The India Social Forum [NEW DELHI NOVEMBER 2006]
http://www.wsfindia.org/consultation_details.php
Building Another Worlds: Visions for the Future


The proposed India Social Forum (ISF), to be organised
at Delhi in November 2006, will be the third event to
be organised by WSF-India after the Asian Social Forum
in Hyderabad in January 2003 and the World Social
Forum in Mumbai in January 2004. The World Social
Forum process in India has, in the last 4 years, been
successful in bringing together different political
and social streams on a common platform to oppose, and
resist the onslaught of Imperialist Globalisation.

The ISF is being held at a time when both the WSF
process and imperialist globalisation have both
gathered strength. While the WSF process in 2006 has
struck new roots – in Bamako (Mali), Caracas
(Venezuela) and in Karachi (Pakistan) – the peoples of
Africa, Asia and Latin America are embattled by the
forces of imperialism. The proposed ISF will reflect
the unity and solidarity of the peoples of Asia and
Africa for a world free from hunger, debt, inequality,
inequity, and exclusion.

The theme for the India Social Forum is proposed to
be: BUILDING ANOTHER WORLD: VISIONS FOR THE FUTURE. It
focuses on engendering dialogue, optimism and hope, by
creating a space that will enable a greater
mobilisation of resources for an alternative future –
within India, Asia, and Africa. The envisaged central
theme foregrounds the fact that a positive
all-embracing vision inheres in the resistance to
imperialist globalisation, and that this vision plots
out quite a different future for the people of the
South, particularly those living in India, Asia and
Africa. The aim of this ISF is to showcase the richly
textured vision produced by the wide spectrum of
social and political movements in India, Asia, and
Africa today, with special emphasis on the role of
children, youth and women in taking forward the
aspirations. Alternatives will run through all the
spaces and events. An estimated 60,000 people are
expected to participate, representing diverse
movements and organisations from India, Asia and
Africa.

A Vision for the ISF in Delhi

The vision for ISF in Delhi incorporates the idiom of
Delhi, its language (which itself is a result of the
confluence of so many influences), its cuisine, its
people. For people who have a casual acquaintance with
Delhi, the city is virtually synonymous with India's
"babudom" – the sprawling government complexes in New
Delhi, and other symbols of India's political power.
But Delhi is much more than that – it is one of the
oldest living cities in this part of the world, with a
history that dates to almost 1500 years. It is a city
where more than two-thirds are working people, to
which lakhs migrate each year in search of employment,
where more than a third live in temporary shelters,
where more than two-thirds are working people. It is
also a city with a vibrant culture, a city where
cultural activists perform in A/C Halls as well as in
narrow by lanes and slums. It is a city that has a
vibrant student movement, a very strong women's
movement, and a working class that is today engaged in
fighting for its right to remain in the city. The ISF
in Delhi will reflect the aspirations of the majority
of Delhi's people, an ISF that speaks in their idiom.

Major Spaces

Taking the liberty to borrow from the local idiom, the
following would be some of the contours of the ISF in
Delhi. The following could be some of the major
"spaces" in the ISF:

Aawaaz (voices): Aawaaz represents the myriad voices
in the Indian Social Forum – debating, exchanging
experiences, forging alliances, discussing strategies
– on the core issues of the WSF process.
This would be the largest space in the Forum and would
include spaces for debate, sharing of experience, and
dialogue. It would include the largest number of
conferences, seminars and workshops that deepen our
understanding of different aspects of imperialist
globalisation.

Jagah (space): This could represent movements
discussing among themselves – women, dalits, kisans,
working people, etc.
This would be the place for the mass and social
movements of diverse kinds, to discuss issues of
shared concern in each sector and also to strategise
on ways to confront the challenges posed by
globalisation.

Dosti (friendship): This represents the space for
sharing with our South Asian neighbours – from India,
Nepal, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Bangladesh, with the
Asia-Pacific and social movements from different parts
of the world like Africa and Latin America. This also
represents the space for broader alliance building
that will go beyond India's immediate neighbourhood.

This space would focus on events on South Asia. This
space will be used to explore common issues and
challenges faced by us in South Asia. The space can
also include exhibitions, film shows, cultural events
built around such issues. This space would also focus
on events sharing experiences and alternatives from
other parts of the world – Latin America, Africa and
Europe – and link up with concerns that we address in
India and South Asia. We can think of discrete spaces
within this on Latin America, Africa and Europe.

Hamsafar (fellow travellers): This space exists to
strengthen unity between movements of the peoples of
Africa and India in the fight against neoliberal
policies. The space will enable the forging of links
from the bonds of solidarity first established in the
historic decolonisation movements in both continents.
This space would focus on developing linkages and
alliances between the people of Africa, Asia and India
in their struggles against poverty, superstition,
racism and exclusion, conservatism and violence
against women, debt cancellation and other
neo-colonialist policies, for better healthcare and
medication, particularly in the battle against
diseases like AIDS.

