Globalization and the Politics of Resistance. Edited by Barry K. Gills. New York: St. Martin's Press, 2000. Pp. 313.
"Globalization" has become a fashionable term ever since the 1980s, but particularly during the 1990s. Despite an extensive usage of the term, globalization is a "contested
The debate on globalization has raged particularly strongly in the international political economy discourse, where it has become the main buzzword in explaining the variety of recent events in international relations. Accordingly, this edited volume, which initially appeared as a special issue in the journal, New Political Economy (March 1997, Vol. 2, No. 1), is a useful contribution to the literature.
The volume is divided into two main parts. The first part is called "Globalization and Resistance: Thinking through Politics". The discussion here focuses on the theoretical aspects of resistance against globalization. The second part is called "Strategies of Resistance: From the Local to the Global". This part offers a discussion on the various popular strategies emerging at local, national, regional, and global levels against neoliberal globalization.
Taken together, the eighteen chapters in the volume address various aspects of globalization and, in particular, challenge the oft-noted view that the process of globalization is "obvious and inexorable". The authors of the chapters argue that globalization is not a process that is external, that is occurring outside the society or state. The book is an effort to "bring the people back" into the international political economy as the "agents at the centre of historical change". It seeks to highlight the "political" aspect of globalization in furthering the understanding of this concept. As the editor, Barry Gills notes in the Introduction, "(t)he analytical focus of the study of the globalization phenomena must therefore shift from the technical to the political" (p. 3).
The volume addresses the "politics of resistance" against globalization from a wide variety of perspectives. It argues that marginalized groups have the right and ability to mitigate the negative repercussions of the globalization process through greater co-ordinated efforts. Richard Falk refers to this process as resisting "globalization-from-above" through "globalization-from-below" (Chapter 4). This volume contends that for the acts of resistance against neoliberal globalization to be successful in the post-Cold War era, at least four changes are required.