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Resistance to globalization

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Title: Resistance to globalization


1
Topic 7 Resistance to globalization
French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002)
2
  • Questions
  • What is resistance to globalization?
  • What are the agents and sites of resistance?
  • Themes
  • How to conceptualize resistance to globalization,
  • The concepts of social capital and embedded
    market
  • Bottom-up perspectives stake-holding agenda and
    communitarian project

3
Conceptualizing Resistance
  • Globalization is a contested concept, not a
    received theory.
  • It is a serious analytical and political mistake
    to begin from the assumption "Globalization is".

4
Conceptualizing Resistance
  • Globalization can be construed as a partial,
    incomplete and contradictory process- an uneasy
    correlation of economic forces, power relations
    and social structure.
  • Amidst this uneasy correlation, it nurtured the
    politics of resistance to globalization as a
    hegemonic project as a neo-liberal capitalism.

5
Four features of neo-liberal economic
globalization as a hegemonic project
  1. protection of the interests of capital and
    expansion of the process of capital accumulation
    on world scale
  2. a tendency towards homogenization of state
    policies and state so as to privilege the
    interest of capital

6
Four features of neo-liberal economic
globalization as a hegemonic project
  1. creation of a new "market ideology" which
    overshadows other social and communal values
  2. construing "economic subject" to replace all kind
    of subjectivities and identities.

7
Neo-liberal economic globalization as a hegemonic
project
  • The economy becomes the master of society and of
    all within it, and society exists to serve the
    ends of capital.
  • This is teleology of capital, or teleology of
    globalization.
  • Teleology means a doctrine that ends are immanent
    in nature or a doctrine explaining phenomena by
    final causes

8
Teleology of Globalization
  • Technological change is presented as the driving
    force of globalization
  • Globalization is framed in the essentialistic
  • There is strong emphasis on the notion of
    convergence, i.e., societies become increasingly
    alike
  • 4. Globalization is presented instrumentally.

9
Teleology of Globalization
  • Globalization is presented as an automatic
    process. Social conflict is posited as being
    confined to the adjustment phase.
  • Thus, "globalization is here to stay", our task
    is "to accept and adjust". It represents the
    final triumph of capital over society.

10
Teleology of Globalization
  • J. K. Galbraith sums up the trends of the past
    fifteen years as "the Uncertain Miracle" and
    warns of "the possibility of a depressive
    equilibrium as regards unemployment."
  • The upshot is that neo-liberal globalization may
    not result in a new global utopia, but rather in
    a global dystopia.

11
Teleology of Globalization
  • Resistance to globalization, thus, is an attempt
    to offer a counter-hegemony discourse and
    practice.

12
Manifesto of Social Rights
  • According to Barry Gills, a "manifesto of social
    rights" against globalization should be
    suggesting
  • The right of individuals, families and
    communities to employment, welfare, social
    stability and social justice
  • The right of the poor, dispossessed and
    marginalized, wherever they exist, to resist the
    imposition of poverty and the intensification of
    social polarization

13
Manifesto of Social Rights
  1. the right of the people to reclaim and deploy
    government in their own self- defense, at all
    levels from local, national, regional and global
  2. the right of all people to establish social
    solidarities and autonomous forms of social
    organization outside the state and the market
    and finally
  3. the right to imagine "post-globalization" and
    realize alternative modes of human development.

14
Manifesto of Social Rights
  • A counter-hegemonic position must concentrate on
    the question of social reform and the changing
    relationship between "civil society" and the
    state or between "social forces" and "state
    power".
  • Civil society is "the sphere in which a dominant
    group organizes consent and hegemony. It is also
    the sphere where subordinate social groups may
    organize their opposition and construct an
    alternative hegemony.

15
Direction of resistance against globalization
What is the direction?
  • breaking down the myth that state is helpless in
    the face of globalization
  • highlights the links between global restructuring
    and social discontents, such as unemployment,
    environmental degradation, community dislocation
    and other social problems.

16
Direction of resistance against globalization
What is the direction?
  • re-invent state-society relationship
  • building a global civil society in the long run.

17
Forms of Resistance
  • Different forms and dimensions of resistance to
    hegemony are witnessed
  • Collectivity is assumed in the notion movement
    based on collective action and solidarity.
  • Infrapolitics everyday forms of resistance
    conducted singularly and/or collectively, but
    without openly declared confrontation

18
Forms of Resistance
  • Submerged networks with no clearly defined
    organizational structure have also formed in an
    era of globalization.
  • Participants in submerged networks live their
    everyday lives mostly without engaging in openly
    declared contestations.

19
Forms of Resistance
  • The new politics of social resistance to
    neo-liberal economic globalization is not
    confined to the traditional framework of national
    politics.
  • The emerging forms of resistance act in and
    across different spatial scales, encompassing the
    local, national, regional, and global

20
Forms of Resistance
  • Movements like Green Peace, People 21, Global
    Women Health Movement, or the campaign to
    establish international labor standards, each
    illustrate how the new politics of resistance
    seeks to operate across all of these scales.

21
Agents of Resistance
  • People are usually not taken as participants and
    agents but passive bystanders in globalization.
  • What about people as consumers, producers,
    distributors of transnational commodities and
    services, as travelers, migrants, participants in
    transnational communication, international
    organizations, social movements?

22
Agents of Resistance
  • How can the "weapons of the weak" become tools of
    transformation? How can local "everyday forms of
    resistance" be integrated in a politics of
    emancipation?
  • Agents of resistance ranging from blue collar
    and while collar workers, to clerics, homemakers,
    and middle managers, or even teachers,
    professionals and civil servants.

23
Agents of Resistance
  • More and more individuals in many movements
    recognize the need for new strategies of
    resistance which include stronger regional or
    international alliances and broader social
    coalitions.

24
Agents of Resistance
  • Sites of resistance ranging from formal
    political space such as square and everyday space
    to cyberspace.
  • One is the step from critique to construction,
    from opposition to proposition.
  • Another is the step from local to wider horizons.
    Several such bridges are in construction.

25
Civil Society and Social Market
  • Building civil society is a theme that runs
    through many fields of action, often as a
    stepping stone to wider links.
  • Civil society empowerment come to a point where
    either it pursues the path of local autonomy, or
    it cooperates with state or market, though at a
    price of depoliticisation.

26
Civil Society and Social Market
  • Cooperation with business is often more difficult
    to conceive.
  • Muto's suggestion "taking back the economy"
    through people's accumulation at grassroots
    level.

27
Civil Society and Social Market
  • In civil society activism, the social agenda is
    usually clear it concerns questions such as
    equity, participation, empowerment.
  • The political agenda is also clear it is about
    democratization, decentralization,
    debureaucratisation, human rights, citizenship
    rights, pluralism.

28
Civil Society and Social Market
  • What is usually less clear and less developed is
    the economic agenda. The social economies- the
    cooperative sector, people-to-people trade, fair
    trade, socially responsible business and
    eco-business are very much under studied.

29
Civil Society and Social Market
  • Thus, it is not an anti-development thinking, but
    alternative development program.
  • Social capital can be a meeting place of social
    and corporate interests, the basis for a social
    market approach.

30
Civil Society and Social Market
  • Social capital concerns the question of the
    social and political embeddedness of markets.
  • Disembedded markets make societies conform to the
    logic of commercialization embedded markets or
    economies, in contrast, would conform to the
    needs of societies.

31
Civil Society and Social Market
  • Further along the road, the human development
    approach may be opened up and extended in a
    social capital framework
  • not in the sense of social welfare but in the
    sense of social development
  • not simply in the sense of tidying up after the
    market, but in the sense of rethinking what
    markets are in the first place.

32
Bottom-up Perspectives
  • The alternative is to look for a new relationship
    between markets and social life.
  • Polanyi's concept of economics "man's dependence
    for his living upon nature and his fellows and
    refers to the interchange with his natural and
    social environment, insofar as this results in
    supplying him with the means of material
    want-satisfaction."

33
Bottom-up Perspectives
  • What are economies for?
  • Polanyi's book The Great Transformation is
    dedicated to showing how, the liberal utopia of a
    harmonious market match of supply and demand
    across divisions of labor overlooked the
    possibilities that market systems would form
    their own logic, laws, and interests separate
    from the rest of society.

34
Bottom-up Perspectives
  • Stakeholding agenda
  • The principle of stakeholding agenda is that a
    firm's activity affects many parties
    shareholders, customers, employees, suppliers,
    the local community and the nature environment.

35
Bottom-up Perspectives
  • The principle of stakeholding agenda is that A
    program intended to "design institutions, systems
    and a wider architecture which creates a better
    economic and social balance, and with it a
    culture in which common humanity and the instinct
    to collaborate are allowed to flower."
  • It concerns with well-being of the community of
    the business enterprise and the community within
    which it operates.
  • .

36
Bottom-up Perspectives
  • The core of the stakeholding agenda turns upon
    the business enterprise's enhanced sense of
    responsibility and responsiveness towards those
    with whom it interacts.
  • 5. The primary responsibilities of the firm are
    thus expanded beyond the more traditional concern
    for its share-holders.

37
Bottom-up Perspectives
  1. The well-being of the entire range of
    stakeholders, thus becomes the active concern of
    the firm and also becomes the central to the
    legislative and regulative activities of wider
    political system.

38
Communitarianism
  • Communitarianism is a frontal challenge to the
    individualistic and liberal oriented character of
    political and philosophical forms.
  • The central part of the communitarian project is
    a critical response to social fragmentation,
    community disintegration and ethical dissolution.

39
Communitarianism
  • The agenda is devoted to social reconstruction at
    the level of the community, often local but
    sometimes national, regional or transnational.
  • A central theme is a re-assertion of individual
    responsibilities as a counter to the
    over-emphasis of individual rights.

40
Communitarianism
  • It is a response to the increasingly losing
    control over individual and community life, in
    the aspects of social, economic and political
    realms.
  • The "thick ties" of common identity and
    relationship are necessary foundations for the
    communitarian agenda.
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