Naming the Enemy: Anti-Corporate Social Movements Confront GlobalizationBloomsbury Academic, 2000 - 268 Seiten A new movement of 'anti-globalists', in Time Magazine's words (24 April 2000), now 'oppose corporate dominion over the planet's poor and disfranchised'. Naming the Enemy is the first systematic documentation of this international resistance to transnational corporations and globalization which has so recently burst into the public gaze with the street protests in Seattle, Washington, London and Prague. |
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... struggles with the terms of everyday domestic life can be equally valued in the struggle for libera- tion . On the heels of Laclau and Mouffe , Carl Boggs predicted that these many struggles all had the same enemy ( I've italicized it ) ...
... struggle . All the movements use discourse in the form of truth as part of building the movement and in the process of presenting themselves to outsiders . None proposes that truthful speech has no power . Most of the movements are ...
... struggle ? Do they use identity ? Is culture a medium of struggle ? PopCulture ? Environmentalists note that when the movement focuses on legal actions , the mass of supporters demobilize because they have nothing to contribute . Rather ...
Inhalt
Contestation and Reform | 45 |
Globalization from Below | 83 |
Delinking Relocalization Sovereignty | 111 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Naming the Enemy: Anti-Corporate Social Movements Confront Globalization Amory Starr Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2000 |