South Asian Activists in the Global Justice Movement
Price: 795.00
ISBN:
9780199466276
Publication date:
10/11/2016
Hardback
264 pages
Price: 795.00
ISBN:
9780199466276
Publication date:
10/11/2016
Hardback
264 pages
Eva-Maria Hardtmann
This work is a well-researched study of the last decades of the networks in the Global Justice Movement (GJM) and World Social Forums. It offers a novel perspective on the traditions of protest, ethics, organizational forms, and visions among activists than is usually presented in the literature on GJM, which largely focuses on Latin America, the United States of America, and Europe. It is an ethnographically rooted account of the two conflicting discourses—one among activists in GJM and the other emanating from the World Bank—that have become intertwined locally within the same circle of activists. The author argues that local and transnational activist networks, no longer spatially and territorially limited, have become entangled with forces understood under the paradigms of ‘neoliberalism’, and relations among activists have changed in unexpected ways. Through a vivid description of transnational movements, this book aims to make evident the not-so-obvious yet intricate links between the World Bank, the United Nations, popular rock stars, and historical knowledge production among activists in South Asia and Japan in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Rights: World Rights
Eva-Maria Hardtmann
Description
This work is a well-researched study of the last decades of the networks in the Global Justice Movement (GJM) and World Social Forums. It offers a novel perspective on the traditions of protest, ethics, organizational forms, and visions among activists than is usually presented in the literature on GJM, which largely focuses on Latin America, the United States of America, and Europe. It is an ethnographically rooted account of the two conflicting discourses—one among activists in GJM and the other emanating from the World Bank—that have become intertwined locally within the same circle of activists. The author argues that local and transnational activist networks, no longer spatially and territorially limited, have become entangled with forces understood under the paradigms of ‘neoliberalism’, and relations among activists have changed in unexpected ways. Through a vivid description of transnational movements, this book aims to make evident the not-so-obvious yet intricate links between the World Bank, the United Nations, popular rock stars, and historical knowledge productionamong activists in South Asia and Japan in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
About the Author
Eva-Maria Hardtmann teaches at the Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, Sweden.
Eva-Maria Hardtmann
Table of contents
Acknowledgements vii
List of Abbreviations x
- Introduction 1
- The Global Justice Movement and Occupy: Ethics, Visions, and Networking Logics 30
- The Logical Ethics of a ‘Neoliberal Bricolage’: The World Bank, the UN, and the Rock Stars 52
- Dalits and Burakumin: Knowledge Production in the Early Protest Movements 73
- Dalits in the World Social Forums 102
- South Asian Dalit Feminism: The Intricate Local Practices of Transnational Networking 143
- Conclusion: Place Matters 194
References 206
Index 232
About the Author 249
Eva-Maria Hardtmann
Description
This work is a well-researched study of the last decades of the networks in the Global Justice Movement (GJM) and World Social Forums. It offers a novel perspective on the traditions of protest, ethics, organizational forms, and visions among activists than is usually presented in the literature on GJM, which largely focuses on Latin America, the United States of America, and Europe. It is an ethnographically rooted account of the two conflicting discourses—one among activists in GJM and the other emanating from the World Bank—that have become intertwined locally within the same circle of activists. The author argues that local and transnational activist networks, no longer spatially and territorially limited, have become entangled with forces understood under the paradigms of ‘neoliberalism’, and relations among activists have changed in unexpected ways. Through a vivid description of transnational movements, this book aims to make evident the not-so-obvious yet intricate links between the World Bank, the United Nations, popular rock stars, and historical knowledge productionamong activists in South Asia and Japan in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
About the Author
Eva-Maria Hardtmann teaches at the Department of Cultural Anthropology and Ethnology, Uppsala University, Sweden.
Table of contents
Acknowledgements vii
List of Abbreviations x
- Introduction 1
- The Global Justice Movement and Occupy: Ethics, Visions, and Networking Logics 30
- The Logical Ethics of a ‘Neoliberal Bricolage’: The World Bank, the UN, and the Rock Stars 52
- Dalits and Burakumin: Knowledge Production in the Early Protest Movements 73
- Dalits in the World Social Forums 102
- South Asian Dalit Feminism: The Intricate Local Practices of Transnational Networking 143
- Conclusion: Place Matters 194
References 206
Index 232
About the Author 249
Transnational Commercial Surrogacy and the (Un)Making of Kin in India
Anindita Majumdar
Unraveling Farmer Suicides in India
Nilotpal Kumar
The Making of the Dalit Public in North India
Badri Narayan Tiwari