By Heather MacDonald
GV ContributorWhile much of the world is making progress on creating
societies of equality amongst their women, migrants or religious
groups, many countries are still struggling with what Canadians
would consider to be the basics.
At a recent Globalization Studies Network (GSN) conference -
hosted by the Centre for International Governance Innovation in
Waterloo, Ontario - the need for minority groups to gain equal
rights was repeated throughout the three-day conference.
During the session entitled ‘Peoples' Movements,
Popular Culture, and Populism: Can Civil Society Civilize
Globalization', two women in particular questioned the inferiority
of women to men in today's society.
Grazielle Furtado Alves da Costa, a faculty member at the
Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, posed the idea of a positive
contradiction. If "war is a masculine issue" then the solution for
women would be to soften the act of battling.
Using different art forms as a non-violent form of aggression
towards male-dominated governments, one group of women in Columbia
created "an act of solidarity among women who were affected by
war."
Furtado presented
Mujeres DeNegro (Women in Black) a book of photos showing
women dressed in black, representing the "strong civil society
fight against such issues [like] drug trafficking, crime and
terrorism in Columbia."
Like many other aspects of the women's movement, the book is
"an act of solidarity among women who were affected by war," she
explained, "because women from Columbia really care."
Sarah Raymundo, associate sociology professor at the
University of the Philippines, said such portrayals of women in the
media are needed. Star Cinema in the Philippines shows the
exploitation of women in their films by "introducing women as
modern slaves," she explained.
Raymundo went on to say that these productions were merely a
way to "feminize migrant labour through Star Cinema."
In a world where the media reveals and sometimes encourages
discrimination of minority groups and, as Reverend Ram Rattan
Sharma put it, "the United States has power around the world,"
religious affiliation can also lead to discrimination.
Throughout one of the most intense sessions of the
conference, ‘Terrorism in the Context of Contemporary forms
of Transnational Violence'
, panellists and members of the audience spoke on behalf of
Muslims as a minority group in the United States.
Rekha Chowdhary, professor at the University of Jammu in
India, believes that America's negative view towards the Muslim
World is because of terrorist groups, allowing them to gain a more
globalized power. Moreover, this view has spread to other Western
nations.
"In the way [terrorism] has come to be defined, it has become
a means to justify intervention of internal affairs of other
countries. Terrorism, it is argued by many, is a convenient tool
for the US to label any situation as an act of terrorism. By using
the label ‘terrorist,' it has sought to justify its proactive
interventions," he explained.
Fellow panellist and associate professor at the Center for
American Studies at Fudan University in Shanghai, Zhang Jiadong
agreed that "in the 19
th Century, terrorism was political... [but]
globalization has made terrorism more religious [in recent years]."
M.J. Akbar, a keynote speaker at the conference and
Editor-in-Chief of
Covert Magazine, told panellists that there is actually a
disconnect between Islamic communities and terrorism.
"We think of the Kashmir problem as a Muslim problem, it
comes naturally to the terminology, sometimes consciously,
sometimes subconsciously. This is another lie." Akbar figures that,
"if there are 5 million Muslims in Kashmir, there are 175 million
Muslims elsewhere in India who have no relationship and do not
support this movement, who do not participate in it."
Akbar went on to compare Muslim grouping with Hinduism. "In
South Asia there are Hindu populations in Sri Lanka, India, Nepal
and Bangladesh. There are Hindus who are involved in terrorist
movements in Sri Lanka, India and Nepal [but] nobody identifies
that terrorism with Hinduism and it should not be... the terrorism
that emerges out of Muslim populations is not Muslim or Islamic."
In order to make changes to a society where minority groups
are often victims of discrimination, there are many governance
angles to consider before coming to a solution. Akbar feels that
"if you're talking about uncivil society, you have to also talk
about uncivil governance."
Heather MacDonald is the International Editor ofThe Cord
Weekly, the official student newspaper of Wilfrid Laurier
University
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