The Urban Response to Internationalization

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

The Urban Response to Internationalization Bibliography Academy of Social Sciences (2003). Aeppel, Timothy (2000), ‘Think small,’ Wall Street Journal, 1 January. Agarwal, P.K. (2000), ‘It’s the new economy, stupid,’ Government Technol- ogy, July. Altshuler, Alan and David Luberoff (2003), Mega-Projects: The Changing Politics of Urban Public Investment, Washington, DC: Brookings Institu- tion Press. Altshuler, Alan, William Morrill, Harold Wolman and Faith Mitchell (eds) (1999), Governance and Opportunity in Metropolitan America, Washing- ton, DC: National Academy Press. American Cities and the Global Economy: Challenges and Opportunities, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Pub- lications. Anas, Alex, Richard Arnott and Kenneth A. Small (1998), ‘Urban spatial structure,’ Journal of Economic Literature, XXXVI, 1426–64. Andersen, Hans Thor and Ronald van Kempen (eds) (2001), Governing European Cities, Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. Andrew, Caroline, Katherine A. Graham and Susan D. Philips (eds) (2003), Urban Affairs, Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press. Andrew, Caroline, Pat Armstrong and André Lapierre (eds) (1999), World Class Cities: Can Canada Play?, Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press. Arizona Republic (1995), 5 February. Artibise, Alan (1995), ‘Achieving sustainability in Cascadia: An emerging model of urban growth management in the Vancouver–Seattle–Portland Corridor,’ in Peter Karl Kresl and Gary Gappert (eds), North American Cities and the Global Economy, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. Assembly of European Regions, www.are-regions-europe.org. Association of European Border Regions, www.aebr.net. Bachman, S.L. (2003), Globalization in the San Francisco Bay Area, Los Angeles: Pacific Council on International Policy. Bairoch, Paul (1988), Cities and Economic Development: From the Dawn of History to the Present, translated by Christopher Braider, Chicago: Univer- sity of Chicago Press. Barlow, Maude, and Tony Clarke (2001), Global Showdown: How the New Activists Are Fighting Global Corporate Rule, Toronto: Stoddart. 208 Peter Karl Kresl and Earl H. Fry - 9781845426767 Downloaded from Elgar Online at 09/27/2021 12:52:46PM via free access Bibliography 209 Barry, Donald (2003), ‘Managing Canada–US relations in the post-9/11 era: do we need a big idea?,’ Washington: Center for Strategic and International Studies, Policy Paper on the Americas, XVI, Study 11, November. Bartlett, Randall (1998), The Crisis of America’s Cities, Armonk, New York: M.E. Sharpe. Begg, Iain, Barry Moore and Yener Altunbas (2002), ‘Long-run trends in the competitiveness of British cities,’ in Iain Begg, Urban Competitiveness: Policies for Dynamic Cities, Bristol: Policy Press. Begg, Iain (ed.) (2002), Urban Competitiveness: Policies for Dynamic Cities, Bristol: Policy Press. Berners-Lee, Tim (1999), Weaving the Web, New York: Harper. Best, Michael H. (2000), ‘Silicon Valley and the resurgence of Route 128: Systems integration and regional innovation,’ in John H. Dunning (ed.), Regions, Globalization, and the Knowledge-based Economy, Oxford: Ox- ford University Press, 459–84. Bhagwati, Jagdish (2002), ‘Coping with antiglobalization,’ Foreign Affairs, 81 (1). Blakely, Edward J. and Ted K. Bradshaw (2002), Planning Local Economic Development: Theory and Practice, 3rd edn, Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications. Borja, Jordi and Manuel Castells (1997), Local and Global: Management of Cities in the Information Age, London: Earthscan Publications. Borjas, George J. (1999), Heaven’s Door: Immigration Policy and the Ameri- can Economy, Princeton: Princeton University Press. Bourne, Larry S. (2000), ‘Urban Canada in transition to the twenty-first century: Trends, issues, and visions,’ in Trudi Bunting and Pierre Filion (eds), Canadian Cities in Transition, 2nd edn, Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. Bradford, Neil (2002), Why Cities Matter: Policy Research Perspectives for Canada, Ottawa: Canadian Policy Research Networks. Brooks, Janet Rae (2003), ‘Turin sees its olympic moment as investment in future,’ Salt Lake Tribune, 10 March. Brotchie, John, Peter Newton, Peter Hall and John Dickey (1999), East–West Perspectives on 21st Century Urban Development. