Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 352
Trim: 7 x 10
978-0-7425-1034-0 • Paperback • March 2002 • $71.00 • (£55.00)
978-0-7425-8179-1 • eBook • March 2002 • $67.00 • (£52.00)
Robin Broad is associate professor of international development at American University in Washington, D.C.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 List of Acronyms
Chapter 3 Introduction: Of Magenta Hair, Nose Rings, and Naïveté
Part 4 Part I The Clash of Visions
Chapter 5 Introduction
Chapter 6 1.1 Globaphobia: Confronting Fears about Open Trade
Chapter 7 1.2 Address to WTO Ministerial Meeting
Chapter 8 1.3 Report of the International Financial Institution Advisory Commission
Chapter 9 1.4 Free Trade Is Not Free
Chapter 10 1.5 Globalism on the Ropes
Chapter 11 1.6 Alternatives to Economic Globalization
Chapter 12 1.7 The New Internationalism
Chapter 13 1.8 General Principles and Gender
Chapter 14 1.9 The Death of the Washington Consensus?
Chapter 15 For Further Reading
Part 16 Part II The Historical Context
Chapter 17 Introduction
Chapter 18 2.1 How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
Chapter 19 2.2 Why Can't People Feed Themselves?
Chapter 20 2.3 Long before Seattle: Historical Resistance to Economic Globalization
Chapter 21 2.4 Present at the Creation: The Bretton Woods Agreements
Chapter 22 2.5 Multinational Corporations and United States Foreign Policy
Chapter 23 2.6 Declaration on the Establishment of a New International Economic Order
Chapter 24 2.7 We Are to Be Sacrificed: Indigenous Peoples and Dams
Chapter 25 2.8 The Pillars of the System
Chapter 26 For Further Reading
Part 27 Part III Realigning Trade Rules
Chapter 28 Introduction
Chapter 29 3.1 A Just and Sustainable Trade and Development Initiative for North America
Chapter 30 3.2 Another Look at NAFTA
Chapter 31 3.3 Cross-Border Labor Solidarity
Chapter 32 3.4 NAFTA's Labor Agreement: Lessons
Chapter 33 3.5 Building Workers' Human Rights into the Global Trading System
Chapter 34 3.6 How the South Is Getting a Raw Deal at the WTO
Chapter 35 3.7 How to Support the Rights of Women Workers in the Context of Trade Liberalisation in India
Chapter 36 3.8 Agreement on the Establishment of a Free Trade Area
Chapter 37 For Further Reading
Part 38 Part IV Challenging Corporate Conduct
Chapter 39 Introduction
Chapter 40 4.1 The Conscious Consumer: Promoting Economic Justice through Fair Trade
Chapter 41 4.2 What Hope for Ethical Trade in the Globalized Garment Industry?
Chapter 42 4.3 Business Partner Terms of Engagement and Guidelines for Country Selection
Chapter 43 4.4 Presentation and Acceptance of Reebok Youth in Action Award
Chapter 44 4.5 Children of the Looms: Rescuing the Carpet Kids of Nepal, India, and Pakistan
Chapter 45 4.6 Independent Monitoring in Guatemala: What Can Civil Society Contribute?
Chapter 46 4.7 Can Advocacy-Led Certification Systems Transform Global Corporate Practices?
Chapter 47 4.8 Forest Stewardship Council Principles and Criteria
Chapter 48 4.9 Letter to University Presidents Regarding Anti-Sweatshop Campaigns on American Campuses
Chapter 49 4.10 Statement to College and University Presidents
Chapter 50 4.11 Developing Effective Mechanisms for Implementing Labor Rights in the Global Economy
Chapter 51 For Further Reading
Part 52 Part V Rolling Back Globalization
Chapter 53 Introduction
Chapter 54 5.1 Our Word Is Our Weapon
Chapter 55 5.2 Bringing the Food Economy Back In: The Social, Ecological, and Economic Benefits of Local Food
Chapter 56 5.3 Jaiv Panchayat: Biodiversity Protection at the Village Level
Chapter 57 5.4 The Cochabamba Declaration on Water: Globalization, Privatization, and the Search for Alternatives
Chapter 58 5.5 The Treaty Initiative: To Share and Protect the Global Water Commons
Chapter 59 5.6 South-South Summit Declaration: Towards a Debt-Free Millennium
Chapter 60 5.7 Controlling Casino Capital
Chapter 61 5.8 How Much Is Enough?
