For more than two years, the antisweatshop movement has been the hottest political thing on campus [see Featherstone, "The New Student Movement," May 15, 2000]. Students have used sit-ins, rallies, hunger strikes and political theater to demand that garments bearing their institution's logo be made under half-decent working conditions.
Click here to read the ACIT letter, with some comments. Acrobat Reader required.
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Crisis of a Gilded Age
Doug Henwood: Without an energized populace, expect nothing more humane than the rescue of a failing financial system.
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Our Gilded Age
Doug Henwood: Today's elite spend on a grand scale while pretending to be "just folks."
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A Rally in Juneau
Doug Henwood: Veterans for Peace in Juneau greeted the Nation cruise when it docked in their city with a rally against the war.
That changed this past July. After colleges and universities made a number of visible concessions to the students over the spring, a group of some 250 economists and lawyers released a letter to administrators, basically complaining that they hadn't been consulted. The letter, initially drafted by Jagdish Bhagwati of Columbia University and burnished to perfection by a collective of free-trade zealots calling themselves the Academic Consortium on International Trade (ACIT), reproached administrators for making concessions "without seeking the views of scholars" in relevant disciplines. Judging from their letter, the views of these scholars might not have been terribly enlightening. On page 24 of the magazine, the ACIT missive appears with some comments (see "Special" box, right).
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