• Contre le faux pardon et pour les autonomies

    CNI

    https://lavoiedujaguar.net/Contre-le-faux-pardon-et-pour-les-autonomies

    Aujourd’hui, quand Andrés Manuel López Obrador demande pardon au peuple maya, nous nous demandons : qu’est-ce qui vient avec ce « pardon » ? D’un côté, il parle de demander pardon, mais de l’autre il fait comme Porfirio Díaz à l’époque. Avec le pardon, il amène de grandes entreprises, sources de pillage, d’accumulation pour quelques-uns et de misère pour les peuples. Les militaires : agents de la violence et des disparitions les plus cruelles de notre histoire récente. Le développement : le progrès vu depuis l’Occident ; la richesse pour quelques-uns ; un mode d’exploitation et de pillage qui privilégie la mort et se perpétue depuis plus de cinq siècles, depuis la conquête de ce qu’ils ont appelé les Amériques, qui est imposé et détruit d’autres formes de vie, comme les nôtres, les peuples indigènes, les peuples mayas que nous sommes. Le mal nommé Train maya, et de nombreux autres grands projets, comme les industries immobilières et touristiques, les parcs éoliens et photovoltaïques, les semences transgéniques et les exploitations agricoles en sont les représentants.

    À quoi sert-il de demander pardon aux peuples mayas quand celui qui demande pardon représente, comme Porfirio Díaz, l’alliance déclarée avec les grandes entreprises et les militaires, la poursuite de la dévastation des forêts qui nous entourent et nous donnent la vie ; la pollution des eaux que nous ne pouvons plus consommer ; la spoliation du territoire que nous avons habité pendant des siècles et qu’ils veulent nous arracher ; et la terrible exploitation de notre peuple maya par le biais dudit « développement » qui nous rend esclave et nous tue. (...)

    #Mexique #peuples_mayas #Yucatán #López_Obrador #Porfirio_Díaz #développement #dévastation

  • The power of private philanthropy in international development

    In 1959, the Ford and Rockefeller Foundations pledged seven million US$ to establish the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) at Los Baños in the Philippines. They planted technologies originating in the US into the Philippines landscape, along with new institutions, infrastructures, and attitudes. Yet this intervention was far from unique, nor was it spectacular relative to other philanthropic ‘missions’ from the 20th century.

    How did philanthropic foundations come to wield such influence over how we think about and do development, despite being so far removed from the poor and their poverty in the Global South?

    In a recent paper published in the journal Economy and Society, we suggest that metaphors – bridge, leapfrog, platform, satellite, interdigitate – are useful for thinking about the machinations of philanthropic foundations. In the Philippines, for example, the Ford and Rockefeller foundations were trying to bridge what they saw as a developmental lag. In endowing new scientific institutions such as IRRI that juxtaposed spaces of modernity and underdevelopment, they saw themselves bringing so-called third world countries into present–day modernity from elsewhere by leapfrogging historical time. In so doing, they purposively bypassed actors that might otherwise have been central: such as post–colonial governments, trade unions, and peasantry, along with their respective interests and demands, while providing platforms for other – preferred – ideas, institutions, and interests to dominate.

    We offer examples, below, from three developmental epochs.

    Scientific development (1940s – 70s)

    From the 1920s, the ‘big three’ US foundations (Ford, Rockefeller, Carnegie) moved away from traditional notions of charity towards a more systematic approach to grant-making that involved diagnosing and attacking the ‘root causes’ of poverty. These foundations went on to prescribe the transfer of models of science and development that had evolved within a US context – but were nevertheless considered universally applicable – to solve problems in diverse and distant lands. In public health, for example, ‘success against hookworm in the United States helped inspire the belief that such programs could be replicated in other parts of the world, and were indeed expanded to include malaria and yellow fever, among others’. Similarly, the Tennessee Valley Authority’s model of river–basin integrated regional development was replicated in India, Laos, Vietnam, Egypt, Lebanon, Tanzania, and Brazil.

    The chosen strategy of institutional replication can be understood as the development of satellites––as new scientific institutions invested with a distinct local/regional identity remained, nonetheless, within the orbit of the ‘metropolis’. US foundations’ preference for satellite creation was exemplified by the ‘Green Revolution’—an ambitious programme of agricultural modernization in South and Southeast Asia spearheaded by the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations and implemented through international institutions for whom IRRI was the template.

    Such large-scale funding was justified as essential in the fight against communism.

    The Green Revolution offered a technocratic solution to the problem of food shortage in South and Southeast Asia—the frontier of the Cold War. Meanwhile, for developmentalist regimes that, in the Philippines as elsewhere, had superseded post-independence socialist governments, these programmes provided a welcome diversion from redistributive politics. In this context, institutions like IRRI and their ‘miracle seeds’ were showcased as investments in and symbols of modernity and development. Meanwhile, an increasingly transnational agribusiness sector expanded into new markets for seeds, agrichemicals, machinery, and, ultimately, land.

    The turn to partnerships (1970s – 2000s)

    By the 1970s, the era of large–scale investment in technical assistance to developing country governments and public bureaucracies was coming to an end. The Ford Foundation led the way in pioneering a new approach through its population programmes in South Asia. This new ‘partnership’ mode of intervention was a more arms-length form of satellite creation which emphasised the value of local experience. Rather than obstacles to progress, local communities were reimagined as ‘potential reservoirs of entrepreneurship’ that could be mobilized for economic development.

    In Bangladesh, for example, the Ford Foundation partnered with NGOs such as the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC) and Concerned Women for Family Planning (CWFP) to mainstream ‘economic empowerment’ programmes that co-opted local NGOs into service provision to citizens-as-consumers. This approach was epitomised by the rise of microfinance, which merged women’s empowerment with hard-headed pragmatism that saw women as reliable borrowers and opened up new areas of social life to marketization.

    By the late-1990s private sector actors had begun to overshadow civil society organizations in the constitution of development partnerships, where state intervention was necessary to support the market if it was to deliver desirable outcomes. Foundations’ efforts were redirected towards brokering increasingly complex public-private partnerships (PPPs). This mode of philanthropy was exemplified by the Rockefeller Foundation’s role in establishing product development partnerships as the institutional blueprint for global vaccine development. Through a combination of interdigitating (embedding itself in the partnership) and platforming (ensuring its preferred model became the global standard), it enabled the Foundation to continue to wield ‘influence in the health sphere, despite its relative decline in assets’.

    Philanthrocapitalism (2000s – present)

    In the lead up to the 2015 UN Conference at which the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were agreed, a consensus formed that private development financing was both desirable and necessary if the ‘trillions’ needed to close the ‘financing gap’ were to be found. For DAC donor countries, the privatization of aid was a way to maintain commitments while implementing economic austerity at home in the wake of the global finance crisis. Philanthrocapitalism emerged to transform philanthropic giving into a ‘profit–oriented investment process’, as grant-making gave way to impact investing.

    The idea of impact investing was hardly new, however. The term had been coined as far back as 2007 at a meeting hosted by the Rockefeller Foundation at its Bellagio Centre. Since then, the mainstreaming of impact investing has occurred in stages, beginning with the aforementioned normalisation of PPPs along with their close relative, blended finance. These strategies served as transit platforms for the formation of networks shaped by financial logics. The final step came with the shift from blended finance as a strategy to impact investing ‘as an asset class’.

    A foundation that embodies the 21st c. transition to philanthrocapitalism is the Omidyar Network, created by eBay founder Pierre Omidyar in 2004. The Network is structured both as a non–profit organization and for–profit venture that ‘invests in entities with a broad social mission’. It has successfully interdigitated with ODA agencies to further align development financing with the financial sector. In 2013, for example, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) launched Global Development Innovation Ventures (GDIV), ‘a global investment platform, with Omidyar Network as a founding member’.

    Conclusion

    US foundations have achieved their power by forging development technoscapes centred in purportedly scale–neutral technologies and techniques – from vaccines to ‘miracle seeds’ to management’s ‘one best way’. They have become increasingly sophisticated in their development of ideational and institutional platforms from which to influence, not only how their assets are deployed, but how, when and where public funds are channelled and towards what ends. This is accompanied by strategies for creating dense, interdigitate connections between key actors and imaginaries of the respective epoch. In the process, foundations have been able to influence debates about development financing itself; presenting its own ‘success stories’ as evidence for preferred financing mechanisms, allocating respective roles of public and private sector actors, and representing the most cost–effective way to resource development.

    Whether US foundations maintain their hegemony or are eclipsed by models of elite philanthropy in East Asia and Latin America, remains to be seen. Indications are that emerging philanthropists in these regions may be well placed to leapfrog over transitioning philanthropic sectors in Western countries by ‘aligning their philanthropic giving with the new financialized paradigm’ from the outset.

    Using ‘simple’ metaphors, we have explored their potential and power to map, analyse, theorize, and interpret philanthropic organizations’ disproportionate influence in development. These provide us with a conceptual language that connects with earlier and emergent critiques of philanthropy working both within and somehow above the ‘field’ of development. Use of metaphors in this way is revealing not just of developmental inclusions but also its exclusions: ideascast aside, routes not pursued, and actors excluded.

    https://developingeconomics.org/2021/05/10/the-power-of-private-philanthropy-in-international-development

    #philanthropie #philanthrocapitalisme #développement #coopération_au_développement #aide_au_développement #privatisation #influence #Ford #Rockefeller #Carnegie #soft_power #charité #root_causes #causes_profondes #pauvreté #science #tranfert #technologie #ressources_pédagogiques #réplique #modernisation #fondations #guerre_froide #green_revolution #révolution_verte #développementalisme #modernité #industrie_agro-alimentaire #partnerships #micro-finance #entrepreneuriat #entreprenariat #partenariat_public-privé (#PPP) #privatisation_de_l'aide #histoire #Omidyar_Network #Pierre_Omidyar

  • Translation as a contributor to human rights in the Global South

    This research project investigates the critical role of translation in establishing an equal, two-way dialogue between Northern NGOs and the people they work with in the Global South. The project considers translation, in written and oral form, as a contributor to communities’ empowerment in two ways: as a tool that provides access to information; and as a tool that enables people to be heard. The project focuses on human rights advocacy organisations, because language rights are part of the human rights agenda.

    https://sites.google.com/view/translation-as-empowerment
    #traduction #empowerment #développement #coopération_au_développement #aide_au_développement #empowerment #accès_à_l'information #écoute #droits_humains #interprétation

  • First ever village-level mapping of childhood undernutrition in India reveals sharp local disparities | News | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

    https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/press-releases/first-ever-village-level-mapping-of-childhood-undernutrition-in-india-

    Boston, MA – The risk of childhood undernutrition varies widely among villages in India, according to new research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in collaboration with researchers at Harvard’s Center for Geographic Analysis, Harvard’s Center for Population and Development Studies, Korea University, Microsoft, and the Government of India.

    The study is the first to predict and map the burden of childhood undernutrition across all of the nearly 600,000 villages in rural India, and the methods developed to do so could be applied to other health indicators and help advance the field of “precision public health,” in which interventions and policies are tailored to smaller populations that are disproportionally affected by specific health issues, according to the study’s authors.

    #inde #cartographie #inégalité #développement #Malnutrition #enfance

  • Les actions civiles et militaires de la France dans les pays du G5 Sahel | Cour des comptes
    https://www.ccomptes.fr/fr/publications/les-actions-civiles-et-militaires-de-la-france-dans-les-pays-du-g5-sahel

    La Cour a enquêté sur la stratégie de la France dans les pays du G5 Sahel (Burkina Faso, Mali, Mauritanie, Niger et Tchad) et la cohérence des actions civiles et militaires dans la région, au service de la sécurité de ces États et du développement économique et social de leurs populations.
    La France a déclaré l’espace sahélien, l’une des régions du monde les plus déshéritées, prioritaire pour l’aide au développement. Si les dépenses françaises y ont plus que doublé, passant de 580 M€ à 1,35 Md€ entre 2012 et 2018, la majorité de ces sommes concerne des dépenses militaires. L’aide publique au développement n’a pas suivi la même progression et la priorité affichée tarde à se traduire dans les faits.
    Concernant la présence militaire française, l’extension progressive du périmètre d’intervention et la diversification des objectifs rendent incertains les critères qui permettront d’évaluer si un terme satisfaisant a été atteint, pour la France et pour le Sahel. Un bilan d’étape paraît nécessaire, notamment afin de préciser ces critères.
    Les complémentarités entre actions militaires et civiles d’aide à la stabilisation et au développement doivent être recherchées et se traduire dans l’organisation de la réponse française, notamment avec une coordination interministérielle renforcée. La Cour formule quatre recommandations à cette fin.

    #Sahel #AidePubliqueauDéveloppement #Armée #Barkhane #Développement

  • La fabrique européenne de la race (17e-20e siècles)

    Dans quelle galère sommes-nous allé•es pointer notre nez en nous lançant dans ces réflexions sur la race ? Complaisance à l’air du temps saturé de références au racisme, à la #racialisation des lectures du social, diront certain•es. Nécessaire effort épistémologique pour contribuer à donner du champ pour penser et déconstruire les représentations qui sous-tendent les violences racistes, pensons-nous.

    Moment saturé, on ne peut guère penser mieux… ou pire. Évidemment, nous n’avions pas anticipé l’ampleur des mobilisations contre les #violences_racistes de cet été aux États-Unis, mais nous connaissons leur enracinement dans la longue durée, l’acuité récente des mobilisations, que ce soit « #black_lives_matter » aux États-Unis ou les #mobilisations contre les #violences_policières qui accablent les plus vulnérables en France. L’enracinement aussi des #représentations_racialisées, structurant les fonctionnements sociaux à l’échelle du globe aujourd’hui, d’une façon qui apparaît de plus en plus insupportable en regard des proclamations solennelles d’#égalité_universelle du genre humain. Nous connaissons aussi l’extrême #violence qui cherche à discréditer les #protestations et la #révolte de celles et ceux qui s’expriment comme #minorité victime en tant que telle de #discriminations de races, accusé•es ici de « #terrorisme », là de « #communautarisme », de « #séparatisme », de vouloir dans tous les cas de figure mettre à mal « la » république1. Nous connaissons, associé à cet #antiracisme, l’accusation de #complot dit « #décolonial » ou « postcolonial », qui tente de faire des spécialistes des #colonisations, des #décolonisations et des #rapports_sociaux_racisés des vecteurs de menaces pour l’#unité_nationale, armant le mécontentement des militant•es2. Les propos haineux de celles et ceux qui dénoncent la #haine ne sont plus à lister : chaque jour apporte son lot de jugements aussi méprisants que menaçants. Nous ne donnerons pas de noms. Ils ont suffisamment de porte-voix. Jusqu’à la présidence de la République.

    3L’histoire vise à prendre du champ. Elle n’est pas hors sol, ni hors temps, nous savons cela aussi et tout dossier que nous construisons nous rappelle que nous faisons l’histoire d’une histoire.

    Chaque dossier d’une revue a aussi son histoire, plus ou moins longue, plus ou moins collective. Dans ce Mot de la rédaction, en septembre 2020, introduction d’un numéro polarisé sur « l’invention de la race », nous nous autorisons un peu d’auto-histoire. Les Cahiers cheminent depuis des années avec le souci de croiser l’analyse des différentes formes de domination et des outils théoriques comme politiques qui permettent leur mise en œuvre. Avant que le terme d’« #intersectionnalité » ne fasse vraiment sa place dans les études historiennes en France, l’#histoire_critique a signifié pour le collectif de rédaction des Cahiers la nécessité d’aborder les questions de l’#exploitation, de la #domination dans toutes leurs dimensions socio-économiques, symboliques, dont celles enracinées dans les appartenances de sexe, de genre, dans les #appartenances_de_race. Une recherche dans les numéros mis en ligne montre que le mot « race » apparaît dans plus d’une centaine de publications des Cahiers depuis 2000, exprimant le travail de #visibilisation de cet invisible de la #pensée_universaliste. Les dossiers ont traité d’esclavage, d’histoire coloniale, d’histoire de l’Afrique, d’histoire des États-Unis, de l’importance aussi des corps comme marqueurs d’identité : de multiples façons, nous avons fait lire une histoire dans laquelle le racisme, plus ou moins construit politiquement, légitimé idéologiquement, est un des moteurs des fonctionnements sociaux3. Pourtant, le terme d’ « intersectionnalité » apparaît peu et tard dans les Cahiers. Pour un concept proposé par Kimberlé Crenshaw dans les années 1990, nous mesurons aujourd’hui les distances réelles entre des cultures historiennes, et plus globalement sociopolitiques, entre monde anglophone et francophone, pour dire vite4. Effet d’écarts réels des fonctionnements sociaux, effets de la rareté des échanges, des voyages, des traductions comme le rappelait Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch dans un entretien récent à propos des travaux des africanistes5, effet aussi des constructions idéologiques marquées profondément par un contexte de guerre froide, qui mettent à distance la société des États-Unis comme un autre irréductible. Nous mesurons le décalage entre nos usages des concepts et leur élaboration, souvent dans les luttes de 1968 et des années qui ont suivi. Aux États-Unis, mais aussi en France6. Ce n’est pas le lieu d’évoquer la formidable énergie de la pensée des années 1970, mais la créativité conceptuelle de ces années, notamment à travers l’anthropologie et la sociologie, est progressivement réinvestie dans les travaux historiens au fur et à mesure que les origines socioculturelles des historiens et historiennes se diversifient. L’internationalisation de nos références aux Cahiers s’est développée aussi, pas seulement du côté de l’Afrique, mais du chaudron étatsunien aussi. En 2005, nous avons pris l’initiative d’un dossier sur « L’Histoire de #France vue des États-Unis », dans lequel nous avons traduit et publié un auteur, trop rare en français, Tyler Stovall, alors professeur à l’université de Berkeley : bon connaisseur de l’histoire de France, il développait une analyse de l’historiographie française et de son difficile rapport à la race7. Ce regard extérieur, venant des États-Unis et critique de la tradition universaliste française, avait fait discuter. Le présent dossier s’inscrit donc dans un cheminement, qui est aussi celui de la société française, et dans une cohérence. Ce n’était pas un hasard si en 2017, nous avions répondu à l’interpellation des organisateurs des Rendez-vous de l’histoire de Blois, « Eurêka, inventer, découvrir, innover » en proposant une table ronde intitulée « Inventer la race ». Coordonnée par les deux responsables du présent dossier, David Hamelin et Sébastien Jahan, déjà auteurs de dossiers sur la question coloniale, cette table ronde avait fait salle comble, ce qui nous avait d’emblée convaincus de l’utilité de répondre une attente en préparant un dossier spécifique8. Le présent dossier est le fruit d’un travail qui, au cours de trois années, s’est avéré plus complexe que nous ne l’avions envisagé. Le propos a été précisé, se polarisant sur ce que nous avions voulu montrer dès la table-ronde de 2017 : le racisme tel que nous l’entendons aujourd’hui, basé sur des caractéristiques physiologiques, notamment la couleur de l’épiderme, n’a pas toujours existé. Il s’agit bien d’une « #invention », associée à l’expansion des Européens à travers le monde à l’époque moderne, par laquelle ils justifient leur #domination, mais associée aussi à une conception en termes de #développement, de #progrès de l’histoire humaine. Les historien•nes rassemblée•es ici montrent bien comment le racisme est enkysté dans la #modernité, notamment dans le développement des sciences du 19e siècle, et sa passion pour les #classifications. Histoire relativement courte donc, que celle de ce processus de #racialisation qui advient avec la grande idée neuve de l’égalité naturelle des humains. Pensées entées l’une dans l’autre et en même temps immédiatement en conflit, comme en témoignent des écrits dès le 17e siècle et, parmi d’autres actes, les créations des « #sociétés_des_amis_des_noirs » au 18e siècle. Conflit en cours encore aujourd’hui, avec une acuité renouvelée qui doit moins surprendre que la persistance des réalités de l’#inégalité.

