Hyphen magazine - Asian American arts, culture, and politics


Idealize This | The Ethics of Solidarity

To put it simply, solidarity is about more than simply joining forces for the common good. Rather, it's about forging coalitions based on mutual interests, trust, and -- most importantly -- the equitable distribution of power and resources amongst stakeholders and supporters. (In the jargon of the unenlightened: stakeholders = people who need help, while supporters = people with money to help them.) That last point is where most well-intentioned, would-be do-gooders flub.

After all, it's pretty easy to build a relationship based on mutual interests and trust when everyone at the table has big hearts and great intentions. It's quite another thing to build a relationship based on equitably distributed power when half of the table has all the money (and the clout that comes with it) while the other half of the table has none (but desperately needs to get it). That's precisely where foreign aid by way of western NGOs become a tad iffy, and where Western donors (AsAms included) lose their way (and their cred).

While the issue's contributors rightly emphasize the profound importance and overwhelming potential of women-based aid and development projects, they might do better also to encourage their readers to consider critically how the power dynamics involved in charitable giving foster or stifle development. If we had been doing this kind of critical thinking ages ago, we wouldn't have condoned the decades of discriminatory and ineffectual male-centered development projects that have brought this very issue to the front page of NYT Magazine now. Assuming we know what's best for the Third World, without actively engaging in a dialogue with Third World stakeholders, has never worked in the past -- no matter how much money you throw at it.

Moreover, a major failure of the issue is the contributors' own failure to analyze our place, as Americans, in upholding systems and policies that keep women of the Third World down:

  • Hey, Kristof and WuDunn: What role do IMF and World Bank policies (which we fund) play in restricting public education, limiting women's healthcare and exacerbating the poverty debilitating the women about whom you write so passionately? Certainly in a globalized world like ours, their problems don't start and end exclusively within their own borders...
  • And you, Belkin: Though you''re very impressed by the extent of Western women's charitable giving, touting the "power of the purse," what about the starvation wages paid to the women who constructed those designer, powerful purses? I want to read a feature about that!
  • And, of course, New York Times Magazine: How about criticizing the structures that caused this kind of inequality in the first place instead of pretending like soft hearts can trump moneyed institutions? Supporting stakeholders to the point that we can honestly acknowledge our own mistakes and remodel ourselves -- that would be an act of solidarity!
By all means, read the issue, sincerely thank the New York Times for putting it together, and definitely donate to the wonderful organizations that the contributors recommend -- but know that doing so is an act of charity, and not solidarity. Charity does wonderful things for individual people (most of the time), but solidarity addresses the roots of injustice and unites disparate people to make a better world for everyone. Solidarity forces us to critically examine and better ourselves, before presuming that we can do so for others.

For tips on building solidarity, be sure to check out next week's column. For the uninitiated: read the introduction to Idealize This! to learn more about Hyphen's Handbook for Practical Idealists.

Pictured above: Rug weaver employed by Rags to Riches teaches weaving method to a Fair Trade organizer in Quezon City, Philippines. Learn more about them.

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giles wrote 2 years 37 weeks ago

re: Idealize This | The Ethics of Solidarity

thanks for this. really excellent and thoughtful critique that raises a grip of issues that we are not encouraged to consider.

donna wrote 2 years 36 weeks ago

re: Idealize This | The Ethics of Solidarity

Thanks for this piece, looking forward to reading more.

Junebug wrote 2 years 36 weeks ago

re: Idealize This | The Ethics of Solidarity

good someone brought this up

Mel wrote 2 years 34 weeks ago

re: Idealize This | The Ethics of Solidarity

Right on. Thank you for this clear analysis.

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About The Author

Catherine A Traywick

Catherine is the assistant features editor at Hyphen. Her work has appeared in the Bay Citizen, Ms. magazine, the Huffington Post and on CBS radio. She is a master's student at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism.

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