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Carnegie
Quarterly - Winter 1996
Balkan
Tragedy
Contents:
On
the eve of the post-cold war revolutions in eastern and central
Europe, Yugoslavia was arguably the most likely to make a successful
transition to democracy and a market economy. It had never subscribed
to the virulent communism of Stalin, its borders were relatively
open to people and trade, it borrowed money from the International
Monetary Fund under free-market conditions, it was a member of the
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, and it had economic ties
to the European Community and the European Free Trade Association.
But
just two short years after the fall of the Berlin Wall in November
l989, Yugoslavia, a nation of six semi-autonomous republics, had
ceased to exist. Slovenia and Croatia had declared independence,
savage nationalistic and ethnic wars had broken out in Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina, and the Western powers -- the United States,
Europe, and the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance (NATO) -- together
with the United Nations were thwarted in their efforts to resolve
the conflict.
What led to this bloody internecine war in Yugoslavia is the story
behind Balkan Tragedy: Chaos and Dissolution After the Cold War
(The Brookings Institution, 1995, 536 pp.), by Susan Woodward,
senior fellow in the Brookings Foreign Policy Studies program, whose
work was partly Corporation financed. A long-time scholar of the
Balkans, university professor, and policy analyst, Woodward has
observed the unfolding events in the former Yugoslavia over many
years, first as a Ph.D. student in comparative politics. Between
1970 and 1985, she made frequent trips to Yugoslavia, staying anywhere
from six weeks to three years, mainly in Croatia. Her more recent
insights were gathered as a member in 1994 of a United Nations mission
sent to Bosnia to monitor cease-fires and provide humanitarian aid.
There she headed up an analysis and assessment unit at UN headquarters
in Zagreb, Croatia.
"By
the end of 1991, after Slovenia and Croatia declared independence,"
she explains, "it became clear to me that Yugoslavia had been
badly misunderstood and that this had led to bad policy. It seemed
to me that it might be good to explain what was really happening."
Woodward sees Bosnia as "a defining moment for the post-cold
war period, in which all the issues left unresolved since the breakup
of the former Soviet Union were brought into play." She blames
the West for failing to understand the root cause of Yugoslavia's
problems and for exacerbating these problems by trying to solve
them with cold war thinking inappropriate to the situation.
The disintegration of governmental authority and the breakdown of
political and civil order took place over a prolonged period, she
says, against the backdrop of dramatic changes in the international
environment that subjected the country to wrenching stresses. Among
these were mounting pressures by international agencies for Yugoslavia
to speedily transform itself from a socialist society to a market
economy and democracy, when the country was incapable of marshaling
an adequate response.
For
those who have the patience to follow Woodward's analysis of events
leading up to hostilities between Croatia and Serbia, the book will
be a revelation, though not one that will persuade everybody, because
it holds the West partly responsible for the first major war to
break out in Europe since 1945, when the instruments were presumably
put in place to prevent such a thing from ever occurring again.
Chaos
and Dissolution
According
to Woodward, it is plain wrong to think that Yugoslavia broke apart
because it was an "artificial country" made up of ethnically
diverse republics held together by the repression of national sentiments
and by the charisma and will of strongman Josip Broz Tito, the World
War II leader who was president until his death in 1980. Yugoslav
society, rather, was held together both by an extensive system of
rights and overlapping sovereignties and by a complex balancing
act at the international level. Far from being repressed, she says,
national identity and rights were institutionalized by Tito -- in
a federated system that granted near statehood to the republics
and individual, group, and national rights to social and economic
equality.
But the administrative capacity of the federal government was weak
and its decentralized economies progressively overstretched as they
headed into the post-cold war era. When stiff economic and political
reforms were forced on Yugoslavia in return for continued International
Monetary Fund support, the divisions between the six republics became
fissures that began to widen.
To Woodward, the market reforms, privatization, and slashed budgets
demanded of an unstable country by foreign creditors and by Western
governments virtually asked for political suicide. In the decade
following Tito's death, the civil and legal order in Yugoslavia
began to fall apart. There was large-scale unemployment among young
people and unskilled urban dwellers; demobilized soldiers and security
police were looking in vain for jobs in the private sector; hyperinflation
encouraged black market activities and crime; and local and global
traffic in small arms and ammunition was flourishing. The social
conditions were potentially explosive.
Diminished
Strategic Importance
At the same time that internal conditions were deteriorating and
Yugoslavia was beset by external demands, eastern Europe's strategic
importance to the West began to diminish. The Warsaw Pact had collapsed,
and Yugoslavia no longer figured as a bulwark against Soviet expansionism.
Having worked out arms and force reduction agreements with the Soviet
Union, the NATO states were reluctant to respond to the worsening
situation on the southeastern flank of Europe.
