Department of Political
Economy, University of Sydney . The paper is about the Italian Water
Movements Forum (Forum), a broad alliance of trade unions, social movements,
development NGOs and environmental groups, and its successful mobilisation for
a referendum against the privatisation of water in June 2011 (see also Road
to Victory). Trade unions and other social movements find it often
difficult to co-operate due to their different histories and institutional
structures, as argued in an article on the European
Social Forum. In this blog post, I will analyse how the Italian Water
Movements Forum was able to bring together such a wide range of different
groups into a successful campaign.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)