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SOCIAL
SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL / AFTER SEPT. 11
The Shifting Grounds for Transnational Civic Activity
Jeffrey Ayres, Professor of Political Science, St. Michael's
College; and Sidney Tarrow, Professor of Government and Sociology,
Cornell University
Since the terrorist attacks rocked the United States on September
11th, for most Americans the state has become a welcome buffer
against the anxiety and uncertainties of a new age of biological
attacks. This has had a profoundly negative effect on the
transnational activists who challenged neoliberal globalization
in the late 1990s. As the "rally around the flag" effect has
spread from the United States to other countries, especially
to Canada and Western Europe, international activists have
moved into a retreat-and- reflect mode, increasingly questioning
the viability of their repertoire of transnational tactics.
The climate of resurgent statism; the advantage being taken
of the post September 11th climate by advocates of neoliberalism;
and the disarray in the transnational activist community combine
to offer the occasion for a reflection on the impacts of September
11th upon the "global civil society" project that framed transnational
activism between the Battle of Seattle in 1999 and the Genoa
police riot of July 2001. That project was already being questioned
by troubled activists before September 11th for the opening
it offered to violent radical groups and to reactionary responses
to them.1 Our questioning goes deeper than tactics
and their repression: we argue that - especially in the heightened
state-centric nature of the world after September 11th - the
most fruitful targets for transnational activism are - as
they have always been - within the state.
Escalating Repression
The first factor of concern among transnational activists
is the escalating crackdown on dissent, both in the United
States and elsewhere. Although it predated the September 11
attacks to the police clashes with antiglobalization demonstrators
from Seattle to Genoa, the repressive threat is now intensifying.
In the United States, amid heightened surveillance and preemptive
strikes, alternative political views have quickly become heresy.2
Under the rubric of "Homeland Defense," the new anti-terrorist
legislation, known as the U.S.A. Patriot Act, gives government
agencies broad police powers. As a cowering press lionizes
the Bush administration for its war in Afghanistan, a supine
Congress has accorded it sweeping new authority to conduct
"sneak and peak" searches, expand wiretap authority, and give
the FBI wider access to personal records. Similar style legislation
has been passed or is being contemplated in Canada and across
Western Europe. And in Singapore and Malaysia, authoritarian
regimes welcome the heightened international atmosphere of
fear to crack down on domestic opponents. These moves raise
legitimate concerns of a new state-centered but internationally
diffused and targeted McCarthyism.
Just as sobering for activists is the increased penchant for
state authorities to equate protest against neoliberal policy
initiatives with the violent terrorism of September 11. Italy's
Prime Minister Berlusconi, smarting from international criticism
of his crackdown on peaceful demonstrators at the Genoa summit,
saw a "singular coincidence" between the anti-globalization
protestors and the terrorist attacks in Washington and New
York City. Praising the superiority of "our [read: Christian]
civilization," Berlusconi equated the anti-globalization movement
with radical Islamic terrorist groups for their hatred of
"Western civilization and the Western way of life,"3
as his government was ironically moving away from Italy's
traditional pro-European stance.
Across Europe, the American-inspired search-and-destroy mission
against Islamic radicalism has heightened fear among immigrants
and given racist and xenophobic groups a new lease on life,
legitimating their calls for immigrant exclusion. Prime Minister
Blair of Britain has become so unflagging in his unflagging
support for the American war on terrorism that he has ignored
the domestic reforms his party promised in the last election.
In the Middle East, after a gesture at even-handedness, the
American government has ignored brutal Israeli attacks on
civilian and Palestinian Authority targets and supported Prime
Minister Sharon's strategy of conflating Palestinian aspirations
with the actions of Islamist terrorists. The Israeli peace
movement - already stifled by the violence of the Intifada-
has been paralyzed by the tightened Israeli/Washington anti-Islamist
axis.