    5Ce numéro 146 tisse de bien d’autres manières ce socle de notre présent. En proposant une synthèse documentée et ambitieuse des travaux en cours sur les renouvellements du projet social portés pour son temps et pour le nôtre par la révolution de 1848, conçue par Jérôme Lamy. En publiant une défense de l’#écriture_inclusive par Éliane Viennot et la présentation de son inscription dans le long combat des femmes par Héloïse Morel9. En suivant les analyses de la nouveauté des aspirations politiques qui s’expriment dans les « #têtes_de_cortège » étudiées par Hugo Melchior. En rappelant à travers expositions, films, romans de l’actualité, les violences de l’exploitation capitaliste du travail, les répressions féroces des forces socialistes, socialisantes, taxées de communistes en contexte de guerre froide, dans « les Cahiers recommandent ». En retrouvant Jack London et ses si suggestives évocations des appartenances de classes à travers le film « Martin Eden » de Pietro Marcello, et bien d’autres évocations, à travers livres, films, expositions, de ce social agi, modelé, remodelé par les luttes, les contradictions, plus ou moins explicites ou sourdes, plus ou moins violentes, qui font pour nous l’histoire vivante. Nouvelle étape de l’exploration du neuf inépuisable des configurations sociales (de) chaque numéro. Le prochain sera consacré à la fois à la puissance de l’Église catholique et aux normes sexuelles. Le suivant à un retour sur l’histoire du Parti communiste dans les moments où il fut neuf, il y a cent ans. À la suite, dans les méandres de ce social toujours en tension, inépuisable source de distance et de volonté de savoir. Pour tenter ensemble de maîtriser les fantômes du passé.

    https://journals.openedition.org/chrhc/14393

    #histoire #race #Europe #revue #racisme

    ping @cede @karine4

  • On doit toujours apprendre des erreurs passées : aujourd’hui on a une conscience #écologique plus poussée, et on ne peut pas reproduire le modèle asiatique de #développement qui a un coût environnemental très important même s’il a réduit la #pauvreté. Les règles de commerce, les régimes de propriété intellectuelle rendent difficile l’#industrialisation de l’#Afrique. Mais les atouts de l’Afrique doivent être mis en évidence : les coûts de l’#énergie renouvelable sont devenus compétitifs, et l’Afrique peut directement aller vers les énergies renouvelables. La première difficulté n’est pas #technologique, c’est celui de la fiscalité, qui protège un tissu industriel basé sur les énergies #fossiles, et qui est très difficile à défaire, comme on a pu le voir en France avec les Gilets Jaunes.

    (Carlos Lopes)
    #cartographie #projection #mercator #Libre
    https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/la-grande-table-idees/carlos-lopes-afrique-quels-futurs-possibles

  • « Ce guide présente les principales bonnes pratiques de design pour réaliser des services numériques [en pratique, uniquement Web] à l’empreinte environnementale réduite. Il aborde les questions d’éco-conception en tentant de faire le pont avec l’accessibilité, l’économie de l’attention ou encore la diversité. »

    https://eco-conception.designersethiques.org/guide

    #environnement #green_IT #éco_conception #développement_Web

    • C’est évidemment une bonne idée de faire de tels guides, ne serait-ce que pour servir de « check-list » aux développeurs Web, et pour les sensibiliser au fait que leurs choix ont des conséquences.

      Après, beaucoup des conseils concrets donnés sont très contestables.

      Et pas un mot de la suppression des pisteurs et des pubs sur les sites Web. C’est l’écologie corporate, où il ne faut pas fâcher le marketing.

  • Éducation et développement durable : quand le volontarisme politique se réduit à un effet d’annonce... de ce qui existe déjà

    On sait qu’aujourd’hui l’action politique repose avant tout sur des effets d’annonce.
    Ce qui ne cesse de surprendre, c’est qu’avec LREM, lorsqu’il s’agit de décisions plutôt positives sur le fond, elles se réduisent presque systématiquement à des effets d’annonce... de trucs qui existent déjà.

    La décision telle que présentée dans un tweet de LCP :

    “Les députés adoptent l’article 2 du projet de loi #ClimatResilience. Il prévoit l’éducation à l’environnement "tout au long de la formation scolaire", notamment sur le "changement climatique et la préservation de la biodiversité". #DirectAN #LoiClimat
    Source : https://twitter.com/LCP/status/1369671608927916032

    L’existant sur les sites du MEN :
    – La circulaire de septembre dernier où Blanquer dit qu’il a modifié les programmes dans l’été et qu’un vademecum "identifie des ressources utiles et accompagne les enseignements relatifs au changement climatique, au développement durable, à la biodiversité dans chaque cycle de formation pour la rentrée 2020".
    Source : https://www.education.gouv.fr/bo/20/Hebdo36/MENE2025449C.htm
    – Le “vademecum pour éduquer au développement durable à l’horizon 2030” sur Eduscol, accompagné de tout un tas de ressources et de dispositifs déjà existants dans l’Éducation Nationale (label E3D, éco-délégués, semaine du climat à l’école, etc.)
    Source : https://eduscol.education.fr/1117/education-au-developpement-durable
    – Le détail du contenu de cette éducation au développement durable sur l’ensemble des niveaux de formation du système scolaire, contenu fondé sur la “Charte de l’environnement” de 2004.
    Source : https://www.education.gouv.fr/l-education-au-developpement-durable-7136
    – des éléments de communication ministérielle avec liens vers des mises en œuvre concrètes et deux paragraphes intitulés "2015, une année particulière pour l’éducation au développement durable" et "2019 : L’École se mobilise face au changement climatique" qui inscrivent cette mobilisation du ministère et de notre système scolaire dans la durée.
    Source : https://eduscol.education.fr/1118/qu-est-ce-que-l-education-au-developpement-durable

    Évidemment, pour une réelle montée en puissance d’une “éducation au développement durable”, ce qu’il faudrait ce sont du temps de concertation pour la mise en œuvre de ces dispositifs et de la formation continue pour accompagner les enseignant·es à les faire vivre, mais il est indubitablement moins coûteux de faire voter aux député·es, en mars 2021, la circulaire de rentrée 2020.

    #éducation #développement_durable

  • #Développement_humain (2020)

    - L´#indice_de_développement_humain et ses composantes
    – L´évolution de l´indice de développement humain
    – L´indice de développement humain ajusté aux #inégalités
    – L´indice de développement de #genre
    – L´indice d´#inégalités_de_genre
    – Indice de #pauvreté multidimensionnelle : pays en développement
    – Tendances démographiques
    #Santé
    – Niveaux d´#instruction
    #Revenu_national et composition des ressources
    #Travail et #emploi
    #Sécurité_humaine
    #Mobilité humaine et flux de capitaux
    – Qualité du développement humain
    – Inégalités femmes-hommes sur le cycle de vie
    – Autonomisation des #femmes
    #Durabilité_environnementale
    – Viabilité socio-économique

    http://www.cartostat.eu/dr=2020_developpement_humain/F/TABLEAU.html

    #cartothèque #cartes #visualisations #développement_humain
    #ressources_pédagogiques #statistiques #chiffres #monde
    #inégalités #démographie #éducation #mobilité_humaine #dette #tourisme #migrations #téléphone #téléphone_mobile #mortalité_infantile #paludisme #tuberculeuse #VIH #HIV #scolarisation #alphabétisation #PIB #chômage #réfugiés #IDPs #déplacés_internes #suicide #suicides #violence_domestique #violence_conjugale #alimentation #déficit_alimentaire #espérance_de_vie #lits_d'hôpitaux #soins #médecin #PISA #électricité #eau_potable #assainissement #travail_domestique #accouchement #contraception #congé_maternité #combustibles_fossiles #CO2 #émissions_de_CO2 #forêt #engrais #industrie_agro-alimentaire #pollution #pollution_atmosphérique #hygiène #dépenses_militaires #armée #pauvreté

    ping @reka

  • Decolonisation and humanitarian response

    As part of our annual Careers in Humanitarianism Day, we were joined by:

    #Juliano_Fiori (Save the Children, and PhD Candidate at HCRI)
    – Professor #Patricia_Daley (Oxford University)
    – Professor #Elena_Fiddian-Qasmiyeh (UCL)

    in discussion (and sometimes disagreement!) on the notions of humanitarianism and decolonisation.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLcf7O1Y_SOZQ24s6vCT8rtR9ANGs0nzEi&v=BSTjc3YCH9I&feature=youtu.b


    #décolonialité #décolonialisme #humanitaire #conférence

    ping @cede @isskein @karine4

    • Migration, Humanitarianism, and the Politics of Knowledge —> An Interview with #Juliano_Fiori.

      Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh: In this issue of Migration and Society we are interested in the overarching theme of “Recentering the South in Studies of Migration.” Indeed, it is increasingly acknowledged that studies of and policy responses to migration and displacement often have a strong Northern bias. For instance, in spite of the importance of different forms of migration within, across, and between countries of the “global South” (i.e., “South-South migration”), there is a significant tendency to focus on migration from “the South” to countries of “the North” (i.e., South-North migration), prioritizing the perspectives and interests of stakeholders associated with the North. Against this backdrop, what is your position with regard to claims of Eurocentrism in studies of and responses to migration?

      Juliano Fiori: To the extent that they emerge from immanent critiques of colonialism and liberal capitalism, I am sympathetic toward them.1 Decentering (or provincializing) Europe is necessarily an epistemological project of deconstruction. But to contribute to a counterhegemonic politics, this project must move beyond the diagnosis of epistemicide to challenge the particular substance of European thought that has produced systems of oppression.

      The idea of “decolonizing the curriculum” is, of course, à la mode (Sabaratnam 2017; Vanyoro 2019). It is difficult to dispute the pedagogical necessity to question epistemic hierarchies and create portals into multiple worlds of knowledge. These endeavors are arguably compatible with the exigencies of Enlightenment reason itself. But, though I recognize Eurocentrism as an expression of white identity politics, I am wary of the notion that individual self-identification with a particular body of knowledge is a worthy or sufficient end for epistemic decolonization—a notion I associate with a prevalent strain of woke post-politics, which, revering the cultural symbols of late capitalism but seeking to resignify them, surely produces a solipsistic malaise. Decolonization of the curriculum must at least aim at the reconstruction of truths.

      Eurocentrism in the study of human migration is perhaps particularly problematic—and brazen—on account of the transnational and transcultural histories that migrants produce. Migrants defy the neat categorization of territories and peoples according to civilizational hierarchies. They redefine the social meaning of physical frontiers, and they blur the cultural frontier between Self and Other. They contribute to an intellectual miscegenation that undermines essentialist explanations of cultural and philosophical heritage. Migration itself is decentering (Achiume 2019).

      And it is largely because of this that it is perceived as a threat. Let’s consider Europe’s contemporary backlash against immigration. The economic argument about the strain immigration places on the welfare state—often framed in neo-Malthusian terms—can be readily rebutted with evidence of immigrants’ net economic contribution. But concerns about the dethroning of “European values” are rarely met head-on; progressive political elites have rather responded by doubling down on calls for multiculturalism from below, while promoting universalism from above, intensifying the contradictions of Eurocentricity.

      It is unsurprising that, in the Anglophone world, migration studies developed the trappings of an academic discipline—dedicated university programs, journals, scholarly societies—in the late 1970s, amid Western anxieties about governing increased emigration from postcolonial states. It quickly attracted critical anthropologists and postcolonial theorists. But the study of the itinerant Other has tended to reinforce Eurocentric assumptions. Migration studies has risen from European foundations. Its social scientific references, its lexicon, its institutional frameworks and policy priorities, its social psychological conceptions of identity—all position Europe at the zero point. It has assembled an intellectual apparatus that privileges the Western gaze upon the hordes invading from the barrens. That this gaze might be cast empathetically does nothing to challenge epistemic reproduction: Eurocentrism directs attention toward the non-Western Other, whose passage toward Europe confirms the centrality of Europe and evokes a response in the name of Eurocentrism. To the extent that Western scholars focus on South-South migration, the policy relevance of their research is typically defined by its implications for flows from South to North.

      The Eurocentrism of responses to forced migration by multinational charities, UN agencies, and the World Bank is not only a product of the ideological and cultural origins of these organizations. It also reflects the political interests of their principal donors: Western governments. Aid to refugees in countries neighboring Syria has been amply funded, particularly as the European Union has prioritized the containment of Syrians who might otherwise travel to Europe. Meanwhile, countries like India, South Africa, and Ivory Coast, which host significant numbers of regional migrants and refugees, receive proportionally little attention and support.

      It is an irony of European containment policies that, while adopted as a measure against supposed threats to Europeanness, they undermine the moral superiority that Eurocentrism presupposes. The notion of a humanitarian Europe is unsustainable when European efforts to deter immigration are considered alongside the conditions accepted for other regions of the world. A continent of more than half a billion people, Europe hosts just under 2.3 million refugees; Lebanon, with a population of six million, hosts more than 1.5 million refugees from Syria alone. It should be noted that, in recent years, European citizens’ movements have mobilized resources to prevent the death of people crossing the Mediterranean. Initiatives like Alarm Phone, Open Arms, Sea Watch, and SOS MEDITERRANEE seem to represent a politicized humanitarianism for the network age. But in their overt opposition to an emboldened ethnonationalist politics, they seek to rescue not only migrants and refugees, but also an idea of Europe.

      EFQ: How, if at all, do you engage with constructs such as “the global North,” “the global South,” and “the West” in your own work?

      JF: I inevitably use some of these terms more than others, but they are all problematic in a way, so I just choose the one that I think best conveys my intended meaning in each given context. West, North, and core are not interchangeable; they are associated with distinct, if overlapping, ontologies and temporalities. As are Third World, South, and developing world.

      I try to stick to three principles when using these terms. The first is to avoid the sort of negative framing to which your work on South-South encounters has helpfully drawn attention (i.e., Fiddian-Qasmiyeh 2015, 2018; Fiddian-Qasmiyeh and Daley 2018). When we come across one of these terms being deployed negatively, it invariably describes that which is not of the West or of the North. As such, it centers Europe and North America, and it opens up an analytical terrain on which those residing beyond the imagined cultural bounds of these regions tend to be exoticized. When I need to frame something negatively, I try to do so directly, using the appropriate prefix.

      Second, I try to avoid setting up dichotomies and continuities. Placing East and West or North and South in opposition implies entirely dissimilar bodies, separated by a definite, undeviating frontier. But these terms are mutually constitutive, and it is rarely clear where, or even if, a frontier can be drawn. Such dichotomies also imply a conceptual equilibrium: that what lies on one side of the opposition is ontologically equivalent to what lies on the other. But the concept of the West is not equivalent to what the East represents today; indeed, it is questionable whether a concept of the East is now of much analytical value. South, West, North, and East might be constructed dialectically, but their imagined opposites are not necessarily their antitheses. Each arguably has more than one counterpoint.

      Similarly, I generally don’t use terms that associate countries or regions with stages of development—most obviously, least developed, developing, and developed. They point toward a progressivist and teleological theory of history to which I don’t subscribe. (The world-systems concepts of core, semiperiphery, and periphery offer a corrective to national developmental mythologies, but they are nonetheless inscribed in a systemic teleology.) The idea of an inexorable march toward capitalist modernity—either as the summit of civilization or as the point of maximum contradiction—fails to account for the angles, forks, and dead ends that historical subjects encounter. It also tends to be founded on a Eurocentric and theological economism that narrows human experience and, I would argue, mistakenly subordinates the political.