Jan Sansad (people's parliament): This space
represents people's aspirations and plans on sectors
like education, health, land, agriculture, forest,
water, food, etc. Our parliamentarians could be
invited to listen to the voices of the people.

This space will be dedicated to events that explore
concrete alternatives in the form of peoples plans in
different sectors, geographical areas and addressing
real concerns of the people.
Further, there will be 'Space for Living
Alternatives', 'Space for Strategy', etc. for the
organisations, to demonstrate their visions and
voices. Some separate space will also be provided to
farmers, tribals, dalits, women, physically
challenged, children and women.

We would also like that the ISF finds a resonance in
the city's life, while at the same time facilitating
programmes in the city that reflect its history and
diversity. Such programmes could include:

Dilli Nama: This can be held at different venues in
Delhi to explore the diverse images of the city as
created in its everyday life.

Numayish: This will be in the form of exhibitions,
installations and performance in order to capture
different forms of artistic expressions.

Films for Freedom and Justice: There are many film
makers in Delhi and a screening of their films as well
as films from other parts of the world depicting
struggles for freedom and justice can be organised
inside India Social Forum premises.

Food Festival: Food festivals representing the
different histories of diverse people in Delhi, could
be held at different venues.

University Activities: Delhi has three Central
universities, dozens of polytechnics and professional
institutions. In all the universities and several
colleges, there could be seminars, theatre, etc, and
teachers' unions like DUTA and student unions could be
integrated.

Mobile Exhibition: A mobile exhibition can move in the
workers colonies, resettlement colonies, slums, and
rural parts of Delhi.

Dillu Sanskriti Mandli: Many people believe that Delhi
has obtained its name from an erstwhile Dalit king of
Delhi named Dillu. A Cultural troupe called Dillu
Sanskriti Mandli can travel to different parts of the
city to perform on concerns of the India Social Forum.

Thematic areas

At the outset it must be noted that the thematic areas
are intended as a frame of reference for the planned
activities, while continuing to encourage participants
to feel free to propose their activities. In order to
give greater visibility and organic cohesion to the
freely proposed activities, they will be classified a
posteriori. For this purpose, we will set up a group
to analyse the set of proposals as a whole, define
criteria and frame an orderly presentation for the
printed Forum Programme. Each set of activities will
be described and useful information given to help
participants chose among activities during the Forum
event.

In each thematic area and, where appropriate, in the
sub-areas, there will also be a constant concern to
propose strategies along with the alternatives. In the
same way, it is fundamentally important to identify
the processes of organization and struggle in
progress, and to point to the global subjects/actors
in civil society who embody the proposals.

Both the descriptions of, and arrangements for, the
various activities in each thematic area and its
sub-areas will ensure that gender, ethnic/racial,
youth, labour, disability and ecumenical issues and
perspectives run through and cut across them. This is
not to eliminate the specific spaces that the various
ensembles of participants wish to organize and that
are proper to them, but to ensure that these do not
end up functioning as self-referential forums within
the WSF.

As a method of working which runs through and informs
our activities as a whole, we must always seek more
universal languages that valorise sensitivity and
emotion. Besides permitting identity to be asserted in
the diversity of forms of expression, this
methodological concern impregnating our whole
programme can facilitate exchanges, mutual respect and
collective strategic thinking.

The broad thematic areas would be as follows:

Democracy, Secularism, Multiculturalism and Dignity: A
theme that will focus attention on the struggles for
democracy, cultural plurality, even as it highlights
the common quest for dignity and justice, for an
identity that is inclusive rather than exclusionary.
It will focus on issues of Rights: Right to work,
right to livelihood, right to food, right to
education, right to health. Freedom would be an
another anchoring point: Freedom to live in peace and
without fear of violence by religious fundamentalism,
sectarianism and chauvinism, freedom to choose the
ways of living and working, freedom to create another
worlds.

From Caracas to Nairobi via India: A theme that will
focus attention on the solidarity of the peoples of
the South for building joint struggles at an
international level against. The aim here is to
evaluate and consolidate the achievements of the
people's struggles in Latin America, Africa and Asia
as well as the WSF polycentric events is Caracas,
Bamako and Karachi in 2005. United once by the wave of
decolonisation movements in the last century, the
peoples of the South have a common agenda in this
century as well – the struggle against neo-liberalism,
in all its expressions, be it in the fostering of
militarism and militias, the severe exploitation of
workers, racism, sexism, and regressive social
practices, particularly against women, or the denial
of education and healthcare.