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate. Buchanan, Patrick J. (2002), The Death of the West, New York: St Martin’s. Bueno de Mesquita, Bruce (2002), ‘Domestic politics and international rela- tions,’ International Studies Quarterly, 46 (1), 1–10. Camagni, Roberto P. (1995), ‘The concept of innovative milieu and its rel- evance for public policies in European lagging regions,’ Papers in Regional Science, 74, (4), 189–208. Camagni, Roberto P. (2002), ‘On the concept of territorial competitiveness: sound or misleading?’, Urban Studies, 39 (13), 2395–411. Peter Karl Kresl and Earl H. Fry - 9781845426767 Downloaded from Elgar Online at 09/27/2021 12:52:46PM via free access 210 The urban response to internationalization Camarota, Steven A. (2001), Immigrants in the United States – 2000: A Snapshot of America’s Foreign-Born Population, Washington, DC: Center for Immigration Studies, January. Capello, Roberta (1994), ‘Towards new industrial and spatial systems: the role of new technologies,’ Papers in Regional Science, 73 (2), 189–208. Cappelen, Aadne, Jan Fagerberg and Bart Verspagen (1999), ‘Lack of re- gional convergence,’ in Jan Fagerberg, Paolo Guerrier and Bart Verspagen (eds), The Economic Challenge for Europe, Cheltenham, UK and North- ampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar, 134. Cartier, Carolyn (2002), ‘Transnational urbanism in the reform-era Chinese city: Landscapes from Shenzhen,’ Urban Studies, 39 (13), 1513–32. Castells, Manuell (1989), The Informational City: Information Technology, Economic Restructuring and the Urban Regional Process, Oxford: Blackwell. Centre d’études prospectives et d’information internationales (1998), Compétitivité des nations, Paris: Economica. Center for Strategic and International Studies (2003), Policy Paper on the Americans, Vol. XIV, Study 11, November. Chanda, Nayan (2002), ‘Coming together: Globalization means reconnecting the human community,’ YaleGlobal, 19 November. Chernotsky, Harry I. (2004), ‘Fragmenting federalism and local economic policy,’ paper presented at the 45th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association, Montreal, 20 March. Chernotsky, Harry I. and Jennifer Watson Roberts (1996), ‘America’s shifting global agendas: a case study of local foreign policy,’ paper presented at the 37th Annual Convention of the International Studies Association, San Diego, 16 April. Chesire, Paul (1990), ‘Explaining the recent performance of the European Community’s major urban regions,’ Urban Studies, 27 (6), 311–33. Cheshire, Paul, Gianni Carbonaro and Dennis Hay (1986), ‘Problems of urban decline and growth in EEC countries: or measuring degrees of elephantness,’ Urban Studies, 23 (2), 131–49. Chicago Tribune (2002), 21 July. Cities for Peace, www.ips-dc.org/citiesforpeace. City Planner’s Office (2003), Community Strategic Plan: 2003 Action Plan, Windsor: City of Windsor. Clark, David E. and William J. Hunter (1992), ‘The impact of economic opportunity, amenities and fiscal factors on age-specific migration rates,’ Journal of Regional Science, 32 (3). Clark, Robert P. (2001), Global Life Systems: Population, Food, and Disease in the Process of Globalization, Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Clark, William V. and Sarah A. Blue (2004), ‘Race, class, and segregation Peter Karl Kresl and Earl H. Fry - 9781845426767 Downloaded from Elgar Online at 09/27/2021 12:52:46PM via free access Bibliography 211 Patterns in US immigrant gateway cities,’ Urban Affairs Review, 39 (6), 274–81. Clarkson, Stephen (2002), Uncle Sam and Us: Globalization, Neoconservativism, and the Canadian State, Toronto: University of Toronto Press. CMEA, ‘Brief history of European town-twinning,’ at www.ccre.org/docs/ jumelages/origins.html. Cohen, Malcolm S. and Mahmood A. Zaidi (2002), Global Skill Shortages, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar. Commission on Global Governance (1995), Our Global Neighborhood, New York: Oxford University Press. Committee for Economic Development (1986), Leadership for Dynamic State Economies, New York: Committee for Economic Development. Conway, Maureen and Josef Konvitz (2000), ‘Meeting the Challenge of Distressed Urban Areas,’ Urban Studies, 37 (4), 749–74. Council of European Municipalities and Regions (2003), ‘Enhancing democ- racy in the European Union: A stronger involvement for local and regional government,’ A White Paper on European Governance, Brussels: Council of European Municipalities and Regions. Crahan, Margaret E. and Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush (eds) (1997), The City and the World: New York’s Global Future, New York: Council on Foreign Relations. Cross, Malcolm and Robert Moore (eds) (2002), Globalization and the New City, New York: Palgrave. Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly (1988), ‘Society, culture, and person: a systems view of creativity,’ in Robert J. Sternberg (ed.), The Nature of Creativity: Contemporary Psychological Perspectives, Cambridge: Cambridge Uni- versity Press. Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly (1996), Creativity, New York: HarperCollins. Czarniawska, Barbara (2002), A Tale of Three Cities, New York: Oxford University Press. Daniels, P.W. and J.R. Bryson (2002), ‘Manufacturing services and servicing manufacturing: Knowledge-based cities and changing forms of produc- tion,’ Urban Studies, 39 (5–6), 977–92. Day, George S. and David J. Reibstein, with Robert Gunther (1997), Wharton on Dynamic Competitive Strategy, New York: John Wiley and Sons. Deas, Iain and Benito Giordano (2002), ‘Locating the