Woodward writes: "For forty years Yugoslavia had had a special
relationship with the United States, including the implicit guarantee
of special access to Western credits to keep Yugoslavia's trade
deficit afloat in exchange for Yugoslav neutrality and military
capacity to deter Warsaw Pact forces from western Europe. Now, however,
Yugoslavia was unnecessary to U.S. vital security. It was being
moved from a special category in the U.S. State Department and international
organizations, a category in which it stood alone or shared its
status with southern Europe, and returned to its pre-1949 category,
defined geopolitically, of eastern and southeastern Europe."
Fanning
the Flames
A
byproduct of disastrous Western economic policies toward Yugoslavia,
and of the West's neglect, declares Woodward, was rising militant
nationalism. Ethnic resentments, suspicion, and fear were inflamed
by several leaders, in particular Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic and
Croatia's Fanjo Tudjman, both of whom became presidents of their
respective republics, as well as Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadsic
-- each standing to gain power from their demagoguery.
Milosevic, for example, fueled the claims of Serbs for national
rights by accepting local Serb assertions in Kosovo that they were
victims of "genocide" by ethnic Albanians. Croatia did
its part to erect nationalistic barriers by rewriting its constitution
to deny Serbs equal political status with Croatians and by adopting
the historical symbols of Croatian statehood, which were last seen
in fascist Croatia from 1941 to 1945.
Nationalistic concerns were heightened even more when Croatia and
Slovenia held multiparty elections in 1990. Those elections became
the vehicle by which the republics of Slovenia and Croatia legitimized
their assertion of sovereignty for their majority nations on the
grounds of the right to self determination. They declared their
independence from Yugoslavia in the summer of 1990.
Woodward writes that, rather than being a regular instrument of
popular choice and expression of political freedom for the transition
to a democratic system, the elections "became the critical
turning point in the process of political disintegration over a
decade of economic crisis and constitutional conflict...."
Yugoslavia was now becoming an agglomeration of sovereign independent
states, and the fight for territorial gain, for territorial autonomy,
and for ethnic purity began. The Yugoslav political theorist Vladimir
Gligorov encapsulated the new reasoning as, "Why should I be
a minority in your state when you can be a minority in mine?"
The result in mid-l991 was war in Croatia between Croatia and the
Yugoslav Peoples Army, one of the last vestiges of the old Yugoslav
state, which tried to prevent Croatia's secession.
A second war for territory now erupted in Bosnia-Herzegovina, as
Croatia and Serbia vied for bits and pieces of the undefended republic
and as people fleeing from the conflict caused Europe's greatest
refugee crisis of the post-World War decades. Says Woodward, "Bosnia
was a republic of three nations, each represented by one political
party in the ruling coalition of 1990-91. Each was fighting for
its own ideas of national self-determination -- choosing their political
future as independent, or united with Serbia or with Croatia. Europe
and the United States made fundamental errors in not recognizing
this legal problem."
The
West's Muddled Response
The author argues that the West made two serious miscalculations
in its handling of Yugoslavia's disintegration, effectively hastening
the bloodshed in Croatia and Bosnia. The first was the precipitate
recognition by the European Community (EC) of the new states of
Slovenia and Croatia and by the United States of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
These decisions were affirmed by the United Nations, which admitted
them as separate states to the UN in May 1992.
Woodward writes, "In recognizing the Slovene and Croatian declarations
of independence in the face of substantial opposition from within
Yugoslavia -- thus accepting without question that the republics
were sovereign states and bore exclusively the right to national
self-determination -- the Europeans, for example, handed a victory
to the confederalists. The federalists lost to the EC, not to a
domestic vote or an elite political party. The EC also defeated,
by elimination, the third party to the constitutional conflict,
the Yugoslav federal government."
The second mistake was the failure of the U.S., Europe, NATO, and
the UN to agree to a course of action that would resolve the worsening
crisis. Compounding the problem was a lack of communication and
common front in the West. Observes Woodward, "The many conflicting
signals could have been read in several ways: as support for the
Slovene and Croatian cause, for the federal government's policies,
for the Serbian suspicions, and for the army's conviction that it
needed to prepare a defense and that it would not be deterred by
foreign intervention.
"The
effect was to encourage all parties to the conflict to believe their
chosen course would eventually win, and thus to become more tenacious."
Inadequacy
of Current Security Regimes
The lack of agreement among NATO members about how the conflict
should be resolved exposed dangerous cracks in the Atlantic alliance
and pointed to a general misdirection in the West's efforts to chart
a course in the post-cold war world. "The fact is," asserts
Woodward, "that these disagreements revealed the lack of leadership
and conception of the security regime that should replace the cold
war division in Europe. This included the role of the United States
as the sole remaining global power, the relations of the United
States with its European allies in a new Europe, and the place that
Russia would assume in that new world order."
