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Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical Introduction (2000) • BA in International Relations from Pomona College (USA); MA and DPhil in International Relations from the University of Sussex. • Professor in the Department of Politics and International Studies at Warwick University, where he also serves as Acting Director of the Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation. • Taught at the University of Sussex, Brighton and the Institute of Social Studies, The Hague. • Main publications: Globalization: A Critical Introduction (Palgrave, 2000; 2nd Edition Forthcoming in 2005); International Relations of Social Change (Open University Press, 1993); Contesting Global Governance (Cambridge University Press, 2000), Civil Society and Global Finance (Routledge, 2002). • Forthcoming: Civil Society and Global Democracy (Polity Press, 2005); and Encyclopedia of Globalization (co-edited with Roland Robertson, Routledge, 2006).

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Page 1: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical Introduction (2000)

• BA in International Relations from Pomona College (USA); MA and DPhil inInternational Relations from the University of Sussex.

• Professor in the Department of Politics and International Studies at WarwickUniversity, where he also serves as Acting Director of the Centre for the Studyof Globalisation and Regionalisation.

• Taught at the University of Sussex, Brighton and the Institute of SocialStudies, The Hague.

• Main publications: Globalization: A Critical Introduction (Palgrave, 2000;2nd Edition Forthcoming in 2005); International Relations of Social Change(Open University Press, 1993); Contesting Global Governance (CambridgeUniversity Press, 2000), Civil Society and Global Finance (Routledge, 2002).

• Forthcoming: Civil Society and Global Democracy (Polity Press, 2005); andEncyclopedia of Globalization (co-edited with Roland Robertson, Routledge,2006).

Page 2: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Basic Conclusions

“Little consensus exists on the subject in respect of definitions, evidence,explanations, implications, value judgment and prescriptions.” (2)

Chapters 1-4: General Definition / Chronology / Causal Dynamics

• Globalization is a transformation of social geography marked by the growth ofsupraterritorial spaces. However, globalization does not entail the end ofterritorial geography. Territoriality and supraterritoriality coexist. (8)

• Although globalization has made “earlier” appearances, the trend has unfoldedstrongly since 1960s. However, it does not need to go on indefinitely and couldpossibly reverse. (8)• Globalization is an uneven trend, occurring mainly among propertiedprofessional classes in the North, in city areas, and among the young. (8)

• Globalization is driven chiefly by rationalist knowledge, capitalist production,various technological innovations, and certain regulatory measures. (8)

Page 3: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Competing Definitions: What exactly is “globalization?”

• Globalization = Internationalization (enhanced cross-border relations) (15)

• Globalization = Liberalization (enhanced trade across the world) (15)

• Globalization = Universalization (emergence of global culture) (16)

• Globalization = Westernization (spread of Western control) (16)

• Globalization = Deterritorialization (spread of supraterritoriality; social space is no longer mapped in terms of territorial places, territorial distances and territorial borders - 16; increasing number of ‘global’ activities - 55)

“Only the last notion gives ‘globalization’ a new and distinctive meaning - and… identifies an important contemporary historical development.” (3)

Redundant; State interaction = century old process

Redundant; Free trade = century old process

Redundant; Spread of culture = millennia old process

Redundant; Imperialism/modernization = age old process

Page 4: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Has ‘globalization’ brought continuity or change?

• Change in Production?

Yes: “knowledge society”; new means ofcommunication/transportation/data processing (20)

No: agriculture, manufacturing remain central; capitalism continues (21)

• Change in Governance?Yes: Loss of sovereignty on state level; possible elimination

No: Sovereignty on state level remains strongMaybe: Expansion of politics into substate (municipal/provincial) andsuprastate (regional/global) realms; new multilateralism (IOs, globalfirms, global civil society) (22)

• Change in Culture? Yes: ‘cultural synchronization’

No: increased cultural diversity, possible clashes of civilization (23)

Page 5: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

“Globalization’: Liberation or shackles?• Liberation?

