Globalisation: New Global Non-State Actors and New Social Movements Flashcards

1
Q

Who is Civil Society most associated with?

A

Often associated with Immanuel Kant and Antonio Gramsci (and Hobbes and Locke discussed it more generally as what is meant by civilised society)

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2
Q

What is Civil Society?

A
- The realm of civil engagement above
  the private and below the state
- Only possible in and one of the
  characteristisc of democracy
    - Non-democracies restrict or make
      impossible the existence of civil
      society (China)
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3
Q

What forms can civil society take?

A
  • Association
  • Identity Formation
  • Activism
  • Lobbying
  • Interest Groups
  • Excluded groups
  • Protests and Movements
  • Community Development
  • Voluntary Sector
  • Political Violence?
  • Proximity to government?
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4
Q

What is meant by civil society in the global context?

A

NGO’s charities, aid and humanitarian groups and their links with self organising associational groups

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5
Q

What is the history of global civil society organisations?

A
  • Have emerged since the 1970s
  • Made possible by the globalisation of
    communication and in response to what
    the globalisation of communication
    makes visible (poverty, exploitation,
    repression, suffering)
  • They success led to accreditation and
    recognition by International Bodies
    from the 1990s
  • A portion of unilateral and
    multilateral development funding is
    dispersed through these organisations
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6
Q

What is globalisation?

A

The process of increasing interconnectedness between societies such that events in one part of the world increasingly have effects on people and societies far away

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7
Q

What is the Standard Policy Approach to globalisation?

A
  • Interdependence
  • Connectedness
  • “Global Village”
  • Inherently Democratising
  • A fact of modern life that need to be
    made to “work”
  • Inevitable
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8
Q

What is the academic debate concerning globalisation?

A
- Globalisation as a real material
  historical process
- Globlisations as a hegemonic project
- Different schools of thought
  (Globalist, Transformationalist,
  Critical, Sceptical )
- Key conceptual points in the debate:
  History (when do we start story),
  Democracy, Capital, Imperialism and
  Power (in relation to)
- Cuts across all disciplines in the
  social sciences
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9
Q

What are the dimensions of the schools of thought regarding globalisation?

A
  • Globalist vs Skeptic

- Communitarian vs Cosmopolitan

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10
Q

What are the schools of though regarding globalisation?

A
  • Transformationalists
  • Critical Globalists
  • Statists
  • Glocalists
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11
Q

Who are Transformationalists?

A
  • Globalists and Cosmopolitan
  • Liberal
  • Enthusiastic about progressive political change and democratisation,
  • Emphasis on Global Civil Societ
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12
Q

Who are Critical Globalists?

A
  • Globalists and Communitarian
  • Anti/alter-globlisation activists
  • Emphasis on exploitation & inequality
  • Political economy and capitalism
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13
Q

Who are Statists?

A
  • Skeptic and Communitarian
  • The state is still the only game in town
  • Classical Marxists
  • Realist IR
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14
Q

Who are Glocalists?

A
  • Skeptic and Cosmopolitan
  • Liberal
  • Emphasis on hybridity
  • Assumption of inevitability
  • “post modern” all boundaries blurred
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15
Q

What is cosmopolitanism?

A

Orientation toward the universal, the plural and the democratic

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16
Q

What is communitarian?

A

Orientation towards the communal, the specific

17
Q

What is globalisation the globalisation of?

A
  • Material conditions
  • Capital and the market
  • Relations or “Flows”
  • Forms of governance & institutions
  • New types of political actors, and
    new transferred political
    configuration
  • The Built Environment
    • Everything looks the same
  • Culture, identity, worldview
    (Cosmopolitan or Communitarian?)
18
Q

What are the opposing views of globalisation?

A
  • Progressive and liberating
    • Greater human connectedness,
      appreciation of difference,
      spread of human rights,
      democracy, health care,
      education, living standards
      globally
  • Exploitative
    • Uneven spread of capitalist
      relations in which some people
      are winners and some losers,
      homogenisation of culture, a
      hegemony of capitalist class
      interests and cultural imperialism
19
Q

What is the difference between communication and mediation?

A
  • Communication
    • Form
    • The material means, such as
      telegraph cable, clay or
      parchment, fibre optic
  • Mediation
    • Content
    • All the different forms by which
      messages, meaning and the
      symbolic order are mediated to an
      audience
20
Q

What has the impact of the communications revolution been?

A
  • Increase co-operation and capacity
  • Unmediated knowledge leading to
    progressive political action, further
    democratisation
  • New forms of democracy, new forms of
    citizenship that break down
    communitarian boundaries
21
Q

What do information telecommunications change?

A
  • New modes of governance
    • Flexible, responsive, transparent
      (potentially)
  • Political organisation
    • New types of mobilisation possible
  • Warfare
    • A revolution in Military Affairs
      (RMA), asymmetric warfare,
      insurgencies
  • Technologies of Surveillance
    • Big data, Identity cards, face
      recognition
22
Q

Describe the network as a non-state actor?

A
- The Network as a form of politics,
  different from the state
- Networks have particular
  organisational properties
    - Flexible
    - Sometimes self organising
    - Adaptive
    - Sometimes non-hierarchical or
      leaderless
23
Q

What non-state actors have risen out of the communication revolution?

A
  • Network Society
  • Global insitutions
  • MNC’s
  • Hyper-empowered individuals
  • Global Civil Society
  • Insurgent groups
  • New Social Movements
24
Q

What is the argument concerning hyper-empowered individuals?

A
  • Celebritization of politics
  • Praise and criticism
    • Otherwise non politically engaged
      people know Julian Assange or
      Edward Snowden
    • Why should Bono get access?