
Social Movements and World-System Transformation
Description
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This collection offers new insights into contemporary movements for global justice, challenging readers to appreciate how modernist thinking both colors our own observations and complicates the work of activists seeking to resolve inequities and contradictions that are deeply embedded in Western cultural traditions and institutions. Contributors consider today's movements in the longue duree-that is, they ask how Occupy Wall Street, the Arab Spring, and other contemporary struggles for liberation reflect, build upon, or diverge from anti-colonial and other emancipatory struggles of the past. Critical to this volume is its exploration of how divisions over gender equity and diversity of national cultures and class have impacted what are increasingly intersectional global movements. The contributions of feminist and indigenous movements come to the fore in this collective exploration of what the movements of yesterday and today can contribute to our ongoing effort to understand the dynamics of global transformation in order to help advance a more equitable, just, and ecologically sustainable world.
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Persons
Michael Goodhart is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh.
Patrick Manning is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of World History at the University of Pittsburgh.
John Markoff is Distinguished University Professor of Sociology and History at the University of Pittsburgh.
Content
Part 1) Disrupting Hegemonic Discourses & Modes of Thought
Janet Conway, Brock University, "The Study of Social Movements in the Modern-Colonial World System"
Joyce Dalsheim, University of North Carolina-Charlotte, "Other Moral Orders: Epistemology & Resistance in Israel/Palestine"
*Dialogue -Jackie Smith
Part 2: World-Historical Perspectives on Emancipatory Struggles & Organizational Logics
Patrick Manning, "Linking Social Movement Networks, 1989 to 1992: Southeast Asia, Africa and South America"
Todd Wolfson, Rutgers University & Peter Funke, University of South Florida, "Contemporary Social Movements and Media: The Emergent Nomadic Political Logic and its Nervous System"
Rafal Soborski "Ideological Imbalance Post the Credit Crunch: Neoliberalism Versus the Politics of Resistance"
*Dialogue: -Patrick Manning
Part 3: Practices and Challenges in Contemporary Organizing across Diversity
6) Manisha Desai, University of Connecticut, "Exploring the Persistence of Gendered Geographies of Global Justice"
7) Lee Cormie, University of Toronto, "Religious Others and Global Social Justice Movements"
9) Jackie Smith and Rachel Kutz-Flamenbaum "Transnational Feminism and United Nations Global Conferences"
*Dialogue- John Markoff
Part 4: The Politics of Making Life Possible: Towards Buen Vivir?
10) Leonardo E. Figueroa Helland and Pratik Raghu, Westminster College, "Indigeneity Vs. 'Civilization': Indigenous Alternatives To The Planetary Rift In The World-System Ecology"
11) Peter (Jay) Smith "Spirituality and Global Capitalism - Contested Perspectives
*Dialogue- Michael Goodhart
Conclusion: Jackie Smith, Michael Goodhart, Patrick Manning and John Markoff,
"Transforming the World-System? What Would Revolution Look Like?"
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