Naming the Enemy: Anti-Corporate Social Movements Confront GlobalizationA 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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A group of ' newly industrialized countries ' ( NICs ) are cited as having escaped
the cycle of dependency . They are developing independently and are finally
achieving the social promises of modernization theory as measured by increased
...
The notion of dependency relations articulated by Cardoso and Faletto ( 1979 ) to
describe nations is extended by critical globalization scholars to describe the
economic conditions of workers , households and communities . Separating ...
T . . . . . . dependency ? . . . . . . . . Does the movement see corporations as colonial
| . . Key : see p . 151 The labour movement does not use any of these critical
concepts to analyse economic relations . This could explain why even in South ...
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Inhalt
Contestation and Reform | 43 |
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 |