Resurgent Neoliberal Globalization
What of globalization and its discontents? As national publics
reel from safety and security concerns, the terrorist attacks
have given supporters of neoliberalism a rare window of opportunity
to push their corporate trade and investment policies. Immediately
after September 11th, U.S. Trade Representative Zoellick demanded
that Americans choose between free trade or terrorism. Then,
at the APEC Summit meeting in Shanghai, President Bush told
business executives that the key to fighting terrorism is
the promotion of free trade and unrestricted commerce. Following
this, Federal Reserve chairman Greenspan noted that the terrorist
attacks had made it urgent that the WTO trade talks in Qatar
succeed.4 As recently as December, presidential
fast-track authority - defeated by a labor-environmental coalition
in 1997-98 - was resuscitated. By a single vote, the Republican-controlled
U.S. House of Representatives reauthorized this power, with
the Republican House leadership successfully reframing a vote
against fast-track as an unpatriotic act.5
The Global Civil Society Project
For activists and supporters of transnational contention,
the September 11 terrorist attacks have led to shocked silence
or compliance with resurgent nationalism. But these events
also provide a fortuitous opportunity for a reasoned reassessment
of the "global civil society" project that guided the transnational
movement through the 1990s. Appropriating the language that
guided eastern European dissidents against state socialism
and Soviet hegemony through the 1980s, that project emerged
both as an intellectual response to globalization and as a
collective action frame for NGOs campaigning against neoliberalism.
In Eastern Europe, the civil society project provided a bold
orienting frame that could bring together nationalists, democrats,
democratic socialists, environmentalists, Catholics and nationalists
against a regional hegemon.
Transferred to the transnational sphere, the concept had a
similarly positive function of bringing together advocates
of environmental protection, supporters of regulations to
combat climate change, indigenous rights campaigners and advocates
of sustainable development in North and South. But in the
absence of an overweening power and faced with the multifaceted
nature of "globalization" and its discontents, it was always
intellectually weak and politically confused.
For a start, beneath the stirring rhetoric of fighting for
a "global civil society," the project was most often operationalized
through the highly institutionalized forms of international
NGOs that gravitate around international institutions and
operate through lobbying, information exchange, and personal
influence.6 As such, it failed to encompass the
more contentious forms of collective action that began to
appear across the globe in the mid-1990s. The movement was
thus unprepared for the violent clashes between police and
demonstrators from Seattle to Genoa, clashes that the media
invariably blamed on the demonstrators and that authorities
were able to instrumentalize to delegitimize the entire antiglobalization
movement.
Second, the global civil society project seldom specified
the causal links from globalization to civil society groups
or to the episodes of domestic contention in which they were
involved. These links might be fairly direct - for example,
as in the case of the anti-WTO protests. But they are often
indirect or hard to imagine - as in the human rights movement
that aims its fire, not against "globalization" but against
dictators and torturers; or on the religious groups that have
moved to center-stage after September 11th. If we derive transnational
social movements directly from globalization, we will risk
muddying a clear understanding of some of the most pressing
problems in the world today - dictatorship, religious repression,
abuse of human rights, and - since September 11th - resurgent
hegemonic nationalism.
Third, the global civil society project has had from the beginning
a secular, progressive bias. In focusing attention mainly
on four main families of secular, western-dominated activity
in the Third World - the sectors of human rights, the environment,
indigenous rights and development - it largely ignored the
"nasty" transnational movements that have much more impact
on the world today. Not only that: from the international
support mobilized in the North in favor of the Chiapas insurgency
on, it overstates the supposed liberating potential of the
Internet, overlooking the persistent inequities rooted in
geographical and resource differences, commonly referred to
as the "digital divide."7
Moreover, as the debates over the Kyoto protocol, FTAA, and
MAI have demonstrated, the ultimate actors reining in neoliberal
globalization are states, not transnational NGOs or
social movements. After all, while transnational activism
helped to focus the spotlight on the secretive MAI talks,
it was France and its decision to pull out of the talks in
1998, which ultimately doomed the accord. Moreover, currently
the most impressive roadblock to the successful completion
of the FTAA is not the notable transnational educational and
lobbying activities of the Hemispheric Social Alliance, but
the formidable and growing objections of Brazil to U.S. domestic
trade policies, as well as the potential fallout from Argentina's
recent economic tailspin and its shift to the governing populist
Peronist left.
To be sure, it was with the encouragement of their corporate
lobbies that Northern states orchestrated the rise of the
neoliberal trade regime in the 1980s. But that regime possesses
no power of its own; it is only states - and the pressure
that movements can put on states - that may in time act to
redress this regime's now exposed deficiencies. It is of limited
help to the cause of the subaltern peoples of the South to
direct the energies of activists towards an abstraction like
"global civil society" and away from the states that shape
the policies of international institutions.
