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You are here: Frontpage > Issues > 2447 >
Reformism (again!)
David Cromwell, Private Planet; Corporate Plunder and Fight Back (Jon Carpenter Publishing, 2001, ISBN 1897766629, 239pp, £12.99)
Reviewed by: LOUKAS CHRISTODOULOU
"Yet another book on globalisation."
With the recent focus of the
mass media on anti-globalisation
protests and the success of
books such as No Logo (Naomi
Klein) and Captive State (George
Monbiot), any attempt to plough a
similar furrow must expect this
sort of greeting.
But this approach assumes that
the emerging movements deserve
no more than the creation of a niche
in the big bookstore chains; a handful
of specialist books, rather than a
discussion that goes beyond any
one genre. A deeper look at the
processes of "globalisation", and
the movements against it, reveal
them to be part of the ancient struggle
of people versus power, phrased
in struggles of renewed urgency. To
paraphrase Tolstoy - you may not
be interested in globalisation, but it
is very interested in you!
This book is a very good primer
on some of the key issues: "free"
trade, the role of the mass media,
genetic engineering, climate change
and Kyoto. However, as Cromwell
admits, he can offer only a partial
picture. While building up a map of
the global process of privatisation
and enclosure involves charting its
deep roots, in describing the alternatives
he is usually limited to suggesting
increased regulation. State
regulation - rejuvenated by popular
protest - is seen as the only real
solution. This attitude is similar to
that of reformist groups such as the
World Development Movement,
Greenpeace or Christian Aid. These
NGOs represent a stream of the
"anti-globalisation movement" which
sees our current crises as born out
of a recent aberration, rather than
deeper social relations such as patriarchy
or class society.
Another strong strand within the
"anti-globalisation" movement sees
global solutions as based on co-operative
social movements at the
local level; but this strand is largely
ignored in this book. Business and
government are eager to split social
movements by offering certain
"respectable" groups a degree of
legitimacy. Cromwell unconsciously
plays to this agenda by sidelining
important social movements in
Europe, such as the social centres of
Spain or the Netherlands, in favour of
less contentious groups, such as
Jubilee 2000 at home or the MST
(Brazillian landless peasants) abroad;
thus some of the most important factors
in the upsurge of protest in 1997-2001
ignored.
Private Planet describes how governments
are unable to deal with climate
change, or to redirect wealth
flows from the rich to the poor - yet
there remains a desire for politicians
to see the error of their ways and
take action. Such action will never
come willingly, but through our
emerging movements we have the
means to both pressurise the powers
that be, and meanwhile to develop
liberated forums of our own.
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