      Third, I try to use these terms conceptually, without presenting them as fixed unities. They must be sufficiently tight as concepts to transmit meaning. But they inevitably obscure the heterogeneity they encompass, which is always in flux. Moreover, as concepts, they are continuously resignified by discursive struggles and the reordering of the interstate system. Attempts to define them too tightly, according to particular geographies or a particular politics, can give the impression that they are ahistorical. Take Boaventura de Sousa Santos’s definition of the South, for example. For Santos, the South is not a geographical concept: he contends that it also exists in the geographical North (2014, 2016). Rather, it is a metaphor for the human suffering caused by capitalism and colonialism. It is anticapitalist, anticolonialist, antipatriarchal, and anti-imperialist. According to this definition, the South becomes representative of a particular left-wing politics (and it is negative). It thus loses its utility as a category of macrosociological analysis.

      Ultimately, all these terms are problematic because they are sweeping. But it is also for this reason that they can be useful for certain kinds of systemic analysis.

      EFQ: You have written on the history of “Western humanitarianism” (i.e., Fiori 2013; Baughan and Fiori 2015). Why do you focus on the “Western” character of humanitarianism?

      JF: I refer to “Western humanitarianism” as a rejoinder to the fashionable notion that there is a universal humanitarian ethic. Within both the Anglophone academy and the aid sector, it has become a commonplace that humanitarianism needs to be decolonized, and that the way to do this is to recognize and nurture “local” humanitarianisms around the world. In the last decade and a half, enthusiasm for global history has contributed to broader and more sophisticated understandings of how humanitarian institutions and discourses have been constructed. But it has also arguably contributed to the “humanitarianization” of different altruistic impulses, expressions of solidarity, and charitable endeavors across cultures.

      The term “humanitarian” was popularized in English and French in the first half of the nineteenth century, and it soon became associated with humanistic religion. It thus connoted the existence of an ideal humanity within every individual and, as Didier Fassin (2012) has argued, it has come to represent the secularization of the Christian impulse to life. It was used to describe a wide range of campaigns, from abolition and temperance to labor reform. But all promoted a rationalist conception of humanity derived from European philosophy. That is, an abstract humanity, founded upon a universal logos and characterized by the mind-body duality. What is referred to today as the “humanitarian system”—of financial flows and liberal institutions—has been shaped predominantly by Western power and political interests. But the justification for its existence also depends upon the European division between the reasoned human and the unreasoned savage. The avowed purpose of modern humanitarianism is to save, convert, and civilize the latter. To cast modern humanitarian reason as a universal is to deny the specificity of ethical dispositions born of other conceptions of humanity. Indeed, the French philosopher François Jullien (2014) has argued that the concept of “the universal” itself is of the West.

      Of course, there are practices that are comparable to those of Western humanitarian agencies across different cultures. However, claiming these for humanitarianism sets them on European foundations, regardless of their author’s inspiration; and it takes for granted that they reproduce the minimalist politics of survival with which the Western humanitarian project has come to be associated.

      So why not refer to “European humanitarianism”? First, because it must be recognized that, as a set of evolving ethical practices, humanitarianism does not have a linear intellectual genealogy. European philosophy itself has of course been influenced by other traditions of thought (see Amin 1989; Bevilacqua 2018; Hobson 2004; Patel 2018): pre-Socratic Greek thinkers borrowed from the Babylonians, the Persians, and the Egyptians; Enlightenment philosophes had exchanges with Arab intellectuals. Second, reference to the West usefully points to the application of humanitarian ideas through systems of power.

      Since classical antiquity, wars and ruptures have produced various narratives of the West. In the mid-twentieth century, essentialist histories of Western civilization emphasized culture. For Cold War political scientists, West and East often represented distinct ideological projects. I refer to the West as something approaching a sociopolitical entity—a power bloc—that starts to take form in the early nineteenth century as Western European intellectuals and military planners conceive of Russia as a strategic threat in the East. This bloc is consolidated in the aftermath of World War I, under the leadership of the United States, which, as net creditor to Europe, shapes a new liberal international order. The West, then, becomes a loose grouping of those governments and institutional interests (primarily in Europe and North America) that, despite divergences, have been at the forefront of efforts to maintain and renew this order. During the twentieth century, humanitarians were sometimes at odds with the ordering imperatives of raison d’état, but contemporary humanitarianism is a product of this West—and a pillar of liberal order.2

      EFQ: With this very rich historically and theoretically grounded discussion in mind, it is notable that policy makers and practitioners are implementing diverse ways of “engaging” with “the global South” through discourses and practices of “partnership” and supporting more “horizontal,” rather than “vertical,” modes of cooperation. In turn, one critique of such institutionalized policy engagement is that it risks instrumentalizing and co-opting modes of so-called South-South cooperation and “hence depoliticising potential sources of resistance to the North’s neoliberal hegemony” (Fiddian-Qasmiyeh and Daley 2018: 2). Indeed, as you suggested earlier, it has been argued that policy makers are strategically embracing “South-South migration,” “South-South cooperation,” and the “localisation of aid agenda” as efficient ways both “to enhance development outcomes” and to “keep ‘Southerners’ in the South,” as “part and parcel of Northern states’ inhumane, racist and racialised systems of border and immigration control” (Fiddian-Qasmiyeh and Daley 2018: 19). What, if any, are the dangers of enhancing “policy engagement” with “the South”? To what extent do you think that such instrumentalization and co-option can be avoided?

      JF: The term “instrumentalization” gives the impression that there are circumstances under which policy engagement can be objectively just and disinterested. Even when framed as humanitarian, the engagement of Western actors in the South is inspired by a particular politics. Policy engagement involves an encounter of interests and a renegotiation of power relations; for each agent, all others are instruments in its political strategy. Co-option is just a symptom of negotiation between unequal agents with conflicting interests—which don’t need to be stated, conscious, or rationally pursued. It is the means through which the powerful disarm and transform agendas they cannot suppress.

      The “localization agenda” is a good example. Measures to enable effective local responses to disaster are now discussed as a priority at international humanitarian congresses. These discussions can be traced at least as far back as Robert Chambers’s work (1983) on participatory rural development, in the 1980s. And they gathered momentum in the mid-2000s, as a number of initiatives promoted greater local participation in humanitarian operations. But, of course, there are different ideas about what localization should entail.

      As localization has climbed the humanitarian policy agenda, the overseas development divisions of Western governments have come to see it as an opportunity to increase “value for money” and, ultimately, reduce aid expenditure. They promote cash transfer programming as the most “empowering” aid technology. Localization then becomes complementary to the integration of emergency response into development agendas, and to the expansion of markets.

      Western humanitarian agencies that call for localization—and there are those, notably some branches of Médecins Sans Frontières, that do not—have generally fallen in line with this developmental interpretation, on account of their own ideological preferences as much as coercion by donor governments. But they have also presented localization as a moral imperative: a means of “shifting power” to the South to decolonize humanitarianism. While localization might be morally intuitive, Western humanitarians betray their hubris in supposing that their own concessions can reorder the aid industry and the geostrategic matrix from which it takes form. Their proposed solutions, then, including donor budgetary reallocations, are inevitably technocratic. Without structural changes to the political economy of aid, localization becomes a pretext for Western governments and humanitarian agencies to outsource risk. Moreover, it sustains a humanitarian imaginary that associates Westerners with “the international”—the space of politics, from which authority is born—and those in disaster-affected countries with “the local”—the space of the romanticized Other, vulnerable but unsullied by the machinations of power. (It is worth stating that the term “localization” itself implies the transformation of something “global” into something local, even though “locals”—some more than others—are constitutive of the global.)

      There are Southern charities and civil society networks—like NEAR,3 for example—that develop similar narratives on localization, albeit in more indignant tones. They vindicate a larger piece of the pie. But, associating themselves with a neomanagerial humanitarianism, they too embrace a politics incapable of producing a systemic critique of the coloniality of aid.

      Yet demands for local ownership of disaster responses should also be situated within histories of the subaltern. Some Western humanitarian agencies that today advocate for localization, including Save the Children, once faced opposition from anticolonial movements to their late imperial aid projects. More recently, so-called aid recipient perception surveys have repeatedly demonstrated the discontent of disaster-affected communities regarding impositions of foreign aid, but they have also demonstrated anguish over histories of injustice in which the Western humanitarian is little more than an occasional peregrine. It is the structural critique implicit in such responses that the localization agenda sterilizes. In the place of real discussion about power and inequalities, then, we get a set of policy prescriptions aimed at the production of self-sufficient neoliberal subjects, empowered to save themselves through access to markets.

      While some such co-option is always likely in policy engagement, it can be reduced through the formation of counterhegemonic coalitions. Indeed, one dimension of what is now called South-South cooperation involves a relatively old practice among Southern governments of forming blocs to improve their negotiating position in multilateral forums. And, in the twenty-first century, they have achieved moderate successes on trade, global finance, and the environment. But it is important to recognize that co-option occurs in South-South encounters too. And, of course, that political affinities and solidarity can and do exist across frontiers.

      EFQ: You edited the first issue of the Journal of Humanitarian Affairs, which focused on “humanitarianism and the end of liberal order” (see Fiori 2019), and you are also one of the editors of a forthcoming book on this theme, Amidst the Debris: Humanitarianism and the End of Liberal Order. New populisms of the right now challenge the liberal norms and institutions that have shaped the existing refugee regime and have promoted freer movement of people across borders. Can decolonial and anticolonial thinking provide a basis for responses to displacement and migration that do more than resist?

      JF: Any cosmopolitan response to migration is an act of resistance to the political organization of the interstate system.4 As blood-and-soil politicians now threaten to erect walls around the nation-state, the political meaning and relevance of cosmopolitan resistance changes. But if this resistance limits itself to protecting the order that appears to be under threat, it is likely to be ineffective. Moreover, an opportunity to articulate internationalisms in pursuit of a more just order will be lost.

      In recent years, liberal commentators have given a great deal of attention to Trump, Salvini, Duterte, Orbán, Bolsonaro, and other leading figures of the so-called populist Right. And these figures surely merit attention on account of their contributions to a significant conjunctural phenomenon. But the fetishization of their idiosyncrasies and the frenzied investigation of their criminality serves a revanchist project premised on the notion that, once they are removed from office (through the ballot box or otherwise), the old order of things will be restored. To be sure, the wave that brought them to power will eventually subside; but the structures (normative, institutional, epistemological) that have stood in its way are unlikely to be left intact. Whether the intention is to rebuild these structures or to build new ones, it is necessary to consider the winds that produced the wave. In other words, if a cosmopolitan disposition is to play a role in defining the new during the current interregnum, resistance must be inscribed into strategies that take account of the organic processes that have produced Trumpism and Salvinism.

      French geographer Christophe Guilluy offers an analysis of one aspect of organic change that I find compelling, despite my discomfort with the nativism that occasionally flavors his work. Guilluy describes a hollowing out of the Western middle class (2016, 2018). This middle class was a product of the postwar welfarist pact. But, since the crisis of capitalist democracy in the 1970s, the internationalization of capital and the financialization of economies have had a polarizing effect on society. According to Guilluy, there are now two social groupings: the upper classes, who have profited from neoliberal globalization or have at least been able to protect themselves from its fallout; and the lower classes, who have been forced into precarious labor and priced out of the city. It is these lower classes who have had to manage the multicultural integration promoted by progressive neoliberals of the center-left and center-right. Meanwhile, the upper classes have come to live in almost homogenous citadels, from which they cast moral aspersions on the reactionary lower classes who rage against the “open society.” An assertion of cultural sovereignty, this rage has been appropriated by conservatives-turned-revolutionaries, who, I would argue, represent one side of a new political dichotomy. On the other side are the progressives-turned-conservatives, who cling to the institutions that once seemed to promise the end of politics.

      This social polarization would appear to be of significant consequence for humanitarian and human rights endeavors, since their social base has traditionally been the Western middle class. Epitomizing the open society, humanitarian campaigns to protect migrants deepen resentment among an aging precariat, which had imagined that social mobility implied an upward slope, only to fall into the lower classes. Meanwhile, the bourgeois bohemians who join the upper classes accommodate themselves to their postmodern condition, hunkering down in their privileged enclaves, where moral responses to distant injustices are limited to an ironic and banalizing clicktivism. The social institutions that once mobilized multiclass coalitions in the name of progressive causes have long since been dismantled. And, despite the revival of democratic socialism, the institutional Left still appears intellectually exhausted after decades in which it resigned itself to the efficient management of neoliberal strategies.

      And yet, challenges to liberal order articulated through a Far Right politics create a moment of repoliticization; and they expose the contradictions of globalization in an interstate system, without undermining the reality of, or the demand for, connectivity. As such, they seem to open space for the formulation of radical internationalisms with a basis in the reconstruction of migrant rights. In this space, citizens’ movements responding to migration have forged a politics of transnational solidarity through anarchistic practices of mutual aid and horizontalism more than through the philosophizing of associated organic intellectuals. Fueled by disaffection with politics, as much as feelings of injustice, they have attracted young people facing a precarious future, and migrants themselves; indeed, there are movements led by migrants in Turkey, in Germany, in Greece, and elsewhere. They construct social commons with a basis in difference, forming “chains of equivalence.” Decolonial and anticolonial thinking is thus more likely to influence their responses to migration and displacement than those of Western governments and conventional humanitarian agencies. Indeed, beyond the political inspiration that horizontalism often draws from anticolonial struggles, decolonial and postcolonial theories offer a method of deconstructing hierarchy from the inside that can transform resistance into the basis for a pluralist politics built from the bottom up. But for this sort of internationalism to reshape democratic politics, the movements promoting it would need to build bridges into political institutions and incorporate it into political strategies that redress social polarization. To the extent that this might be possible, it will surely dilute their more radical propositions.

      I rather suspect that the most likely scenario, in the short term at least, involves a political reordering through the reassertion of neoliberal strategies. We could see the development of the sort of political economy imagined by the early neoliberal thinker Gottfried Haberler (1985): that is, one in which goods, wages, and capital move freely, but labor doesn’t. This will depend on the consolidation of authoritarian states that nonetheless claim a democratic mandate to impose permanent states of emergency.

      https://www.berghahnjournals.com/view/journals/migration-and-society/3/1/arms030114.xml

      #migrations

    • Conceptualising the global South and South–South encounters

      Long before the institutional interest in ‘engaging with’, and ostensibly mobilising and co-opting actors from across the global South, rich, critical literatures have been published in diverse languages around the world, demonstrating the urgency of developing and applying theoretical and methodological frameworks that can be posited as Southern, anti-colonial, postcolonial and/or decolonial in nature.[1] These and other approaches have traced and advocated for diverse ways of knowing and being in a pluriversal world characterised (and constituted) by complex relationalities and unequal power relations, and equally diverse ways of resisting these inequalities – including through historical and contemporary forms of transnational solidarities.

      Of course, the very term ‘South’ which is included not once but twice in the title of the Handbook of South-South Relations, is itself a debated and diversely mobilised term, as exemplified in the different usages and definitions proposed (and critiqued) across the Handbook’s constituent chapters.

      For instance, a number of official, institutional taxonomies exist, including those which classify (and in turn interpellate) different political entities as ‘being’ from and of ‘the South’ or ‘the North’. Such classifications have variously been developed on the basis of particular readings of a state’s geographical location, of its relative position as a (formerly) colonised territory or colonising power, and/or of a state’s current economic capacity on national and global scales.[2]

      In turn, Medie and Kang (2018) define ‘countries of the global South’ as ‘countries that have been marginalised in the international political and economic system’. Indeed, Connell (2007) builds upon a long tradition of critical thinking to conceptualise the South and the North, respectively, through the lens of the periphery and the metropole, as categories that transcend fixed physical geographies. And of course, as stressed by Sabelo Ndlovu-Gatsheni and Kenneth Tafira in their contribution to the Handbook, such geographies have never been either static or defined purely through reference to physical territories and demarcations:

      ‘imperial reason and scientific racism were actively deployed in the invention of the geographical imaginaries of the global South and the global North.’

      Through conceptualising the South and North through the lenses of the periphery and metropole, Connell argues that there are multiple souths in the world, including ‘souths’ (and southern voices) within powerful metropoles, as well as multiple souths within multiple peripheries. As Sujata Patel notes in her chapter in the Handbook, it is through this conceptualisation that Connell subsequently posits that

      ‘the category of the south allows us to evaluate the processes that permeate the non-recognition of its theories and practices in the constitution of knowledge systems and disciplines’.

      It enables, and requires us, to examine how, why and with what effect certain forms of knowledge and being in the world come to be interpellated and protected as ‘universal’ while others are excluded, derided and suppressed ‘as’ knowledge or recognisable modes of being.[3] Indeed, in her chapter, Patel follows both Connell (2007) and de Sousa Santos (2014) in conceptualising ‘the South’ as ‘a metaphor’ that ‘represents the embeddedness of knowledge in relations of power’.

      In turn, in their contribution to the Handbook, Dominic Davies and Elleke Boehmer centralise the constitutive relationality of the South by drawing on Grovogu (2011), who defines ‘the term “Global South” not as an exact geographical designation, but as “an idea and a set of practices, attitudes, and relations” that are mobilised precisely as “a disavowal of institutional and cultural practices associated with colonialism and imperialism”’ (cited in Davies and Boehmer). Viewing the South, or souths, as being constituted by and mobilising purposeful resistance to diverse exploitative systems, demonstrates the necessity of a contrapuntal reading of, and through, the South.

      As such, as Ndlovu-Gatsheni and Tafira powerfully argue in their chapter,

      ‘the global South was not only invented from outside by European imperial forces but it also invented itself through resistance and solidarity-building.’

