A WATSONBLOG, hosted by THE WATSON INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDIES at BROWN UNIVERSITY

April 13, 2006

Big Business Remittances

Henry and I are working toward producing a show from Watson on May 12. We're hoping to get Chris and the gang in for that Friday to tape a show to be aired sometime this summer.

At this point, we'd like the show to be about the economic possibilities and problems with global remittances.

Possible guests/contacts:

Uche Nworah, an expert on remittances and the Nigerian migrant worker dispora
Dilip Ratha, senior economist at the World Bank and author of Understanding the Importance of Remittances
Joy Zarembka, at the Campaign for Migrant Domestic Worker's Rights
bloggers, bloggers, bloggers
Watson folks and adjuncts.

At this stage in the research, I'm not really seeing what the arc of the show is. Defining the issue, weighing the benefits of localized remittances vs. FDI (Foreign Direct Investment), citing the major pitfalls of national reliance on remittances, then the solutions that some countries are trying to answer those problems? Sounds pretty dry-- As Mary would say, there's not much there that's keeping me from switching the dial to the ballgame.

Here are the major issues as I see them:

Scale: the amount of money remitted anually to Africa ($17 billion) rivals the amount of FDI there ($15 billion), and comes close to aid/grants figures. The impact is huge, and not studied much.

Impact: In a survey of the Nigerian diaspora, Uche Nworah found that 96% of respondents said that they contribute to nation building, especially by sending money home. But since only 6% of remittances to Africa are invested, that money might boost disposable incomes and increase educational access by paying tuition bills, but it won't account for large scale change. Also, it won't have an appreciable effect on those families which are so poor that they can't afford to send workers abroad, which might only increase the inequality. Blogger Nebuer attributed inflation to remittances in his native Kerala.

It'll be important to tie into the imigration rights protests, but since our airdate won't be set until mid summer, we won't be able to depend upon the news peg to keep people listening.

More in a bit...

Posted by Greta Pemberton at 10:09 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

April 03, 2006

Fire Thunder Challenges South Dakota Abortion Ban

“I will personally establish a Planned Parenthood clinic on my own land which is within the boundaries of the Pine Ridge Reservation where the State of South Dakota has absolutely no jurisdiction.”
Cecilia Fire Thunder, Giago: Oglala Sioux president on state abortion law, Indianz.com, 3/21/06
pine_ridge

Oglala Sioux girl at Pine Ridge [Stephen Thompson / Flickr]

When Gov. Michael Rounds signed HB1215, the law that will ban all abortions in South Dakota as of July 1 (including those procedures for victims of rape and incest, excepting those that could potentially save the mother's life), he said he "fully expected a legal challenge." He probably didn't expect that the challenge would come from Cecilia Fire Thunder, President of the Oglala Sioux tribe.

The statement aroused quite a bit of interest among LiveJournalers after kathrynt proposed a fundraising campaign to support the proposed clinic. Blogger tezliana did some digging and emailed Planned Parenthood of South Dakota for a statement.


Things are unfolding quickly in South Dakota, so this information may change at any time, but we are not currently planning to establish a clinic on tribal land. While we appreciate Ms. Thunder's support, I believe she made the comment prior to speaking with us about a clinic on the Pine Ridge Reservation.
Mark Fredrickson, Email from Planned Parenthood this morning, re: South Dakota, Liana's Little Jungle, 3/23/06
When Cecilia used the name Planned Parenthood, she used the name in reference to an abortion clinic in general. She fully intends to donate land so that a clinic can be built....You can't possibly expect a victim of violence to raise a 100% healthy child.
Vonnie Bush, personal assistant to President Fire Thunder, in a conversation with Open Source, 3/24/06

American Indian women are sexually assaulted at a 3.5 times higher rate than women in all other racial groups. Given these numbers and her background counselling rape victims as a nurse, Fire Thunder says she had to take a stand.

Rather than having our daughters and our women have to drive several states away, as if they were criminals, to protect their own health, we wanted to have a viable option closer to their homes, until this law is struck down. We intend to take the lead to make sure that we live up to our constitution and our own ideals, and respect our female citizens.
Cecilia Fire Thunder, in an email to Open Source, 3/24/06

Could plans for a clinic on tribal lands actually go through? Will this move test the limits of tribal sovereignty? South Dakota Attorney General Larry Long says the state might be able to enforce HB1215 in Indian County "but only against non-Indian women who receive abortions by non-Indian doctors." Could this bring down the law that would bring down Roe?

This is not a matter of an assertion of tribal sovereignty - we already have that. Nor is it a matter of confronting Governor Rounds or the State of South Dakota, it is a matter of upholding federal law, as it now exists. I believe that the South Dakota law banning abortion will be struck down as unconstitutional. We are making it clear that we support the constitutional right of women all over this country, and particularly here in South Dakota, to make their own decisions and their own choices regarding their own health.
Cecilia Fire Thunder, in an email to Open Source, 3/24/06

Posted by Greta Pemberton at 11:54 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

March 14, 2006

Economists for Sweatshops

Henry and I are reading Jeff Sachs’ The End of Poverty this week. The gist of his argument is that it’s unjustifiable to have a sixth of the global population in such desperate poverty that they must struggle for day to day survival; that the key is for well off countries to lower “the ladder of development” into these countries to allow them to climb up on their own. “The ladder of development” means aid, it means debt cancellation, it means international pressure for responsible governing.

