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Published bySylvia Horn Modified over 8 years ago
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Self-organization and alternative forms of globalization Occupy Wall Street Washington Square Park 2011
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Classical economic liberalism: allowing the rise of the merchant class VS
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Contemporary neo-liberalism: is unfettered, globalized capitalism sustainable?
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Externalize costs=poor labor and environment consequences
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Distributive Social Justice can fail USSR: “The People’s Engineering” no better than the czar’s Dnieper Dam Power Plant: Water flow too slow 10,000 farmers forced out & farmland lost Scarce food = large scale disease; erosion and algae = environmental disasters
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Globalization can make matters even worse Free trade agreements: poor countries sell at same price as wealthy nations: Wealthy countries can subsidize their farmers, which lowers the market price for poor nations. The shift to outsourcing: corporations move manufacturing and service jobs to the lowest cost locations, forcing workers to compete against each other. Weakened labor unions: Competition from low-paid workers in other nations weakens labor unions in high-cost areas. Decreased environmental and health protection: Countries with poor democratic process have laws largely determined by foreign corporations.
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Globalization can make matters even worse Gini coefficient: 0 = all income the same 1= one person has all income
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Can “generative” social justice offer a better solution? Increasing the capacity to generate sustainable social and material resources, create alliances, explore and innovate, celebrate life Generative public space: Community gardens, murals Generative tech: DIY, access to cultural capital, turning consumers into producers Social entrepreneurship: using market forces to aid non- market goals (local self-determination for health and social impacts)
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Can “generative” social justice offer a better solution? Zapatistas: movement in S. Mexico). Primarily non-violent Questioning both communism and capitalism, they support restoring indigenous control over local resources, traditional sustainable practices Arturo Escobar: “tacking” between physical and virtual spaces (unique for the 1990s)
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