Negotiation of a "piecemeal peace" resulted in a series
of ineffectual cease-fires. NATO bombing of Serbian positions resulted
in more than 200 UN peacekeepers being taken hostage in 1994. And
the creation of so-called safe areas in Muslim-majority towns such
as Sarajevo and Gorazde that were encircled by Serbian artillery
did nothing but escalate the Bosnian war and further expose civilians
to bombardment.
Now that a fragile peace settlement has been brokered, vouchsafed
by NATO and U.S. peacekeeping forces, what are the prospects for
a long-term resolution of the war in Bosnia? "Only a political
solution is possible," pronounces Woodward. "We had to
get a negotiated settlement to stop the fighting -- it is an outrage
that it was not done four years ago. But in order to get significant
change, we have to resolve certain issues that have not yet been
addressed. If we do not address them, there will be more ethnic
cleansing, more ethnically pure areas, and an unstable region for
years to come. We have more work to do."
For information:
Susan Woodward, Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies Program,
The Brookings Institution, 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington,
DC 20036.
While the West is worrying about the resurgence of infectious
diseases, low-income nations like Egypt, India, and Zaire ironically
are grappling with a variety of mental health problems that are
often an unexpected side effect of improved economies and living
conditions. Life expectancy has increased with more effective public
health and medical treatment, but this blessing is also associated
with more depression, schizophrenia, and dementia. Advancing economies
have been marked by higher rates of alcoholism, drug abuse, and
suicide. Psychiatric disorders among children in low-income countries
make up a significant part of the reason for visits to child primary
health clinics. And while maternal mortality has declined, violence
against women, young and old, is growing. Rape and sexual abuse
have come to be regarded as unremarkable aspects of war.
These problems until now have received scant attention from governments,
health officials, and international aid groups. But World Mental
Health: Problems and Priorities in Low-Income Countries, by
Robert Desjarlais, Leon Eisenberg, Byron Good, and Arthur Kleinman
(Oxford University Press, 1995, 382 pp.), is beginning to rectify
the situation. This study, by members and associates of Harvard
Medical School's department of social medicine, examines the mental,
emotional, and behavioral anomalies that often lurk behind the medical
aspects of disease in the developing world. Among its many prescriptions
for policy and program changes are the inclusion of mental health
care in essential national health services and more ethnographic
and cross-cultural research for the benefit of all societies beset
by mental health problems.
The authors look at mental illness arising from war, poverty, famines,
and natural disasters, which are endemic in many countries and not
only kill and maim but demoralize whole populations and impair the
mental and physical development of the young. While these are conditions
that a physician or mental health practitioner may be helpless to
change, at least the connections to sickness can be better understood
and more effective interventions possibly devised for affected regions
of the world.
The
High Cost of Mental Illness
It is sobering to think that the rise of mental health problems
could imperil the hard-won gains in physical health made by so many
low-income countries over the past forty years, but this is the
conclusion of Professor Kleinman and his colleagues. Kleinman, a
social anthropologist and psychiatrist who chairs the medical school's
department of social medicine, directed the two-year study with
partial Corporation support.
As the authors report, the total number of cases of schizophrenia
in developing nations is projected to increase from 16.7 million
in 1985 to 24.4 million by decade's end, largely because of a 45-percent
increase in the population of fifteen- to forty-five-year-olds,
the age cohort most susceptible to the disease. Similarly, instances
of senile dementia are increasing as more people live past the age
of sixty-five.
The mental anguish experienced by nearly one-fifth of the world's
population living in abject poverty is nearly incalculable. Yet,
if the per capita income of some countries continues its downward
course, the conditions for malnutrition, illness, social strife,
political instability, and despair stand only to worsen.
More than 23 million people in the world are officially refugees,
mainly from the nations of Asia and Africa. A similar number are
displaced within their own countries by wars and famine. Many of
those driven from their homes suffer some form of mental distress,
including post-traumatic stress disorder. Children displaced or
orphaned by chronic violence are the cruelest victims in countries
like Guatemala, Cambodia, Mozambique, Eritrea, and South Africa.
In other realms, terror "creates a surreal environment of confusion,
mistrust, and fearful silence."
Complex
Origins
The authors decry two simplistic and contradictory conclusions often
drawn about the origins of mental illness in low-income countries.
One is that mental illness is rooted in "underdevelopment"
and lack of wealth per se. The other is that most of the pathologies
are "caused" by the breakdown of coherent cultures and
communities that frequently accompany modernization. There is little
real evidence in either direction: emotional and behavioral problems
do not decline with the rise in a society's wealth, nor do they
increase as a direct result of economic development, although the
prevalence of some types of illness may change. Such simple models
fail to advance understanding of what are indeed very complex interactions
among diverse global and local processes.
What their book offers instead is a number of "causal pathways"
that might assist in understanding these processes and in designing
intervention strategies. First, both biological and social factors
are involved in mental disorders. Second, there are often multiple
interacting factors at work -- for example, suicide and drug abuse
are more likely to occur when the means of engaging in such self-destructive
behaviors are readily at hand. Third, behavioral and other mental
health problems tend to occur in clusters. Fourth, the problems
described in the report are best understood as a "vicious spiral"
rather than a chain of conditions -- in which abused children are
more likely than others to become abusers themselves. Finally, key
social forces, such as institutionalized discrimination against
women, recur as sources of social and psychiatric morbidity.
Research
and Action
Although
many countries face similar mental and social health concerns, World
Mental Health warns that research and programs of amelioration,
to succeed, must "meet the challenge of diversity." To
make their work locally relevant and sustainable, therefore, researchers
would do well to follow six general principles, whether in Boston
or Bangladesh:
-
At the outset, conduct focused ethnographic studies to provide
descriptive maps of local problems, perspectives, social realities,
and resources.
-
Evaluate new technologies and treatments for their cultural
relevance and in relation to patterns of use, resources, and
priorities.
-
Establish and monitor ethical standards for research development.
-
Favor interdisciplinary approaches over those based on a single
disciplinary perspective.
Beyond offering a research agenda and set of research principles,
World Mental Health proposes practical and cost-effective
measures that, in both the short run and the long, can be taken
by governments and mental health organizations to alleviate mental
suffering in low-income nations:
-
Decentralize mental health services rather than concentrate
them in large urban hospitals.
-
Give higher priority to the most important mental health problems
facing particular communities.
-
Make services culturally relevant rather than narrowly medical,
and ensure that they are locally controlled and administered.
-
Attack the deep-rooted sources of female suffering: discriminatory
practices in employment, education, food distribution, health
care, and resources for economic development. To reverse this
trend, encourage girls to stay in school, compensate working
women fairly, and give them the same access to credit for business
expansion enjoyed by men.
Even in financially burdened countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin
America, the elderly could benefit from inexpensive targeted and
universal policies. For nominal sums, governments could support
home health programs, education programs on dementia, housing policies
that encourage multigenerational families, promotion of employer-sponsored
benefits for families taking care of elder members, and income tax
relief for families caring for an elderly person.
These recommendations share several qualities. They build on local
strengths and resources; they attempt to mitigate the worst of economic
and structural inequalities; they promote human rights; and they
take seriously the fundamental connection between the well-being
of individuals and that of communities.
For some problems, Kleinman et al. insist that cost-effective solutions
are already available and directions for policy initiatives relatively
clear. In Zimbabwe, for example, low-cost cooperative residential
facilities cater to the needs of the destitute elderly. In such
a living situation, residents can contribute to the daily management
of the facility as well as maintain their sense of independence
and self-worth. For other problems, experimental programs offer
promising results that could be replicated or scaled up. Mali's
National Program in Mental Health combines psychiatric services
with traditional healing practices within an integrated primary
health system.
It has to be acknowledged, however, that the sheer magnitude of
some illnesses is such that ready answers are not at hand. The situation
is not helped by the largely "unbridged gap" between research
and policy, which often prevents practical knowledge or suggestive
findings from being applied on the ground. World Mental Health
urges international agencies to mount a campaign to inform policy
makers of relevant mental and social health research literature
and to move mental health issues from the margin to the center of
health and social policy in all countries. "We are now in the
United Nations Year of Indigenous Peoples. There soon needs to be
a United Nations Year of Mental Health."
For information:
Arthur Kleinman, M.D., Maude and Lillian Presley Professor of
Medical Anthropology and Chair, Department of Social Medicine, Harvard
Medical School, Harvard University, 641 Huntington Ave., Boston,
MA 02115..
Some
Key Findings from World Mental Health
-
Mental retardation and epilepsy rates are three to five times
higher in low-income societies than in industrialized countries.
-
The total number of cases of schizophrenia in low-income societies
will increase from 16.7 million in 1985 to 24.4 million by the
year 2000.
-
By the year 2025, some 80 million persons with dementia -- three
quarters of the world's total -- will live in low-income societies.
-
Well over 40 million of the world's refugees and internally
displaced persons run a high risk of depression, anxiety disorders,
and post-traumatic distress and other forms of emotional illness
that are the consequences of political violence.
-
Rates of domestic violence against married women vary from a
low of 20 percent to a high of 75 percent in developing nations.
Such rates are particularly high in association with alcohol
abuse among men.
-
Child abuse, including the use of juveniles in the commercial
sex industry; industrial slavery; and abandonment, is becoming
endemic in many parts of the world.
Mental
Illness Links Rich and Poor
"Mental
health is not simply the absence of detectable mental disease, but
a state of well-being in which the individual realizes his or her
own abilities, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able
to contribute to her or his community. That is a state desired by
individuals in Delhi no less fervently than it is in New York. Chronically
high levels of violence are deadly on the streets of Los Angeles,
in the working-class neighborhoods of Belfast, and in the slums
of Caracas. Women with abusive relationships face physical and emotional
hardship, even death, whether they live in Sydney, Boston, or Nairobi."
--
World Mental Health
How to organize a secure, just, democratic, and peaceful
future on the planet is the focus of the independent Commission
on Global Governance, which has reported its findings and conclusions
in a comprehensive, far-reaching report.
Our
Global Neighbourhood (Oxford University Press, 1995, 410 pp.),
the work of twenty-eight international luminaries who met over two
years, offers nothing less than a grand vision for creating the
"global civil society" -- one with a broadened concept
of international security, to include the security of individuals,
sustainable development, and freedom from want.
The commission's program of action calls for a renewed system of
international cooperation under the United Nations and development
of enlightened international leadership that can "inspire people
to acknowledge their responsibilities to each other and to future
generations." Central are the prevention and management of
conflict, United Nations reform, protection of the global ecosystem,
clear rules governing economic integration, and worldwide acceptance
of the rule of law encompassing a set of rights and responsibilities
common to all.
Former West German chancellor Willy Brandt initiated the
commission in 1992. Chaired by Ingvar Carlsson, former prime
minister of Sweden, and Shridath Ramphal, past secretary-general
of the Commonwealth, its members include Oscar Arias, Nobel peace
prize winner and former president of Costa Rica; Allan Boesak, member
of the African National Congress's National Executive Committee;
Barber Conable, former president of the World Bank; Jacques Delors,
former president of the European Commission; Qian Jiadong, deputy
director-general of the China Centre for International Studies;
and Yuli Vorontsov, current Russian ambassador to the United States.
Carnegie Corporation contributed toward the publication and dissemination
of the report.
Commission members specify they are not proposing a move toward
world government. Quite the contrary, "Were we to travel in
that direction, we could find ourselves in an even less democratic
world than we have -- one more accommodating to power, more hospitable
to hegemonic ambition, and more reinforcing of the roles of states
and governments rather than the rights of people."
Their goal is to achieve a state of global governance, in
which people have "the will and capacity to take control of
their lives," and governments, intergovernmental and nongovernmental
organizations, academia, the media, and citizens "work together
to create the kind of society they want for themselves and their
children."
Survival
and Security
The report underscores that, even though the communist threat to
the West has diminished, the world is still a dangerous and inhospitable
place for millions of people. Estimates are that in the last few
years at least thirty major armed conflicts -- defined as those
causing more than 1,000 deaths annually -- have been in progress.
A traditional cornerstone of the international system has been the
concept of national sovereignty, but as the commission points out,
threats to national sovereignty and territorial integrity today
often have their roots within states, not between states. Dealing
with these problems in a world of increasing interdependence may
require the collective exercise of sovereignty on behalf of the
"global commons," concludes the commission. The group's
proposal is to amend the United Nations Charter to let the UN Security
Council approve both military and humanitarian intervention into
domestic affairs in cases of flagrant violation of the security
of people "so gross and extreme that it requires an international
response." A further recommendation is for a "Right of
Petition" to let nations bring situations that endanger the
security of a people to the attention of the Security Council.
In the realm of peacekeeping, commission members urge the creation
of a UN Volunteer Force consisting of up to 10,000 personnel --
not to take the place of large-scale peacekeeping forces but to
act as a deterrent by letting the Security Council back up preventive
diplomacy with the threat of "a quickly deployed armed force."
Additionally, the report asks the international community to reaffirm
its commitment to eliminate nuclear and other weapons of mass destruction
and to pursue a program for achieving that end in ten to fifteen
years.
Managing
Economic Interdependence
The pace of globalization of financial and other markets is outstripping
the capacity of governments to provide the necessary framework of
rules and cooperative arrangements for solving global economic problems
"in the round" and for considering the linkages among
economic, social, environmental, and security issues. So states
the commission.
One solution, members suggest, is to create a new UN body called
the Economic Security Council, structured like the Security Council.
While it would not have the authority to make legally binding decisions,
its tasks would be to assess on a continuous basis the overall state
of the world economy and use its standing to promote consensus and
policy consistency among the different international organizations
on strategies for tackling economic instability, ecological crises,
international drug traffic, a marginalized global underclass, the
transformation of the former Soviet Union, and lack of food security.