      In this mode of analysis, the South has been constituted through a long history of unequal encounters with, and diverse forms of resistance to, different structures and entities across what can be variously designated the North, West or specific imperial and colonial powers. An analysis of the South therefore necessitates a simultaneous interrogation of the contours and nature of ‘the North’ or ‘West’, with Mignolo arguing (2000) that ‘what constitutes the West more than geography is a linguistic family, a belief system and an epistemology’.

      Indeed, the acknowledgement of the importance of relationality and such mutually constitutive dynamics provides a useful bridge between these rich theoretical and conceptual engagements of, with and from ‘the South’ on the one hand, and empirically founded studies of the institutional interest in ‘South–South cooperation’ as a mode of technical and political exchange for ‘international development’ on the other. In effect, as noted by Urvashi Aneja in her chapter, diverse policies, modes of political interaction and ‘responses’ led by political entities across the South and the North alike ‘can thus be said to exist and evolve in a mutually constitutive relationship’, rather than in isolation from one another.

      An important point to make at this stage is that it is not our aim to propose a definitive definition of the South or to propose how the South should be analysed or mobilised for diverse purposes – indeed, we would argue that such an exercise would be antithetical to the very foundations of the debates we and our contributors build upon in our respective modes of research and action.

      Nonetheless, a common starting point for most, if not all, of the contributions in the Handbook is a rejection of conceptualisations of the South as that which is ‘non-Western’ or ‘non-Northern’. As noted by Fiddian-Qasmiyeh (here and in the Handbook), it is essential to continue actively resisting negative framings of the South as that which is not of or from ‘the West’ or ‘the North’ – indeed, this is partly why the (still problematic) South/North binary is often preferred over typologies such as Western and non-Western, First and Third World, or developed and un(der)developed countries, all of which ‘suggest both a hierarchy and a value judgment’ (Mawdsley, 2012).

      In effect, as Fiddian-Qasmiyeh argues in the Handbook (drawing on Brigg), such modes of negative framing risk ‘maintaining rather than disrupting the notion that power originates from and operates through a unidirectional and intentional historical entity’. She – like other contributors to the Handbook addressing the relationships between theoretical, conceptual and empirical dynamics and modes of analysis, response and action – advocates for us to ‘resist the tendency to reconstitute the power of “the North” in determining the contours of the analysis’, while simultaneously acknowledging the extent to which ‘many Southern-led responses are purposefully positioned as alternatives and challenges to hegemonic, Northern-led systems’.

      This is, in many ways, a ‘double bind’ that persists in many of our studies of the world, including those of and from the South: our aim not to re-inscribe the epistemic power of the North, while simultaneously acknowledging that diverse forms of knowledge and action are precisely developed as counterpoints to the North.

      As noted above, in tracing this brief reflection on conceptualisations of the South it is not our intention to offer a comprehensive definition of ‘the South’ or to posit a definitive account of Southern approaches and theories. Rather, the Handbook aims to trace the debates that have emerged about, around, through and from the South, in all its heterogeneity (and not infrequent internal contradictions), in such a way that acknowledges the ways that the South has been constructed in relation to, with, through but also against other spaces, places, times, peoples, modes of knowledge and action.

      Such processes are, precisely, modes of construction that resist dependence upon hegemonic frames of reference; indeed, the Handbook in many ways exemplifies the collective power that emerges when people come together to cooperate and trace diverse ‘roots and routes’ (following Gilroy) to knowing, being and responding to the world – all with a view to better understanding and finding more nuanced ways of responding to diverse encounters within and across the South and the North.

      At the same time as we recognise internal heterogeneity within and across the South/souths, and advocate for more nuanced ways of understanding the South and the North that challenge hegemonic epistemologies and methodologies, Ama Biney’s chapter in the Handbook reminds us of another important dynamic that underpins the work of most, perhaps all, of the contributors to the Handbook. While Biney is writing specifically about pan-Africanism, we would argue that the approach she delineates is essential to the critical theoretical perspectives and analyses presented throughout the Handbook:

      ’Pan-Africanism does not aim at the external domination of other people, and, although it is a movement operating around the notion of being a race conscious movement, it is not a racialist one … In short, pan-Africanism is not anti-white but is profoundly against all forms of oppression and the domination of African people.’

      While it is not our aim to unequivocally idealise or romanticise decolonial, postcolonial, anti-colonial, or Southern theories, or diverse historical or contemporary modes of South South Cooperation and transnational solidarity – such processes are complex, contradictory, and at times are replete of their own forms of discrimination and violence – we would nonetheless posit that this commitment to challenging and resisting all forms of oppression and domination, of all peoples, is at the core of our collective endeavours.

      With such diverse approaches to conceptualising ‘the South’ (and its counterpoint, ‘the North’ or ‘the West’), precisely how we can explore ‘South–South relations’ thus becomes, first, a matter of how and with what effect we ‘know’, ‘speak of/for/about’, and (re)act in relation to different spaces, peoples and objects around the world; subsequently, it is a process of tracing material and immaterial connections across time and space, such as through the development of political solidarity and modes of resistance, and the movement of aid, trade, people and ideas. It is with these overlapping sets of debates and imperatives in mind, that the Handbook aims to explore a broad range of questions regarding the nature and implications of conducting research in and about the global South, and of applying a ‘Southern lens’ to such a wide range of encounters, processes and dynamics around the world.[4]

      […]

      From a foundational acknowledgement of the dangers of essentialist binaries such as South–North and East–West and their concomitant hierarchies and modes of exploitation, the Handbook aims to explore and set out pathways to continue redressing the longstanding exclusion of polycentric forms of knowledge, politics and practice. It is our hope that the Handbook unsettles thinking about the South and about South–South relations, and prompts new and original research agendas that serve to transform and further complicate the geographic framing of the peoples of the world for emancipatory futures in the 21st century.

      This extract from Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh and Patricia Daley’s Introduction to The Handbook of South-South Relations has been slightly edited for the purposes of this blog post. For other pieces published as part of the Southern Responses blog series on Thinking through the Global South, click here.

      References cited

      Anzaldúa, G., 1987. Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza. San Francisco: Spinsters/Aunt Lute.

      Brigg, M., 2002. ‘Post-development, Foucault and the Colonisation Metaphor.’ Third World Quarterly 23(3), 421–436.

      Chakrabarty, D., 2007. Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

      Connell, R., 2007. Southern Theory: The Global Dynamics of Knowledge in Social Science. London: Polity.

      Dabashi, H., 2015. Can Non-Europeans Think? London: Zed Books.

      de Sousa Santos, B., 2014. Epistemologies of the South: Justice Against Epistemicide. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers.

      Dussel, E., 1977. Filosofía de Liberación. Mexico City: Edicol.

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E., 2015. South-South Educational Migration, Humanitarianism and Development: Views from the Caribbean, North Africa and the Middle East. Oxford: Routledge.

      Gilroy, P., 1993. The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness. London: Verso.

      Grosfoguel, R., 2011. Decolonizing Post-Colonial Studies and Paradigms of Political-Economy: Transmodernity, Decolonial Thinking, and Global Coloniality. Transmodernity: Journal of Peripheral Cultural Production of the Luso-Hispanic World 1(1). Available from: https://escholarship.org/uc/item/21k6t3fq [Accessed 7 September 2018].

      Grovogu, S., 2011. A Revolution Nonetheless: The Global South in International Relations. The Global South 5(1), Special Issue: The Global South and World Dis/Order, 175–190.

      Kwoba, B, Nylander, O., Chantiluke, R., and Nangamso Nkopo, A. (eds), 2018. Rhodes Must Fall: The Struggle to Decolonise the Racist Heart of Empire. London: Zed Books.

      Mawdsley, E., 2012. From Recipients to Donors: The Emerging Powers and the Changing Development Landscape. London: Zed Books.

      Medie, P. and Kang, A.J., 2018. Power, Knowledge and the Politics of Gender in the Global South. European Journal of Politics and Gender 1(1–2), 37–54.

      Mignolo, W.D., 2000. Local Histories/Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.

      Mignolo, W.D., 2015. ‘Foreword: Yes, We Can.’ In: H. Dabashi, Can Non-Europeans Think? London and New York: Zed Books, pp. viii–xlii.

      Minh-ha, Trinh T., 1989. Woman, Native, Other: Writing Postcoloniality and Feminism, Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

      Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S.J., 2013. Empire, Global Coloniality and African Subjectivity. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books.

      Quijano, A., 1991. Colonialidad y Modernidad/Racionalidad. Perú Indígena 29, 11–21.

      Said, E., 1978. Orientalism: Western Conceptions of the Orient. New York: Vintage Books.

      Spivak, G.C., 1988. In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics. New York: Routledge.

      Sundberg, J., 2007. Reconfiguring North–South Solidarity: Critical Reflections on Experiences of Transnational Resistance. Antipode 39(1), 144–166.

      Tuhiwai Smith, L., 1999. Decolonizing Methodologies: Research and Indigenous Peoples. London: Zed Books.

      wa Thiong’o, N., 1986. Decolonising the Mind: The Politics of Language in African Literature. London: Heinemann Educational.

      Wynter, S., 2003. Unsettling the Coloniality of Being/Power/Truth/Freedom: Towards the Human, After Man, Its Overrepresentation – An Argument. The New Centennial Review 3(3), 257–337.

      * Notes

      [1] For instance, see Anzaldúa 1987; Chakrabarty 2007; Connell 2007; de Sousa Santos 2014; Dussell 1977; Grosfoguel 2011; Kwoba et al. 2018; Mignolo 2000; Ndlovu-Gatsheni 2013; Quijano 1991, 2007; Said 1978; Spivak 1988; Sundberg 2007; Trinh T. Minh-ha 1989; Tuhiwai Smith 1999; wa Thiong’o 1986; Wynter 2003.

      [2] Over 130 states have defined themselves as belonging to the Group of 77 – a quintessential South–South platform – in spite of the diversity of their ideological and geopolitical positions in the contemporary world order, their vastly divergent Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and per capita income, and their rankings in the Human Development Index – for a longer discussion of the challenges and limitations of diverse modes of definition and typologies, see Fiddian-Qasmiyeh 2015.

      [3] Also see Mignolo 2000; Dabashi 2015.

      [4] Indeed, Connell notes that ‘#Southern_theory’ is a term I use for social thought from the societies of the global South. It’s not necessarily about the global South, though it often is. Intellectuals from colonial and postcolonial societies have also produced important analyses of global-North societies, and of worldwide structures (e.g. Raúl Prebisch and Samir Amin).

      https://southernresponses.org/2018/12/05/conceptualising-the-global-south-and-south-south-encounters
      #développement

    • Exploring refugees’ conceptualisations of Southern-led humanitarianism

      By Prof Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Principal Investigator, Southern Responses to Displacement Project

      With displacement primarily being a Southern phenomena – circa 85-90% of all refugees remain within the ‘global South – it is also the case that responses to displacement have long been developed and implemented by states from the South (a construct we are critically examining throughout the Southern Responses to Displacement project – see here). Some of these state-led responses to displacement have been developed and implemented within the framework of what is known as ‘South-South Cooperation’. This framework provides a platform from which states from the global South work together to complement one another’s abilities and resources and break down barriers and structural inequalities created by colonial powers. It can also be presented as providing an alternative mode of response to that implemented by powerful Northern states and Northern-led organisations (see here).

      An example of this type of South-South Cooperation, often driven by principles of ‘internationalism,’ can be found in the international scholarship programmes and schools established by a number of Southern states to provide primary, secondary and university-level education for refugees from across the Middle East and North Africa. In particular, since the 1960s, Cuba has provided free education through a scholarship system for Palestinian refugees based in camps and cities across the Middle East following the Nakba (the catastrophe) and for Sahrawi refugees who have lived in desert-based refugee camps in Algeria since the mid-1970s.

      In line with the Southern Responses to Displacement project, which aims to purposefully centralise refugees’ own experiences of and perspectives on Southern-led initiatives to support refugees from Syria, throughout my previous work I have examined how Palestinian and Sahrawi refugees have conceptualised, negotiated or, indeed, resisted, diverse programmes that have been developed and implemented ‘on their behalf.’ While long-standing academic and policy debates have addressed the relationship between humanitarianism, politics and ideology, few studies to date have examined the ways in which refugee beneficiaries – as opposed to academics, policymakers and practitioners – conceptualise the programmes which are designed and implemented ‘for refugees’. The following discussion addresses this gap precisely by centralising Palestinian and Sahrawi graduates’ reflections on the Cuban scholarship programme and the extent to which they conceptualise political and ideological connections as being compatible with humanitarian motivations and outcomes.

      This blog, and my previous work (here and here) examines how Palestinian and Sahrawi refugees have understood the motivations, nature and impacts of Cuba’s scholarship system through reference to identity, ideology, politics and humanitarianism. Based on my interviews with Palestinians and Sahrawis while they were still studying in Cuba, and with Palestinian and Sahrawi graduates whom I interviewed after they had returned to their home-camps in Lebanon and Algeria respectively, this short piece examines the complex dynamics which underpin access to, as well as the multifaceted experiences and outcomes of, the scholarship programme on both individual and collective levels.
      Balancing ‘the humanitarian’

      Although both Palestinian and Sahrawi interviewees in Cuba and Sahrawi graduates in their Algeria-based home-camps repeatedly asserted the humanitarian nature of the Cuban scholarship programme, precisely what this denomination of ‘humanitarianism’ might mean, and how compatible it could be given the ideological and political links highlighted by Palestinian graduates whom I interviewed in a range of refugee camps in Lebanon, requires further discussion.

      The contemporary international humanitarianism regime is habitually equated with the principles of humanity, impartiality, neutrality and independence (Ferris 2011: 11), and a strict separation is firmly upheld by Western humanitarian institutions between morality and politics (as explored in more detail by Pacitto and Fiddian-Qasmiyeh 2013). However, many critics reject the assertion that humanitarianism can ever be separated from politics, since ‘“humanitarianism” is the ideology of hegemonic states in the era of globalisation’ (Chimni 2000:3). Recognising the extent to which the Northern-led and Northern-dominated humanitarian regime is deeply implicated in, and reproduces, ‘the ideology of hegemonic [Northern] states’ is particularly significant since many (Northern) academics, policymakers and practitioners reject the right of Southern-led initiatives to be denominated ‘humanitarian’ in nature on the basis that such projects and programmes are motivated by ideological and/or faith-based principles, rather than ‘universal’ humanitarian principles.

      Palestinians who at the time of our interviews were still studying in Cuba, in addition to those who had more recently graduated from Cuban universities, medical and dentistry schools and had ‘returned’ to their home-camps in Lebanon, repeatedly referred to ‘ideology’, ‘politics’, ‘humanitarianism’ and ‘human values’ when describing the Cuban scholarship programme. Yet, while they maintained that Cuba’s programme for Palestinian refugees is ‘humanitarian’ in nature, Palestinian graduates offered different perspectives regarding the balance between these different dimensions, implicitly and at times explicitly noting the ways in which these overlap or are in tension.

      Importantly, these recurrent concepts are to be contrasted with the prevalent terminology and frames of reference arising in Sahrawi refugees’ accounts of the Cuban educational programme. Having also had access to the Cuban educational migration programme, Sahrawi graduates’ accounts can perhaps be traced to the continued significance of Spanish – the language learned and lived (following Bhabha 2006:x) in Cuba – amongst graduates following their return to the Sahrawi refugee camps, where Spanish is the official language used in the major camp-based Sahrawi medical institutions.

      As such, in interviews and in informal conversations in the Sahrawi camps, Cuban-educated Sahrawis (commonly known as Cubarauis) consistently used the Spanish-language term solidaridad (solidarity) to define both the nature of the connection between the Sahrawi people and Cuba, and the nature of the scholarship programme; they also regularly cited Cuban revolutionary figures such as José Martí and Fidel Castro. In contrast, no such quotes were offered by the Palestinian graduates I interviewed in Lebanon, even if the significance of Fidel Castro and Ché Guevara was noted by many during our interviews in Cuba.

      Explaining his understanding of the basis of the scholarship programme for Palestinians, Abdullah elaborated that this was:

      ‘mainly prompted because Cuban politics is based upon human values and mutual respect, and in particular upon socialism, which used to be very prominent in the Arab world during that time.’

      In turn, referring to the common visions uniting both parties and facilitating Cuba’s scholarship programme for Palestinian refugees, Hamdi posited that:

      ‘Certain ideological and political commonalities contributed to this collaboration between the Cuban government and the PLO. However, the humanitarian factor was present in these negotiations.’ (Emphasis added)

      These accounts reflect the extent to which ideology and humanitarianism are both recognised as playing a key role in the scholarship programme, and yet Hamdi’s usage of the term ‘however’, and his reference to ‘the humanitarian factor’, demonstrate an awareness that a tension may be perceived to exist between ideology/politics and humanitarian motivations.

      Indeed, rather than describing the programme as a humanitarian programme per se, eight of my interviewees offered remarkably similar humanitarian ‘qualifiers’: the Cuban education programme is described as having ‘a humanitarian component’ (Marwan), ‘a humanitarian dimension’ (Younis), a ‘humanitarian aspect’ (Saadi), and ‘humanitarian ingredients’ (Abdel-Wahid); while other interviewees argued that it is ‘a mainly humanitarian system’ (Nimr) which ‘carr[ies] humanitarian elements’ (Hamdi) and ‘shares its humanitarian message in spite of the embargo [against Cuba]’ (Ibrahim).

      As exemplified by these qualifiers, Palestinians who participated in this programme themselves recognise that humanitarianism was not the sole determining justification for the initiative, but rather that it formed part of the broader Cuban revolution and a particular mode of expressing support for other liberation movements, including the Palestinian cause.

