[energiadecreixent] Ajut traducció ingles - catala: esborrany declaració conf Barcelona
Laura Blanco Grau
lblanco_grauayahoo.es
Dij Jun 3 16:30:34 CEST 2010
SÃ, hi ha folletons a l'infoespai, al calaix de baix de l'armari del darrere. si hi ha poques còpies, caldria imprimir.
Jo no puc, perquè marxo el cap de setmana fora.
Que disfruteu
________________________________
De: ester c <ishtar888 en gmail.com>
Para: Xarxa pel decreixement <energiadecreixent en llistes.moviments.net>
Enviado: jue,3 junio, 2010 15:52
Asunto: Re: [energiadecreixent] Ajut traducció ingles - catala: esborrany declaració conf Barcelona
Hola,
- Sobre la traducció no puc.
- Sobre folletos o trÃptics. Segueixen a l'Infoespai, oi?
Algú que es passi normalment per allà o estigui a prop, podria
agafar-ne uns quants per portar-ne diumenge? (no sé si ahir a la part
que em vaig perdre de l'assemblea es va parlar d'això)
Sinó potser puc intentar que algú em deixi les claus i passar-hi el
diumenge per agafar-ho.
El 2 de juny de 2010 10:13, federico demaria
<federicodemaria en hotmail.com> ha escrit:
>
> Alquien, porfa, nos podrÃa ayudar a traducir al catala (o castellano)
> un borrador de la declaración?
> A mi me queda solo el traductor de la Gene o el de google :-)
> Aun no es la versión final (porfa no difundir), pero estarÃa bien tenerla
> traducida como texto para el dÃa del pic nic.
> Ademas, alquien tiene algún folleto o triptic sobre el decrecimiento (en cat
> y/o cast) para tener en la mesa?
> Como una presentación en general...
> Gracies,
> fede
>
>
>
> DRAFT (Please, keep confidential)
> Degrowth Declaration Barcelona 2010
> In the midst of an international crisis more than four hundred researchers,
> practitioners and activists from forty
> different countries gathered in Barcelona between the 26th and the 29th of
> March 2010 for the Second
> International Conference on Degrowth. In the Declaration of the First
> International Conference in Paris in
> 2008, we had noted, against the current, the looming multi-dimensional
> crisis which was not just financial but
> also fiscal, social, ethical, and ecological, result of the failure of an
> economic model based on growth. Today
> this multi-dimensional crisis threatens the conditions of living of the most
> vulnerable people in our societies
> and in the world.
> An international elite and a “global middle class†with its conspicuous
> consumption is not only causing havoc
> to the environment, but also further damage when imitated by the rest of the
> people in a vicious circle of status
> seeking through material possession. While irresponsible financial
> institutions and governments are rightly at
> the forefront of public criticism, this crisis has deeper structural causes.
> The so-called anti-crisis measures that
> seek to boost economic growth will worsen inequalities and environmental
> conditions in the long-run. The
> illusion of a "debt-fuelled growth", i.e. forcing the economy to grow in
> order to pay the debts, will finish in
> social disaster, displacing economic and ecological debts to the future and
> to the poor. A process of degrowth
> of the world economy is inevitable and will be beneficial for the
> environment. The challenge is how to manage
> it so that it turns out to be socially sustainable and equitable both inside
> each country and in the world. The
> Degrowth movement has been born in rich countries, in Europe and elsewhere.
> This is where it has to start.
> Academics, activists and practitioners met in Barcelona to structure
> proposals towards an alternative,
> sustainable and equitable degrowth society. An inclusive process was
> followed, something almost
> unprecedented for an international conference. In addition to standard
> scientific presentations some 29 working
> group discussions brought participants together to discuss hands-on policies
> for degrowth and identify the
> research questions these generate. Economic, social and environmental topics
> were brought together. New ideas
> and issues never before discussed in the context of sustainable development
> were put on the table: currencies
> and financial institutions, social security and working hours, population
> and resource consumption, moratoria
> on infrastructures and resource sanctuaries, restrictions to advertising and
> many others. The results of this
> innovative process are hard to capture on paper and synthesise in a short
> declaration. We welcome those
> interested to look at the www.degrowth.eu where the results of the working
> groups are presented in detail.
> A wealth of new proposals came up including among several others:
> facilitation of local currencies and gradual
> elimination of fiat money; promotion of small scale self-managed companies;
> defending local commons and
> establishing new jurisdictions for global commons; establishing integrated
> policies of reduced working hours
> (work-sharing) and introduction of a basic income; institutionalization of
> an income ceiling based on
> maximum-minimum ratios; discouraging the consumption of non-durable goods
> and the under-use of durable
> ones, such as houses, by regulation, taxation or bottom-up approaches;
> abandonment of large-scale
> infrastructure such as nuclear plants, dams, incinerators, high-speed
> transportation; conversion of car-based
> infrastructure to walking, biking and open common spaces; taxing advertising
> heavily and banning it from
> public spaces; support from the environmental justice movements of the South
> that complain against resource
> extraction, introduction of global extractive moratoria on areas with high
> biodiversity and cultural value, and
> compensations for leaving resources under the ground; denouncing top-down
> population control measures
> while supporting women’s reproductive rights, conscious procreation and the
> right to freely migrate while
> welcoming a decrease in world birth rates; de-commercialization of politics
> and enhancement of direct
> participation in decision-making.
> These proposals are not utopian: new redistributive taxes will finance
> social investments and discourage
> consumption and environmental damage, while reduced working hours with a
> reinforced social security system
> will manage unemployment. As the economy will quietly contract and our
> damage on the environment through
> new infrastructures and extraction activities will be constrained,
> well-being will increase through public
> investments in low-cost social and relational goods.
> Every new proposal generates several new objections and questions. We do not
> claim to have a recipe for a
> future. But we know that we can no longer pretend that we can keep growing
> as if nothing has happened. The
> folly of growth has come to the end. The challenge now is how to adapt. The
> debate has just started.
>
>
>
>
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