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at the World Social Forum in 2003. Photo by Marcello Casal Jr/ABr.]] The World Social Forum (WSF) is an annual meeting held by members of the Anti-globalization (using the term Globalization in a Doctrinal sense not a literal one) or Alter-globalization movement to coordinate world campaigns, share and refine organizing strategies, and inform each other about movements from around the world and their issues. It tends to meet in January when its "great capitalist rival", the World Economic Forum is meeting in Davos , Switzerland . This is not a coincidence. The date was chosen because of the logistical difficulty of organizing a mass protest in Davos and to try to overshadow the coverage of the World Economic Forum in the news media. The WSF has prompted the organizing of many regional drawn up by the World Social Forum. In , Kenya . HISTORY at World Social Forum, 2005.]] The first WSF was held from 25 January to 30 January , 2001 in Porto Alegre , organized by many groups involved in the alternative globalization movement, including the French Association for the Taxation of Financial Transactions for the Aid of Citizens ( ATTAC ). The WSF was sponsored, in part, by the Porto Alegre government, led by Brazilian Worker's Party (PT). The town was experimenting with an innovative model for the local government which combined the traditional representative institutions with the participation of open assemblies of the people. 12,000 people attended from around the world. At the time, Brasil was also in a moment of transformation that later would lead to the electoral victory of the PT candidate Luiz Inácio Lula Da Silva . The second WSF, also held in Porto Alegre from 31 January to 5 February , 2002 , had over 12,000 official delegates representing people from 123 countries, 60,000 attendees, 652 workshops, and 27 talks. The third WSF was again held in Porto Alegre, in January . The fourth WSF was held in Mumbai , India, from 16 January to 21 January 2004 . The attendance was expected to be 75,000 and it shot over by thousands. The cultural diversity was one notable aspect of the forum. The other notable decision that was taken was the stand on Free Software . One of the key speakers at the WSF 2004 was Joseph Stiglitz . The fifth World Social Forum for 2005 was held in Porto Alegre, Brazil between 26 January and 31 January . There were 155,000 registered participants at the Forum, with most coming from Brazil , Argentina , the United States , Uruguay , and France . A number of participants in the forum released the Porto Alegre Manifesto . The sixth World Social Forum was "polycentric" held in January 2006 in Caracas ( Venezuela ) and Bamako ( Mali ), and in March 2006, in Karachi ( Pakistan ). The Forum in Pakistan was delayed to March because of the Kashmir Earthquake that had recently occurred in the area. The seventh World Social Forum was held in , accessed 2007-02-16 It was criticized as being 'an NGO fair' {Link without Title} and movements of the poor in Kenya and South Africa mounted vigorous protests against some of the NGOs that attended the forum in the name of the African poor. The eighth World Social Forum in 2008 won´t be organized at a particular place, but globally, which means by thousands of autonomous local organizations. Regional forums have taken place in the SW ( NW, NE, Midwest, and SE ([http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southeast_Social_Forum ) regions of the United States. The United States Social Forum ( {Link without Title} )took place in downtown Atlanta, Ga from June 27 through July 1, 2007. CRITICISMS 's Chinatown echoes the slogan of the World Social Forum: 'Another world is possible'.]] The WSF has been criticized, particularly by Socialist and Communist left parties, for producing few practical ideas, concentrating instead on general and vague criticisms of Neoliberalism and Imperialism . On the other hand some, particularly Anarchists , have criticised the WSF for attempting to act as a central decision making location for dissident groups, as the Communist Internationals once did. Most WSF participants would counter that the WSF is not a decision-making body, but rather a space for public deliberation. A far more prevalent criticism runs in the opposite direction: that the group has no established procedure for adopting consensus statements or advocacies. The WSF is also subject to the same criticisms as the anti/alternative globalization movements, namely that the globalization and capitalism they oppose are inevitable, or that globalisation and capitalism are the most effective means of addressing global poverty. WSF participants have responded that the idea of the 'inevitability' of globalization is simply an ideological myth, hence their embrace of the slogan, 'Another World is Possible'. The WSF has, especially in recent years, been strongly criticised for replacing popular movements of the poor with NGOs. Movements of the poor in poorer parts of the world, like Africa, have argued that they are almost completely excluded from the forum and in countries like Kenya and South Africa they have protested against donor funded left NGOs that, they argue, determine and dominate African representation at the forum. Right-wing opponents of the current global order have criticized the supposed Pluralism of the WSF, as it only includes movements on the left (from social democrats to anarchists). Some activities by activists attending the WSF have also been criticised, such as in the WSF 2001, where activists invaded and destroyed a plantation of experimental transgenics of the Monsanto enterprise.http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/brasil/ult96u28760.shl FURTHER READING
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