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Resisting Globalization: Action

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Resisting Globalization: Action & Critique Peter Evans (Ch. 54), International Forum on Globalization (Ch. 60), Charles Tilly, Paul Mason, Naomi Klein, The Yes Men – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Resisting Globalization: Action


1
Resisting Globalization Action Critique
  • Peter Evans (Ch. 54), International Forum on
    Globalization (Ch. 60), Charles Tilly, Paul
    Mason, Naomi Klein, The Yes Men

2
GL, as it exists, is actually neoliberal GL or
corporate GL
  • Evans (Ch. 54) argues that when people invoke GL,
    they usually mean the prevailing system of
    transnational domination or hegemony which is
    more accurately called "neoliberal globalization
    or "corporate globalization"

3
Implicit in discourse is idea that GL is
"natural," inevitable, beyond our control
  • GL-as-juggernaut discourse is hegemonic
  • such discourse enables deregulation,
    privatization, govt downsizing
  • hegemony domination, influence, or authority
    over another, especially one political group over
    a society or by nation over others
  • when a discourse is hegemonic it conforms to the
    dominant ideology, which justifies the status quo

4
counterhegemonic globalization
  • counterhegemonic globalization (CHG) challenges
    the prevailing system of transnational domination
    and the ideologies that justify it
  • ? Hegemonic ideological propositions are not
    simply instruments of domination, but also a
    toolkit that can be used for subversive ends

5
Activists involved in CHG make up the "global
justice movement"
  • global justice movement is part of global civil
    society, but a more critical part that uses less
    conventional, more innovative strategies
    tactics
  • ultimate objective is justice, on a global
    scale
  • reject GDP (natl or global) as measure of social
    well-being
  • Formally organized movement participants work
    through transnational NGOs, often linked together
    in transnational advocacy networks
  • Protests at the 1999 WTO mtg in Seattle ongoing
    World Social Forum are key events in the movement

6
World Economic Forum vs World Social Forum
  • World Social Forum meeting of transnational
    social activists, especially from the global
    south, organized as a "counter-meeting" to the
    World Economic Forum (annual gathering of leaders
    in business and politics held in Davos,
    Switzerland)

7
non-routine resistance
  • contentious politics interactions in which
    actors make claims that bear on s/o elses
    interests, leading to coordinating efforts on
    behalf of shared interests or programs, which
    involve govts, as targets, the objects of
    claims, or 3rd parties
  • takes nonviolent or lethal forms
  • e.g., social movements or terrorist groups)
  • (Tilly Tarrow, 2007, p. 202)

8
Terrorists?
WikiLeaks/Julian Assange
More than a dozen peace activists in the Midwest
were targets of an FBI investigation into
material support for terrorism
cyber-terrorists?
Anwar al-Awlaki US-born Islamic lecturer of
Yemeni descent who is said to have inspired
anti-Western terrorism in his online sermons
Al-Awlaki's targeted killing has been approved
by President Obama, with the consent of the US
National Security Council, making him the first
US citizen ever placed on the CIA target list.
9
Terrorism is a political strategy, not a creed
  • We can reasonably define that strategy as
    asymmetrical deployment of threats and violence
    against enemies using means that fall outside the
    forms of political struggle routinely operating
    within some current regime
  • (Tilly, Terror, Terrorism, Terrorists, 2002)
  • ,

10
A great variety of individuals groups engage
in terror
  • A great variety of individuals/groups engage in
    terror, thus defined, from time to time, most
    often alternating terror with other political
    strategies or with political inaction
  • Groups and networks specializing in terror and no
    other forms of political action do sometimes
    form, but they typically remain unstable and
    ephemeral
  • Most groups and networks that engage in terror
    overlap extensively with govt-employed and
    govt-backed specialists in coercion armies,
    police, militias, paramilitaries, and the like
  • Even when they organize in opposition to existing
    govts, specialists in coercion typically adopt
    forms of organization, external connections, and
    sources of supply resembling those of
    govt-employed specialists
  • Most uses of terror actually occur as complements
    or by-products of struggles in which participants
    often including the so-called terrorists are
    simultaneously or successively engaging in other
    more routine varieties of political claim making

11
Whats new about the recent global cycle of
protest?
  • Paul Mason identifies 3 new features
  • Demographics
  • youth bulge, graduates without a future
  • Technology
  • networked, non- or anti-hierarchical
  • Behavior
  • crowd-driven, decentralized, do-it-yourself
  • e.g., DDOS

