Academic Journal

Faction in Movement: The Impact of Inclusivity on the Anti-Globalization Movement.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Faction in Movement: The Impact of Inclusivity on the Anti-Globalization Movement.
Authors: Brooks, D. Christopher1 (AUTHOR)
Source: Social Science Quarterly (Wiley-Blackwell). Sep2004, Vol. 85 Issue 3, p559-577. 19p. 2 Graphs.
Abstract: This research examines and evaluates the reasons why the anti-globalization movement has yet to make significant progress in achieving its primary goals of democratizing international trade negotiation processes. Data on anti-globalization protest cycles were collected from news sources for a time period of up to one month that encapsulated the protest events. From these, I constructed brief case narratives of the major events in Seattle, Washington, DC, Prague, Quebec City, Genoa, and Doha to illustrate my argument. I find that the democratic master frame employed by the movement results in two important limitations: (1) the movement cannot exclude participants without undermining its legitimacy, and (2) its lack of a centralized organizational framework makes it impossible to police the actions of participants during major protests. Recognizing these limitations, states hosting global economic summits have demonstrated increasingly a willingness to utilize repressive measures against the movement thereby undermining the movement's ability to achieve its goals. I conclude that the inability of the anti-globalization movement to exclude violent participants will continue to limit its effectiveness given states' increasing willingness to employ repressive tactics indiscriminately. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Subject Terms: *Anti-globalization movement, *Globalization, *Economic summit conferences, Sociology, Social science research, Social movements
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ISSN: 00384941
DOI: 10.1111/j.0038-4941.2004.00233.x
Database: Business Source Complete
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