Via Campesina Sets an International Agenda
- Opinión
The peasantry has been portrayed historically as a backward sector, rooted in traditional productive practices and embedded in obsolete cultures. Peasants\' deep ties to natural cycles are often considered limitations to human transcendence—defined as the conquest of nature and the progress of technology. Their diversity is seen as an impediment to an efficient, homogenized society.
Who would have thought that in the age of globalization, small farmers\' weaknesses would prove to be their strengths?
The international forum of Via Campesina in
For most peasant farmers in
Both sides nodded knowingly at the other\'s descriptions of the loss of markets to imports, the drop in producer prices due to unfair competition, and government cutbacks to producers except the large exporters. The January tortilla crisis in
But the organizations didn\'t gather only to commiserate. The strengths of the peasantry also came to light, and these strengths show why Via Campesina has become an effective and influential actor in international movements for global justice. As globalization erodes community, threatens the quality and accessibility of our food supply, and destroys ecosystems, small farmers are the ones defending these values. In doing so, they hold important keys to the future survival of the planet and rebuilding the kind of society we want for our children.
Via Campesina members are deeply involved in building alternatives. The Landless Movement in
Other proposals include building global alliances, designing new forms of professional training, advocating alternative models of consumption and of relations between producers and consumers, and building a new agro-ecological model.
In complex times, the messages from Via\'s farmers were strikingly simple: to remain farmers, to provide a healthy and sustainable food supply, to market their product fairly. Some are surprising—the representative from the Union Paysanne of Quebec issued this plea: "We want neighbors." In
Paul Nicholson of the European Farmers Coalition noted that in the
Future actions supported by Via Campesina include the campaign of the National Union of Autonomous Regional Peasant Organization (UNORCA) to oppose the January 2008 lifting of all tariffs on corn, beans, sugar, and milk under the agricultural chapter of NAFTA. The National Campaign for Peasant and Indigenous Dignity begins on August 9 with an encampment at
Via Campesina has made a strategic decision that to advance the alternatives they propose, it\'s necessary to break down the power of the large transnational corporations. The organization called for an international day of protest on January 26, 2008. The corporations targeted include Monsanto, Cargill, Archer Daniels Midland, and Wal-Mart.
As globalization dictates that Big is Powerful and cultural monotony is imposed from above, small farmers are leaping borders to become the leaders of an international movement to resist the imperatives of the economic model. In their diversity they are achieving unity, in their traditions they find answers to contemporary problems, and in their determination they provide an example of their slogan—globalize hope.
Laura Carlsen is the director of the Americas Program in
For More Information
La Via Campesina
International Peasant Movement
www.viacampesina.org
National
www.unorca.org.mx
Source: IRC Americas Program http://www.ircamericas.org
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