Yes: globalization = emancipatory force; win-win (25)

No: globalizatgion = global apartheid; undermines security, equity, democracy(25)

• Less ‘human’ security?Yes: neo-liberal forces undermine economical, ecological security; spread ofintolerance and fundamentalism; cultural imperialism destroys traditionalidentities; unsettling of any and all truth leads to relativism (28-29)No: “End of History” prepares ground for “perpetual peace” (29)

• Less equity (social justice)? Yes: neo-liberal forces deepen social hierarchies (intra- and interstate) (29) No: raising all boats (Friedman); promote notion of equality (30-31)

• Less democracy? Yes: Elites hold control; democratic governance on global level isimpossible (32) No: technology helps democratization; people are empowered(Friedman) (31) [e-parliament; UN parliament initiative]

Page 6: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Three (economic) perspectives of globalization

1. Neoliberal perspective: The world is best served by FREEMARKETS. Government intervention is NOT permitted. (34)

2. “Reformist” (Keynesian) perspective: Markets are good.However, they are not perfect. Government MUST intervene toCORRECT MARKET FAILURES. (New Deal; welfare state) (36)

3. “Radical” perspective: Markets are NOT good. Local not global.Small not big (Arundhati Roy).

Page 7: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Three historic phases of globalization (“global consciousness”)

1. 1600s: Emergence of ‘global imagination’ - world religions;scientific revolution; Enlightenment; humanism; capitalism (63-65)

2. 1850s - 1950s: Incipient globalization - telegraph, telephone,radio, television; cars; aircrafts; global products; early globalbanking; proliferation of IOs (65-74)

3. 1960s - today: Full-scale globalization - global markets; globalproduction; global banking; global corporations; global challenges;global tourism; world wide web (74-86)

Page 8: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Four main ‘causes’ of globalization

1. Rationalism: (93ff)- secular global consciousness- anthropocentric view of world as home of human species- belief in scientific “universal” truths- pursuit of efficiency

2. Capitalism: (95ff)- global markets, goods, production, banking

3. Technological Innovation: (99ff)- air, electronic, digital; ecological change caused by technology

4. Regulation: (101ff)- standardization- liberalization- property rights- international law

Page 9: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Part II: Implications of Globalization

“In sum, globalization has bee a powerful force of socialchange, but the changes to date have not been epochal. Thecontemporary globalizing world remains capitalist, bureaucratic,communitarian and rationalist … .” (110)

⇒Analysis of current social order by means of focusing on

• structure of production (Ch. 5) - capitalist

• structure of governance (Ch. 6) - bureaucratic

• structure of communities (Ch. 7) - communitarian

• structure of knowledge (Ch. 8) - rationalist

Page 10: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Agent-structure debate (91)

Core question:What causes social change? Is it agent driven OR is it a result ofsocial structures?⇒ Methodological individualism: The aims and decisions ofindividual actors shape the social structures.

⇒ Methodological structuralism: The organizing principles ofsocial relations (eg, patriarchy, nationalism, rationalism,capitalism etc.) shape the social structures.

⇒ Structuration argument: Both agent choices and structuraldispositions shape the social structures.

“The account of globalization developed in this bookis a structuration argument.” (92)

Page 11: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

How has ‘globalization” affected the modes of production?

From Ch. 4 (Causes of Globalization):

“Capitalism has spurred globalization in four principle ways.”

• global markets (economy of scales)

• global accounting (tax advantages)

• global sourcing (highest productivity at lowest costs)

• global mobility (move where conditions are in your favor)

=> “globalization has offered capitalists a way to counter thestrategies of socialism and economic statism that rose inmuch of the South during the mid-twentieth century.” (98)

Page 12: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

How has ‘globalization” affected the modes of production? (cont’d)

Findings of Ch. 5: Globalization has

• substantially strengthened the position of capitalism as the prevailingstructure of production

• facilitated the extension of surplus accumulation to consumer, finance,information and communications sectors

=> Consumerism! Stock market frenzy! Trade in hard-, software, servicingand content (e.g., Lawtank)

• encouraged major shifts in the organization of capitalism, including

- rise of offshore centers (China, India, etc.)

- rise of transborder companies (Bertelsmann, Nestle, etc. - cartels!?)

- rise of corporate mergers & acquisitions (hotels, banks, phone companies)

- rise of economic oligopolies (Microsoft, media, cement, cars)

Page 13: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

How has ‘globalization” affected the structure of governance?

Findings of Ch. 6: Globalization has

• led to emergence of ‘post-sovereign’ governance⇒ new non-statist forms of governance; however, States remains “crucial togovernance;” governance remains “deeply bureaucratic” (132)

⇒ “end of sovereignty” (135)

⇒ decline of ‘welfare state’; less redistribution of wealth (140)

⇒ less inter-state wars (McDonald’s effect?); more intra-state wars (142)

• spurred several shifts in the main attributes of ‘States’⇒ transborder cooperation & constituencies (e.g., environment) (138)

• promoted moves toward multilayered governance⇒ regionalization - EU, NAFTA, APEC, etc. (anti-globalization?); transworld(multilateral) governance - WTO, IMF, etc. (148)

⇒ proliferation of international legal instruments (150)

• encouraged some privatization of governance=> NGO involvement in policy formulation & execution (accountability?) (152)

Page 14: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

How has ‘globalization” affected the structure of community?