Casteism, Racism, Exclusion and Discrimination: Issues
of casteism, discrimination and exclusion in India and
South Asia do not just provide a different take on the
issues of poverty, rights, health, work and life, but
they pretty much, define the issues at the heart of
the violation of the right to life. It is also
important to reiterate that the right to life for the
discriminated and excluded communities will be futile
unless their socio-economic-political abilities and
inabilities are not central to these commitments.
Moreover, discrimination often functions in an
intersectional manner making those who experience
multiple forms of discrimination, the most vulnerable.
The current socio-political-economic context is
further aggravating the problem. The WTO regime serves
as a big impediment to the realization of food
sovereignty. The privatization of natural resources
and services, the withdrawal of the social and
economic roles of the state, the unemployment, the
diminishing livelihoods, the corporatisation have
consistently pushed the corporate agenda at the
expense of the already marginalized sectors of the
country and the region.

New Liberal Globalisation, Militarism and Hegemony: A
theme that will explore the impact of corporate
globalisation and free market economics on India and
the third world. A theme that will examine the impact
of imperialism as well as the challenges to it, coming
from people's movements in the developing world – in
Asia, Africa and Latin America . It will also
specifically look at issues related to war and
militarization. Among the issues: what is the fallout
on the young, children and women – and what are the
defences? ISF will offer space for the question to be
raised about the hegemony of the corporate and
military regimes and the domination of the powerful.

Worlds of Work and Labour: A theme that will showcase
the range of worker's movements, [including those of
working children] and the unemployed, the challenge of
unorganised and unprotected labour, including the
brutalities of child labour, and economic trafficking
of children, and their struggles across the country,
particularly in the context of globalisation, and
emphasize the validity of an alternative vision that
protects workers rights.

Theories and Practices of Sustainable Developments:
This theme would focus on the rapacious exploitation
of our natural resources by forces aligned to
imperialist globalisation and peoples struggles and
alternatives to safeguard these resources. The theme
will especially focus on environmental and peoples'
movements and initiatives on natural resources,
including the peoples' perspectives on the global
environmental issues and negotiations.

Media and Culture: A theme that will explore the role
of diverse cultural expressions, mass media, cinema,
and literature, as both an instrument of imperialist
globalisation, as well as a means of popular
expression. The focus will also on the alternative and
counter media practices.

Social Sector: The issues of food, health, education
and the overall social security are of utmost
importance for the marginal majorities and their
organisations in this country. This theme will deal
with these issues from the perspectives of peoples'
basic rights, entitlements, struggles and
alternatives. The theme will articulate the peoples'
visions in the wake of liberalisation, privatisation
and GATS-WTO.

Young India: A theme that will showcase the stake of
the young – children, students and youth – in the plus
and minus (positive and negative) forces of
development and denial, query the role and obligations
of State and Society, give space and articulation to
the voices of the young, and profile the vibrant
nature of movements of the children and youth – as
children, workers, students, political activists –
towards a vision of an egalitarian, equal world. A
thematic space that will present the young as citizens
with entitlements and with their own capacity to build
needed change, and offer a doorway to
inter-generational dialogue for another world in the
making. This could be the special / unique character
or 'USP' of the ISF initiative.

Women's Era: A theme that will give centre-stage to
the vision of the Indian women's movements,
highlighting the breadth of its interventions in all
areas of economy and polity, ranging from sexuality to
work, water and literacy.

Developing Alternatives: A theme that will explore the
development of alternatives that will be part of a NEW
WORLD.

·The broad schedule of events at ISF 2006 is as
follows:

Date 9.30 am to 12.30 pm 1.30 pm to 5.30 pm 7 pm to
8.30 pm 8.30 pm to 11.00 pm
9th November Registration Opening Plenary(open to
public) 4 p.m. onwards
10th November 4 Panels (1,000 people) each seminars,
workshops, testimonies, street theatre, film shows,
other cultural activities Movement Dialogues seminars,
workshops, testimonies, street theatre, film shows,
other cultural activities Film shows, cultural events
Cultural Events
11th November 4 Panels (1,000 people) each seminars,
workshops, testimonies, street theatre, film shows,
other cultural activities Movement Dialogues,seminars,
workshops, testimonies, street theatre, film shows,
other cultural activities Film shows, cultural events
Cultural Events
12th November 4 Panels (1,000 people) each seminars,
workshops, testimonies, street theatre, film shows,
other cultural activities Movement Dialogues,seminars,
workshops, testimonies, street theatre, film shows,
other cultural activities Film shows, cultural events
Cultural Events
13th November Movement Dialogues,seminars, workshops,
testimonies, street theatre, film shows, other
cultural activities Closing plenary(4 pm onwards)


Detailed Listing of sub-themes for ISF 2006


Democracy, Secularism, Multiculturalism and Dignity
Alternative visions, practical experiments and
struggles for inclusive, plural and radical democracy
Autonomy, separation, reconciliation, toleration
Just and Democratic Governance
Human Rights, Constitution and Law
Indian Diaspora
Visions for a new State and Civil Society, with
reference to:
· religious intolerance and majoritarian tendencies.
· gender and the 'double' exclusion of women
· non- citizens, migrants and refugees
Cultural imperialism and shaping subordinate
identities
Globalisation and cultural resistance
Fundamentalism and Sexual Identities