Global
Environmental Threats
In Our Global Neighbourhood, the commissioners explore
the relationship of poverty, population growth, and consumption
to environmental degradation. Growing awareness that the global
ecosystem may be seriously damaged has at last nudged governments
into devising cooperative, albeit weak, approaches to address the
overfishing of oceans, species extinction, ozone layer depletion,
and the buildup of greenhouse gases.
But in urging restraints on the behavior of burgeoning populations,
the commission points the finger as much at high-consuming nations
as low. The report emphasizes that developed nations must reduce
their overuse of scarce resources without slackening their efforts
at poverty alleviation. "The failure to establish a common
approach can have disastrous consequences," they warn.
United
Nations Reforms
Far from dismantling and replacing the architecture of the United
Nations, the commission advocates an expansion of the Security Council's
membership to reflect current geopolitical realities. Recommended
is a two-step revision. First, add five new "standing"
members to the council -- two from industrial countries and one
each from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Second, increase the
number of nonpermanent members from ten to thirteen.
Permanent members are also urged to enter into a "concordat"
to forgo the use of the veto except in circumstances of an "exceptional
and overriding nature." Then, around the year 2005, there should
be a full review of the Security Council's membership and future
status, taking into consideration the growing strength of regional
bodies.
The
Rule of Law
With one of its major goals the strengthening of international law,
the commission urges universal acceptance of the compulsory jurisdiction
of the International Court of Justice at The Hague, commonly known
as the World Court. Their report pointedly notes that, of the 184
member states of the UN, only 57 have accepted the court's jurisdiction,
a statistic considered alarming: "At present, some countries
accept the court's jurisdiction without qualification in all cases
that may arise. Many others do so only when the state that wishes
to proceed against them has also done so. A number of states, however,
are willing to use the World Court only when it suits their short-term
interests. This last situation is wholly unsatisfactory."
To promote acceptance of the World Court, the commissioners propose
a system of selecting judges that places the highest value on skills
in jurisprudence and proven objectivity. Holding to such principles
in the selection process, they believe, would lead to a panel of
judges that commands the confidence of all UN member nations.
Leadership
The success of the foregoing recommendations ultimately resides
with an enlightened leadership that is "proactive, not simply
reactive; that is inspired, not simply functional; that looks to
the longer term and future generations for whom the present is held
in trust," assert commission members. They call for the creation
of "leaders made strong by vision, sustained by ethics, and
revealed by political courage beyond the next elections."
Members see two divergent choices for the future: go forward into
a new era of security that responds to law and collective will and
common responsibility by placing the security of people and of the
planet at the center. Or go backwards to the spirit and methods
of what one member describes as "the sheriff's posse dressed
to masquerade as global action."
There
is no question which course the commission thinks the world must
take: assert the values of internationalism, the primacy of the
rule of law worldwide, and the institutional reforms that sustain
them.
For information:
The Commission on Global Governance, 1, The Sutherlands, 188
Sutherland Avenue, London, W9 1HR, United Kingdom. Telephone: (44-171)
266-3409..
Links
between Consumption
and Population, 1990
Selected
Countries
| Country |
Actual
Population
(in millions) |
Consumption-
Adjusted
Population
(in millions) |
| China |
1,139 |
9,329 |
| India |
853 |
3,907 |
| Soviet
Union |
289 |
16,828 |
| United
States |
249 |
22,993 |
| Canada |
27 |
3,159 |
Source:
The Earth Council, "Consumption: The Other Side of Population
for Development," presented to the International Conference
on Population and Development, September 1994.
Other
members of The Commission on Global Governance are:
Ali Alatas, Minister for Foreign Affairs, Republic of Indonesia;
Abdlatif Al-Hamad, Director-General and Chairman of the Arab Fund
for Economic and Social Development, Kuwait; Anna Balletbo i Puig,
Member of Parliament, Spain; Kurt Biedenkopf, Minister-President
of Saxony; Manuel Camacho Solis, former Minister of Foreign Affairs
and former Mayor of Mexico City; Bernard Chidzero, Senior Minister
of Finance, Zimbabwe; Jiri Dienstbier, Chairman of the Free Democrats
party, Czech Republic; Enrique Iglesias, President of the Inter-American
Development Bank and former Minister of External Relations, Uruguay;
Frank Judd, Member of the House of Lords, United Kingdom; Hongkoo
Lee, Deputy Prime Minister of Korea; Wangari Maathai, Founder, Green
Belt Movement, Kenya; Sadako Ogata, United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees; Olara Otunnu, President, International Peace Academy,
New York, and former Foreign Minister of Uganda; I. G. Patel, Chairman,
Aga Khan Rural Support Programme, India; Celina Vargas do Amaral
Peixoto, Director, Getulio Vargas Foundation, Brazil; Jan Pronk,
Minister for Development Cooperation, the Netherlands; Marie-Angélique
Savan’, Director, Africa Division, UN Population Fund, New York;
Adele Simmons, President, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation, Chicago; Maurice Strong, Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Ontario Hydro, Canada; and Brian Urquhart, Scholar-in-Residence,
the Ford Foundation.
Publications
Received
The
following recent publications are the result of Corporation grants
and may be ordered directly from their publishers:
- The
Buying of the President, Charles Lewis (New York, NY:
Avon Books).
-
Charles
Lewis and the Center for Public Integrity expose the influence
peddlers -- lobbyists, special interest groups, and political
professionals -- and what their dollars may buy from each of
the 1996 presidential candidates. The book offers a significant
peek behind the curtain at the groups and individuals who will
pull the presidential strings.
-
In
Her Lifetime: Female Morbidity and Mortality in Sub-Saharan
Africa, Christopher Howson et al., eds. (Washington,
DC: National Academy Press).
This
comprehensive study examines the conditions that affect female
morbidity and mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. It expands the
traditional emphasis on reproductive issues to include nutrition,
nervous system disorders, mental health problems, chronic diseases,
injury, occupational and environmental health, tropical infectious
diseases, sexually transmitted diseases, and HIV infection.
-
Mamphela
Ramphele: A Life, Mamphela Ramphele (Cape Town, South
Africa: David Philip Publishers).
The
author shares the journey of her life, from a childhood steeped
in the traditions of the northern Transvaal, to her heightened
political consciousness working with Stephen Biko in the South
African Students ' Organization. Ramphele, perceived as a danger
to the apartheid state, was jailed as a political prisoner and
banished to an area of rural South Africa unfamiliar to her.
Despite the challenges she faced, she made invaluable contributions
to the creation of a just society.
-
National
Television Violence Study (Studio City, CA: Mediascope,
Inc.).
The
National Television Violence Study, the largest scientific study
of that medium 's content to date, analyzes the relationship
between television violence and aggressive behavior and attitudes
among viewers. The study evaluates the context in which violence
is portrayed, including such factors as the condemnation or
acceptance of violent acts by characters, the inclusion of humor,
and the heroic representation of victims or victimizers.
Other
Recent Publications
Arm in Arm: The Political Economy of the Global Arms Trade,
William W. Keller (New York, NY: Basic Books).
Central
Asia: Conflict, Resolution and Change, Roald Z. Sagdeev and
Susan Eisenhower, eds. (Chevy Chase, MD: CPSS Press).
The
Courage to Change: Stories from Successful School Reform, Paul
E. Heckman (Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press).
Health
Systems in an Era of Globalization: Challenges and Opportunities
for North America, Phyllis Freeman, Octavio Gomez-Dantes, and
Julio Frenk (Washington, DC: Institute of Medicine).
Legal
Rights Organizing for Women in Africa: A Trainer 's Manual,
Florence Butegwa and Sydia Nduna (Harare, Zimbabwe: Women in Law
and Development in Africa).
Missing
Links: Gender Equity in Science and Technology for Development
(Ottawa, Ontario: International Development Research Centre).
Preventing
Conflict in the Post-Communist World: Mobilizing International and
Regional Organizations, Abram Chayes and Antonia Handler Chayes
(Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution).
The
Price of Justice: A Los Angeles Area Case Study in Judicial Campaign
Financing (Los Angeles, CA: Center for Governmental Studies).
Raised
by Wolves: Photographs and Documents of Runaways, Jim Goldberg
(New York, NY: Scalo).
Raising
Our Future: Families, Schools and Communities Joining Together
(Cambridge: Harvard Family Research Project).
Reaching
for a Better Standard: English School Inspection and the Dilemma
of Accountability for American Public Schools, Thomas A. Wilson
(New York, NY: Teachers College Press).
U.S.
Foreign Policy and the United Nations System, Charles William
Maynes and Richard Williamson, eds. (New York, NY: W. W. Norton).
Audio-Visual
Materials
First
Vote: A Video on Citizenship and Voting (Washington, DC: People
for the American Way).
Jerome
B. Wiesner, 1915-1994: A Random Walk Through the Twentieth Century
(Cambridge, MA: The Media Laboratory, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology).
Recent
Grants
The
following were among the grants awarded at the January 11, 1996,
board meeting:
Education
and Healthy Development of Children and Youth
Academy for Educational Development: toward a project on collaborations
between schools and youth-serving organizations, $100,000 (1 year).
American Bar Association Fund for Justice and Education: toward
a project to examine linkages between teen pregnancy and child sexual
abuse, conducted in collaboration with the Progressive Foundation,
$124,000 (16 months).
Child Care Action Campaign: toward media strategies to improve
child care quality, $250,000 (20 months).
