StopMAI Coalition
Western Australia(This site will soon be revamped and updated) For the latest information on the Australian component of
the trade justice movement, visit the AFTINET siteClick here to enter our Millennium Round Webliography which provides the world's most comprehensive links to the globalisation issues
Associated with international civil society against unfettered corporate powerApril 2007 Citizens' Voice Newsletter
New terrorist laws threaten democratic rights
WA email forum on globalisation:
Fair trade
involves justice to all peoples, development of democracy and care for the natural environment."Free trade"
is an unfair licence for a few countries and corporations to exploit the world's peoples to make limitless profits, regardless of injustice, and destruction of natural and community environment.Global enforcement of "free trade" by agencies of large corporations (WTO and IMF) is a significant threat to freedom.
Protesters in Seattle, November 1999, began a huge new wave of dissent against excessive control of world trade bureaucracies and subservient national political parties by greed-driven multinational corporations.
StopMAI endorses ISPO
(International Simultaneous Policy Org'n)
--Visit http://www.simpol.orgNewsletter Newsroom
GATS_advt WTO_Seattle Stop_the_MAI!! Salmon_Issue WA_Campaign AFTINET WTO_Links MAI_Links Global_Links Fair_Use_Notice Australia's WTO capitulation over salmon diseases
How Australia relaxed its rigorous quarantine standards in pursuit of free trade. (The guys who kow-towed to Soeharto have now found a new career path of genuflection.)Tasmania's Salmon Fight-back
Australia's smallest State takes on the world to defend the disease-free status of its salmon industry--and learns it has no friends in the Canberra bureaucracy. But the State has clear jurisdiction to regulate for animal health, and is sticking to its 'line in the sand'.The meaning of Seattle
Here you will find links to all the information about the collapse of the 1999 Seattle "Free Trade" Ministerial Conference -- and analysis of civil society's victory.At Seattle a statement signed by 1600 civil-society organisations from over 90 countries, both North and South, demanded a halt to further trade liberalisation and for the WTO's rules to be 'reviewed and revised'. Third World Delegates at the WTO didn't want a halt to trade liberalisation, but prior to the meeting the G77 group of developing countries called for a 'review, repair and reform' of the WTO. Amongst the activists on the streets the call was for 'No New Round, Turnaround'.
The IMF and World Bank protests
Why Civil Society went to Washington DC on April 16, 2000. (Links to criticism by activists, and by experts including a former Chief Economist of the World Bank - Joseph Stiglitz)Citizens' Voice
On-line Australian newsletter which promotes fair trade and opposes the power of multinationals to control economies and undermine democratic governmentClinton bombshell annihilated WTO at Seattle
Commentary by Vigdor Schreibman: The WTO would prohibit, "non-tariff barriers to trade," thereby, disregarding under classic market theory the interdependent social and environmental attributes of democratic sustainability. The whole idea of WTO is bizarre. American sociologist James S. Coleman (1990) has observed that classic market theory is a "broadly perpetrated fiction," possessing no logical intellectual foundation.The MAI and WTO Seattle Campaigns, 1998-9
. . .The multinational 'Dracula' treaty of the 1990s is undead--but the stakes are sharpened! These pages outline, from an Australian perspective, the famous internet battles against the attempt by powerful multinational corporations to bring most of the world's governments under their control.StopMAI - The Western Australian grassroot campaign, with a calendar of coming events
OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
A submission on the process of review (lodged with Treasury Dept, Feb 00)Defining Globalisation
A selection of articles compiled by Global Policy, a United Nations monitor for the labour movement
From 9/9/03.