Findings of Ch. 7: Globalization has

• loosened some links between nations and states⇒ no end of “the national project”, but diversification of nationhood (ethno-nations, region-nations, transworld nations) (160)

⇒ [complication]

• helped develop nonterritorial communities (class, gender, race, religion etc.)

⇒ feminist, pacifist, liberal (!), socialist, black, ecologist, gay&lesbian etc.

⇒ [complication]

• encouraged the rise in cosmopolitan bonds (vision of single global community)

⇒ ‘global village’; ‘think globally, act locally’; ‘global solidarity’ etc.

⇒ [completion; see also O’Neill’s “cosmopolitan justice”]

• increased ‘hybridity’ in many personal identities⇒‘identity surfing’ (181); “lost souls”? (161)

⇒ “significant challenges for the construction of community?” (181)

Page 15: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

How has ‘globalization” affected the structure of knowledge?

Findings of Ch. 8: Globalization has

• not weakened [but strengthened?] the hold of rationalism as dominanttheory of knowledge

⇒ rationalism (ie, secularism, anthropocentrism, scientism, instrumentalism)remains dominant, but there’s more reflexive (ie., self-critical) rationalism

• given rise to some anti-rationalist knowledges (religious revivalism,ecocentrism, postmodernism = not objective but context bound/relativist knowledge)

⇒ defensive reaction; search for identity (Huntington); minority tendency (189)

⇒ eco- vs. anthropocentrism (Norgaard!); Gaia concept (Midgley) (190)

• promoted some shifts in ontology, methodology and aesthetics⇒greater appreciation of limitations, dangers of rationalism (185; Norgaard)

⇒ new notions of space - post-territorial, global; time - fast & busy! (Ontology)

⇒ new need for interdisciplinary modes of inquiry (while disciplinary tribalismcontinues), visualization, global language (English) (Methodology)

⇒ global aesthetics (commodification?!); greater hybridization; new art forms.

Page 16: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Summary of social change through globalization?

“…we have found important shifts: in production, in governance, incommunity and in knowledge. To this extent contemporaryglobalization has certainly not marked ‘the end of history’. On theother hand, we have also found underlying continuities: of capitalism,of bureaucratism, of communitarianism and of rationalism. A moreglobal world could in principle bring deeper structural transformationsin these areas; however, forces in the (thus far) predominantelyneoliberal course of contemporary globalization have favoured the pre-existent social order.” (203)

Page 17: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Part III: Policy Issues (ie., Costs and Benefits of Globalization)

Ch. 9: Globalization and (In)security

Ch. 10: Globalization and (In)justice

Ch. 11: Globalization and (Un)democracy

Overall conclusions:

1. “In each case contemporary globalization is found to haveyielded both positive and negative outcomes. … this bookplaces greatest emphasis on the downsides, particularly as theyare largely avoidable. In other words, the harms have resultednot from supraterritoriality as such, but from the policies that wehave adopted towards it.” (206)

2. “A host of reformist measures … could make our globalizingworld a happier place.” (206)

Page 18: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Globalization and (In)security? (232)

Fundamentalism; insecurityFundamentalism??Knowledge

Loss of locality; little businessresponsibility; exclusionary club

New transworld solidarity,less state control

Social Cohesion

Loss of tradition and selfMultiple possibilitiesIdentity

Undermining of social contract;not enough workers’ rights

Some improvementsWorking Condition

Lots of job lossesLots of new jobsEmployment

Volatility and crises hurt manyLots of capital availableFinancial Stability

Increased poverty, little progressoverall

Rapid growth for someSubsistence

Heavy pollution; downwardpressure on conservation; fear

Greater ecolog. awareness;technology exists

Nat. Environment

More destructive power; globalreach; more intra-state conflict

Less interstate war;possibility of arms control

PeaceNegative ChangePositive ChangeIssue

Page 19: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Globalization and (In)justice? (234)

• Globalization has had significant effects on various types ofsocial stratification, including with respect to class, country,gender, race, urban/rural, and age. (234)

