 | Globalization: Encyclopedia II - Globalization - Anti-globalization
Globalization - Anti-globalization
Main article: "Anti-globalization".
Various aspects of globalization are seen as harmful by public-interest activists as well as strong state nationalists. This movement has no unified name. "Anti-globalization" is the media's preferred term; it can lead to some confusion, as activists typically oppose certain aspects or forms of globalization, not globalization per se. Activists themselves, for example Noam Chomsky, have said that this name is meaningless as the aim of the movement is to globalize justice. Indeed, the global justice movement is a common name. Many activists also unite under the slogan "another world is possible", which has given rise to names such as altermondialisme in French.
There is a wide variety of kinds of "anti-globalization". In general, critics claim that the results of globalization have not been what was predicted when the attempt to increase free trade began, and that many institutions involved in the system of globalization have not taken the interests of poorer nations, the working class and the environment into account.
Economic arguments by fair trade theorists claim that unrestricted free trade benefits those with more financial leverage (i.e. the rich) at the expense of the poor.
Many "anti-globalization" activists see globalization as the promotion of a corporatist agenda, which is intent on constricting the freedoms of individuals in the name of profit. They also claim that increasing autonomy and strength of corporate entities increasingly shape the political policy of nation-states.
Some "anti-globalization" groups argue that globalization is necessarily imperialistic, is one of the driving reasons behind the Iraq war and is forcing savings to flow into the United States rather than developing nations.
Some argue that globalization imposes credit-based economics, resulting in unsustainable growth of debt and debt crises.
Increase in law and order with a decrease in state intervention at home in order to protect the wealth and businesses.
The main opposition is to unfettered globalization (neoliberal; laissez-faire capitalism), guided by governments and what are claimed to be quasi-governments (such as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank) that are supposedly not held responsible to the populations that they govern and instead respond mostly to the interests of corporations. Many conferences between trade and finance ministers of the core globalizing nations have been met with large, and occasionally violent, protests from opponents of "corporate globalism".
Some "anti-globalization" activists object to the fact that the current "globalization" globalizes money and corporations, but not people and unions. This can be seen in the strict immigration controls in nearly all countries, and the lack of labour rights in many countries in the developing world.
Another more conservative camp opposed to globalization are state-centric nationalists who fear globalization is displacing the role of nations in global politics and point to NGOs as impeding upon the power of individual nations. Some advocates of this warrant for anti-globalization are Pat Buchanan and Jean-Marie Le Pen.
The movement is very broad, including church groups, national liberation factions, left-wing parties, environmentalists, peasant unionists, anti-racism groups, anarchists, and others. Most are reformist, (arguing for a more humane form of capitalism) while others are more revolutionary (arguing for a more humane system than capitalism). Many have decried the lack of unity and direction in the movement, but some such as Noam Chomsky have claimed that this lack of centralization may in fact be a strength.
Protests by the global justice movement have forced high-level international meetings away from the major cities where they used to be held, into remote locations where protest is impractical.
Other related archives1850, 1880, 1900, 1910, 1920, 1930, 1950, 1960s, 1970, 1970s, 1990s, 1999, 19th century, 2000, Antecedents of Globalization, Anti-globalization, Appadurai, Arjun Appadurai, Bollywood, Child mortality, China, David Ricardo, Douglas Roche, European Union, French, GATT, General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, Geography, George Ritzer, Global Empire, Green Peace, Green Revolution, Hollywood, IMF, Indian food, Intellectual Property, International Court of Justice, International Criminal Court, International Monetary Fund, Internet, Iraq war, Jean-Marie Le Pen, Libertarians, Life expectancy, Linda Weiss, Maastricht Treaty, Management, Marketing, Marketization, Mundialization, NAFTA, NGOs, National Sovereignty, Noam Chomsky, North American Free Trade Agreement, OPEC, Pat Buchanan, Pax Britannica, Roland Robertson, Saskia Sassen, Say's Law, Senator, Sinicization, Strategy, The World Is Flat, US, United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, Uruguay, WIPO, WTO, WWII, Westernization, World Bank, World Trade Organization, World War II, activists, altermondialisme, anarchists, anecdotal evidence, anti-globalization, anti-racism, assimilation, calories, capital, capital controls, capitalism, communication satellites, communications, comparative advantage, containerization, copyright laws, corporate entities, corporatist, cultural diversity, debt, democracy, democratic globalization, developing nations, developing world, directly-elected, economic nationalism, environmentalists, fair trade, financial leverage, for-profit, foreign direct investment, free trade, free trade zones, global civilization, global financial systems, global justice movement, global telecommunications infrastructure, global village, glocalization, hybridization, illegal immigration, immigration, imperialistic, international trade, internationalization, interventionist, kilojoules, labor, labour, laissez-faire capitalism, left-wing, liberalization, localization, mass media, migration, multiculturalism, multinational corporations, nation states, nation-state, nationalists, nations, natural environment, neoliberal, neoliberalism, outsourcing, patents, peasant, pizza, pollution, protectionism, public-interest, reformist, representative democracy, revolutionary, social organisation, software, state, subsidies, tariffs, technology, telephones, terrorism, tourism, transport, travel, unions, universal suffrage, universal values, world citizens
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Anti-globalization", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |