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Throughout the world, solutions to some of the greatest challenges of the day are either nascent or fully thriving. Organized people's movements - sometimes with help from supportive government - are changing the structures which cause violence, poverty, inequality, and environmental destruction.

 

Throughout the world, solutions to some of the greatest challenges of the day are either nascent or fully thriving. Organized people's movements - sometimes with help from supportive government - are changing the structures which cause violence, poverty, inequality, and environmental destruction. At the same time, they are creating better quality of life in their communities.  In other instances, people are preserving ancient cultures where individuals live in relative equity and harmony with other life and their communities, and without expectation of profit. 

Join us to learn more and become a part of this inspiring movement:
  • Check out Other Worlds' newest book and food sovereignty tool, Harvesting Justice: Transforming Food, Land, and Agriculture in the Americas, which explores the growing movement to reclaim the food system from multinational agribusiness and put it back into the hands of people. Accompanying the book is a popular education curriculum called Sowing Seeds, and a weekly blog series! And, find more resources and action steps on the Harvesting Justice website.

  • More than three years after the devastating 2010 earthquake, read about how Haitian grassroots movements are continuing the struggle for a just reconstruction on our Another Haiti is Possible blog. And, find out how you can support the Under Tents campaign for the right to housing for nearly 400,000 who are still living under tarps and tents.

  • Visit our blog, below, of articles by and about our allies building grassroots alternatives around the world (click here for full blog history).

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Alternatives Blog

“MRS. CLINTON CAN HAVE HER FACTORIES”: A HAITIAN SWEATSHOP WORKER SPEAKS

Submitted by admin on Tue, 04/30/2013 - 08:05

By Beverly Bell

Marjorie Valcelat ran an embroidery machine in a factory from 2005 to 2008. She says the experience made her so sick and weak that she’s not felt able to work since then.

I had three children I had to take care of; their father had left. And since I hadn’t had enough schooling, I didn’t have the skills to do much. So I said to myself, “I’m going to work at a factory.” When I got there, they showed me how to run the machines to embroider slips and nightshirts. I spent a month training, but during that time they didn’t pay me; I had to pay them for the training.

  • Another Haiti is Possible
  • Other Worlds
  • Workers' Rights & the Assembly Sector
  • Read more
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WEEDING CORPORATE POWER OUT OF AGRICULTURAL POLICIES: COMMUNITIES MOBILIZE FOR FOOD AND FARM JUSTICE

Submitted by admin on Sat, 04/27/2013 - 14:41

By Tory Field and Beverly Bell

From the school cafeteria to rural tomato farms, and all the way to pickets at the White House, people are challenging the ways in which government programs benefit big agribusiness to the detriment of small- and mid-sized farmers. Urban gardeners, PTA parents, ranchers, food coops, and a host of others are organizing to make the policies that govern our food and agricultural systems more just, accountable, and transparent. They are spearheading alternative policies on the local, state, national, and international levels. Some advances include the following:

  • Other Worlds
  • Food Sovereignty
  • Transforming the U.S. Food Supply Chain
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In Hopeful Sign, EPA Slams State Department for 'Insufficient' KXL Review

Submitted by admin on Fri, 04/26/2013 - 09:49

Cross-posted from Common Dreams

By Lauren McCauley

Agency questions assumptions of 'inevitability' and calls for further review of greenhouse gas emissions

On the final day of the Keystone XL public comment period for the State Department's draft supplementary environmental impact statement (SEIS) of the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline, the Environmental Protection Agency issued a sharply critical assessment declaring the analysis "insufficient." 

Ruptured Enbridge Pipeline from Kalamazoo Spill,(Photo: NTSB)

  • Resources
  • Environmental Protection & Zero Waste
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Retail and Fast Food Workers Strike in Chicago's Magnificent Mile

Submitted by admin on Thu, 04/25/2013 - 15:38

Cross-posted from The Nation.

By Micah Uetricht

April 24, 2013

Chicago workers go on strike
The woman on the right is a McDonald’s worker who walked off the job this morning. Photo by Micah Uetricht.
 
Chicago’s downtown Loop area is the heart of commerce in the city. But beginning at 5:30 am today, fast food and retail workers there have gone on strike, following New York City fast food workers who walked off the job in November and again earlier this month demanding higher wages and better working conditions.