Recommended publications
  • N Play? Citizen Activism, the Internet, and Global Public Policy
    International Studies Perspectives ~2000! 1, 255–272. POLICY AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES International Plug ’n Play? Citizen Activism, the Internet, and Global Public Policy Ronald J. Deibert University of Toronto One of the most dramatic changes in world politics has been the rise to prominence of citizen networks. Among the many factors responsible for their emergence are new communication technologies, and in par- ticular the World-Wide Web. Opinions on the nature and significance of these citizen networks, however, are mixed. Some applaud citizen networks as potential counter-hegemonic forces and expressions of dem- ocratic participation. Others see them, on the contrary, as undemo- cratic and largely destructive. Straddling both of these views is a third argument that suggests “real” communities cannot be sustained on the Internet, hence calling into question the long-term viability of citizen networks as actors on the world political stage. To help push these debates further, this article examines the case of the citizen networks that emerged to lobby against the Multilateral Agreement on Invest- ments, focusing in particular on how the Internet played a part in the opposition movement. The case suggests that, contrary to those who see new media as an obstacle to global citizen networks, the Internet and World-Wide Web greatly facilitated their activities. As a consequence, citizen networks will likely continue to grow and expand, intruding into international policymaking processes. The article concludes by examin- ing several global public policy issues that are raised by this shift in the landscape of world politics that will have to be addressed by practition- ers of international relations in years to come.
    [Show full text]
  • E:\Publications\Making the Links\Peoples Guide No Canada.Pmd
    CONTENTS Written by ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 2 Maude Barlow and Tony Clarke Edited by INTRODUCTION 3 Brent Patterson Cover design by PART ONE - The World Trade Organization 5 Flavio Rojas What is the WTO? 5 Layout by How does the WTO work? 5 Laura Sewell How do WTO rules affect our lives? 8 What happened in Seattle? 10 The Council of Canadians 502 – 151 Slater Street What happened in Doha? 10 Ottawa, Ontario What will be the critical issues in Cancun? 11 K1P 5H3 Phone PART TWO - The Free Trade Area of the Americas 14 1 800 387-7177 What is the FTAA? 14 Fax What is in the FTAA? 15 613 233-6776 How will the FTAA enforce its rules? 19 How will the FTAA rules affect our lives? 20 e-mail [email protected] What will be the critical issues in Miami? 23 Web site PART THREE - The Dangerous Combination 26 www.canadians.org What impact will the WTO and the FTAA have on the ISBN 0-9689719-5-4 peoples of the Americas and elsewhere? 26 This report was produced by the Council of How could the WTO and FTAA trade politics play out? 33 Canadians and the Polaris Institute, in association with the International Forum on CONCLUSION 38 Globalization. SOURCES AND FURTHER READING 40 WEB RESOURCES 41 ABOUT THE AUTHORS 42 MAKING THE LINKS: A Peoples’ Guide to the World Trade Organization and the Free Trade Area of the Americas 1 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We wish to thank the following individuals for their contributions to this paper: Ellen Gould, Scott Sinclair, Lori Wallach, Steven Shrybman, Vandana Shiva, Martin Khor, Shefali Sharma, Barry Coates, Sarah Larrain, Pablo Salon, Ken Traynor, Timi Gerson, Victor Menotti, Oliver Hoedeman, Aileen Kwa, Walden Bello, Mike Waghorn, Clare Joy, and Ronnie Hall.