      In terms of weighting these different motivating and experiential elements, Mohammed argued that the ‘humanitarian aspect outweighs the ideological one’, emphasising the ‘programme’s strong humanitarian aspect’. In turn, Ahmed and Nimr declared that the Cuban scholarships were offered ‘without conditions or conditionalities’ and without ‘blackmailing Palestinians to educate them’.

      These references are particularly relevant when viewed alongside critiques of neoliberal development programmes and strategies which have often been characterised by ‘tied aid’ or diverse economic, socio-political and gendered conditionalities which require beneficiaries to comply with Northern-dominated priorities vis-à-vis ‘good governance’ – all of which are, in effect, politically and/or ideologically driven.

      Concurrently, Khalil argued that the programme is ‘humanitarian if used correctly’, thereby drawing attention to the extent to which the nature of the programme transcends either Cuba’s or the PLO’s underlying motivating factors per se, and is, rather, characterised both by the way in which the programme has been implemented since the 1970s, and its longer-term impacts.

      With reference to the former, claims regarding the absence of conditionalities on Cuba’s behalf must be viewed alongside the extent to which Palestinians could only access the scholarships if they were affiliated with specific Palestinian factions (as I explore in the book): can the programme be ‘truly’ humanitarian if individual participation has historically been contingent upon an official declaration of ideological commonality with a leftist faction and/or the Cuban internationalist project?

      With universality, neutrality and impartiality being three of the core ‘international’ humanitarian principles, a tension is apparent from the perspective of ‘the Northern relief elite’ who arguably monopolise the epithet humanitarian (Haysom, cited in Pacitto and Fiddian-Qasmiyeh 2013: 6). Indeed, although José Martí’s humanitarian principle to ‘compartir lo que tienes, no dar lo que te sobra’ (‘to share what you have, not what is left over’) has historically guided many of the Cuban state’s revolutionary programmes on national(ist) and international(ist) levels, precisely who Cuba should share with (on a collective) has often been geopolitically framed. Whilst designed to overcome the historical legacy of diverse exclusionary processes in Cuba, the programme could itself be conceptualised as being guided by an ideological commitment to inclusion with exclusionary underpinnings.

      The imposition of a hegemonic discourse leaves people out, primarily on ideological grounds. Ideological repression means that everybody who questions the regime in a fundamental way is basically left out in the dark. There is a creation of boundaries between Self and Other that leaves very little room for fundamental critique. However, the existence of a hegemonic discourse, and demands for students to publicly assert their affiliation to an official ideological stance, whether this refers to Cuban or Palestinian discourses, should not necessarily be equated with the exclusion of individuals and groups who do not share particular opinions and beliefs.

      In the case explored in this blog and in the book it is based on, a distinction can therefore perhaps be usefully made between the collective basis of scholarships primarily being offered to groups and nations with political and ideological bonds to Cuba’s revolutionary project, and the extent to which individual Palestinian students have arguably negotiated the Cuban system and the factional system alike to maximise their personal, professional and political development. To achieve the latter, individuals have developed official performances of ideological loyalty to access and complete their university studies in Cuba, whilst ultimately maintaining or developing political and ideological opinions, and critiques, of their own.

      With reference to the broader outcomes of the programme, is it sufficient to announce, as seven Palestinian graduates did, that the project was ‘humanitarian’ in nature precisely because the beneficiaries of the scheme were refugees, and the overarching aim was to achieve professional self-sufficiency in refugee camps?

      In effect, and as explored in my other research (here) Cuba’s programme might appear to fall under the remit of a developmental approach, rather than being ‘purely’ humanitarian in nature, precisely due to the official aim of maximising self-sufficiency as opposed to addressing immediate basic needs in an emergency phase (with the latter more readily falling under the remit of ‘humanitarian’ assistance).

      Nonetheless, Cuba’s aim to enhance refugees’ self-sufficiency corresponds to the UNHCR’s well-established Development Assistance to Refugees approach, and programmes supporting medium- and long-term capacity building are particularly common in protracted refugee situations. At the same time, it could be argued that the distinction between humanitarianism and development is immaterial given that the rhetoric of solidarity underpins all of Cuba’s internationalist projects, whether in contexts of war or peace, and, furthermore, since Cuba has offered scholarships not only to refugees but also to citizens from across the Global South.

      Related to the programme’s reach to citizens and refugees alike, and simultaneously to the nature of the connection between humanitarianism and politics, Younis drew attention to another pivotal dimension: ‘although the educational system had a humanitarian dimension, I don’t think it is possible to separate the human being from politics’. Cuba’s political (in essence, socialist) commitment to the ‘human being’ was reasserted throughout the interviews, with Saadi, for instance, referring to Cuba’s prioritisation of the ‘relationship between a human being and a fellow human being’, and Khalil explaining that Cuba had adopted ‘the cause of the human being, and that’s why it supported Palestinians in their struggle’.

      While critiques of Northern-led human rights discourses have been widespread, and such critiques have often paralleled or influenced critical analyses of humanitarianism (as I explore elsewhere), in their responses Palestinian graduates invoked an alternative approach to supporting the rights of human beings.

      By conceptualising Cuba’s commitment to human beings as being inherently connected to politics, graduates, by extension, also highlighted that politics cannot be separated from approaches geared towards supporting humanity, whether external analysts consider that such approaches should be labelled ‘development’ or ‘humanitarianism’. Whilst absent from the terminology used by Palestinian graduates, it can be argued that the notion of solidarity centralised in Cubaraui (and Cuban) accounts captures precisely these dimensions of Cuba’s internationalist approach.
      Moving Forward

      These dynamics – including conceptualisations of the relationship between politics, ideology, and humanitarianism; of short-, medium- and long-term responses to displacement; and how refugees themselves negotiate and conceptualise responses developed by external actors ‘on their behalf’ – will continue to be explored throughout the Southern Responses to Development from Syria project. This ongoing research project aims, amongst other things, to examine how people displaced from Syria – Syrians, Palestinians, Iraqis, Kurds … -, experience and perceive the different forms of support that ‘Southern’ states, civil society groups, and refugees themselves have developed in Lebanon, Jordan and Turkey since the outbreak of the Syrian conflict in 2011. This will include reflections on how refugees conceptualise (and resist) both the construct of ‘the South’ itself and diverse responses developed by states such as Malaysia and Indonesia, but also by different groups of refugees themselves. The latter include Palestinian refugees whose home-camps in Lebanon have been hosting refugees from Syria, but also whose educational experiences in Cuba mean that they are amongst the medical practitioners who are treating refugees from Syria, demonstrating the complex legacies of the Cuban scholarship programme for refugees from the Middle East.

      *

      For more information on Southern-led responses to displacement, including vis-à-vis South-South Cooperation, read our introductory mini blog series here, and the following pieces:

      Carpi, E. (2018) ‘Empires of Inclusion‘

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E. (2019) ‘Looking Forward. Disasters at 40′

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E. (2018) Histories and spaces of Southern-led responses to displacement

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E. (2018) Internationalism and solidarity

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E. (2018) Refugee-refugee humanitarianism

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E. (2014) The Ideal Refugees: Islam, Gender, and the Sahrawi Politics of Survival

      Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, E. and Daley, P. (2018) Conceptualising the global South and South–South encounters

      Featured Image: A mural outside a school in Baddawi camp, N. Lebanon. Baddawi has been home to Palestinian refugees from the 1950s, and to refugees from Syria since 2011 (c) E. Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, 2017

      https://southernresponses.org/2019/04/08/exploring-refugees-conceptualisations-of-southern-led-humanitaria

      #réfugiés #post-colonialisme #ressources_pédagogiques

  • L’ASGI demande à la #Cour_des_comptes italienne l’ouverture d’une #enquête sur l’utilisation des #fonds_publics dans les #centres_de_détention en Libye

    L’ASGI a déposé une #plainte auprès de la Cour des comptes à Rome, soulignant plusieurs profils critiques liés aux activités menées par certaines ONG italiennes en Libye avec des fonds de l’#Agence_italienne_pour_la_coopération_au_développement (AICS).

    La plainte est basée sur le rapport « Profils critiques des activités des ONG italiennes dans les centres de détention en Libye avec des fonds de l’AICS » (https://sciabacaoruka.asgi.it/en/italian-ngos-activities-in-libyan-detention-centres), publié le 15 juillet 2020, dans lequel l’ASGI analyse une série de documents obtenus du ministère des affaires étrangères et de l’AICS suite à des demandes d’accès civique. La plainte porte à l’attention de la Cour des comptes de nombreux profils critiques dans la conception et la mise en œuvre des actions au sein des centres de détention en Libye, en partie déjà mis en évidence dans le rapport.

    La plainte affirme que dans certains centres, les ONG italiennes semblent avoir effectué des activités au profit de l’entretien des locaux de détention plutôt que des détenus, avec des activités visant à préserver leur solidité et leur efficacité. Par conséquent, ces interventions pourraient avoir contribué à renforcer la capacité du centre à accueillir, même à l’avenir, de nouveaux prisonniers dans des conditions désespérément inhumaines. En outre, bien que les centres libyens soient universellement reconnus comme des lieux de torture et de mortification de la dignité humaine, le gouvernement italien n’a pas conditionné la mise en œuvre de ces interventions à un engagement quelconque envers les autorités de Tripoli pour apporter une amélioration durable des conditions des étrangers y détenus.

    Dans la plainte l’ASGI souligne que la mise en œuvre d’interventions d’urgence en faveur de personnes détenues dans des conditions inhumaines sur ordre d’un gouvernement étranger ne semble pas relever de la promotion de la « coopération et du #développement » prévue par le statut de l’AICS.

    La plainte attire également l’attention de la Cour des comptes sur les doutes de l’ASGI quant à la destination réelle des biens et services fournis, compte tenue aussi de la décision du ministère des affaires étrangères d’interdire au personnel italien de se rendre en Libye. Le fait que la gestion de la plupart des centres de détention officiels soit menée par les milices, et l’approximation de la déclaration des dépenses encourues par certaines ONG dans leurs activités, ne semblent pas avoir conduit l’AICS à exercer un contrôle strict sur la dépense de fonds publics et sur ce qui est effectivement mis en œuvre par les partenaires libyens sur le terrain.

    Par cette plainte, l’ASGI demande donc à la Cour des comptes d’examiner si le comportement de l’AICS est conforme à ses objectifs statutaires et à ses obligations de veiller à la bonne utilisation des fonds publics, en déterminant les responsabilités éventuelles de l’Agence tant du point de vue d’un éventuel #préjudice_budgétaire que d’un éventuel préjudice à l’image du gouvernement italien.

    https://sciabacaoruka.asgi.it/fr/lasgi-demande-a-la-cour-des-comptes-italienne-louverture-dune-enq
    #justice #Italie #centres #camps #externalisation #asile #migrations #réfugiés

  • À #Pont-Audemer, les projets locaux se dessinent entre chercheurs, décideurs et citoyens

    Lancer des projets de développement local durable, tels que l’implantation de parcs éoliens ou la restriction de la circulation des voitures à Paris, implique chaque fois de consulter un grand nombre d’acteurs, et en premier lieu, les personnes qui vivent et travaillent sur le territoire concerné.

    Même s’il est évident que la participation de tous est essentielle au bon déroulement du pilotage, de la concrétisation et du développement des projets, la prise en compte des citoyens est particulièrement difficile. Elle exige d’entendre et d’inclure les différents points de vue, et de les concilier tant sur le plan des objectifs et résultats à atteindre que sur les méthodes à mettre en œuvre.

    La convention citoyenne pour le climat nous a récemment donné un exemple criant de la difficulté à dépasser les bonnes intentions et à intégrer les avis et souhaits d’une population. Une difficulté qui peut produire à terme des effets inverses à ceux recherchés si elle n’est pas surmontée.

    Du côté des élus et représentants de l’État, le risque est en effet de tomber dans une vision politique un peu figée des enjeux de développement local. Quant aux chercheurs et scientifiques sollicités pour diagnostiquer et conseiller, le principal écueil est d’être trop abstrait et trop éloigné des attentes et des besoins locaux. Comment repenser alors leur place dans ces processus de décisions ?

    Pour répondre à cet enjeu, il existe une démarche de terrain, inclusive, réflexive et participative appelée la recherche-action. Elle part du postulat que les problèmes environnementaux, sociaux et économiques sont vécus par les acteurs locaux, sur le terrain. Pour les comprendre et mieux les résoudre, agents de l’État, élus, chercheurs et citoyens ont par conséquent intérêt à se regrouper pour réfléchir et produire des savoirs permettant d’agir collectivement en toute connaissance. Cela implique de créer des méthodes de participation où tous sont impliqués de façon équitable.

    C’est dans cette voie que se sont engagés plusieurs acteurs de Pont-Audemer, dans l’Eure, une commune déjà impliquée dans des processus de transition écologique et solidaire et souhaitant aller encore plus loin dans le développement local durable.
    L’expérience de Pont-Audemer

    Entre septembre 2019 et juin 2020, une démarche de recherche-action a été menée collectivement pour nourrir les projets de cette commune. L’université de Caen Normandie a proposé à la ville de Pont-Audemer d’être l’objet d’un module de formation par l’action, le principe étant que les étudiants apprennent en agissant. Cette commune, située au cœur de la Normandie, est assez petite pour être appréhendée en peu de temps. Elle a mené et fait l’objet de nombreux diagnostics préalables à l’action et avait déjà mis en œuvre des opérations entrant dans le cadre de la transition écologique et solidaire.

    Le projet a mis en relation plusieurs catégories d’acteurs : des habitants, des associations, des enseignants-chercheurs, des fonctionnaires étudiants en formation continue, des fonctionnaires territoriaux, le maire, des responsables d’équipements publics comme une médiathèque ou un théâtre, des entreprises et des professionnels de divers secteurs comme des chefs de rayons dans la grande distribution ou des agriculteurs.

    Le travail en commun a fait émerger des axes de travail à privilégier dans le champ de la culture, des circuits courts, des tiers lieux, des modes doux de déplacement et de la mise en valeur du patrimoine naturel, avec en toile de fond l’économie sociale et solidaire.

    Les méthodes de participation et d’implication ont été multiples et diverses : l’observation participante – qui consiste à observer en essayant de se mettre à la place des autres – l’enquête par questionnaire, l’atelier, la réalisation d’entretiens, de réunions régulières… Autant de techniques qui favorisent l’immersion et l’interaction. L’analyse des territoires et des projets potentiels – valorisation des productions agricoles locales, réhabilitation des anciens lieux industriels, préservation des lieux naturels remarquables, implication des populations dans les projets – se fait alors au plus proche des acteurs et des agents, elle vient compléter les approches et raisonnements théoriques.

    Les fonctionnaires étudiants accompagnés par les enseignants-chercheurs accèdent en allant sur le terrain à des connaissances par le vécu. Les échanges avec les acteurs de la vie locale permettent de rendre poreuse la frontière entre les théories et les pratiques.

    Les acteurs expriment la vision du monde (théorie) qui sous-tend leurs choix et actes : entre autres, l’idée d’un développement endogène s’appuyant sur les forces déjà présentes sur le territoire a rassemblé beaucoup de protagonistes. La prise en compte de la pauvreté dans le raisonnement économique, qui d’un point de vue théorique n’est pas si courante, est aussi une préoccupation de bon nombre d’acteurs, dont l’épicerie sociale. Les étudiants et chercheurs remettent quant à eux en question leurs savoirs en les confrontant à la réalité de terrain (pratiques). Les acteurs deviennent chercheurs, les chercheurs deviennent acteurs.

    Concrètement, le travail réalisé sur la capacité de la Risle, la rivière qui traverse Pont-Audemer, à fédérer les habitants, illustre bien l’efficacité de la démarche. Le travail collectif de terrain a permis de rassembler les différents participants autour de l’organisation d’un atelier participatif pour inviter la population à s’exprimer sur le rôle de la Risle dans l’identité de la ville ou sur des idées d’aménagements.
    Partager les réalités du terrain

    Cette recherche-action a toutefois révélé une difficulté pour certains acteurs à changer de posture. Les agents de l’État mis en situation d’étudiants dans le cadre d’un Diplôme universitaire ont dû s’affranchir d’une démarche descendante habituelle.

    Parallèlement, certains acteurs locaux n’attendant plus de solutions qui seraient venues « d’en haut » avaient du mal à intégrer la démarche, en particulier tous ceux qui se sentent délaissés par les politiques publiques et victimes du désengagement de l’État. La prise en compte de la conjoncture a par ailleurs perturbé le calendrier de la recherche-action et les possibilités d’interaction entre les personnes impliqués (élections municipales, Covid).

    Plus généralement, la démarche a mis en évidence des « visions dépolitisées » de la cité, quand par exemple un projet de diffusion de l’usage du vélo vient résoudre un problème ponctuel, conjoncturel, de stationnement et d’embouteillage sans réellement s’insérer dans une pensée plus globale de long terme. Il conviendrait d’envisager plus largement la question de la mobilité en lien avec l’articulation vie professionnelle et vie privée, travail et loisir, travail en présentiel et télétravail, horaires normaux et décalés… En fait, la démarche a parfois révélé un manque de conceptions partagées du monde, qui aident pourtant à l’action collective.

    Mais l’expérience a aussi mis en lumière l’intérêt d’échanger et de collaborer dans la durée. Elle a créé des relations de confiance en encourageant la circulation et le partage de l’information, et la liberté pour tous de prendre des initiatives.

