Name/Title
Free Trade of the Americas | Beehive Design CollectiveDescription
Machias, Maine.
https://beehivecollective.org/beehive_poster/free-trade-of-the-americas/:
THE STORY OF THE FTAA GRAPHICS CAMPAIGN
The FTAA poster was the Beehive’s first large scale narrative graphics campaign, and became the first in a trilogy of graphics about globalization in the Americas. We made this graphic in the lead up to the mass demonstrations against the negotiations of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) that happened in Quebec City in 2001. We reprinted the poster to take to Miami for the next round of talks at the end of 2003. The FTAA finally reached an impasse and stalled out after the last attempt at negotiations that took place in Mar del Plata, Argentina in 2005, also amidst large protests.
The heavily contested, and now collapsed, Free Trade Area of the Americas was a proposed international trade agreement that aimed to eliminate the remaining “barriers” to the free flow of money, goods, and services across borders in the entire Western Hemisphere, excluding Cuba, in an attempt to create ONE huge, integrated web of “open markets.” It was first introduced at the 1994 Summit of the Americas, soon after the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and then negotiated in private for a decade.
This graphic representation of the FTAA illustrates the consequences of this plan, and exposes its threat to the well-being of all forms of life throughout the Americas. In our most recent reprint of the poster, we changed the banner at the bottom to read “la lucha sigue contra todos los TLCs / the fight continues against all free trade agreements.” Since the collapse of the FTAA negotiations, the US has continued to push forward bilateral trade agreements (which means between the US and one other country, like Colombia, Panama, and Korea) and regional trade agreements (like in Central America).
Most recently, a new, sweeping free trade agreement called the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) is in the works, that would include at least 12 countries, including the US and Asian and Latin American countries. Like the FTAA, the TPP is being negotiated in private and the US is pushing for fast-track approval of the plan.