It is true, as Michael Edwards recently wrote, that "acting
alone, governments cannot confer legitimacy on global decisions,
since legitimacy rests on public trust, and public trust requires
a consensus between societies on how to manage the costs and
benefits of globalization."8 Civil society groups
have also served as "critical communities," placing new issues
on the agenda and bringing them to the attention of decision-makers
and the public. But barriers to a genuinely global civil society
remain rooted in inequities in representation, communication
and citizenship that are reflected in, and defended by the
current state system. In the post-September 11th world, and
in the face of an American administration that has successfully
harnessed intergovernmentalism to a hegemonic state project,
the fulcrum for movement activism will increasingly be the
state.
This is no warrant for pessimism. First, activists who turn
from the transnational realm to their own countries return
there with the experiences, the contacts, and the collective
action frames they have gleaned from their transnational networks.
The European anti-GMO campaign against both the EU's labeling
policy and the policies of national states provides a good
example. Second, while currently in retreat mode, it is unlikely
that the momentum of transnational activism will disappear,
for such activity will certainly prove to be part of the solution
to the indelible divisions over wealth and power that continue
to mark the world. The recent success of activists at the
WTO Qatar meetings, whose lobbying convinced reluctant trade
delegations from the North to create exceptions to trade-related
property rights for patents of key drugs to battle AIDS and
other debilitating diseases especially affecting the South,
provides but one illustration of the persisting utility of
transnational civic action. Just as transnational social activism
and the movement against neoliberal globalization affected
public debate in helping to halt the MAI, to delay the WTO
millennial round, and to force FTAA negotiators to release
a public draft of the once secret text, it will increasingly
highlight and push for reforms to the anti-democratic aspects
of the neoliberal trade regime.
This is no call for retreat to the dubious security of national
politics. But transnational activists have always been "rooted"
and not rootless cosmopolitans, working primarily in national
contexts while they were fruitfully engaged in transnational
networks.9 In the anti-bank campaign of the 1980s
that forced the World Bank to create its Inspection Panel;
in the anti-landmine campaign of the early 1990s; in the defeat
of the MAI in the late 1990s: transnational activists operate
most effectively on native ground, their activities buttressed
by the resources and opportunities they find in their home
societies.
Transnational civic activity after September 11 may be undergoing
a period of healthy regrouping, pulling back from spectacular
but unpromising areas of activity to those where it can make
a difference, like opening up northern markets to agricultural
products from the global South or sorting out the differences
between northern unionists and southern workers over core
labor standards. Movements are undergoing both a tentative
identity shift from international to national social movement
sectors and working towards the domestication of transnational
frames and repertoires. Any reassessment of the prevailing
limits of transnational civic activity should be matched by
a sober appraisal of the constraints bearing down at all levels
of civil society and on the capacities and resources that
the past decade of transnational activism has bequeathed on
its successors in the new century.
Footnotes
1 See Luke Peterson, "Civil Society Groups Being
to Question Tactics Used at Trade Talks," The Toronto Star,
3 August 2001; for after September 11 ruminations, see Dennis
Bueckert, "Political Activists, Environmentalists Feel Chill
of Anti-Terror Campaign," Canadian Press, 27 October
2001.
2 Bill Carter and Felicity Barringer, "In Patriotic
Times, Dissent is Muted," The New York Times, 28 September
2001.
3 Steven Erlanger, "Italy's Premier Calls Western
Civilization Superior to Islamic World," The New York Times,
27 September 2001.
4 Leslie Wayne, "For Trade Protesters, 'Slower,
Sadder Songs'," The New York Times, 28 October 2001.
5 David E. Sanger, "Using the Battle of Terrorism
for Victory on Trade," The New York Times, 7 December
2001.
6 See, for example, the excellent work of Robert
O'Brien, Anne Marie Goetz, Jan Aart Scholte and Marc Williams,
Contesting Global Governance (Cambridge: 2000) in which
the umbrella term "global social movement' is used to signify
the international NGOs that challenge the Bank, the IMF and
the WTO. Pp. 13-15.
7 See, in this regard, Judy Hellman's "Real and
Virtual Chiapas: Magic Realism and the Left," in Socialist
Register 2000 (Merlin).
8 "The Mouse that Roared: We're Witnessing the
Birth of a New World Politics," Toronto Globe and Mail,
3 January 2002.
9 See Sidney Tarrow, "Rooted
Cosmopolitans: Towards a Sociology of Transnational Contention,"
on http://falcon.arts.cornell.edu/sgt2/contention/default.htm;
and Jeffrey Ayres, "Global Civil Society and Transnational
Protest: No Swan Song Yet for the State," Chapter Two in Gordon
Laxer and Sandra Halperin, eds., Global Civil Society:
Idyllic New World or False Promise (in preparation).
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