From Caracas to Nairobi via India

The Politics of International Aid
Hunger and Poverty
Racism and Exclusion
Battling AIDS
'Community' vs. women
Building Alternative Futures
Indian Diaspora

Casteism, Racism, Exclusion and Discrimination

Exclusion, discrimination based on caste, class, race,
gender, ethnicity, religion, sexuality,
ability/disability
Social Security and Social Opportunity
Affirmative Actions in Public and Private Sectors
Labour Market Discrimination
Deprivation, Domination, Displacement, Descent-based
occupations
Social Inclusion, Social Justice and Inclusiveness
Politics, Movements, Struggles on Social Justice
Displacement and Forced Migration
Caste and Communalism

New-Liberal Globalisation, Militarism and Hegemony

Corporate Globalisation, Free Trade and Debt
Globalisation of Finance and Trade
Transnational Corporations, Corporate Control and
Self-reliance
Trade or Justice
Human Security
World Economy, WTO, World Bank and IMF
India in the new World Order
Multinational Companies
International Trade Negotiations
Corporate Social Responsibility
Alternative Economic Spaces
War on Terror: US Militarist Agenda and Resistances
Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, Palestine
Global Disarmament and Nuclear Weapons
Imperialist War and Control of Resources
UN, International Law and War
Zones of Conflicts, Border Areas and Peace in South
Asia
Internal Conflicts
State Terrorism: Civil and Political Rights
Self Determination and Nationalities

Theories and Practices of Sustainable Development

Livelihood Rights: Biodiversity and Livelihood; Land,
Water and Livelihood; Energy and Livelihood; Urban
Livelihood
Poverty and Wealth; Atmospheric Commons, Community
Rights on Genetic Knowledge
Community Rights on Resources, Environmental Rights,
Right to Information
Market, Trade and Environment
Environment, Industry, Labour
Environmental Movements
Alternative Technologies
Risks and Disasters

Worlds of Work and Labour

Work, Labour and Employment
Globalisation, Liberalisation and Labour
Dynamics of Labour Movements
New Industries, New Labour
Informal and Small Sector Labour
Law & Labour
Social Security and Well Being
Technology and its Impact
The Problems of Agriculture and Rural Labour
Footloose Labour: Issues, Rights and Struggles of
Migrant Labour

Media and Culture

Cultural expressions as tools of imperialist
globalisation and counter culture challenging the
status quo
Globalisation and the media.
Media and alternative visions of another world
Sponsorship and Censorship
Alternate media
Media as an instrument of exclusion and a space for
democratic struggle (social audit of old and new
media, changing content and form, state-owned media
vs. public broadcasting)

Social Sector

Right to Food, health and education
Right to Shelter
GATS, WTO and Service Sector
Employment, Work and Security
Privatisation of Health and Education
Social Security
Urbanisation, Development and Well-being
Reproduction, Health and Sexual Rights
HIV and AIDS
Child Rights
States and Social Sector

Young India

Young Visions
Vision of a new India through the lens of children
Globalisation and its impact on children and youth
Youth, Work and Employment
Youth and Student Movements
Youth: Rights, Respect, Responsibilities
Children and Youth for Peace
Media and Culture – the vision for Children and Youth

Women's Era

Women, Caste, Class
Women Work, Labour and Globalisation
Sexuality, Obscenity, Community
Women, War, Terror and Violence
Gender, Power, Equations
Women Social Spaces
Contribution of Feminism
Patriarchy
Trafficking
Women and Communalism
Nation, Law and Women's Rights
Reproductive Health and Women's Lives
Women's Movements and Organisations

Developing Alternatives

Alternatives to Corporate Globalisation
Decorporatisation and Decentralisation
Just and Sustainable Trade and Financial Systems
Deepening Democracy
Economic Democracy
Principles for Sustainable Societies
Development for Dignity
Social Movements, Mass Organisations and Alternatives
Ideologies and Alternatives
Resistance Movements
Forms of Movements

Note: Each of the thematic axes need to be fleshed out
in the form of sub-themes. Each theme will need a
group that works on developing these and also in
developing concept notes for the different axes.

Format for the events:


Opening and Closing Plenaries
Conferences (1,000 capacity – 9 WSF organised, one on
each thematic axes, and 9-18 more self organised
Seminars (500, 200, 100 capacity – all self organised
– possibly approx. 200 such seminars)
Workshops (50 capacity – all self organised – possible
approx. 200)
Testimonies (some WSF organised, some self organised)
Panel Discussions (some self organised, some WSF
organised)
Note: The above will need to be expanded with more
concrete numbers.

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