Title: Civic Values for Global Justice: What Values
1Civic Values for Global Justice What Values?
- World Civic Forum
- 1st Thematic Session
- May 2009
- Dr Manuel Escudero
- Special Advisor, United Nations Global Compact
- Head PRME Secretariat
2The context of the 2009 Global Forum2008 was
the year in which a new global agenda was unveiled
- In the first half of the year we faced several
global crises (energy and food), and the urgency
concerning climate change was heightened. - These crises point out to a new important and
crucial fact as a result of economic growth and
the incorporation to the international markets of
the emerging countries (Russia, China, India and
Brazil), we are now facing the certainty of
scarcity in the supply of natural resources in
the world in the areas of food, energy, water
and climate, and therefore the need for effective
global governance.
3The context 2008 was the year in which a new
global agenda was unveiled
- In the second half of the year, we witnessed the
collapse of the credit system and a rapid spread
of the biggest and most contagious economic
recession in our lifetime. This crisis implies
the need to - Rethink global capitalism (in the precise sense
of the financial system and also in terms of the
role of corporations and the managerial model) - Design and implement global recovery
- Design new global financial regulations
- Reform the IMF to cope with economic distress in
developing countries - Ultimately, reform the international monetary
system.
4The context of the 2009 Global Forum 2008 was
the year in which a new global agenda was unveiled
- Finally, as a result of the crisis, we have seen
that there are new silent, but powerful new
partners of the global agenda, notably emerging
economies, and that, therefore, we are not
anymore in a unipolar (West dominated), but
multipolar world. - However, unilateralism and protectionism have not
disappeared, and without multilaterism, in a
multipolar world we can live a period of
instability, fragmented alliances and unclear
leaderships. -
5The context of the 2009 Global Forum some
conclusions when we inquire about civic values
- a) Global Interdependence In the XXI Century
civic values should be global, values which
address the problems emerging from
interdependence at the global scale. - b) Urgency confronted with these crises
(economic, financial, of natural resources),
civic values have to mean values for collective
action. Challenges do not wait! - c) Legacy of the 2009 WCF a call of the Forum
should mean a definition of civic values for
global governance and for collective engagement. -
6Civic Values relevant background
- The Roots of Civic Values
- Religion as a culture many religions have, at
the core, an important call to transcend the
mere individual, to recognize the others in
society and to build a dynamics of community
cooperation. - Regional cultures particularly, some regions
present a heritage of the culture of harmony,-
between the individual and the community ,and
between humanity and nature. - Even the last important ideological developments
of humankind, capitalism and political
liberalism, even if they affirm the rights of the
individual, entail a mixture of individual and
collective values (the mixed economy, social
democracy, the concept of freedom) -
7Civic Values relevant background
- The Roots of Civic Values
- While the roots explain the existence of a basis
for collective cooperation and community
building - While these roots (religions, regional cultures
or ideological mainstream trends) also explain
the commitment to civic values of many leadings
personalities and social institutions - There is no such a thing as a Kantian moral
imperative that effectively guarantees human
progress. Civic values are historical, and have
to be defended and consolidated every day for
them to become effective guides of human
behavior. - To define civic values in the XXI Century, we
have to inquire about the social milestones which
have affected the values of citizens in the last
period (post II WW). -
8Civic Values towards a new citizen
- Some important transformations are adding new
attributes to the concept of citizen - As a result of continued economic growth,
citizens have today a higher degree of material
autonomy than ever before in the history of
humankind . - Material autonomy means to have ones own
economic income in order to choose ones personal
life. It is clear that there are still many
steps towards material autonomy for each person
in the world. But it is also clear that never
before, humanity reached todays levels of
material autonomy. Moral autonomy (to make
personal decisions according to ones own
judgment) presupposes material autonomy, but is a
wider and deeper concept it cannot be conquered
without education. - B) As a result of the existence of public systems
of education, citizens today are better educated
than never before. And therefore, the citizen is
more morally autonomous today than never before. -
9Civic Values the new citizen
- Some important transformations are adding new
attributes to the citizens - C) As a result of globalization and the IT
revolution citizens today have more reflexivity
than never before. - Reflexivity is the capacity of humankind to
reflect about itself. The leap in reflexivity
created by globalization and communications means
that we are able now to forecast the adverse
consequences of human actions, and we are much
better than never before in terms of preventive
capacities. These capacities are new attributes
of the citizen. - D) Finally, the intervention of citizens in the
public agenda is greater than never before, as a
result of the development of capitalism, citizens
now are workers, consumers, investors and active
public opinion makers. -
10The values of the new citizen
- In 2003, the New York Times talked about the
birth of the New Global Public Opinion (A New
Power In the Streets Patrick E. Tiller, The New
York Times, 02/17/2003) - But the new global public opinion is not
anecdotal evidence - the public opinion is the
central factor of legitimacy of the public
agenda (Habermas). - My most important thesis is that the new citizen
has emerged with a critical conscience about the
state of affairs of the public agenda. -
11The values of the new citizen
- The new citizen, familiar to the global scenario
and active through many crucial activities in the
public domain, has been born with a new set of
basic global values - Respect for Human Rights has won the battle of
ideas - b) Respect for the ecological balance with Nature
and demand of halting climate change also has won
the battle of ideas. - c) Social and economic convergence at the global
scale. - d) Multilateralism for a multipolar world.
- Proof political correctness and the declaration
of the G20 show where legitimacy is today. -
12The values of the new citizen
- These values do not come from the sky, but are
being born out of the new characteristics of the
citizen (moral autonomy, education, reflexivity)
and are confirmed by the existence of a nascent
set of global institutions which defend similar
values the UN, the multipolarity of regional
associations, the WTO, the International Court of
Justice or the Kyoto protocol - Multilateral institutions and values of the
citizens are in constant feedback and reinforce
each other -
13The values of the new citizen
- The new citizen is also been born with a new set
of basic local values - Accountability as a result of moral autonomy and
education the awareness that the origin of public
power (political or economic) is the small part
of sovereignty owned by each citizen - implying
higher levels of accountability from public
powers. - Reasoned democracy The demand for proficiency,
implying new ways of deliberation and reasoning
from public powers (and in the case of economic
powers, the demand for dialogue with all the
stakeholders) - Transparency rejection of the imperium
(domination by public powers) vis-a-vis political
representatives or economic leaders, which
implies greater transparency in decision making. - Proof a new generation of civic political
leaders, able to connect with the new citizen.
14The consequences of the emergence of new civic
values
- a) The problem of legitimacy of unilateralism as
the leadership style in international relations. - b) The problem of legitimacy of traditional
politics, and the need to rethink democracy
towards a new type of civic politics (reasoned
democracy, transparency, and greater
accountability) - c) The problem of legitimacy of the traditional
way of understanding the role of corporations in
society (a new social contract, CSR, the UN
Global Compact and PRME).
15The way forward
- The most valuable asset of the WCF is, precisely,
its underlying concept and the promise it
encompasses civic values are at the core of the
new solutions in the XXI Century to the public
global/local agenda we need a new civic approach
to international relations, a new civic approach
to politics and a new civic approach to
economics. - In order to progress, the concept is not enough
there should be a definition of civic values
today, and maybe Forum should provide that
definition. - For what is worth, in my opinion, the civic
values of the XXI Century are related to
multilateralism, human rights, halting the
climate change, global socioeconomic
convergence, transparency and anti-corruption,
accountability and reasoned democracy.
16www.unprme.org Prmesecretariat_at_unprme.org escudero
m_at_unprme.org Thank you