Michelle Pressend

Michelle Pressend

Michelle coordinates the Trade Strategy Group (TSG) at the Economic Justice Network and Global Network Africa at the Labour Research Services in Cape Town. She is also an independent socio-political analyst on global issues related to trade, environment and climate change.

Her background is in environmental justice and advocacy. Her research and policy analysis interest lies in the political economy of environmental governance, sustainable development and socio-economic policy.

Decent Work for Domestic Workers: ILO Adopts Convention

Picture: www.domesticworkerrights.org Michelle Pressend - The adoption of the Convention Concerning Decent Work for Domestic Workers on 16 June at the 100th International Labour Conference of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) was a momentous occasion for domestic workers around the world. This Convention sets out global standards to ensure decent working conditions for domestic workers, which the 183 Member States of the United Nations (UN) will have to implement, as the ILO is a UN agency. Domestic workers often referred to as...

From Cancun to Durban: Climate Change Negotiations COP 'Out'

Picture: Oxfam International Michelle Pressend - South Africa is no stranger to hosting major United Nations (UN) events. In 2001 the World Conference Against Racism was hosted in Durban and in 2002, the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) took place in Johannesburg. In late 2011 the contentious climate change negotiations will continue at the UN 17th Conference of the Party (COP 17) in Durban where the South African government is hoping they could clinch the deal for a “fair, balanced and ambitious outcome,” on...

30 Years of the Southern African Development Community: What's to Celebrate?

Picture: IRIN Michelle Pressend - The Southern African Development Community (SADC) celebrated its 30th anniversary at this year’s SADC Summit on the 16th and 17th of August in Windhoek, Namibia. While heads of state congratulated themselves for achievements such as peace and stability - a prerequisite for sustained economic growth - in the region, the reality on the ground contrasts with their embellished sense of accomplishment. Of approximately 250 million citizens in the SADC, 80% have no access to modern energy...

Righting the Wrongs of the Copenhagen Fraud: Bolivia Charts a New Climate Course

Picture: Chucksta420 Michelle Pressend - “Climate change cannot be addressed by half measures,” argues Pablo Solón Romero, Bolivia’s Ambassador to the United Nations (UN), in a recent article published by the UK’s Guardian Newspaper. The crucial point he tries to get across is, “we can't make compromises with nature.” Romero made the statement in the run up to Bolivia’s forthcoming ‘Peoples' Conference on Climate Change and the Rights of Mother Earth’, scheduled to take...

Copenhagen Accord Makes Sham of Global Environmental Justice

Picture: KK+ Michelle Pressend - After the 1999 WTO meeting in Seattle, the Copenhagen Climate Summit will probably go down as the next biggest multilateral meeting failure of the 21st century, but I wouldn’t say for the right reasons.  In biting cold Copenhagen, there was little recognition that 400 years of capitalism is the underlying cause of global warming and simply not enough understanding that the market-driven solutions espoused by the Kyoto Protocol will only exacerbate the climate crisis and global...

Legitimacy of WTO Hangs by a Thread

Picture: Ed-meister Michelle Pressend - I'm in Geneva, Switzerland and wrote this article on the eve of the 7th World Trade Organisation (WTO) Ministerial meeting taking place from 27 November to 2 December 2009 at the WTO's head quarters. I've also just returned from a protest march against the WTO here in Geneva, attended by many people, including activists from many parts of the world.  The march was, unfortunately, marred by a handful of violent protestors on the fringes of the main demonstration. They've been getting...