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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... religious nationalism , to rescue people from its socially backward projects and to protect ourselves from its inexplicable , un- predictable eruptions of violence . These movements are a shunned other . More recently , religious ...
... religion can be used as a tool to defend territory . Benjamin Barber's 1995 Jihad vs. McWorld imagines religious strug- gles for nation in several dialectical relations with a corporatized ' McWorld ' . He sees that jihads are efforts ...
... religious and cultural concerns in the movement does not invalidate basic political economic concerns ; it is quite likely that a damaging political economic regime will also affect cultural and religious realms . Samuel Heilman ...
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 |