The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2000-03-09
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)


Previous Issues

News
SU acclamations criticized
Presidential forum draws one
Dinos athletics levy may go up
VP Academic forum
U of A seizes campus paper
Candidate shuns VP Events forum
Marilyn Waring speaks at Red and White Club
Health and Dental plebiscite
Oberg, White Break ground on new building
Management referendum
Lonely traveler very popular
External Commish
Black Lung Burns
Academic Commish
Machetes and rats
Acclaimed positions for the 2000 SU General Election
Election goes to dogs

Opinions
Black Lung fire destroys filthy pre-school paradise
Prviacy e-nvasion
Campus Crossfire: Bill 11
Campus Crossfire: Bill 11
License to Bitch
Trading off individual rights for community protection
Tuition abolition dependent on hard work
Women shape diversity
Acclamations accountable, say the acclaimed

Sports
Basketball Women headed for CIAUs
Bears punch Dinos square in the mind
Playoffs pricey
Robyn Rittmaster
CIAU disappointment for the Dinos

Entertainment
Mump and Smoot make soup
Bloodflowers -- The Cure
The Ninth Gate: Johnny Depp's redemption
Rubber -- Self-titled
National Dust: perfect soundscapes
Suicide Pact -- You First -- Therapy?
Ice-T stays true blue
Stiff Upper Lip -- AC/DC
King Apparatus: They're back
Drop the Beat / 3 Strikes -- Various Artists
Wanna tickle a dragon tail?
Supreme Beings of Leisure -- Self-titled
Air -- The Virgin Suicides
Get Some Go Again -- Henry Rollins
The Next Best Thing -- Soundtrack

Features
Pumping up Calgary's literary scene



  Marilyn Waring speaks at Red and White Club
Global economists addresses effects of unpaid labour and the environment




[Print] Print this story
MARILYN WARING: The politicial economist spoke Monday night. (Click for larger image.) MARILYN WARING: The politicial economist spoke Monday night.

Credit: Gemma McLintock / The Gauntlet  


ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

Nearly 1,000 Calgarians turned up at the Red and White Club Monday night to hear Dr. Marilyn Waring debunk the old political and economic adage, "there is no alternative."
Waring, a political economist from Massey University in New Zealand, offered alternatives for evaluating the current international economic order, which she said places little value on unpaid labour and the environment.

To articulate this, Waring described an ongoing study in Nova Scotia, which is attempting to create a data bank for evaluating the contribution of unpaid labour and the environmental value of resources to society.

"In Nova Scotia, the value of these areas equaled 571,000 full-year, full-time jobs," she said.

She argued that policymakers must consider this work when determining public policy, adding that women who must care for children and elderly parents or engage in volunteer work often do it on top of their paid jobs.

"The unspoken assumption is that all these women were not in the paid workforce while engaging in this type of work," she said.

She went on to note that the last Canadian census tried to account for the overlap of paid and unpaid responsibility of women in society.

Waring's interest in how things are counted in economic terms stem from her 12 years in the New Zealand parliament, to which she was elected at the age of 22 and served as the only woman representative at that time.

She is a self-proclaimed proponent for seeking ways to incorporate the environment and unpaid labour into the global economic order.

"The Exxon Valdez was a hugely productive oil spill," Waring told the audience with a hint of irony.

She explained how the intense focus policymakers place on raising gross national product detracts from the simple fact that, while an oil spill may make money by employing people during the clean-up, it is still an environmental disaster.

"There is no accounting for deficit when dealing with market productivity," she said. "While we might not be able to impute a value on the intergenerational consequences of environmental indicators, we still have to give it visibility even if the [value] is unknown."

Waring's speech was geared toward the University of Calgary's academic community, which partly sponsored her talk in conjunction with International Women's Day.

Dr. Doreen Barrie of the Political Science department introduced Waring.

"Her most valuable contribution is the attention she has brought to the millions of people whose work is uncounted and ignored," she said.

Waring is the author of the book If Women Counted, which is also known outside of North America by its original title, Counting For Nothing.

Share this story: del.icio.us digg Fark NewsVine Reddit YahooMyWeb


Reader Comments:

 Add your comment or send a letter to the editor

Posted: 2004-01-12 18:11:03
#1 - I have only just discovered Marilyn Waring. I am grateful for the report on her speech. It is succinct, it will help me write my essay in advanced rhetoric and I will put this website in my bibliography and my Favourites!


–Leslie, Being a Woman


 Views expressed are those of the posters and do not necessarily reflect that of the Gauntlet.

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

RSS icon RSS Feeds:
[ Main - News - Opinions - Entertainment - Sports ]
Volunteer at the Gauntlet®
.