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Economic Justice archive 2
2002 -- 2003

For more recent reports on economic justice issues, click here.

Items from 1999 through 2001 are archived on another page >>

More on Miami and the shrinkage of human rights in the USA
[12-3-03]

Police actions against mostly peaceful demonstrators in Miami have drawn more attention and analysis as an example of the continuing expansion of government power against dissent - and against basic human rights.

Sojourners points to three good sources, while the LA Times on Nov. 23 published a provocative opinion piece under the headline, "Mission Creep Hits Home: American armed forces are assuming major new domestic policing and surveillance roles"

News and analysis from the WTO gathering in Cancun

WTO Ministerial is meeting this week (Sept. 10-14, 2003) in Cancun, Mexico

Free trade or fair trade ... and for whom?

As the next round of global trade talks proceeds in Cancun, Mexico, we offer links to a number of sites that may help you follow what's going on, seen from various perspectives. If you have other resources to suggest, or comments of your own, please send a note!

The Mexico Solidarity Network, in its Weekly News and Analysis for September 1-7, 2003, offered a good introduction to some of the major issues.
The new name for "welfare reform" is ... poverty.
[10-1-03]

Mark Engler, writing for TomPaine.com. Says that in spite of all the conservative calls for "personal responsibility" as the key for escaping poverty, the combination of a jobless recovery and increasingly harsh rules are creating deeper poverty. He notes that Democrats, who supported "welfare reform" under President Clinton, are unlikely to offer much resistance.

He adds that "the percentage of eligible families who actually receive welfare benefits plunged from 84 percent in 1995 to 52 percent in 1999."

Latin American bishops call Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) a neo-colonialist trap     [9-8-03]

The Catholic bishops of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay, along with Bolivia and Chile, met recently in Montevideo, Uruguayan capital, to discuss the challenges of integration in Latin America and the "ethical and moral" aspects of the creation of the FTAA.

The report summarizes their statements thus: "The main objections to the FTAA raised by the bishops were that it will benefit the richest countries -- like the United States and Canada -- at the expense of the less competitive members, and that it will consolidate the hold of 'unfettered neo-liberalism' on the entire region."

Overtime pay vote expected any day.  [9-3-03]

We've received a note from Working Families e-Activist Network, urging people to contact their Senators to support the Harkin Amendment that would block the Bush overtime pay cuts.

They provide more information, and links to send messages to the Senate.

Trade negotiators try to override state laws in U.S.

A news release from Public Citizen and the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy warns of how US negotiators in WTO talks are being pushed to override state and local control to demands from other nations in the name of "free trade."   [4-2-03]

Washington Office offers extensive background for the coming federal budget debate   [3-17-03]

Gilbert Brown, a retired World Bank economist, looks at the budget in general, names five major concerns about the looming deficits, amplified by planned tax cut.

Jessica Tate examines the consequences of the federal fiscal crisis for education, and reminds us of long-standing Presbyterian commitment to "high quality education for all children and appropriate funding to ensure the quality."

Life in the Spirit: Toward a Theology of Globalization
OR ... for the Spanish version go to

La Vida en el Espíritu - Hacia una Teología de la Globalización

The Witherspoon Society is committed to a multicultural church in our increasingly diverse society, but we don't do much to live out that commitment. Here's one very modest step in that direction: a theological exploration of a very important topic, which was written originally in Spanish and then translated by the author into English.

[2-22-03]

Let's pay attention to "the common good"

Jane Hanna reminds us of a concept rooted deeply in the Biblical faith and in American history:  the common good.  Our society's growing focus on private gain poses a threat to us as a nation, and even as individuals.  And certainly it's a threat to the rest of the world.  [1-31-03]

Call for a fast at Taco Bell headquarters   [1-15-03]

The Presbyterian Church has endorsed a consumer boycott of Taco Bell restaurants, in support of efforts by Florida tomato growers to gain better wages and working/living conditions.

Taco Bell Boycott Resource Office of the PC(USA) is now encouraging Presbyterians to join the Coalition of Immokalee Workers in a hunger fast at the doorstep of Taco Bell headquarters in Irvine, California, beginning on Monday, Feb. 24. The fast calls upon Taco Bell to take responsibility for the sweatshop conditions in the fields where its tomatoes are picked.

Union network urges pressure on The Gap to end sweatshop exploitation of workers   [12-11-02]
"Lucky duckies"??

A visitor points to likely new tax policies as a further cause for protest on behalf of justice.  [12-4-02]

You wanna be really countercultural??
Try a "Buy Nothing Day" on Nov. 29!

[11-27-02]

International Buy Nothing Day, the annual 24-hour period of no shopping and anti-consumer activism, will be observed this year in the United States on November 29. Buy Nothing Day events will take place in a total of 40 countries this year, encompassing theater and celebrations as well as more militant protests and actions.

Or if you really need to buy, try buying clothing not produced by sweat-shop labor.  Join the "No sweat!" campaign!

Equal Exchange Coffee -- a Presbyterian project -- is a way congregations and other entities can buy their coffee from farmers' cooperatives like Miraflor, in Nicaragua, at a guaranteed price that is roughly three times the current world market price.

Try it -- You'll like it!     [10-30-02]

Fair trade coffee needs consumer and voter support  [10-25-02]
Updates on the Taco Bell boycott

New resources on the Web -- including for Labor Day Sunday

[8-29-02]

The PCUSA web page for the Taco Bell boycott has been vastly expanded. It now includes the General Assembly action calling for the boycott, background for the action, suggestions of what to do - including how to write to the President of Taco Bell.