    Les acteurs se sont pris au jeu de la recherche participative, et les chercheurs ont intégré les opportunités et freins rencontrés par les praticiens, devenant ainsi facilitateurs et animateurs. Les différentes approches disciplinaires des chercheurs se complètent par ailleurs pour produire des analyses systémiques et interdisciplinaires entre économie sociale et solidaire et géographie sociale. Cela a permis, si ce n’est de co-construire une vision du monde commune, au moins de partager de manière constructive les réalités vécues sur le terrain.

    https://theconversation.com/a-pont-audemer-les-projets-locaux-se-dessinent-entre-chercheurs-dec
    #développement_local #participation #recherche-action #RAP #recherche-action_participative #transition #transitions #ESS #économie_sociale_et_solidaire #pédagogie #théorie #pratique #développement_endogène #pauvreté #épicerie_sociale #Risle #atelier_participatif #mobilité #action_collective #confiance #circulation_des_savoirs

  • L’Effet Shadoks en programmation

    Ce concept existe surement sous un autre nom, mais je garde trâce de son baptême ici.
    Pour moi, l’effet Shadok d’un langage ou d’une technique, c’est quand cette chose ne vous donne aucun cadre structurant, qu’elle vous laisse décider d’une manière de faire qui va vous éloigner des bonnes pratiques.

    Il y a des langages qui portent en eux une philosophie, qui vont vous entrainer à améliorer la relecture du code, à son test simplifié, qui embarquent naturellement des pattern (design pattern)...
    Et des langages qui au contraire vous laissent tellement réinventer la roue que vous l’inventez carrée. D’où le nom Effet Shadoks...

    #computer-science #IT #dev #programmation #développement

  • Production

    Jean Robert

    https://lavoiedujaguar.net/Production

    Don Bartolo habite une masure derrière ma maison. Comme beaucoup d’autres personnes déplacées, c’est un intrus, un « envahisseur » ou un « parachutiste », comme on dit au Mexique. Avec du carton, des bouts de plastique et de la tôle ondulée, il a édifié une cabane dans un terrain au propriétaire absent. S’il a de la chance, un jour il construira en dur et couronnera les murs d’un toit d’amiante-ciment ou de tôle. Derrière sa demeure, il y a un terrain vague que son propriétaire lui permet de cultiver. Don Bartolo y a établi une milpa : un champ de maïs ensemencé juste au début de la saison des pluies afin qu’il puisse donner une récolte sans irrigation. Dans la perspective de l’homme moderne, l’action de Bartolo peut paraître profondément anachronique.

    Après la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, le Mexique, comme le reste du « Tiers-Monde », fut envahi par l’idée du développement. La popularité de ce concept doit beaucoup au président Harry Truman, qui en fit l’axe politique de son discours de prise de pouvoir en 1949. Selon Truman, la politique du développement consiste à « appuyer tous les peuples libres dans leurs efforts pour augmenter la production d’aliments, de textiles pour l’habillement et de matériaux de construction de maisons, ainsi que celle de nouvelles forces motrices pour alléger leur effort physique ». Il ajoutait que « la clé du développement est la croissance de la production et la clé de celle-ci, l’application ample et vigoureuse des connaissances scientifiques et techniques ».

    #Jean_Robert #Mexique #milpa #développement #production #Kant #Goethe #Defoe #Adam_Smith #valeur #Ricardo #rareté #Marx #économie #progrès #destructivité #croissance #Keynes #maïs

  • On n’a pas signalé ces deux captations d’interventions d’Aude Vidal sur son livre sur Égologie, dont une très longue par @latelierpaysan ici présent !

    Aude VIDAL - ÉGOLOGIE : écologie, individualisme et course au bonheur
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouEdpD9w5x0

    L’Atelier paysan s’attaque à l’autonomie technique des paysan-nes en leur proposant une alternative concrète : les former à autoconstruire leur matériel agricole.
    Est-ce suffisant pour enrayer l’industrie de la machine, qui impose de remplacer les paysan- nes par des robots, des drones, des capteurs informatiques ?
    Quelles sont les conséquences de ces « solutions technologiques » pour les communautés paysannes, pour l’environnement, pour le modèle alimentaire ?

    Aude Vidal nous parle ici des « alternatives », dans la suite de son ouvrage Egologie : les
    expérimentations écologistes sont-elles le laboratoire d’innovations sociales plus
    respectueuses de l’être humain et de son milieu ? ou accompagnent-elle un recul sur soi et ce sur quoi il est encore possible d’avoir prise dans un contexte de dépossession démocratique et économique ?

    Une belle manière pour l’Atelier paysan de questionner la limite des alternatives : l’expansion de pratiques alternatives peut-elle provoquer de la transformation sociale ? Les pratiques sociales parviennent-elles à infléchir les rapports sociaux ?
    A l’Atelier paysan, dont l’activité centrale est de proposer des alternatives concrètes et immédiates aux paysannes et paysans, nous pensons que non. Nous avons l’intuition qu’il nous faut dans le même temps tenter d’exercer un rapport de force avec les dominants (pour nous l’industrie de la machine et la techno-science).

    Et une autre plus récente :
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lxqPsK2mkAY

    #Aude_Vidal #écologie #politique #écologie_politique #individualisme #libéralisme #bien-être #développement_personnel

    • Égologie. Écologie, individualisme et course au bonheur

      #Développement_personnel, habitats groupés, jardins partagés... : face au désastre capitaliste, l’écologie se présente comme une réponse globale et positive, un changement de rapport au monde appuyé par des gestes au quotidien. Comme dans la fable du colibri, « chacun fait sa part ».
      Mais en considérant la société comme un agrégat d’individus, et le changement social comme une somme de gestes individuels, cette vision de l’écologie ne succombe-t-elle pas à la logique libérale dominante, signant le triomphe de l’individualisme ?

      http://www.lemondealenvers.lautre.net/livres/egologie.html

      #livre

      #souveraineté_alimentaire #liberté_individuelle #alternatives #Nicolas_Marquis #capitalisme #jardins_partagés #classes_sociales #jardinage #justice_environnementale #dépolitisation #égologie

    • Du bien-être au marché du malaise. La société du développement personnel

      Des ouvrages qui prétendent nous aider dans notre développement personnel, à « être nous-mêmes » ou à « bien communiquer », et des individus qui déclarent que ces lectures ont « changé leur vie » : voilà la source de l’étonnement dont ce livre est le résultat. Comment comprendre ce phénomène ? Comment est-il possible que tant de personnes puissent trouver du sens au monde si particulier du « développement personnel », au point d’en ressentir des effets concrets ?

      Nicolas Marquis prend au sérieux cette expérience de lecture, en cherchant à comprendre ce qui se passe très concrètement entre un lecteur qui veut que quelque chose change dans son existence et un ouvrage qui prétend l’aider en lui parlant de ce qu’il vit personnellement. En procédant à la première enquête sur les lecteurs, il montre en quoi le développement personnel est l’une des institutions les plus frappantes des sociétés individualistes : son succès permet de comprendre les façons dont nous donnons, au quotidien, du sens à notre existence.


      https://www.cairn.info/du-bien-etre-au-marche-du-malaise--9782130628262.htm

    • Le Syndrome du bien-être

      Vous êtes accro à la salle de sport ? Vous ne comptez plus les moutons mais vos calories pour vous endormir ? Vous vous sentez coupable de ne pas être suffisamment heureux, et ce malgré tous vos efforts ? Alors vous souffrez sûrement du #syndrome_du_bien-être. Tel est le diagnostic établi par Carl Cederström et André Spicer.
      Ils montrent dans ce livre comment la recherche du #bien-être_optimal, loin de produire les effets bénéfiques vantés tous azimuts, provoque un sentiment de #mal-être et participe du #repli_sur_soi. Ils analysent de multiples cas symptomatiques, comme ceux des fanatiques de la santé en quête du régime alimentaire idéal, des employés qui débutent leur journée par un footing ou par une séance de fitness, des adeptes du quantified self qui mesurent – gadgets et applis à l’appui – chacun de leurs faits et gestes, y compris les plus intimes... Dans ce monde inquiétant, la bonne santé devient un impératif moral, le désir de transformation de soi remplace la volonté de changement social, la culpabilisation des récalcitrants est un des grands axes des politiques publiques, et la pensée positive empêche tout véritable discours critique d’exister.
      Résolument à contre-courant, ce livre démonte avec une grande lucidité les fondements du culte du corps et de cette quête désespérée du bien-être et de la santé parfaite.

      https://www.lechappee.org/collections/pour-en-finir-avec/le-syndrome-du-bien-etre

      #André_Spicer
      #Carl_Cederström

    • Rigolez, vous êtes exploité

      « Vous êtes éreinté ? Votre activité professionnelle vous plonge dans la #dépression ? Vous songez à mettre fin à vos jours ? Nous avons la solution : ri-go-lez ! » Voilà en substance le message de la direction des #ressources_humaines (DRH) du centre hospitalier universitaire (CHU) de Toulouse au personnel de l’établissement. La solution arrive à point nommé, car la situation menaçait de devenir dramatique…

      Un peu comme France Télécom hier ou la Société nationale des chemins de fer français (SNCF) aujourd’hui, le #CHU toulousain est confronté à une recrudescence de #suicides de salariés. Le rapport d’un cabinet de conseil établi en 2016 est formel : les quatre personnes ayant mis fin à leurs jours en quelques semaines la même année (dont une dans les locaux du CHU) l’ont fait à cause de leurs #conditions_de_travail. L’année suivante, dans un des 26 000 documents internes révélés par la presse (1), une infirmière en gynécologie décrit ainsi son quotidien : « Mise en danger de la vie des patientes, mauvaise prise en charge de la douleur, dégradation de l’image des patientes (patientes laissées plusieurs minutes souillées de vomis) (…) mauvaise prise en charge psychologique (annonce de cancer faite récemment, pas le temps de discuter). (…) Une équipe épuisée physiquement (même pas cinq minutes de pause entre 13 h 30 et 23 heures) et moralement (sentiment de travail mal fait et de mettre en danger la vie des patients). »

      Les choses n’ont guère progressé depuis. En février 2019, un patient meurt d’une crise cardiaque dans le sas des urgences. L’infirmier de garde cette nuit-là, en poste depuis 10 heures du matin, avait la charge de plus de quinze patients. Il n’a pas eu le temps de faire les gestes de premiers secours (2). Début mai 2019, rebelote au service de soins intensifs digestifs, en pleine restructuration, où un problème informatique a mené à la mort d’un patient.

      Depuis 2015, une soixantaine de préavis de grève ont été envoyés à la direction par les syndicats. Au moins quatorze grèves ont eu lieu (cinq rien qu’en 2019), sans compter les quelque vingt mobilisations collectives, la douzaine d’actions d’envergure et les chorégraphies parodiques de soignants vues six millions de fois sur les réseaux sociaux. « À l’hôpital des enfants, le nombre d’arrêts-maladie des quatre premiers mois de 2019 est de 20 % supérieur à celui de la même période en 2018, nous explique Mme Sandra C., vingt ans d’hôpital public à son actif, dont dix-sept à l’hôpital des enfants de Toulouse. Nous avons l’impression d’être traités comme des numéros par une direction dont le seul but est de faire appliquer les réductions de coûts et la baisse du personnel. Nous avons besoin d’au moins six cents embauches dans tout le CHU, et vite. »

      Embaucher ? Impossible !, rétorque la direction, largement convertie au lean management, le « management sans gras », une doctrine d’optimisation du rendement élaborée par les ingénieurs japonais du groupe Toyota après la seconde guerre mondiale et peaufinée ensuite dans les éprouvettes néolibérales du Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). L’objectif ? Faire produire plus avec moins de gens, quitte à pousser les équipes à bout.

      Des conditions de travail déplorables, des contraintes de rentabilité qui interdisent d’améliorer le sort du personnel, des salariés qui préfèrent mettre fin à leurs jours plutôt que d’endurer leur activité professionnelle ? Il fallait réagir. C’est chose faite grâce à une initiative de la DRH : des séances de rigologie, cette « approche globale permettant une harmonie entre le corps, l’esprit et les émotions », comme on peut le lire dans le « Plan d’actions 2018 pour la prévention des risques psychosociaux et la qualité de vie au travail » du pôle hôpital des enfants du CHU de Toulouse.

      Yoga du rire, méditation de pleine conscience, techniques variées de relaxation et de respiration, sophrologie ludique… la rigologie vise à « cultiver les sentiments positifs et sa joie de vivre ». Sur la page d’accueil du site de l’École internationale du rire (« Bonheur, joie de vivre, créativité »), l’internaute tombe sur la photographie d’un groupe de salariés hilares faisant le symbole de la victoire. S’ils sont heureux, suggère l’image, c’est qu’ils ont tous décroché leur diplôme de « rigologue » à la suite d’une formation de sept jours en psychologie positive, yoga du rire et autres techniques de « libération des émotions », facturée 1 400 euros. Un rigologue estampillé École du rire, le leader du marché, se fera rémunérer entre 1 000 et 3 000 euros la journée. Il pourra éventuellement devenir chief happiness officer, ces responsables du service bonheur dont les entreprises du CAC 40 raffolent (3).

      La souffrance au travail est devenue un marché, et le service public apparaît comme un nouveau terrain de jeu du développement personnel. Ainsi des policiers confrontés à une vague de suicides (vingt-huit en 2019), auxquels le directeur général de la police nationale a envoyé, fin mai, une circulaire incitant les encadrants à favoriser « les moments de convivialité et de partage » comme les barbecues, les sorties sportives ou les pique-niques en famille (4). Ainsi des agents de la SNCF, une entreprise qui compte depuis le début de l’année 2019 un suicide de salarié par semaine. La direction lilloise de la société ferroviaire en pleine restructuration a fait appel au cabinet Great Place to Work (« super endroit pour travailler »), qui lui a conseillé de… distribuer des bonbons aux agents en souffrance, de mettre en place des goûters-surprises ou encore des ateliers de maquillage (5).

      « Au départ, nous explique Mme Corinne Cosseron, directrice de l’École internationale du rire et importatrice du concept de rigologie en France, je me suis formée pour plaisanter, comme un gag, au yoga du rire, une technique mise au point par un médecin indien, qui s’est rendu compte que ses patients joyeux guérissaient mieux que les sinistres. Le rire permet de libérer des hormones euphorisantes qui luttent contre la douleur », explique cette ancienne psychanalyste qui évoque les endorphines (« un antidouleur naturel qui agit comme une morphine naturelle »), la sérotonine (« la molécule du bonheur »), la dopamine (celle de la motivation) ou encore l’ocytocine (« l’hormone de l’amour »). « C’est un grand shoot gratuit. Beaucoup de grandes entreprises ont commencé à faire appel à nous (SNCF, Total, Suez, Royal Canin, Danone, etc.), car le rire répare point par point tout ce que les effets du stress détruisent. Non seulement le salarié va aller mieux (il ne va pas se suicider, il n’ira pas voir chez le concurrent), mais, en plus, l’entreprise va gagner en productivité. Donc c’est du gagnant-gagnant. »

      Novateur, le CHU de Toulouse a vu se mettre en place des séances de « libération émotionnelle » et de « lâcher-prise » dans le service des soins palliatifs dès 2017. Dans le cadre de ses propositions d’actions 2018-2019 pour prévenir les risques psychosociaux et pour la qualité de vie au travail, la DRH propose désormais d’élargir son offre à d’autres unités sous tension, comme l’hôpital des enfants, où, au mois de mars dernier, deux grèves ont éclaté pour protester contre le projet de réduction du nombre de lits et d’intensification du travail des soignants.

      On soumet ce projet de lâcher-prise à M. Florent Fabre, 31 ans, infirmier au service des urgences psychiatriques. Sa première réaction est de laisser éclater un long rire, générant probablement un apport non négligeable en bêta-endorphines — ce qui lui permet de dire avec une voix parfaitement détendue : « C’est grotesque et indécent. » Pour ce soignant, qui a participé à la lutte victorieuse des salariés de son service, lesquels ont arraché deux postes supplémentaires d’infirmier à l’issue de deux mois de grève durant le printemps 2019, « le niveau du mépris social affiché par la direction du CHU ainsi que par les cadres régionaux de l’agence régionale de santé est totalement aberrant. Dès lors qu’il s’agit d’entendre qu’il y a un vrai manque de soignants, le dialogue se rompt. La santé des agents hospitaliers est le moindre de leurs soucis ». Contactée, la direction du CHU a refusé de répondre à cet appel à embaucher, qu’elle qualifie de « théories de la CGT [Confédération générale du travail] ». « On assume totalement ce document de proposition de rigologie », nous a précisé le directeur de la communication avant de nous raccrocher au nez. On ne rigole plus.

