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Cnet Forum
 The World Social Forum: Strategies of Resistance "In January 2001, in Porto Alegre, Brazil, 20,000 activists, students, filmmakers came together to share their experiences and exchange ideas about confronting Empire. That was the birth of the now-historic World Social Forum. The rallying cry of the WSF is Another World is Possible.' It has become a platform where hundreds of conversations, debates and seminars have helped to hone and refine a vision of what kind of world it should be."-Arundhati Roy The World Social Forum has become a key part of the international global justice movement, attracting activists around the world. Here, Leite lays out the origins, development and challenges of the forum today. JosC) Correa Leite is a member of the Brazilian Organizing Committee for the WSF.
 The Forum of Trajan in Rome: A Study of the Monuments in Brief by James E. Packer, The first-ever systematic account of the creation, destruction, excavation, and attempts at reconstruction of the Forum of Trajan in Rome.
The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead - The Forum of Fargo-Moorhead, sometimes known as the Fargo Forum or most commonly, just The Forum, is a daily newspaper printed in Fargo, North Dakota owned by Forum Communications. The Forum is the primary daily paper for southeast North Dakota, and also much of northwest Minnesota. Boston Social Forum - The Boston Social Forum was the first North American social forum to use the methodology of the World Social Forum process and adhere closely to its [of Principles (World Social Forum)|Charter of Principles]. It was held at the University of Massachusetts at Boston in the United States from July 23-25, 2004. Roman Forum - The Roman Forum (Forum Romanum, although the Romans referred to it more often as the Forum Magnum or just the Forum) was the central area around which ancient Rome developed, in which commerce, business, prostitution, cult and the administration of justice took place. Here the communal hearth was located. Forum Holitorium - The Forum Holitorium was the vegetables, herbs and oil forum venalium of early ancient Rome, by the Tiber at the foot of the Capitoline and Palatine hills. Once, the site of an early temple of Venus, the centre of buying and selling was transferred, in 388, to the Campus Martius (Forum Holitorium), leaving the old Roman Forum to the business of the State.
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