And especially relevant right now: Resources for Labor Day Sunday, including a new hymn (to the tune of "Amazing Grace"! And commentary for the lectionary readings for this Sunday.

And a recent Presbyterian News Service report tells more of the story.

WCC's governing body hears warnings of link between globalization and violence 
[8-29-02]

WCC General Secretary Konrad Raiser and others state concerns that "the blind acceptance of market principles can exclude many people in the process of globalization."

Participation of Orthodox churches in WCC will be a major concern at the meeting of the Central Committee.

Looking at "globalization" from South of the Border [7-30-02]

El Tiempo, Colombia's major daily paper, recently published an analysis of U.S. policy and globalization as they appear today in Latin America. It begins, "The obsessions of U.S. policy in Latin America - terrorism and drug trafficking - only serve to worsen the crises south of the Rio Grande."

There's lots more, with points worth pondering for those who are willing to question whether the impact of U.S. policies is wholly beneficial for our neighbors to the south. If you prefer to believe that "America (i.e. the U.S.) can do no wrong," then you prefer to skip this one.

Mexico Solidarity Network issues urgent call to oppose Fast Track legislation   [7-15-02]
Free trade is devastating forests

Mexico Solidarity Network announces a "Trading Wilderness Road Show" that will show "the devastating impact of 'free trade' policies on forests and biodiversity" at special events along the East and West Coasts, July 14-22.  [6-4-02]

Jim Wallis of Sojourners reports on Call to Renewal's Mobilization in Washington, DC, which focused on "Speaking the Truth About Poverty." The gathering featured visits to senators from 42 states, to urge "a compassionate and just reauthorization of welfare reform." 

One clear response from the legislators was to ask for more information on local stories of what's working in efforts against poverty, and information on the human dimensions of poverty in local communities.   [5-27-02]

Pasadena ministry challenges practices of corporate globalization  [5-16-02]

by Teresa Watanabe

Marty E. Coleman, a longtime member of All Saints Church in Pasadena, now grows her own vegetables, shops at Vroman's independent bookstore instead of national chains, and recycles her clothes. The transformation of her personal consumer habits started with a book that, at first glance, seems to have nothing to do with religion.

But Coleman and a core group of friends have launched a new ministry called Sustainable World to bring these issues to a wider audience. They are part of a growing movement among people of faith to challenge corporate globalization, which some predict may eventually rival the impact of religious-based civil rights work more than three decades ago.

To read the entire feature, go to the LA Times web site.   [Free registration required]

Ooops.  This link isn't working any more.  I'll look for some other material on this interesting congregational project.  Your WebWeaver.

Source: SojoNet 2002 (c) http://www.sojo.net

Equal Exchange's Interfaith Coffee Program works in partnership with communities of faith and faith-based organizations to make a difference in the lives of small coffee farmers and their families through Fair Trade. The Presbyterian Church, among other denominations, is actively supporting this effort.

Here's a report on the Coffee Program's activities during 2001, along with details of a recent delegation visit to coffee growers in El Salvador, and the Program's current search for a new staff member. There's also a brief description of the program as a whole.   [3-23-02]

Here's a call to do your part to help the poor Enron executives in their time of need.  [2-25-02]
Looking at globalization:

BILL MOYERS REPORTS will be dealing with a largely ignored effect of NAFTA: It gives multinational corporations the right to sue governments whose environmental and health laws threaten their profits. Premieres February 5. [1-25-02]

An exciting novel about Adam Smith?  Peter Sawtell recommends Saving Adam Smith as offering insight into a neglected side of the famed economist.  
After 9/11 -- A renewed call for Jubilee and justice
[1-19-02]

Ross and Gloria Kinsler were the outstanding leaders of the Ghost Ranch Seminar on globalization in the summer of 2000. Last November, as the events of September 11th led into the "war on terrorism," they

Their letter includes insights on such topics as:

bulletthe real significance of globalization (quoting Dr. Oscar Arias, former President of Costa Rica and Nobel Peace Laureate, who said that "the [globalization] system encourages insatiable consumption and consumerism for some, but denies many others the basic necessities of life."
bulletthe meaning of the biblical faith as summed up in the Lord's Prayer, with its petitions that remind us of our calling to make God's Reign a reality on earth, partly by observing the Sabbath and Jubilee years that involve the freeing of people from their debts.
bulletthe call to responsible discipleship in caring for the people of our world as well as our natural environment - a call for which the Kinslers suggest a variety of resources, including the Presbyterian Hunger Program and much more.
The message of Enron:  Diversify!  [1-19-02]

Peter Sawtell of Eco-Justice Ministries sees a lesson in the crash of Enron, and especially the harsh consequences for employees whose pension funds were invested largely in Enron stock: Diversity is a good thing! In the economy, in the church, in nature.

Enron and ethics 

Jim Wallis of Sojourners reflects on the deeper meaning of the Enron collapse. There are many levels of problems, he says, but while "the strongest media critics of Enron call it putting self-interest above the public interest; biblical ethics would just call it a sin."  [1-17-02]

For more recent reports on economic justice issues, click here.

Items from 1999 through 2001 are archived on another page >>

 

A major
Ghost Ranch event this summer!

July 28 - August 3, 2008

Paths toward Peace and Justice:

Spirituality, Earth-Care, and the Prophetic Word in a time of Violence

More info >>

 

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An index of our reports from

 

 

 

BECOMING NEIGHBORS:
An Invitation
to Global Discipleship

A Witherspoon conference
on global mission and justice

September 16 - 19, 2007
Louisville, Kentucky

 

Check out our report from the Conference
on
Terror, Torture,
and Security

 

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