Criticisms
The anti-globalization movement has been heavily criticized on many
fronts by politicians, members of right-wing thinktanks, mainstream economists, and other supporters of free trade policies. Participants in the movement dismiss these criticisms as carping from a tiny minority who can express their opinions via what they call the corporate media. They claim that the criticisms themselves are self-serving and unrepresentative of informed popular opinion.
One of the most fundamental criticisms of the movement is simply that it lacks coherent goals, and that the views of different protestors are fundamentally contradictory.
For instance, it is argued (for instance, as a constant editorial line by The Economist), that one of the major causes of poverty amongst third-world farmers are the trade barriers put up by rich nations. The WTO is an
organisation set up to work towards removing those trade barriers. Therefore, it is argued that people really concerned about the plight of the third world should actually be encouraging free trade, rather than attempting to fight it. Further in this vein, it is argued that the protestor's opposition to free trade is really aimed at protecting the interests of Western labour (whose wages and conditions are protected by trade barriers) rather than the interests of the developing world, despite the proclaimed goals of the movement in favour of solidarity and cooperation, not competition, between ordinary farmers and workers everywhere. Anti-globalization activists counter that free trade policies create an environment for workers similar to the Prisoner's dilemma, in which workers in different countries are tempted to "defect" by undercutting standards on wages and work conditions, and reject this argument in favor of a strategy of cooperation for mutual benefit. More details about the movement's global economics analyses and vision in depth can be found at the ZNet Global Economics site [1].
Another criticism is that, although the movement opposes catastrophic problems (human rights violations, genocide, global warming), it rarely proposes detailed solutions, and those solutions that have been advocated are often what some people regard as failed variants of socialism, e.g. see the debate between Michael Albert, Marvin Mandell and Barry Finger [1]. This criticism ignores the existence of web resources like the Philadelphia IMC alternatives site [1] and the annual World Social Fora where numerous solutions are proposed and debated and empirical data on social experiments are exchanged.
Some have criticized its claim to be non-violent. Aside from the indisputably violent tactics by a minority of protestors (possibly aggravated by the police), some see a blockade of an event as in and of itself a violent action (although many protesters would counter that blockades are a time-honored technique of civil disobedience, and that for alleged war criminals to hold a meeting to plan further crimes is itself a violent act).
Finally, the motivations of the organisers of the protests is often questioned. Some believe that the key organisers are really Trotskyite, who are simply using whatever grievances they can find to enlarge their protests with the aim of provoking violent revolution. The counterargument to this is that the movement has a very horizontal power structure, so that the power of any key organisers is limited, and that the communications structures in rich countries make it totally unrealistic for violent revolution to occur there, since the vast majority of ordinary people reject violence once they have sufficient evidence of it.
Anti-Empire development
In 2003, the movement showed its continued development by wide and deep, global opposition to the war in Iraq. Following the most spectacular show of force on the weekend of February 15, when about 10 million or more anti-globalization protestors participated in global protests against war on Iraq (pre-war), the New York Times dubbed the movement as the world's second superpower.
Although the global protest did not stop the invasion itself, it clearly displayed the contradiction between the claim that the purpose of the invasion was to defend and promote democracy, and the fact that the leaders of many formally democratic countries (UK, Spain, Italy, Poland, Turkey) supported the invasion despite the wishes of the vast majorities of their populations. In the words of Noam Chomsky, these leaders showed their contempt for democracy.
To show how closely linked the economic and military issues are in the eyes of the movement, one new statement of its human rights aims was written as the We Stand for Peace & Justice statement [1], leading in the USA to a coordination of the movement known as United for Peace and Justice [1].
Mobilizations
1999
2000
- April 16 -- Washington, DC, USA IMF
- July 29 -- Philadelphia, USA, Republican National Convention
- August 11 -- Los Angeles, USA, Democratic National Convention
- September 11 -- Melbourne, Australia, World Economic Forum
- September 26 -- Prague, Czech Republic, World Bank/IMF
- November 20 -- Montreal, Quebec, G20 meeting
2001