공지사항
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- '노란봉투'캠페인/국제연대..
- no chr.!
The German news agency dpa reported yesterday that the French trade unions and student organisations called for next Tuesday for a new national protest day, general strike..
Well, once again, please check out..
English language coverage of the young workers’ revolt in France
Here are just some impressions from the last protests and general strike there..
And Da hamkke..다함께.. All Together, commented the devolpments there like that...
Let’s fight like France
The appropriateness of this headline is perhaps lost until you realise the similarity of the situation facing workers and students (ie soon-to-be workers) in France and Korea. In both countries governments are attempting to bring in laws that they say will boost employment and maintain the competitiveness of their country’s economy, but which at the same time throw millions of people (often young) into permanent or semi-permanent states of precarity and flexibilisation.
David Harvey talks quite a bit in A Brief History of Neoliberalism of the ‘uneven geographical development’ of neoliberalism across the world. The other side of this coin is the very real ‘evening’ process of neoliberalism, as states around the world employ the same policies and techniques against workers and often against welfare or the state sector itself (which of course they must do to conform to the requirements of competitive capital accumulation). The constant drive for more and more ‘flexible’ labour (ie the drive to exploit workers harder and extract more surplus value from them), is is certainly one of these ‘evening’ factors, found in both East Asian ‘tigers’ and ‘old’ European states alike.
If there is an evening process in the global neoliberal attack, then there must also be an evening process in the responses of social and labour movements around the world. Not only must workers and movements provide solidarity to one another across all artificial boundaries, they must learn from one another what works and implement it wherever they are.
Of course this is easier said than done and surely the conditions that have created the current struggle in France are very different to those in South Korea. So far in the struggle against the Casual Workers Bill currently being considered by the Korean National Assembly there has been much fighting talk from union leaders but seemingly less in the way of real solidarity or confidence on the ground. Maybe the French students can be an inspiration. That would be my sort of globalisation. Tous Ensemble! 다함께!
...according to the blog of
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kotaji
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Looking forward to hearing your opinion. By the way, did you follow the big strike in the UK yesterday too? It seems to have gone very well.부가 정보
CINA
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yeah, 1,5 million in UK, german newspapers reported.. the largest since 80 years they wrote..btw, where are you staying, or hanging around.. s. korea.. i dont think so..
aeh.. and my opinion.. maybe tomorrow, but i am not sure, because i have a lot of stuuff to do right now... later you can read more about it... but i will try my best...
and.. do we know each other from somewhere..
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kotaji
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I'm in London, studying at SOAS. Haven't been in Korea since winter 2003 where I think I bumped into you at the migrant workers' protest at Myongdong.부가 정보