In his introduction, Sachs lays out some examples of countries as reference points along the ladder’s development continuum. Malawi doesn’t have a ladder, he says. The picture Sachs paints is a country of small farmers, a country ravaged by malaria and AIDS, a country without the funds to afford preventative medicines and without the infrastructure to deliver them. No ladder.

One rung above Malawi is Bangladesh, with a thriving economy of “apparel firms” (read: sweatshops). Raised as I was to be label-conscious of the manufacturer’s labor practices, it turns my stomach a bit to think that sweatshops can be one rung above anything. But I suppose that’s a function of my swanky American passport, too.

I lived with a group of Bushmen just outside Tsumkwe, Namibia for a little while a few years ago. Bigwig anthropologist John Marshall was staying in the same place, and after a few drinks we would get into some lively debates. It’s near impossible to legislate fair land use policies to help maintain “the hunter gatherer lifestyle.” Most of the Bushmen themselves would rather herd cattle and dig boreholes (wells) and go to school than to try to survive within the traditional means, especially when land has been roped and barbed-wired off so that they’re expected to live on a tiny fraction of the land they once traveled across. The lifestyle is unsustainable. Still, our romantic notions of The Gods Must Be Crazy’s “simpler way of life are hard to rid ourselves of.

The same could be said of Malawi and Bangladesh—it seems antithetical to my every hippie romantic notion that sweatshop work could be preferable to subsistence farming. My friends at Students against Sweatshops would loathe to hear him say it, but it’s hard to argue with Jeff Sachs when he says that to demand these “apparel firms” raise wages would be “a ticket back to rural misery.”

He also brings up remittances as an important step on the way to economic self sufficiency. Henry and I are thinking of putting a show together on this topic.

Counterpoint: This American Life did a piece a while back about the Cambodian government trying to institute their own fair labor practices in the garment industry as a country: search the TAL archives for “David and Goliath” and take a listen.

Posted by Greta Pemberton at 12:43 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Blog Search by Location

Often for ROS web features we try to find bloggers who can speak authoritatively about the place where they live (or hail from originally).

Unfortunately, none of the blog searches I know of allow you to restrict your search by location tag. Type in “Dubai blogger” into Technorati a few days after a major news peg like the ports deal, and you’re likely to get a bunch of Americans and Brits pontificating, and no man-on-the-ground perspective from Dubai.

Tricks I use to circumnavigate blogspace and find those regional bloggers:

- Global Voices is, of course, invaluable, but its regional editors can be somewhat inconsistent (some updating all the time, others not for months).

-If the city I’m looking for has a MetroBlogging community, that can be a great way to find a cluster of folks who want to talk about their town.

- If I can find one site that uses Google’s Blogger interface, the tags for location are linked to other blogs with the same location tag. Unfortunately though, if one person enters their location as “Dubai” and one as “UAE” and one as “United Arab Emirates,” they won’t help you find each other.

-In Technorati and Google BlogSearch and the other engines, I find the best way to find the locals is to enter specific search strings: “life in Karachi” rather than ”Pakistan,” etc.

But those are really all I’m working with thus far. (If you’ve got tips and tricks or search engines that can restrict for location, please do send them along).

For now, since the ROS guys have been making valiant efforts to synchronize their rolodexes, I’ve been trying to keep a record of my favorite regional bloggers who group their blogrolls by location.

Selections:

Iraqi and Afghan blogs:
Dave Shuler edits Carnival of the Liberated, a digest of Iraqi and Afghan blogs. He posted a “greatest hits 2005” back in September at his own blog, The Glittering Eye .

Israeli blogs:
Lisa Goldman (a great friend to Open Source, also the regional Global Voices editor), On the Face
EB, OneJerusalem.com
Imshin, Not a Fish

Palestinian blogs:
Haitham Sabbah, Sabbah’s blog
Laila El-Haddad, A Mother from Gaza

Much much more to come.

Posted by Greta Pemberton at 12:40 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Dubai?

If Congress’ reaction to the ports mess was any indication, we were blind-sided by Dubai. But while Congress was tearing their hair out over national security and xenophobia, the real story takes place on their shores, not ours.

Dubai is the fastest growing city on the planet. It’s not vast oil reserves that allows Dubai to bust out all over. Compared to brother-emirate Abu Dhabi, the oil reserves are actually running pretty low. The source is tourism and investment money that used to come to us.

Not finding the U.S. or our economy particularly inviting since the war on terror, many Arab investors have turned to Dubai, and the proof is in the skyline. The riviera is a cluster of cranes and scaffolding, punctuated by skyscrapers that cut impossible streaks into the sky. An indoor ski slope. An underwater hotel. The tallest building in the world, shaped like a giant lighting rod. No more room on the beachfront? No problem. They simply manufacture more.

You might have heard about Palm Island, the man made archipelago of islands that reaches out from the coastline in the shape of (you guessed it) a palm tree, its "leaves" reaching out like grabby fingers. It looks laughable from above until you realize that Mama evolution has been churning out prototypes of the Palm Island blueprint for millennia-- whenever you need a major surface area bang for your volume buck, branching is the way to go. Leaves get more contact with the air to pull water up and out, bronchioles in lungs get more of a shot to leech out more poisons from the air you take in, Palm Island realtors get 78 MILES of brand new coastline within the swanky Dubai zipcode to develop.

The Guardian’s Adam Nicolson says Dubai is “Not the modern centre of the Arab world but, more than that, the Arab centre of the modern world.”

Is Dubai the next London, the next New York? Is this the face of the empire that will succeed us?

[Check out the resultant show here]

Posted by Greta Pemberton at 12:33 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)