Le Monde diplomatique on Mon, 18 Dec 2000 13:29:39 +0100 (CET) |
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December 2000 |
[ DEAR READERS: this is a resend. In our previous email the hypertext links were broken. Thank you to our readers who notified it to us. ] Le Monde diplomatique ----------------------------------------------------- December 2000 LEADER Fears of the year by IGNACIO RAMONET <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/01fears> Translated by Ed Emery A PRESIDENCY WEAKENED Democracy American style * by SERGE HALIMI and LO�C WACQUANT The succession to Bill Clinton has proved laborious. The new president will enter the White House with an authority as disputed as the result of the vote of 7 November. In some states the difference between George W Bush and Al Gore was little more than a few hundred votes, in others just a few dozen. The elections for the Senate and the House of Representatives have been equally inconclusive. This will force Republicans and Democrats to work together in a less buoyant economic climate than some months ago. The likely compromise between the two parties (which have no fundamental differences between them) will not stop the institutional model of the US being gravely tarnished by the electoral and legal chaos in Florida. Beyond the issue of the miscounting of ballots in some counties, an entire political system has been exposed as archaic and exhausted. Translated by Harry Forster When the penal state excludes four million voters S.H. and L.W. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/03penal> Translated by Harry Forster When business "invests" four billion dollars S.H. and L.W. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/04business> Translated by Harry Forster When information travels at "internet speed" S.H. and L.W. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/05speed> Translated by Harry Forster CHINA WOOS THE MARKET Farewell to the land of the Little Red Book by ROLAND LEW Twenty years after it launched its economic reform programme, China is preparing to join the WTO and become part of the world's new free trade system. Senior officials in Beijing say this decisive step in the transition to a market economy will stabilise China's external trade environment, promote growth and secure the "reformist" coalition around President Jiang Zemin and Prime Minister Zhu Rongji. But this is a high-risk strategy. Prematurely opening up an economy that is not ready to cope with international competition will have a huge social cost. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/06china> Translated by Julie Stoker Not working by MARC MANGIN <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/07notworking> Translated by Julie Stoker BUSINESS, OIL AND HUMAN RIGHTS Should corporations care? by ROLAND-PIERRE PARINGAUX The battle of Seattle showed that, in today's global village, multinationals operate under the critical gaze of the media, international organisations and ordinary people. Public opinion is coming to believe that the big corporations must show regard for human rights, the environment and the wishes of local populations - especially in places where politics are violent and arbitrary. Yet many companies shrug off responsibility in the countries they do business in. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/08oil> Translated by Malcolm Greenwood A global compact R-P. P. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/09compact> Translated by Malcolm Greenwood Oil in the way of development A-C. R. <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/10development> Translated by Malcolm Greenwood SETTLEMENTS AT THE HEART OF THE CONFLICT Fighting for a proper peace * by ALAIN GRESH For two months the intifada has shown little sign of abating, showing the Palestinians' determination to see an end to settlement and occupation once and for all. The Oslo accords provided for a five-year interim period of autonomy in the West Bank and Gaza. That was up last year on 4 May. What is in question now is a definitive settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. But the negotiating rules are one-sided: Israel will not implement UN security council resolution 242, which calls for its withdrawal from the occupied territories, and the US, far from being impartial, always "advises" the Palestinians to agree to Israeli proposals. So there is a need to redefine a legal framework based on international law and security council resolutions, with the participation of other players - such as the UN, Europe, Russia - alongside the US. This is the only way there can be real peace, based on coexistence between two sovereign states. Translated by Wendy Kristianasen Failed compromise at Camp David by FEISAL HUSSEINI <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/12campdavid> Translated by Wendy Kristianasen Replaying the pictures * by EDGAR ROSKIS In the Middle East, as elsewhere, war also means the war of the media. For every bit of military strategy there is equally sophisticated and brutal media strategy. Its main weapon is pictures. But what are more effective, still photos or the moving images of videos? And what misunderstandings can creep in between the intentions of the photographer and the distributor? Translated by Wendy Kristianasen RETHINKING FRENCH FOREIGN POLICY Democracy has many hues * by HUBERT V�DRINE The world is no longer divided into two opposing blocs. France, which skilfully exploited that situation, now needs to redefine its foreign policy objectives. Is the world to be converted to western democracy, as some maintain? Is moral outrage a sufficient basis for cogent state policy? And is the right of intervention a cure for all ills? Translated by Barry Smerin COMPULSION AND CONSUMPTION The science behind shopping * by FRANCK MAZOYER December is the costliest month for shopping and gifts. Consumers are psychologically vulnerable to various forms of subconscious pressure - light, smell, sound and touch - meant to transform the act of buying into an uncontrollable impulse. Pleasure, it seems, is all about consuming. Translated by Harry Forster THE MYTHOLOGY OF PROGRESS Communication breeds democracy * by ARMAND MATTELART Whatever Al Gore's claims to inventing the internet, neither the technology nor the ideology surrounding it are new. Already, in the 1950s, a whole mystique of electronic progress was being put in place, which had to do with the advent of a post-industrial society and the end of ideologies and political commitment. We were being told of a coming global society that would be informed and structured by communication - and of a future that would belong to American democracy and market forces. Translated by Ed Emery WORKING TOWARDS UTOPIA Anarchist plans for Spain * by FR�D�RIC GOLDBRONN and FRANCK MINTZ Defence of the existing order is often based on nothing more than claims that any deviation would lead to tyranny or chaos. Yet history abounds with examples to the contrary. Revolt, and the aspiration to democracy and solidarity, are always simmering beneath the surface. For a few months during the Spanish civil war, parts of the country pursued a new of form of social organisation that rejected the rule of wealth, power and bureaucracy. Translated by Barry Smerin The revolution on film * by CARLOS PARDO Translated by Barry Smerin Three years of civil war <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/19civil> A COLLECTIVE PSYCHOSIS? At the sign of the panicked cow * by DENIS DUCLOS With public opinion panicked by the mass media and BSE spreading to humans, the French government has decided to ban the use of animal-based feedstuffs for cattle destined for human consumption. Other European countries have taken similar emergency measures. A kind of collective psychosis seems to be taking root based on a belief that mankind's relations with nature are going badly wrong. Translated by Ed Emery _________________________________________________________________ (*) Star-marked articles are available to paid subscribers only. Yearly subscription fee: 24 US $ (Institutions 48 US $). ______________________________________________________________ For more information on our English edition, please visit http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/ To subscribe to our free "dispatch" mailing-list, send an (empty) e-mail to: [email protected] To unsubscribe from this list, send an (empty) e-mail to: [email protected] English language editorial director: Wendy Kristianasen _________________________________________________________________ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED � 1997-2000 Le Monde diplomatique <http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/en/2000/12/> _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list [email protected] http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold