NEW – News

Challenges and Opportunities of Rural Women in China

Rural women make up 65.6% or more of the farm laborers as many men have left the rural areas and farm work. In China, like in so many other countries, rural women are never helpless victims. Since they have to survive in a physically, socially, legally and culturally hostile environment throughout their lives, they have developed particular strengths, determination and courage.

Demolished: Forced Evictions And The Tenants’ Rights Movement In China

Demolition and eviction has several decades of history in China. In the past, ordinary people longed for demolition and eviction [because they were moved to better homes], but now ordinary people fear demolition and eviction, they hate [it], and even use death and suicide to oppose [it].. This hatred, this opposition to demolition andeviction has really only appeared in the last few years. - Tenants’ rights advocate Xu Yonghai,

For the democratic refoundation of Europe

After the No through referendums in France and the Netherlands the fast implementation of the so called EU constitution has failed. EU has fallen into deep crisis. This situation leads to risks and chances at the same time. What are the consequences for our struggles for the right to housing and participative urban development, against privatisation and urban social exclusion? Do HIC members cooperate with attac at their strategy? What would be the place of our issues inside it?

The Global Fundisation Of Housing – First Sketch And Questions

In Germany and other European countries housing conditions are faced to rapid direct globalisation of the real estate markets. The intensity and quantity of this process is a new phenomenon at least in Germany. Habitat Net Germany is seeking contacts in order to discuss the developments, exchange information, build a common knowledge base and seek common strategies. Below find a first sketch on the situation from a German viewpoint and questions to begin a debate.

The global housing boom

The worldwide rise in house prices is the biggest bubble in history. Prepare for the economic pain when it pops. Calculations by The Economist show that house prices have hit record levels in relation to rents in America, Britain, Australia, New Zealand, France, Spain, the Netherlands, Ireland and Belgium. The housing market has played such a big role in propping up America's economy that a sharp slowdown in house prices is likely to have severe consequences. [more]

CADTM outraged at the G8’s meanness over the debt

On June 11 the meeting of the G8 Finance ministers resulted in bombastic statements about a "historic" cancellation of the debt burdening poorer countries. CADTM is suspicious of such dramatic gestures which so far have led only to cosmetic cancellations hiding a strengthening of the creditor countries' dominant position, as was the case with the HIPC initiative, concerning some 42 highly indebted poor countries, which was launched at the Lyon G7 meeting in 1996 and reinforced at the Cologne G7 meeting in 1999. As soon as the practical modalities that condition this new move are known they will have to be analysed very carefully before any considered judgement is possible. But we can already make a number of comments.

Changing the way we see the city and city-life

The "city" is a strategic site for change - a place of innovations, power, autonomy, diversity, inter-mixing and an opening on the world. But it is just as much a place of exclusion, poverty, violence and danger as it is of potential. What is more, through a tight network of economic and communicational exchange, a new "world economy" is developing out of the relations between the major metropolises in the South and the North. The struggle for the city is essential, but only on condition that it learns to progress from each individual area to the city as a whole, that it helps to produce new regulatory systems and that it joins the poor in their fight to be part of the city.