Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 11/2008

Democratizing Globalization? Impacts and Limitations of Transnational Social Movements

Jackie Smith

December 2004

Institute on Globalization and the Human Condition, McMaster University

Abstract

This paper examines the organizational foundations for global democracy that have been developed through the efforts of generations of activists who have conceptualized their struggles in transnational or global terms. A broad look at the history of transnational activism shows that the "battle of Seattle" against the World Trade Organization had its origins well before the fall of 1999. It also shows that activists from poor countries have played strong roles in shaping the course of past global activism, and they are likely to play central roles in defining the future course of global struggles for democracy and social justice. Finally, we see that transnational activism has helped cultivate skills, collective identities, and perspectives on global interdependence that affect the possibilities for social movement activism today. At the same time, anti-democratic forces led mainly by the U.S. government have sought to preserve existing relations of domination and exploitation against the latest movement challenges. The current "war on terror" serves to mask a longer-term effort by proponents of economic globalization to restrict public opposition to their agenda. I outline some of the key reactions that the U.S. and other Western governments have taken in response to movement challenges, and I suggest several lessons this analysis uncovers for how activists- primarily those in the U.S. and other Western countries- can work to enhance the struggle for a more democratic global system.