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Emeritus Professor Jim Ife Curtin University. Liberalisation and Community Empowerment from a Human Rights Perspective: Challenges for ASEAN Countries. The Global Crisis. Decline of the USA and the shift in power to Asia Challenging Western assumptions The ecological crisis.
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Emeritus Professor Jim Ife Curtin University Liberalisation and Community Empowerment from a Human Rights Perspective: Challenges for ASEAN Countries
The Global Crisis • Decline of the USA and the shift in power to Asia • Challenging Western assumptions • The ecological crisis
Retreating to extremes • Extreme individualism • Denial of the collective • Xenophobia and racism
Neo-liberal assumptions of humanity • Individual • Workers/consumers OR investors/entrepreneurs • Independent • Motivated by self-interest • Citizenship not important • Inequality is both natural and desirable
Human rights and ethical duties • Conventional western discourse starts with rights and implies duties • Other cultural and religious traditions start with the ethical duty to the other, and imply rights • ‘Human rights’ became important when ethical obligations were weakened by the breakdown of community • ‘My rights’ not ‘my duties to others’
The decline of the welfare state • Lack of obligation to others • Incompatible with selfish individualism • State spending seen as wasting resources and eroding productive economy
Community versus development • ‘Development’ seen in terms of investment, and so has destroyed community in many places • ‘The community’ is seen as standing in the way of development • So community and development are opposed: each undermines the other • ‘Community Development’ becomes a contradiction
Focusing on the HUMAN • The idea of ‘human’ and ‘humanity’ is constructed differently at different times and in different contexts
The Enlightenment view of Humanity • Individual rather than collective • Secular rather than spiritual • Man rather than men and women • Young and vigorous rather than valuing elders • Rational rather than emotional • Healthy and able-bodied • Distinct from the natural world
The Humanities All cultures have: • Stories • Art • Literature • Songs • Drama • History • Philosophy
Community Development needs Human Rights • Human Rights need Community Development
Both Human Rights and Community Development stand against the dominant individualism of the neo-liberal discourse • The shift in global power represents an opportunity to articulate both ideas more collectively and vigorously
Exploring and reaffirming our humanity • Reconnecting to the natural world • i.e a creative and holistic community development approach to policy and practice
A Culture of Human Rights • From rule-based human rights to relationship-based human rights.
Beyond simple binaries • individual AND collective • rational AND emotional • sacred AND secular • human AND non-human
Times of Crisis are Times of Opportunity