  • Resources
  • Workers' Rights & the Assembly Sector
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DELEGATION TO GUATEMALA

Submitted by admin on Thu, 04/25/2013 - 15:31

July 6-14, 2013

 MINING INJUSTICE & IMPUNITY

~versus~

COMMUNITY WELL-BEING, HUMAN RIGHTS & THE ENVIRONMENT

 On this trip, we will investigate environmental destruction, health harms (to animal and human life), and other human rights violations (including forced evictions, killings, gang-rapes, etc) caused by “mega-development” projects - particularly mining operations - in the context of Guatemala’s historic and on-going impunity, corruption and lack of justice, exploitation and poverty, and lack of democracy.

  • Resources
  • Citizen Organizing & Politics
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A HARD DAY’S LABOR FOR $4.76: THE OFFSHORE ASSEMBLY INDUSTRY IN HAITI

Submitted by admin on Thu, 04/25/2013 - 07:27

By Beverly Bell and Alexis Erkert
April 25, 2013

“Haiti offers a marvelous opportunity for American investment. The run-of-the-mill Haitian is handy, easily directed, and gives a hard day’s labor for 20 cents, while in Panama the same day’s work costs $3,” wrote Financial America in 1926.[i] That may be the most honest portrayal of the offshore industry in Haiti to date. Today, the US, the UN, multilateral lending institutions, corporate investors, and others are more creative in their characterizations. They spin Haiti’s high-profit labor as being in the interest of the laborer, and as a major vehicle for what they call “development.”

  • Another Haiti is Possible
  • Other Worlds
  • Citizen Organizing & Politics
  • Workers' Rights & the Assembly Sector
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Bangladesh Building Collapse Kills at Least 70

Submitted by admin on Wed, 04/24/2013 - 08:57

Cross-posted from New York Times

By Jim Yardley


A building housing garment factories collapsed on Wednesday

NEW DELHI — An eight-story building in Bangladesh that housed several garment factories collapsed on Wednesday morning, killing at least 70 people, injuring hundreds of others, and leaving an unknown number of people trapped in the rubble, according to Bangladeshi officials and media outlets.

  • Resources
  • Workers' Rights & the Assembly Sector
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Chorus of Voices Demands Justice Three Years After BP Gulf Disaster

Submitted by admin on Wed, 04/24/2013 - 08:18

Cross-posted from Common Dreams

By Andrea Germanos

"The Gulf and its people can’t wait any longer"

Photo: US Coast Guard

Saturday marks three years since the blowout of BP's Macondo well and explosion of Transocean's Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico which killed 11 men and spewed 200 million gallons of oil over three months.

  • Resources
  • Defending the Global Commons
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Nestle Chairman says water isn’t a human right. Tell him he’s wrong

Submitted by admin on Tue, 04/23/2013 - 13:52

Cross-posted from Union Solidarity International

17 April 2013

In a candid interview for the documentary We Feed the World, Nestle Chairman Peter Brabeck makes the astonishing claim that water isn’t a human right. He attacks the idea that nature is good, and says it is a great achievement that humans are now able to resist nature’s dominance. He attacks organic agriculture and says genetic modification is better.

  • Resources
  • Claiming & Protecting Water
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To Build a Community Economy, Start With Solidarity

Submitted by admin on Mon, 04/22/2013 - 09:34
Cross-posted from Yes Magazine 
 
How residents who can’t afford to buy in still get the benefits of co-op work and housing.
 
by Abby Scher
posted Apr 03, 2013

 

Jorge Funes photo by ADP Photos
 

United for Hire worker Jorge Funes paints the exterior of Greenfield Gardens in Springfield, Mass., one of the housing complexes owned by Alliance to Develop Power. Photo courtesy of ADP.

When Cecilia Pastor greeted us at the door of an empty unit at Spring Meadow Apartments in Springfield, Mass., she was surrounded by the harsh smell of paint and the cleaners she had used to scour the space to make it presentable for a new tenant. A petite 30-year-old woman, she was working for United for Hire, a worker-controlled landscaping, snow removal, and cleaning firm operated by the innovative nonprofit Alliance to Develop Power (ADP). 
“One thing I have learned and really like in United for Hire is we work in a community economy, and the money circulates,” she said. “And we have good salaries where we can support our families.”

  • Resources
  • Solidarity Economies
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Alternatives

  • Another Haiti is Possible
  • Defending the Global Commons
  • Claiming & Protecting Water
  • Guaranteed Access to Healthcare
  • Community Control of Knowledge
  • Women's Rights and Gender Justice
  • Gift Economies
  • Solidarity Economies
  • Indigenous Territory & Resource Rights
  • Worker Ownership
  • Agrarian Reform
  • Environmental Protection & Zero Waste
  • Food Sovereignty
  • Transforming the Food Supply Chain

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