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    JOBNAME: Temmerman PAGE: 1 SESS: 13 OUTPUT: Mon Jun 19 09:03:31 2017 Introduction That we cannot live alone, at peace; that our own well-being is dependent on the well-being of other nations – far away. We have learned to be citizens of the world, members of the human community. We have learned the simple truth of Emerson that ‘the only way to have a friend is to be one’. Franklin D. Roosevelt, 20 January 1945 All life-forms depend on the availability of water. Water is a unique resource which cannot be produced artificially. Although the total amount of water resources on the planet is enormous and remains constant in a closed hydrological cycle, only 2.5 per cent of all water resources are fresh water resources.1 Of the fresh water resources, 68.7 per cent is trapped in glaciers, 30.1 per cent is in the form of groundwater, 0.8 per cent is trapped in permafrost, and 0.4 per cent is surface and atmospheric water.2 In total, less than 1 per cent of all the fresh water available on the planet is relatively easily accessible for human consumption and to meet agricultural and industrial demands.3 Additionally, the remaining percent- age of the relatively easily accessible fresh water resources is unequally divided over the planet. Fresh water is already a scarce resource for many people in many regions of the world.4 According to the latest update of the ‘WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) for Water 1 See UNEP, Global Environmental Outlook (GEO) 4: Environment for Development (Nairobi: UNEP, 2007), Figure 4.1 ‘Global distribution of the world’s water’, at 118, available at http://www.unep.org/geo/GEO4/report/ GEO-4_Report_Full_en.pdf (last accessed on 31 August 2016).
    [Show full text]
  • Wto Negotiations
    NEW WTO NEGOTIATIONS AA guideguide toto thethe GATSGATS debatedebate Scott Sinclair and Jim Grieshaber-Otto Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives A guide to the GATS debate Scott Sinclair and Jim Grieshaber-Otto Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives 2002 Copyright © 2002 Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and the authors. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechani- cal, including photocopying, or by any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the pub- lisher or the author. National Library of Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data Sinclair, Scott Facing the facts : a guide to the GATS debate Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-88627-278-5 1. General Agreement on Trade in Services (1994) 2. Service industries—Government policy. 3. World Trade Organization. 4. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. I. Grieshaber-Otto, Jim II. Canadian Centre for Policy Alterna- tives. III. Title. HF1379.S557 2002 382'.45 C2002-900954-5 Printed and bound in Canada Published by Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives Suite 410, 75 Albert Street Ottawa, ON K1P 5E7 Tel 613-563-1341 Fax 613-233-1458 http://www.policyalternatives.ca [email protected] CAW 567 OTTAWA Contents Acknowledgements ...................................................................... i Summary: The growing GATS debate ................................... iii The scope of the GATS is immense.............................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Public Hearing on Nanoose Bay Expropriation
    Presentation to the Public Hearing on Nanoose Bay Expropriation on behalf of the Vancouver Island Public Interest Research Group (VIPIRG)and the Barnard-Boecker Centre Foundation (BBCF). Co-written by Stacy Chappel (VIPIRG) and Theresa Wolfwood (BBCF) Presented July 26, 1999 Nanaimo, British Columbia VIPIRG PO Box 3035 Stn CSC, SUB Rm. B122 University of Victoria, V8W 3P3 BBCF 1022 McGregor, Victoria BC, V8S 3T9 Introduction My name is Stacy Chappel, I'm the Executive Director of the Vancouver Island Public Interest Research Group (VIPIRG) and I co-wrote this presentation with Theresa Wolfwood. Theresa is a member of the Board of VIPIRG, and President of the Barnard- Boecker Centre Foundation. Theresa and I have both been active in peace movements for a number of years, and Theresa was a member of the panel for the People's Enquiry into the Implications of the Canadian Forces Maritime Experimental and Test Ranges in Nanoose Bay in 1985. We vehemently oppose the expropriation of the Nanoose testing ranges, Canadian Forces Maritime Experimental and Test Ranges (CFMETR), by the federal government on the following grounds: 1. Expropriation of CFMETR does not serve the public interest, but rather serves the interests of the military industrial complex, the sex trade, and multinational corporations. 2. The Cold War has ended, and the "justification" for NATO's existence as a military alliance has ended, along with it the supposed "necessity" for US testing ranges like CFMETR on Canadian territory. 3 3. The military and multinational corporations involved in the military industry are operating outside of the laws which govern the citizens of this province and this country, and this undermines the power and efficacy of Canadian democracy.