12
innovative forms of political activism
  • mobilization via social media
  • e.g., citizen journalism, informing public
    about injustice, coordinating resistance via
    Facebook, YouTube, twitter
  • alternative media - websites, blogs, online news
    programs
  • anticorporate activism such as culture jamming
    and brand bombing
  • hacktivism
  • whistle-blowing, using new information/communicati
    on technology

13
hacktivism
  • hacktivism the nonviolent use of illegal or
    legally ambiguous digital tools in pursuit of
    political ends
  • promoting a political agenda by hacking,
    especially by defacing or disabling websites
  • hacktivists use the same tools and techniques as
    hackers, but do so in order to disrupt services
    and bring attention to a political or social
    cause
  • e.g., Anonymous, which employs DDoS attacks
  • distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack
    attempt to make a computer resource unavailable
    to its intended users. Although the means to
    carry out, motives for, and targets of a DDoS
    attack may vary, it generally consists of the
    concerted efforts of individuals to prevent an
    internet site or service from functioning
    efficiently or at all, temporarily or
    indefinitely.

14
whistle-blowing
  • whistle-blower a person who tells the public or
    s/o in authority about alleged dishonest or
    illegal activities occurring in an organization
    (govt or corporation)
  • alleged misconduct may be classified as a
    violation of a law, rule, regulation and/or a
    direct threat to public interest, such as fraud,
    health/safety violations, and corruption
  • Daniel Ellsberg, US military analyst who leaked
    the Pentagon Papers in 1971 (an act credited with
    turning public sentiment against the Vietnam
    War), is now widely praised for whistle-blowing,
    tho he was called the most dangerous man in
    America at the time
  • Some consider US PFC Bradley Manning, who
    allegedly leaked classified govt docs to
    WikiLeaks, a whistle-blower
  • Interestingly, prior to CableGate the NYT
    described WikiLeaks as a whistle-blowing Web
    site (as did most major news outlets) but they
    no longer use that straightforward description.

15
Resisting the commodification of the commons
  • commodification of the commons is the process of
    privatizing, monopolizing, and commodifying
    common heritage resources and turning public
    services into corporate profit centers and the
    promotion of this process within global trade
    agreements (Ch. 60)
  • (A Better World is Possible! International
    Forum on Globalization, Ch. 60, pp. 482-493
    (Excerpted from IFG, A Better World is Possible!,
    report summary, 2002)

16
culture jamming
  • culture jamming the practice of parodying
    advertisements and hijacking billboards in order
    to drastically alter their messages
  • The Yes Men are culture jamming activists
  • Even old-fashioned jamming (blocking or
    disrupting reception) of radio signals was a
    contentious political act, often used by warring
    militaries or political rebels

17
Brands add value, but depend on image
reputation for success making them vulnerable
to brand bombing
  • Consider this satirical take on MasterCards
    promo line circulating on Twitter and other
    social networking sites after MC stopped
    processing transactions for WikiLeaks
  • Freedom of speech? Priceless. For everything
    else, theres MasterCard

18
Naomi Klein on Brands vs Products
  • Brands are products, plus the added value of
    identity, the idea or story behind the brand
  • Brands sell a kind of pseudo-spirituality, a
    sense of belonging, even community
  • This fills a gap that citizens, not just
    consumers, used to get elsewhere, whether from
    religion, or genuine community involvement
  • Behind these brand meanings is a privatized
    concept of what used to be public

19
CHG from the Yes Men -- demanding justice for
Bhopal victims
  • Bhopal catastrophe known as the worlds worst
    industrial disaster
  • In December 1984, the Union Carbide pesticide
    plant in Bhopal began leaking gas other
    chemicals that harmed hundreds of thousands of
    ppl
  • Estimated death tolls vary a government
    affidavit in 2006 stated the leak caused 558,125
    injuries including 38,478 temporary partial and
    approximately 3,900 severely and permanently
    disabling injuries
  • Civil and criminal cases are pending
  • Dow purchased the plant in 2001, and claimed they
    inherited no liabilities

20
The Yes Men Dow hoax
  • The Yes Men claimed that dealing with the
    consequences of the accident was Dows
    responsibility
  • On the 20th anniversary of the Bhopal disaster, a
    Yes Men member posing as "Dow representative"
    "Jude Finisterra," went on BBC World TV to
    announce that the company was finally going to
    compensate the victims and clean up the mess in
    Bhopal
  • The story shot around the world, and by the time
    it was discredited, Dow's stock had declined in
    value by 2 billion

21
US Uncut
  • US Uncut is a grassroots movement taking direct
    action against corporate tax cheats and
    unnecessary and unfair public service cuts across
    the US
  • Modeled on UK Uncut, which has been protesting
    against austerity in Great Britain
  • Recently teamed up w/ the Yes Men to expose tax
    dodging by GE
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