Naming the Enemy: Anti-Corporate Social Movements Confront GlobalizationBloomsbury Academic, 27.10.2000 - 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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... limits often have an inverse relationship . This makes sense , since modernization- style progress tends to depend on extraction of unlimited resources . Notice also that those movements which take ecological limits seriously tend to ...
... limits , timing and pos- sibilities of our places ( 1996 : 472 ) . It is Smithian and at the same time anarchist ... limit an economy to an ecological region is still a political choice – therefore evidence of social / political ...
... limits of secularism ? The limits of state enforcements of civil rights ? Of the civil rights project itself ? Of the universalism of human rights ? Of its antagonistic relation- ship with place and culture - the very culture now ...
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 |