    [Show full text]
  • Who Owns Water? by Maude Barlow & Tony Clarke 2 September 2002 the Nation
    The following is mirrored from its source at: http://www.thenation.com/docPrint.mhtml?i=20020902&s=barlow Who Owns Water? by Maude Barlow & Tony Clarke 2 September 2002 The Nation "Water promises to be to the 21st century what oil was to the 20th century: the precious commodity that determines the wealth of nations." --Fortune Contents Washington Consensus Water Lords International Trade The Case Against Privatization A New Water Ethic As the World Summit on Sustainable Development draws closer, clear lines of contention are forming, particularly around the future of the world’s freshwater resources. The setting of the summit paints the picture. Government and corporate delegates to the September meeting will gather in the lavish hotels and convention facilities of Sandton, the fabulously wealthy Johannesburg suburb that houses huge estates, English gardens and swimming pools, and has become South Africa’s new financial epicenter. There, they will meet with World Bank and World Trade Organization officials to set the stage for the privatization of water. At the same time, activists from South Africa and around the world with a very different vision will gather in very different settings to fight for a water-secure future. One such venue will be Alexandra Township, a poverty-stricken community where sanitation, electricity and water services have been privatized and cut off to those who cannot afford them. Alexandra is situated right next door to Sandton and divided only by a river so polluted that it has cholera warning signs on its banks. There could not be a more fitting setting for Rio+10 than South Africa, because neighboring Sandton and Alexandra represent the great divide that characterizes the current debate over water.
    [Show full text]
  • Waiting in the Wings! How For-Profit Health Corporations Are Planning to Cash-In on the Privatization of Medicare in Canada
    Waiting in the Wings! How for-profit health corporations are planning to cash-in on the privatization of Medicare in Canada. by Darren Puscas with an introduction by Tony Clarke September 2002 Readers are encouraged to reproduce and circulate this publication. We encourage you to undertake direct action in your community. We must fight back or risk the irreparable loss of Canadian Medicare. page 1 Take action now - join the struggle to save Medicare. The Canadian public Medicare system is at serious risk. Many governments and corporations are Exposing pushing for a more and more privatized system, while others, including much of the public, want the Private Medicare to remain a publicly funded and administered right for all Canadians. The great Canadian Healthcare Healthcare debate is now well underway. Industry All across the country, the advocates for a public system of universal healthcare are dueling it out with those calling for greater privatization leading to a two-tiered healthcare system. The federal government’s commission on healthcare, chaired by former Saskatchewan Premier Roy Romanow, appears to have become the rallying point for the first camp while the Senate commission on healthcare, chaired by Senator Michael Kirby, has been the galvanizing center for much of the second camp. Yet, the federal government appears to have already abandoned the goal of a publicly delivered, universal healthcare system. Over the past quarter century, the 50/50 funding formula between the federal and provincial governments has been steadily eroding. The federal share dropped to 42 percent under the Trudeau government, then to 33 percent under the Mulroney government, and down to 23.5 percent under the Chrétien government, reaching as low as 10.5 percent at one point.
    [Show full text]
  • The Bitumen Cliff Lessons and Challenges of Bitumen Mega-Developments for Canada’S Economy in an Age of Climate Change
    Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives February 2013 The Bitumen Cliff Lessons and Challenges of Bitumen Mega-Developments for Canada’s Economy in an Age of Climate Change Tony Clarke, Diana Gibson, Brendan Haley, and Jim Stanford www.policyalternatives.ca RESEARCH ANALYSIS SOLUTIONS About the Authors Jim Stanford is an economist at the Canadian Auto Workers union and a Research Associate with the CCPA. Tony Clarke is a social ethicist, Director of the Polaris Institute, and elected Board member of the CCPA. Brendan Haley is a PhD Candidate at Carleton Uni- versity’s School of Public Policy and Administration. Diana Gibson is President of PolicyLink Research and Consulting, and has published extensively on ISBN 978-1-77125-052-8 public policy in resource rich economies. This report is available free of charge at www. policyalternatives.ca. Printed copies may be or- Acknowledgements dered through the CCPA National Office for $10. The authors wish to thank several people who as- sisted in the production and release of this report: PleAse mAke A donAtIon... Bruce Campbell, Tim Scarth, and Kerri-Anne Finn at Help us to continue to offer our the CCPA plus Richard Girard at the Polaris Institute. publications free online. With your support we can continue to produce high quality research — and make sure it gets into the hands of citizens, journalists, policy makers and progres- sive organizations. Visit www.policyalternatives.ca or call 613-563-1341 for more information. The opinions and recommendations in this report, and any errors, are those of the authors, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers or funders of this report.
    [Show full text]
  • The Articulation of Transnational Campaigns: a Discourse Theoretical Analysis
    The Articulation of Transnational Campaigns: A Discourse Theoretical Analysis Copyright © 2011 Critical Approaches to Discourse Analysis across Disciplines http: //cadaad.net/journal Vol. 5 (1): 73 – 91 ISSN: 1752-3079 MICHAEL STRANGE Roskilde University [email protected] Abstract The article traces the complex series of relations that are constitutive of transnational campaigning through empirical research, focusing on political campaigning critical of the WTO’s General Agreement on Trade-in-Services. Applying the methodology of post- structuralist discourse theory, as developed by Laclau and Mouffe, the article is able to move beyond the search for a ‘Global Civil Society’ or ‘Transnational Advocacy Network’, and instead focus on the articulatory process in which the relations central to transnational campaigning are produced. This empowers an analysis that is able to both situate transnational campaigns within the context of other political phenomena – characterised by collective action – whilst highlighting the historically-contingent communicative devices central to the ‘transnational’ character of such campaigns. 1. Introduction Through a case study of political campaigning critical of the General Agreement on Trade-in-Services (GATS) – held within the World Trade Organization (WTO) – the article seeks to understand the complex series of relations that are constitutive of transnational campaigning. This is achieved via applying the methodology of post-structuralist discourse theory, as developed by Laclau and Mouffe (1990; 2001). Mobilisation critical of the GATS has been facilitated via a series of communicative devices (e.g. face-to-face meetings, joint-protests and press conferences, joint-research, electronic sharing of data, and e-mail lists) operated across national borders on a global scale.
    [Show full text]
  • 'Fast Activism' and the Alter-Globalization Movement in Canada Kamila Pietrzyk a Dissertatio
    TIME, TECHNOLOGY AND TROUBLEMAKERS: 'FAST ACTIVISM' AND THE ALTER-GLOBALIZATION MOVEMENT IN CANADA KAMILA PIETRZYK A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADJJATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY GRADUATE PROGRAM IN POLITICAL SCIENCE YORK UNIVERSITY TORONTO, ONTARIO JUNE 2013 ©KAMILA PIETRZYK 2013 ii Abstract This study documents and critically evaluates the history of the alter-globalization movement in Canada. It makes a contribution to existing scholarship by providing the most comprehensive historical account available of the movement's major mobilizations during the past fifteen years. The study also deploys an interdisciplinary theoretical framework to examine the largely overlooked temporal dimensions of contemporary activism in the age of instant communication. While recent years have seen a proliferation of scholarship lauding the advantages of "new media activism," of which the alter­ globalization movement in an example par excellence, most of this literature neglects what are arguably more pressing questions regarding the ways in which contemporary social actors conceptualize and organize time, and the implications of these hegemonic temporal norms for patterns of collective action. To redress this gap, this study evaluates the social, cultural and political implications for activism of the process of time-space compression, driven by the basic dynamics of capitalism and facilitated by digital communication technologies. Using evidence collected from semi-structured
    [Show full text]
  • Conference 2011 Final Report
    The Growing Struggle Between Democracy and Global Economic Liberalization Group of 78 Annual Policy Conference September 23-25, 2011 Ottawa, Ontario The Group of 78 is grateful for sponsorship from the Canadian Union of Postal Workers. Conference Organizing Committee Richard Harmston, Chair, Group of 78 Gerry Ohlsen, Vice-Chair, Group of 78 Manfred Bienefeld, Board Member, Group of 78 Joan Broughton, Treasurer, Group of 78 Mary Edwards, Executive Secretary, Group of 78 Rapporteurs Coordinator: Daniel V. Preece, SSHRC Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Political Science, Carleton University Rapporteurs: Somayyeh Montazer Hojat, MA Student, School of Public Policy and Administration, Carleton University Colin McLeod, MA Student, School of Public Policy and Administration, Carleton University Brian Owens, MA Student, School of Public Policy and Administration, Carleton University Todd Scanlan, MA Student, Conflict Studies, St. Paul’s University Contact Mary Edwards, Executive Secretary Group of 78 206 - 145 Spruce St. Ottawa, ON K1R 6P1 Tel. +1 613 230 0860 Fax +1 613 563-0017 Email: [email protected] Web: www.group78.org Registered charity: 13056 2085 RR0001 1 Contents Table of Contents Acknowledgements..........................................................................................................................................3 The Group of 78.................................................................................................................................................4 Conference Themes: An Overview..............................................................................................................6
    [Show full text]