Children
Now: toward conferences on children and the media, $125,000
(1 year).
Preventing
Deadly Conflict
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace: toward the center
for Russian and Eurasian programs in Moscow, $575,000 (2 years).
Parliamentarians
for Global Action: toward projects on the Chemical Weapons Convention
and nuclear threat reduction, $100,000 (1 year).
Partners
for Democratic Change: toward a project to develop ethnic conciliation
commissions in Central and Eastern Europe, $50,000 (1 year).
Strengthening
Human Resources in Developing Countries
American
Association for the Advancement of Science: toward a program
to strengthen scientific and technological infrastructure in sub-Saharan
Africa, $410,000 (1 year).
International
Peace Academy: toward conflict management in Africa, $200,000
(1 year).
Overseas
Development Council: toward seminars for congressional staff
members on international development issues, $200,000 (2 years).
Special
Projects
NALEO
Educational Fund: toward a national citizenship project, $200,000
(18 months).
National
Immigration Forum: toward balanced media coverage of immigration
issues and its project to promote citizenship, $100,000 (1 year).
Northeast
Citizen Action Resource Center: toward research on campaign
finance and a project on civic education, $75,000 (1 year).
At the Corporation 's January 1996 board meeting, James P. Comer,
Maurice Falk Professor of Child Psychiatry at Yale University, was
elected vice chairman for a one-year term. Dr. Comer, who has served
as a trustee since 1990, founded the School Development Program
at two New Haven inner-city schools in 1968. The program builds
supportive relationships among children, parents, teachers, and
school administrators and has been duplicated in more than 300 schools
in eighteen states. Dr. Comer cochaired the Carnegie Council on
Adolescent Development 's Task Force on Youth Development and Community
Programs.
Dr. Comer succeeds Eugene H. Cota-Robles as vice chairman. Dr. Cota-Robles
and Richard I. Beattie both retired from the board in January, having
served since 1988 and 1987, respectively.
At the January meeting, two new trustees were elected to four-year
terms. They are James J. Renier, former chairman and chief executive
officer of Honeywell, Inc., and Marta Tienda, Ralph Lewis Professor
and chair of the department of sociology at the University of Chicago.
Starting
Points Grants
Fourteen
states and cities have received two-year Corporation grants totaling
more than $3 million as part of a new grant program, Starting Points
State and Community Partnerships for Young Children. The grants
expand the Corporation 's commitment to supporting the kinds of
policy reform and community mobilization urged in the Carnegie task
force report, Starting Points: Meeting the Needs of Our Youngest
Children, released in 1994. The report offered a comprehensive
set of recommendations to reverse Ąthe quiet crisis" facing
young children today. The recommendations include better preparation
of parents for parenthood, improved prenatal and pediatric health
care, high-quality child care, and community support for families.
New
Corporation Publications
The
Corporation has published a new meeting paper, Parent Education
and Family Support: Opportunities for Scaling Up, by Rima Shore.
The paper synthesizes the proceedings of a November 16-17, 1994,
meeting at the Corporation, attended by noted experts in the field.
Participants examined the challenges involved in expanding programs
that strengthen families through parent support and education. Copies
of the paper are available free on request.
Also recently issued by the Corporation and the Carnegie Council
on Adolescent Development is a fifty-five-page abridgement of Great
Transitions: Preparing Adolescents for a New Century, the council
's concluding report. Complimentary copies of the abridged version
are available from the council, at 2400 N Street, N.W., Washington,
DC 20037, until June 1, 1996. After June 1, copies may be obtained
from the Corporation.
Staff
news
Jane
Wales, who in 1992-93 chaired the Corporation 's Cooperative Security
program (now Preventing Deadly Conflict), has accepted a position
with the Rockefeller Brothers Fund as assistant to the president
for international security. She has been on leave from the Corporation
since 1993. Most recently, Ms. Wales served in the White House as
a senior director of the National Security Council and as associate
director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy.
Carnegie
Quarterly
Winter
1996
Carnegie Corporation of New York
437 Madison Avenue
New York, New York 10022
Phone (212) 371-3200, Fax (212) 754-4073
Editor, Avery Russell
Writers, Barry Rosenberg and Avery Russell
Assistants, Beth Hickner, Laura A. Clark, and Anne S. McCook
Illustrator, Kate Mueller
Carnegie
Corporation of New York is a philanthropic foundation that was created
by Andrew Carnegie in 1911 to promote the advancement and diffusion
of knowledge and understanding among the people of the United States.
Subsequently, its charter was amended to permit the use of funds
for the same purposes in certain countries that are or have been
members of the British overseas Commonwealth. Each issue of the
Carnegie Quarterly examines grant-making activities or Corporation-supported
programs.
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