      « Mais, s’agace Mme Maguy Mettais, la pharmacienne chargée de la prévention des risques psychosociaux, avez-vous déjà testé la rigologie ? Ça serait peut-être intéressant que vous essayiez une séance, non ? C’est génial, vous verrez. » Adeptes du journalisme total, nous acceptons la proposition. « Alors, vous mettez les mains droit devant vous et vous expirez en faisant “chah” ! On le fait ensemble ? C’est parti ! Après on met les bras sur le côté et on fait “chou” ! Et un dernier, les bras levés vers le ciel et on va faire un grand “chiii” sur le temps d’expiration. » Docile, nous nous exécutons, pour la bonne cause. « Au final, ce qui est rigolo, c’est que ça fait chah-chou-chi… Comme si ça faisait “salsifis” [elle éclate de rire]. Voilà, j’avais envie de vous le faire découvrir, ça peut être bien avant d’écrire votre article. »

      https://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2019/07/BRYGO/60014

      #rire #thérapie_du_rire

      –—

      Pour rappel, les #formations dédiées au personnel de l’#Université_Grenoble_Alpes :
      1. Gestion de #conflits (formation mise sous le thème « #efficacité_professionnelle »)
      2. Mieux vivre ses #émotions dans ses #relations_professionnelles (aussi mise sous le même thème : #efficacité_professionnelle)
      https://seenthis.net/messages/882135

      #QVT #qualité_de_vie_au_travail

    • La démocratie aux champs. Du jardin d’Éden aux jardins partagés, comment l’agriculture cultive les valeurs

      On a l’habitude de penser que la démocratie moderne vient des Lumières, de l’usine, du commerce, de la ville. Opposé au citadin et même au citoyen, le paysan serait au mieux primitif et proche de la nature, au pire arriéré et réactionnaire.
      À l’opposé de cette vision, ce livre examine ce qui, dans les relations entre les cultivateurs et la terre cultivée, favorise l’essor des valeurs démocratiques et la formation de la citoyenneté. Défi le alors sous nos yeux un cortège étonnant d’expériences agricoles, les unes antiques, les autres actuelles ; du jardin d’Éden qu’Adam doit « cultiver » et aussi « garder » à la « petite république » que fut la ferme pour Jefferson ; des chambrées et foyers médiévaux au lopin de terre russe ; du jardin ouvrier au jardin thérapeutique ; des « guérillas vertes » aux jardins partagés australiens.
      Cultiver la terre n’est pas un travail comme un autre. Ce n’est pas suer, souffrir ni arracher, arraisonner. C’est dialoguer, être attentif, prendre une initiative et écouter la réponse, anticiper, sachant qu’on ne peut calculer à coup sûr, et aussi participer, apprendre des autres, coopérer, partager. L’agriculture peut donc, sous certaines conditions, représenter une puissance de changement considérable et un véritable espoir pour l’écologie démocratique.

      https://www.editionsladecouverte.fr/la_democratie_aux_champs-9782359251012démocratiques

    • La #durabilité en pratique(s) : gestion et appropriation des #principes_durabilistes véhiculés par les #écoquartiers

      Dans cette contribution, il est question de la durabilité comme objet, dans sa dimension heuristique, en tant que moyen de compréhension voire d’explication des initiatives individuelles, collectives et politiques ainsi que des dynamiques. Il s’agit tout d’abord de se pencher sur la manière dont la durabilité est mobilisée et signifiée, aussi bien sur l’horizon du pensable qui l’accompagne que sur les « manières de faire » qu’elle véhicule, parmi des acteurs divers, pris dans des jeux d’échelles, d’intérêts et dans des engagements parfois contradictoires. Politiquement, la mise en œuvre de la durabilité se décline dans des contextes, pour des raisons et à des finalités diverses que peuvent être la transformation des comportements individuels, la modification de la législation et des cadres réglementaires nationaux et locaux, la redéfinition des stratégies communautaires, etc. Entre pratiques, éthique, fiscalité individuelle d’un côté et enjeux techniques, politiques et sociétaux de l’autre, ces multiples mobilisations de la durabilité rendent cette notion évasive, voire équivoque. Au-delà d’un recensement et d’une classification de cette multiplicité d’usage et de traduction « en pratiques » de la durabilité, c’est sur la base des multiples tensions qui caractérisent ces manières de voir, comprendre, mobiliser et opérationnaliser la durabilité que nous cherchons à venir éclairer les pratiques leurs implications mais aussi leurs conséquences. Pour ce faire nous nous appuyons sur les 37 entretiens (15 avec les concepteurs, 22 avec les habitants) réalisés lors d’une enquête menée en 2012 et 2013 sur l’écoquartier de Lyon Confluence dans le cadre de la thèse de doctorat de Matthieu Adam. Nous analysons les discours portant sur la durabilité. Ceux-ci ont toujours une portée normative et performative mais peuvent aussi être considérés en tant qu’embrayeur de sens permettant de saisir les modalités de réactions, passives (acceptation) et/ou actives (refus, adaptation, contre-proposition, etc.) face à cette quête de durabilité. En analysant les pratiques, les manières d’être, les attitudes ainsi que les représentations d’une part liées à l’injonction de durabilité et d’autre part à sa mise en pratique, nous mettrons au débat des éléments portant tant sur les décalages entre intentions et actions que sur les moyens utilisés pour tenter de les lever. De plus, en changeant de focale, l’analyse fine des discours permet de tirer des enseignements sur le développement durable en tant que valeur et idéologie dominante du projet urbain mais aussi en tant que modalités pratiques quotidiennes.

      https://books.openedition.org/cse/124

      #Georges-Henry_Laffont #Matthieu_Adam

  • Keep Out... Come Again. The underbelly of American-styled conservation in the Indian Himalayas.

    IN DECEMBER, THE ROAD leading to the #Tirthan_Valley entrance archway of the #Great_Himalayan_National_Park (#GHNP), a #UNESCO World Heritage site in India’s mountain state of Himachal Pradesh, is a potholed mudslide: For miles, a fleet of excavators and tunnel-boring machines are lopping and drilling the mountains to widen and extend the highway. Most of the traffic passing through a big, dark tunnel blasted through the mountain is headed to Manali — the mass-tourist hub of the Western Himalayas, about an hour’s drive farther north.

    My partner and I pass through the archway and weave the motorcycle along a cliffside road into the gorgeous, narrow valley. Villages and orchards dot the ridges. The first snow is melting off the roofs, and far below the Tirthan River runs free and fast. This is still the off-beaten path. But around every turn, we see signs that development is on the rise. Guesthouses, campsites, cottages, hotels, and resorts are sprouting up outside the park’s boundaries. Trucks carrying construction material drive traffic off onto the shoulder. On the opposite ridge, a new helipad access road is being carved out. The area appears to be under construction, not conservation.

    It seems that by putting this once little-known national park on the global map, conservationists have catalyzed a massive wave of development along its border. And ecotourism, though ostensibly a responsible form of development, looks over here, as one researcher put it, more like “old wine in a new bottle.”

    In the two decades since it was formed, the park has displaced over 300 people from their land, disrupted the traditional livelihoods of several thousand more, and forced yet more into dependence on a risky (eco)tourism industry run in large part by outside “experts.” In many ways, the GHNP is a poster child of how the American national park model — conceived at Yellowstone and exported to the Global South by a transnational nexus of state and nonstate actors, continues to ignore the sociopolitical and cultural realities of a place. As a result, protected areas around the world continue to yield pernicious impacts on local communities, and, to some extent, on the local ecology as well. It also raises the question: If protecting one piece of land requires moving its long-time human residents out, developing adjacent land, and flying in tourists from around the world — what is actually being conserved?

    IN THE EARLY 1980s, at the invitation of the Himachal government, a team of Indian and international wildlife biologists led by a British researcher named Tony Gaston surveyed the Western Himalayas for a possible location for the state’s first national park. The state government had been eyeing the Manali area, but after a broad wildlife survey, Gaston’s team recommended the Upper Tirthan and Sainj valleys instead.

    The ecosystem was less disturbed, home to more wildlife, and thus had “excellent potential for attracting tourists”— especially foreign tourists — who might constitute both a “substantial source of [park] revenues” as well as “an enormous input to the local economy,” the team’s report said.

    The proposed 754.4-square-kilometer park included the upper mountain glacial and snow melt water source origins of the Jiwa Nal, Sainj Tirthan, and Parvati rivers, which are all headwater tributaries to the Beas River and subsequently, the Indus River. Given its location at the junction of two of the world’s major biogeographic realms — the Palearctic and Indomalayan — its monsoon-fed forests and alpine meadows sustain a diversity of plant, moss, lichen, bird, and mammal species, many of which are endemic, including the Himalayan goral, blue sheep, and the endangered western Tragopan pheasant and musk deer.

    The park’s boundary was strategically drawn so that only four villages needed to be relocated. But this glossed over the problem of resource displacement. To the northwest, the proposed park was buffered by high mountain systems that include several other national parks and wildlife sanctuaries, but the land in and around its southwest boundary was home to about 150 villages with a total population of at least 11,000 people, all of whom were officially dispossessed of the forests they depended on for centuries when the Indian government inaugurated The Great Himalayan National Park in 1999. These villages are now part of a 265.6-square-kilometer buffer, or so-called “ecozone,” leading into the park.

    A large majority of these families were poor. Many of them cultivated small parcels of land that provided subsistence for part of the year, and they relied on a variety of additional resources provided by the forestlands in the mountains around their homes to meet the rest of their food and financial requirements. That included grazing sheep and goats in the alpine meadows, extracting medicinal herbs that they could sell to the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industry, and collecting gucchi, or morel mushrooms, that fetched high prices in international markets.

    “IN THE INDIAN CONTEXT, the notion that you can have a landscape that is pristine and therefore devoid of humans is an artificial creation,” says Dr. Vasant Saberwal, a wildlife biologist and director of the Centre for Pastoralism, an organization based in Gujarat state that aims to enhance our understanding of pastoralist ecosystems. “India has [long] been a heavily populated country. So, when you think of alpine meadows at 15,000 feet above sea-level, they have been used by pastoral communities for several hundred years. You cannot now go into those landscapes and say we want a pristine alpine meadow. There’s no such thing.”

    In keeping with the lingering idea, tracing back to early American conservationism, that pastoral societies destroy their own land, the Gaston team’s original report claimed that firewood collecting, hunting, and especially overgrazing, were degrading habitat within the area. It recommended a ban on grazing and medicinal plant collection in order to maintain the park’s biodiversity.

    But Saberwal’s research shows that grazing practices in the park’s high alpine meadows — which constitute almost half the park’s area — were likely necessary to maintain its high levels of herb diversity. Before the area was closed off to people, traditional herders of the Indigenous Gaddi tribe would travel up to the alpine meadows with about 35,000 sheep and goats entrusted to them by individual families, and graze them in these meadows for six snow-free months from April through September.

    “So, when you talk to people and suggest to people that their use of the park leads to degradation, they say that we have been using these resources for the past 150-200 years,” he says. “They say, if our presence here has been such a threat, then why would there be biological diversity here?”

    Saberwal’s findings are consistent with reams of scholarship in recent years documenting how local and Indigenous communities, without external pressures, live convivially with nature.

    That is not to say that external pressures aren’t impacting the region. There has definitely been an uptick in morel and medicinal herbs extraction from the park area, especially since the early 1990s when India “liberalized” its economy. Yet today, without adequate enforcement, it remains unclear just how much the park actually helped curtail extraction of these herbs or instead just forced the market underground.

    Other threats include poaching, human-wildlife conflicts, and hydropower development. Ironically, a 10-square-kilometer area was deleted from the original map of the GHNP for building of a hydro-power project, underscoring a typical approach towards conservation “wherein local livelihoods are expendable in the interests of biodiversity, but biodiversity must make way for national development,” Saberwal says.

    India’s Wildlife Protection Act, which prohibits all human activities within a national park, does recognize people’s traditional rights to forest resources. It therefore requires state governments settle or acquire these rights prior to finalizing a new national park’s boundaries, either through financial compensation or by providing people alternative land where such rights can be exercised. But India’s record of actually honoring these rights has been sketchy at best. In GHNP’s case, the state chose to offer financial compensation to only about 300 of the 2,300 or so impacted households, based on family names listed in a colonial report with census data for the area dating back to 1894. It eventually provided the rest of the villagers alternative areas to graze their livestock, but this land was inadequate and nutrient-poor compared to the grasses in the high alpine meadows. Only a handful of families in these villages still have sheep and goat herds today.

    Saberwal, and many mainstream conservationists, says there is an argument to be made for allowing villagers into the park, and not only because it supports their livelihoods. “The presence of people with a real stake in the biological resources of the park can also lead to far greater levels of support for effective management of the park, including better monitoring of who goes into the park, for what, and at what times of the year. Poaching could be more effectively controlled, as could the excessive extraction of medicinal herbs,” he says.

    DESPITE STIFF LOCAL RESISTANCE, the forest department — with support from an international nonprofit called Friends of GHNP, as well as the World Bank, which chipped in a $2.5 million loan — developed an ecotourism industry in the area to help local communities adapt.

    Eco-development, of course, is the current cool idea for making exclusionary conservation acceptable. On paper, it requires community involvement to create “alternative livelihoods” to reduce locals’ dependence on a park’s resources. So, with the support of Friends of GHNP, the forest department helped form a street theater group. It developed firewood and medicinal herb plantations in an effort to wean villagers off of foraging for these the park. A women’s savings and credit collective called Sahara was set up to produce vermicompost, apricot oil, and handicrafts. The Forest Department also handed out “doles” — stoves, handlooms, televisions, pressure cookers — what Mark Dowie, in his book Conservation Refugees, calls “cargo conservation,” or the exchange of commodities for compliance.

    Yet, the project was mired in corruption and mismanagement. The male director of the women’s collective, for instance, was discovered to be siphoning off the collective’s funds. Meanwhile, local ecodevelopment committees set up to coordinate expenditure on livelihood projects were run by the most powerful people in the villages, usually upper-caste males of the devta (deity) community, and chose to spend the money on things like temple and road repairs. According to a 2001 study of the ecodevelopment project, 70 percent of the funds were spent on infrastructure initiatives of this kind. Much later, in 2002, in an attempt to distance itself from the program, the World Bank concluded ecodevelopment had left “very little or no impact … on the ground.”

    In 2014, the park, along with the adjacent Sainj and Tirthan wildlife sanctuaries, was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site, again in spite of more protests from the impacted local communities. Friends of GHNP wrote the application.

    If creating the park cracked the door to development in the Tirthan Valley, minting it a UNESCO World Heritage site flung it wide open.

    On the economic front, it’s certainly true that the influx of tourists has injected more money into the Tirthan Valley than ever before. And it’s true, too, that many locals, the youth especially, are excited, or at least hopeful, that the industry will improve their lives and alleviate poverty. But on the whole, locals are losing opportunities to outside entrepreneurs who come with deeper pockets, digital marketing savvy, and already established networks of potential clientele.

    “That kind of investment and marketing involvement is difficult for locals for figure out,” says Manashi Asher, a researcher with Himdhara, a Himachal-based environmental research and action collective. “Basically, what many locals have done instead, is circumvent local ecotourism policies by turning their properties into homestay or other kinds of [tourist] lodgings and leasing them out to outsiders to run.”

    Though there are no official estimates yet, there’s a consensus among locals that outsider-run guesthouses have already cornered a majority of the valley’s tourism revenue. “City-based tourism operators are licking out the cream, while the peasantry class and unemployed youth earn a pittance from the seasonal, odd jobs they offer,” Dilaram Shabab, the late “Green Man” of Tirthan Valley who spearheaded successful movements against hydropower development on the Tirthan river, wrote in his book Kullu: The Valley of Gods.

    When I read this quote to Upendra Singh Kamra, a transplant from the northwestern state of Punjab who runs a tourism outfit for fishing enthusiasts called Gone Fishing Cottages, he emphasizes how, unlike at most properties, they don’t lay off their local staff during low season. Some have even bought motorcycles or cars. “Logically, you have nothing and then you have something and then you’re complaining that something is not enough. So it doesn’t make sense for me.”

    Many locals see it differently. Narotham Singh, a veteran forest guard, told me he leased his land for 30 years, but now worries for his son and grandchildren. “If they don’t study, what they’re going to be doing is probably cleaning utensils and sweeping in the guesthouses of these people. That’s the dark future.” Karan Bharti, one of Shabab’s grandsons, told me many youth are so ashamed to work as servants on their own land that they’re fleeing the valley altogether.

    More broadly, tourism is also a uniquely precarious industry. Global market fluctuations and environmental disasters frequently spook tourists away for years. (The Western Himalayas is primed for an 8.0-plus magnitude quake tomorrow). And when destination hotspots flip cold, once self-reliant shepherds turned hoteliers are left holding the bill for that high-interest construction loan.

    Sadly, this is exactly what’s happened. In Himachal, the Covid-19 pandemic has exposed just how dependent the state has become on tourism. After the borders were shut in late March, pressure to reopen to salvage a piece of the summer high season was palpable in the press. Chief Minister Jai Ram Thakur proposed Himachal advertise itself for “Quarantine Tourism.” The hotel unions shot down the idea as absurd.

    THERE’S NO SIGN NOR ROAD to Raju’s Guesthouse. To get to it, you have to cross the Tirthan River in a cable basket or makeshift plank bridge and climb up the opposite bank into a fairytale. Vines climb the dark wood facade. There are flowers, fruit trees, and a fire pit. When I visit, kittens are playing around an old cherry tree and a pack of dogs bark up the steep south face; leopards, I learn, come over the ridge at night sometimes and steal dogs.

    Raju, in his late sixties, toothpick-thin, and wearing a baseball cap, is the pioneer of ecotourism in Tirthan Valley. He is also Shabab’s son. When I first spoke with him on the phone, he called the park an “eyewash.” What he meant was that most people don’t come to the park for the park. It’s a steep, half-day trek just to the official boundary, and, inside, the trails aren’t marked. Most tourists are content with a weekend kickback at a guesthouse in the ecozone.

    Still, if real ecotourism exists, Raju’s comes as close as I’ve ever seen. Food scraps are boiled down and fed to the cows. There’s fishing and birding and trekking on offer. No corporate groups allowed, even though that’s where the big bucks are. And no fume-expelling diesel generator, despite guests’ complaints after big storms. There’s a feeling of ineffable wholesomeness that has kept people coming back year after year, for decades now.

    In a 1998 report titled “Communtity-Based Ecotourism in the GHNP,” a World Bank consultant was so impressed by Raju’s that she recommended it be “used as a model for the whole area.” But this was a consultant’s fantasy. Rather than provide support to help locals become owners in the tourism industry, the government and World Bank offered them tour guide, portering, and cooking training. Today, similar second-tier job trainings are part of an $83 million project funded by the Asian Development Bank to develop tourism (mainly by building parking lots) across Himachal.