Chapter 62 5.9 Toward a Deglobalized World
Chapter 63 For Further Reading
Chapter 64 Conclusion: What Does It All Add Up To?
Chapter 65 Globalization: Can Governments, Companies, and Yes, the Protesters Ever Learn to Get Along?
Chapter 66 Bibliography of Global Backlash Web Sites
Chapter 67 Index
Chapter 68 About the Contributors
Chapter 69 Credits
This is an excellent book! The format, substance, biographical material, choice of original selections, and writing style are splendid. Recommended for general readers; academic audiences, upper-division undergraduate and up; and professionals.
— Choice Reviews
For those who hold that the WTO protestors are naive anarchists and that globalization is 'inevitable and good'—or even for those who think the opposite—editor and academic Robin Broad gathers together a wide spectrum of views on economic globalization to complicate the debate in Global Backlash. Broad has compiled a volume destined for the knapsacks of college students across the country.
— Publishers Weekly
Global Backlash allows us to understand more clearly the history and content of the current debates about corporate-led economic globalization. But, more than that, it tells what we can do about it—what people are already doing about it! Robin Broad brings together a wide array of practical initiatives that respond to the injustices of the present form of globalization.
— Michael Hardt, Duke University
From Subcomandante Marcos to religious activists, from environmentalists intent on saving virgin forests to students organizing against sweatshops, Global Backlash gives richness and texture to our growing movement. A must-read for academics, activists, and anyone concerned about the future of our planet.
— Medea Benjamin, Founding Director of Global Exchange and Green Party activist
Brilliantly edited, this exciting volume gracefully brings together the most illuminating writings. . . . Indispensable reading for anyone who wants to understand the full range of discontents caused by corporate globalization, and what some cures might be.
— Richard A. Falk, Albert G. Milbank Professor of International Law Emeritus, Princeton University
Timed just right! This book will be very welcome required reading in a number of classrooms around the world. The writing is superb, as are the collected readings themselves. I felt like I was reading a mystery novel!
— Vicki L. Golich, California State University, San Marcos
Robin Broad's penetrating analysis and magnificent collection of documents showcase the intellectual depth of the movement against corporate-driven globalization.
— Walden Bello
Want to understand the most dynamic social movement of our times? Combining scholarship with insider knowledge, Global Backlash connects the dots to put flesh and bones on that movement—a movement committed to the environment, labor, women, indigenous communities, and overall justice.
— Dr. Vandana Shiva, Indian scholar and environmental activist
Robin Broad answers the question usually unasked by the media—'What do these anti-globalist demonstrators want?' She answers it both in the words of their various representative leaders, and in her own clarifying analysis. Highly recommended!
— Herman Daly, University of Maryland, and co-author of For the Common Good
Global Backlash is essential reading for every citizen of the globe. It lays out a full spectrum of views and—better yet—visions of a more democratic and egalitarian future for all of us who share the planet.
— Barbara Ehrenreich, author of Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America
A tremendously informative and inspiring collection of documents, analyses, and first-person accounts about what globalization is, what it means, and how it is being resisted.
— Tikkun
—This innovative text-reader sorts out the mystery of the anti-globalization protesters and answers the often-asked question, "But what do they want?"
—Editor's introductions put articles in context and colorfully set the stageto consider the initiatives behind the protests.
—Presents a wide diversity of voices and views on globalization, many from within the backlash.
—Draws from unconventional sources across the globe in addition to presenting well-known people and publications.
—Emphasizes the impacts of globalization on environment, labor, and gender.
—"For Further Reading" sections lay out key subjects and sources for additional inquiry.
—Web bibliography annotates a wide range of organizations and contacts to facilitate activism and research—over 100 sites included.
—Perfect for students with readings on the university-based anti-sweatshop campaign, Starbucks and fair trade coffee, the "carpet kids" of Nepal, and many more.