• Although contemporary globalization has helped to narrowsocial hierarchies in certain respects, on the whole it has tendedto widen gaps in life chances. (234)

• These injustices are not inherent to globalization, but havemainly flowed from neoliberal approaches to the newgeography. (234)

“The challenge …is to formulate and implementworkable alternatives [to neoliberalism].” (259)

Page 20: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Globalization and (Un)democracy? (261)

• Globalization has undermined conventional liberal democracy withits focus on national self-determination through a territorial state. (261)

• Devolution of power to substate agencies has potential (but notnecessary) democratizing effects. (261)

• Suprastate regimes have developed substantial democratic deficits.(261)

• Nonofficial supraterritorial channels (global markets,communications, and civil society) have sometimes enhanced, butoften undermined democracy. (261)

“The future requires not a reversal of globalization, but a concertedsearch for new concepts and practices that can make democracywork iin post-territorialist, post-sovereign politics.” (282)

Page 21: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Ch. 12: Human Global Futures“… changes in policy approaches (in particular away fromneoliberalism) could produce greater security, equity anddemocracy.” (283)“…the approach promoted here can suitably be characterized asambitiously or thickly reformist.” (286)

- major manipulations/restrictions of market dynamics(toward a veritable global social-democracy)

- push for several reforms of globalization (eg, abolition ofoffshore finance centers)

- call for increased opportunities for the development ofalternatives to established social structures

“against neoliberalism” ; “against radicalism” (286/7)

Page 22: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Toward the ‘end of history’? (ie, Scholte’s reform agenda)

1. Enhancing human security

2. Enhancing social equity

3. Enhancing democracy

Enhancing FREEDOM andEQUALITY?

=> Idealism? Progress-orientation?

YES!

“Admittedly this chapter has provided only a sketch of moreprogressive politics of globalization. …further political calculation…is needed to determine the most effective ways of overcomingresistance against and building momentum for a programme ofambitious reform of globalization.” (312)

Page 23: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Toward the ‘end of history’? (ie, Scholte’s reform agenda)

1. Enhancing human security (283)

• improve global regime for arms control (CTBT, NWC)

• upgrade suprastate mechanisms for conflict management (peacekeeping)

• enhance global environmental codes, laws, institutions (WorldEnvironmental Organization, global codes of conduct, recycling, green life)

• economic restructuration w/emphasis on education, employment, health,shelter (more grassroots ownership; int’l organization provide safety nets)

• dept relief for poor countries, more social spending

• public-sector regulation of global financial markets

• increase public policies aimed at job creation (global public works projects)

• intensify suprastate promotion of better labor standards (ILO)

• protect cultural diversity through “interculturalism”

• enhance social cohesion through trilateral partnerships (public, private, civil)

Page 24: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Toward the ‘end of history’? (ie, Scholte’s reform agenda)

2. Enhancing social justice (297)

• counter monopoly tendencies in global capitalism (rules, anti-monopoly court)

• global taxation (Tobin tax; supraterritorial corporate taxation; bit tax; patent tax

• abolition of offshore finance centers (Liechtenstein, Monaco, Cayman Islands)

• North-South redistribution through global economic regimes (IMF, WTO, WB)

• gender-sensitive governance (enforcement through CEDAW)

• more women leaders in business, civil society and government

• greater attention to equal representation of race, religion, age, sexualorientation, rural population, etc.

Page 25: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Toward the ‘end of history’? (ie, Scholte’s reform agenda)

3. Enhancing democracy (302)

• increase local government involvement in global policies (decentralization,subsidiarity)

• enhance popular input in regard to global policies (referenda, UN parliament)

• enhance representation of nonterritorial constituencies (UN Civic Assembly)

• enhance democratic scrutiny of suprastate organizations

• enhance transparency of suprastate governance

• more independent policy evaluations at the suprastate level (reports)

• enhance civil society input (as long as it’s coming from democratic,accountable bodies)

Page 26: Jan Aart Scholte, Globalization - A Critical

Toward the ‘end of history’? (ie, Scholte’s reform agenda)

4. Implementation Challenges

• convince the rich and powerful that neoliberalism isn’t good for the world

• convince nat’l governments that sovereignty thinking isn’t good for the world

• build up the institutional capacities to implement the changes proposed in 1-3

• educate the people about the importance of the changes proposed in 1-3

• maintain respect for cultural diversity

“I hope that this book will, while clarifying globalizationintellectually, also be part of that process of buildingconstituencies for more humane globalization.” (317)