    Varun, one of Raju’s two sons who runs the guesthouse, doesn’t think any tourist property in the area is practicing ecotourism, even his own. People are illegally catching trout for guests’ dinners, cutting trees for their bonfires, and dumping their trash into the river, he says.

    In 2018, Varun founded the Tirthan Conservation and Tourism Development Association (https://www.facebook.com/Tirthan-conservation-and-tourism-development-association-101254861218173), a union of local guesthouses that works to “eliminate the commercialization of our neighborhood and retain the aura of the valley.” They do tree plantings, enforce camping bans around the river, and meet regularly to discuss new developments in the valley.

    Yet, Varun doesn’t see any way of stopping the development wave. “I mean, it’s inevitable. No matter how much you resist, you know, you’ll have to accept it. The only thing is, we can delay it, slow it down.”

    https://www.earthisland.org/journal/index.php/magazine/entry/keep-out...come-again
    #Inde #montagne #conservation_de_la_nature #nature #protection_de_la_nature #parc_national #Himachal_Pradesh #Manali #tourisme #colonialisme #néo-colonialisme #circulation_des_modèles #Hymalayah #Jiwa_Nal #Sainj_Tirthan #Parvati #rivières #Beas_River #paysage #conservationnisme #biodiversité #Gaddi #élevage #ressources #exploitation_des_ressources #Friends_of_GHNP #banque_mondiale #éco-tourisme #écotourisme #cargo_conservation #corruption #devta #deity #éco-développement #développement #World_Heritage_site #énergie_hydroélectrique #Asian_Development_Bank #Tirthan_Conservation_and_Tourism_Development_Association

    #ressources_pédagogiques

  • « Le Web, tout le monde s’en sert et beaucoup en sont très contents. Mais, même parmi ceux et celles qui sont ravi·es de l’utiliser, il y a souvent des critiques. Elles portent sur de nombreux aspects et je ne vais pas essayer de lister ici toutes ces critiques. Je vais parler d’un problème souvent ressenti : le Web n’est-il pas devenu trop compliqué ? »

    https://framablog.org/2020/12/30/le-web-est-il-devenu-trop-complique

    #Avenir_du_Web #obésiciel #sobriété_numérique #Dillo #NoScript #bloqueur_de_publicité #Gemini

  • Démarrer rapidement et facilement un projet avec un script

    Et si vous aviez un #script pour faire le boulot ? Un script qui pourrait vous générer un projet prêt à démarrer, et ce en quelques instants, avec uniquement des interventions de votre part au début pour répondre à des questions basiques ?

    https://darklg.me/demarrer-rapidement-et-facilement-un-projet-avec-un-script

    Mes 1ers tests par ici avec mon boilerplate #SPIP : https://gitlab.com/jmoupah/zcm-installer

    Couplé à #SPIP-CLI / #Checkout, ça commence à causer :)

    SPIP-CLI : https://contrib.spip.net/SPIP-Cli
    Checkout : https://git.spip.net/spip-contrib-outils/checkout

    #git #developpement #bash #outil

    • c’est en gros ce que fait l’installeur de IntéGraal qui est uniquement en spip-cli :
      https://git.spip.net/spip-contrib-outils/spip-cli/src/branch/master/src/Command/IntegraalGenerer.php

      Sachant qu’en spip-cli, enfin avec le module Console de Sf quoi, une fois qu’on a fait des commandes unitaires pour ci ou ça, on peut aussi faire des commandes qui appelle d’autres commandes.

      Moi je fais donc tout en PHP/spip-cli/Console, vu que c’est bien plus simple à coder, propre, beau avec des couleurs, tableaux, barre de défilement, etc, sans avoir à coder en Bash.

      Pour spip-cli, par contre, hors commandes de base, ça va chercher que les commandes qui sont dans des plugins activés, d’où le fait que pour l’instant celle pour IntéGraal est dans le socle commun, sinon on peut pas l’utiliser.

      Ce qu’on pourrait imaginer c’est que spip-cli cherche aussi au moins les commandes placées dans un dossier « spip-cli » à la racine du dossier où on le lance et/ou à la racine du spip (pas juste les plugins activés).

    • Pour l’instant, mes besoins sont rudimentaires, donc bash me va bien :)

      Ce que ça fait :

      – crée la base mySQL pour installer SPIP via spip-cli
      – crée les dossiers plugins et auto (désactivable)
      – clone ZCM
      – édite paquet.xml avec le préfixe du plugin
      – renomme les fichiers options/fonctions/zcm-xx.svg avec le préfixe du plugin
      – commit le tout dans un repo du nom du préfixe préalablement créé (désactivable)

      Et donc les commandes :

      – télécharger SPIP spip dl --branche master
      – initialiser ZCM Intaller zcminstaller (créer à minima la base de données)
      – installer SPIP spip core:installer --db-server "mysql" --db-login "login" --db-pass "motdepasse" --db-database "nomdelabase" --admin-nom "nom" --admin-login "login" --admin-email "mail@domaine.net" --admin-pass "motdepasse"
      – ajouter le dépôt des plugins spip plugins:svp:depoter https://plugins.spip.net/depots/principal.xml

      La seule chose que je n’arrive pas à faire via SPIP Cli, c’est installer mon plugin car ça ne gère pas les dépendances (téléchargement et installation). Ou alors, je rate une commande ?

  • Denying aid on the basis of EU migration objectives is wrong

    –-> extrait du communiqué de presse de CONCORD:

    The Development Committee of the European Parliament has been working on the report “Improving development effectiveness and efficiency of aid” since January 2020. However, shortly before the plenary vote on Wednesday, #Tomas_Tobé of the EPP group, suddenly added an amendment to allow the EU to refuse to give aid to partner countries that don’t comply with EU migration requirements.

    https://concordeurope.org/2020/11/27/denying-aid-on-the-basis-of-eu-migration-objectives-is-wrong

    –---

    Le rapport du Parlement européen (novembre 2020):

    REPORT on improving development effectiveness and the efficiency of aid (2019/2184(INI))

    E. whereas aid effectiveness depends on the way the principle of Policy Coherence for Development (PCD) is implemented; whereas more efforts are still needed to comply with PCD principles, especially in the field of EU migration, trade, climate and agriculture policies;
    3. Stresses that the EU should take the lead in using the principles of aid effectiveness and aid efficiency, in order to secure real impact and the achievement of the SDGs, while leaving no-one behind, in its partner countries; stresses, in this regard, the impact that EU use of development aid and FDI could have on tackling the root causes of migration and forced displacement;
    7. Calls on the EU to engage directly with and to build inclusive sustainable partnerships with countries of origin and transit of migration, based on the specific needs of each country and the individual circumstances of migrants;
    62. Notes with grave concern that the EU and Member States are currently attaching conditions to aid related to cooperation by developing countries on migration and border control efforts, which is clearly a donor concern in contradiction with key internationally agreed development effectiveness principles; recalls that aid must keep its purposes of eradicating poverty, reducing inequality, respecting and supporting human rights and meeting humanitarian needs, and must never be conditional on migration control;
    63. Reiterates that making aid allocation conditional on cooperation with the EU on migration or security issues is not compatible with agreed development effectiveness principles;

    EXPLANATORY STATEMENT

    As agreed in the #European_Consensus_on_Development, the #EU is committed to support the implementation of the #Sustainable_Development_Goals in our development partner countries by 2030. With this report, your rapporteur would like to stress the urgency that all EU development actors strategically use the existing tools on aid effectiveness and efficiency.

    Business is not as usual. The world is becoming more complex. Geopolitical rivalry for influence and resources as well as internal conflicts are escalating. The impact of climate change affects the most vulnerable. The world’s population is growing faster than gross national income, which increases the number of people living in poverty and unemployment. As of 2030, 30 million young Africans are expected to enter the job market per year. These challenges point at the urgency for development cooperation to have a real impact and contribute to peaceful sustainable development with livelihood security and opportunities.

    Despite good intentions, EU institutions and Member States are still mainly guided by their institutional or national goals and interests. By coordinating our efforts in a comprehensive manner and by using the aid effectiveness and efficiency tools we have at our disposal our financial commitment can have a strong impact and enable our partner countries to reach the Sustainable Development Goals.

    The EU, as the world’s biggest donor, as well as the strongest international actor promoting democracy and human rights, should take the lead. We need to implement the policy objectives in the EU Consensus on Development in a more strategic and targeted manner in each partner country, reinforcing and complementing the EU foreign policy goals and values. The commitments and principles on aid effectiveness and efficiency as well as international commitments towards financing needs are in place. The Union has a powerful toolbox of instruments and aid modalities.

    There are plenty of opportunities for the EU to move forward in a more comprehensive and coordinated manner:

    First, by using the ongoing programming exercise linked to NDICI as an opportunity to reinforce coordination. Joint programming needs to go hand in hand with joint implementation: the EU should collectively set strategic priorities and identify investment needs/gaps in the pre-programming phase and subsequently look at ways to optimise the range of modalities in the EU institutions’ toolbox, including grants, budget support and EIB loans, as well as financing from EU Member States.

    Second, continue to support sectors where projects have been successful and there is a high potential for future sustainability. Use a catalyst approach: choose sectors where a partner country has incentives to continue a project in the absence of funding.

    Third, using lessons learned from a common EU knowledge base in a strategic and results-oriented manner when defining prioritised sectors in a country.

    Fourth, review assessments of successful and failed projects where the possibilities for sustainability are high. For example, choose sectors that to date have been received budget support and where investment needs can be addressed through a combination of EIB loans/Member State financial institutions and expertise.

    Fifth, using EU and Member State headquarters/delegations’ extensive knowledge of successful and unsuccessful aid modalities in certain sectors on the ground. Continue to tailor EU aid modalities to the local context reflecting the needs and capacity in the country.

    Sixth, use the aid effectiveness and efficiency tools with the aim of improving transparency with our partner countries.

    We do not need to reinvent the wheel. Given the magnitude of the funding gap and limited progress towards achieving the SDGs, it is time to be strategic and take full advantage of the combined financial weight and knowledge of all EU institutions and EU Member States - and to use the unique aid effectiveness and efficiency tools at our disposal - to achieve real impact and progress.

    https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/A-9-2020-0212_EN.html

    –—

    L’#amendement de Tomas Tobé (modification de l’article 25.):
    25.Reiterates that in order for the EU’s development aid to contribute to long-term sustainable development and becompatible with agreed development effectiveness principles, aid allocation should be based on and promote the EU’s core values of the rule of law, human rights and democracy, and be aligned with its policy objectives, especially in relation to climate, trade, security and migration issues;

    Article dans le rapport:
    25.Reiterates that making aid allocation conditional on cooperation with the EU on migration issues is notcompatible with agreed development effectiveness principles;

    https://concordeurope.org/2020/11/27/denying-aid-on-the-basis-of-eu-migration-objectives-is-wrong
    https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/B-9-2019-0175-AM-001-002_EN.pdf

    –—

    Texte amendé
    https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2020-0323_EN.html
    –-> Texte adopté le 25.11.2020 par le parlement européen avec 331 votes pour 294 contre et 72 abstentions.

    https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20201120IPR92142/parliament-calls-for-better-use-of-the-eu-development-aid

    –-

    La chronologie de ce texte:

    On 29 October, the Committee on Development adopted an own-initiative report on “improving development effectiveness and efficiency of aid” presented by the Committee Chair, Tomas Tobé (EPP, Sweden). The vote was 23 in favour, 1 against and 0 abstentions: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/doceo/document/TA-9-2020-0323_EN.html.

    According to the report, improving effectiveness and efficiency in development cooperation is vital to help partner countries to reach the Sustainable Development Goals and to realise the UN 2030 Agenda. Facing enormous development setbacks, limited resources and increasing needs in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, the report by the Development Committee calls for a new impetus to scale-up the effectiveness of European development assistance through better alignment and coordination with EU Member States, with other agencies, donors and with the priorities of aid recipient countries.

    On 25 November, the report was adopted by the plenary (331 in favour, 294 against, 72 abstentions): https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20201120IPR92142/parliament-calls-for-better-use-of-the-eu-development-aid

    https://www.europarl.europa.eu/committees/en/improving-development-effectiveness-and-/product-details/20200921CDT04141

    #SDGs #développement #pauvreté #chômage #coopération_au_développement #aide_au_développement #UE #Union_européenne #NDICI #Rapport_Tobé #conditionnalité_de_l'aide_au_développement #migrations #frontières #contrôles_frontaliers #root_causes #causes_profondes

    ping @_kg_ @karine4 @isskein @rhoumour

    –—

    Ajouté dans la métaliste autour du lien développement et migrations:
    https://seenthis.net/messages/733358#message768701

    • Le #Parlement_européen vote pour conditionner son aide au développement au contrôle des migrations

      Le Parlement européen a adopté hier un rapport sur “l’#amélioration de l’#efficacité et de l’#efficience de l’aide au développement”, qui soutient la conditionnalité de l’aide au développement au contrôle des migrations.

      Cette position était soutenue par le gouvernement français dans une note adressée aux eurodéputés français.

      Najat Vallaud-Belkacem, directrice France de ONE, réagit : « Le Parlement européen a décidé de modifier soudainement son approche et de se mettre de surcroit en porte-à-faux du #traité_européen qui définit l’objectif et les valeurs de l’aide au développement européenne. Cela pourrait encore retarder les négociations autour de ce budget, et donc repousser sa mise en œuvre, en pleine urgence sanitaire et économique. »

      « Les études montrent justement que lier l’aide au développement aux #retours et #réadmissions des ressortissants étrangers dans leurs pays d’origine ne fonctionne pas, et peut même avoir des effets contre-productifs. L’UE doit tirer les leçons de ses erreurs passées en alignant sa politique migratoire sur les besoins de ses partenaires, pas sur des priorités politiques à court terme. »

      « On prévoit que 100 millions de personnes supplémentaires tomberont dans l’extrême pauvreté à cause de la pandémie, et que fait le Parlement européen ? Il tourne le dos aux populations les plus fragiles, qui souffriraient directement de cette décision. L’aide au développement doit, sans concessions, se concentrer sur des solutions pour lutter contre l’extrême #pauvreté, renforcer les systèmes de santé et créer des emplois décents. »

      https://www.one.org/fr/press/alerte-le-parlement-europeen-vote-pour-conditionner-son-aide-au-developpement-a

  • Pour vivre heureux, vivons égaux ! - Mon blog sur l’écologie politique
    http://blog.ecologie-politique.eu/post/Pour-vivre-heureux-vivons-egaux

    Depuis quelques années, les libraires témoignent de la part prise par les ouvrages de développement personnel dans leurs rayons, parce qu’ils se vendent mieux. Les livres de sciences sociales ou de philosophie ont laissé peu à peu la place à d’autres qui proposent non plus de comprendre, de remettre en question l’ordre du monde et d’œuvrer à le changer mais de faire avec et d’agencer sa vie au mieux pour ne pas (trop) souffrir de sa condition d’être humain surnuméraire ou pas loin dans des sociétés toxiques. Cette approche « pragmatique » constitue en soi une idéologie, individualiste et rétive au politique, comme l’a bien montré le sociologue belge Nicolas Marquis. Il est illusoire d’imaginer s’en sortir seul·es, nous disent Pickett et Wilkinson en dressant le tableau clinique de la situation : nous sommes de plus en plus nombreuses et nombreux à développer des angoisses sociales, des angoisses liées à notre statut, à la crainte de déchoir ou de ne pas réussir. Plus les inégalités sont fortes et plus les enjeux sont importants, plus l’appréciation des autres compte.

  • Dans l’excellente série « 24 jours de Web » que tous les webmestres lisent (j’espère), le numéro d’aujourd’hui est consacré à démolir ces ridicules formulaires Web écrits par des control freaks fascistes qui vous reprochent votre adresse de courrier électronique, votre prénom, ou votre département de naissance.

    https://www.24joursdeweb.fr/2020/concevoir-des-formulaires-inclusifs

    #développement_Web #RGPD #djandeur

    • Des explications sur : https://docs.radicle.xyz/docs/understanding-radicle/why-radicle
      En raccourci :
      But :

      In a world where nearly all software relies on open source code, maintaining the resilience and health of the free and open source ecosystem is more important than ever. That’s why we believe that dependence on centrally hosted platforms and corporations for the distribution of critical open source infrastructure is unsustainable. Reliance on such centralized services contradicts the values of the free and open source ecosystem and threatens its well-being.

      Principes :

      Designing by principles
      As we set out to build an alternative, we started by thinking about the values that we recognize as integral to free and open source code collaboration. With that said, we developed the following list of guiding principles:
      1. It must prioritize user freedom In the words of the free software movement
      2. It must be accessible and uncensorable
      3. It must be user-friendly
      4. It must be offline-first
      5. It must not compromise on security

      Fonctionnement :

      Radicle’s approach is meant to return to the protocol-first philosophy by focusing on building code collaboration primitives instead of user experiences, and to reject data collection and siloing by intermediaries. This is reflected in the decision to build on and extend git. Having it as the nexus of replication builds on its strengths and decentralized nature. Having issues, pull requests, comments, and reviews locally gives developers the tools to manage and design their workflows without locking them into a new “experience”. Despite any front-end interface that will be built (😉), Radicle exists foremost as an open protocol — not a platform.

      Pour le « comment ça marche » : https://docs.radicle.xyz/docs/understanding-radicle/how-it-works

      #développement #collaboratif #protocole #github #gitlab #bazaar