From vancouverparecon at resist.ca Fri May 19 18:38:40 2006 From: vancouverparecon at resist.ca (vancouverparecon at resist.ca) Date: Fri, 19 May 2006 18:38:40 -0700 (PDT) Subject: [Van-Parecon] Robin Hahnel comes to Vancouver World Peace Forum Message-ID: <2290.24.80.169.62.1148089120.squirrel@mail.resist.ca> Greetings all, The Vancouver Parecon Collective is proud to announce that we're hosting Robin Hahnel at this June's World Peace Forum here in Vancouver at UBC. Robin will be speaking on the WPF theme of "Economy of Peace". We provide an event description below. But first we'd like to mention a few of the latest features added to our website... Collective member Haroon Bajwa reviews Michael Albert's latest book "Realizing Hope": http://vanparecon.resist.ca/bajwarealizinghope.html VanParecon Collective presented at the Canada22: Envisioning Post Neo-liberalism conference last April 22. Material presented there is provided in both print and audio format. Print: http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=26&ItemID=10151 Audio: http://vanparecon.resist.ca/parecon_files/postneolibpareconchris.mp3 We've also recently conducted an extensive interview with Michael Albert on "Parecon Today": http://www.zmag.org/content/showarticle.cfm?SectionID=26&ItemID=10164 One final reminder to please checkout our bulletin board were we discuss vision and strategy for all matters economic, political, cultural, kinship, social and ecological: http://sandbox.oracleatbelfry.com/forums/vanparForum/ Now, Robin Hahnel comes to the Vancouver World Peace Forum on June 27: There are some wars that spring up for reasons that have little to do with the world's sole remaining super power. But most wars since the collapse of Communism have been centered around US imperial ambitions, and even the wars that start for other reasons often become entangled in US imperial machinations. The first duty of all who oppose war and imperial domination is to build a world-wide movement for peace that is so powerful that even the world's only military super power finds it too costly to wage war. But as long as economies are governed by competition and greed, even a peace movement more powerful than the one we have been able to build so far will find itself challenged over and over again to douse the flames of war. Besides preventing wars, stopping the wars that do break out as quickly as possible, and checkmating imperial plans, to be successful in the long-run the peace movement must address the underlying forces that cause war. One underlying cause of war is the economics of competition and greed. (Sexism, racism, and militarism are others.) This means replacing the economics of competition and greed with the economics of equitable cooperation is an integral part of a successful strategy for achieving world peace. Robin Hahnel came of age politically in the anti-Vietnam war movement, and has participated actively in the US anti-imperialist movement ever since. He is also co-creator, along with Michael Albert, of an alternative to capitalism known as participatory economics. Together with the Vancouver Participatory Economics Collective, Hahnel will talk about war, peace, and participatory economics. Go here to register: http://zeus.maxintegration.net/events/fasttrack.aspx Robin Hahnel has taught political economy at American University for 30 years. He has co-authored, along with Michael Albert, numerous books on participatory economics. Robin has been active in many social movements and organizations beginning with Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) and the anti-Vietnam war movement in the 1960s, and most recently with the Southern Maryland Greens and Green Party USA. His most recent book is Economic Justice and Democracy: From Competition to Cooperation published by Routledge (2005). Thanks! Vancouver Parecon Collective http://vanparecon.resist.ca/