*****   INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY AND ECOLOGY SUMMER SCHOOL, 
JULY 3-14, 2001

CHALLENGING CAPITALIST GLOBALIZATION:
TARGETS, OPPORTUNITIES, CONTRADICTIONS

Visiting Professor: Patrick Bond, University of the Witwatersrand, 
Johannesburg, South Africa

Course Description:

Using mainly a critical literature, this course will begin by 
surveying debates regarding the nature of the capitalist-driven 
globalization process said to be central to defining the parameters 
of contemporary international political economy.  After then 
identifying differing possible foundational positions on key 
strategic problems, the course will focus on the nature of the 
various resistances -- some as dramatic as the "Battle of Seattle" 
and similar confrontations in Prague, Washington and Quebec City, 
others more modest and localized but no less worthy of attention -- 
that this process has given rise to.  The world-wide scope of such 
resistance will be emphasized, highlighting common structural 
processes and political patterns that are evident around the world; 
within this framework, several cross-cutting case studies will serve 
to illustrate the way in which targets are understood, opportunities 
are created, and contradictions emerge.

Simultaneously, however, careful consideration will have to be given 
to the very specific (and often unique) socio-economic conditions, 
political traditions, discourses, and strategies/tactics that prevail 
in a range of diverse settings.  (The geographical areas of North 
America and Southern Africa will provide the main material for study, 
but other instances of resistance -- in South Korea, India and Mexico 
-- will also be explored.)  In consequence, serious questions will be 
raised as to whether the sometimes convergent, sometimes divergent 
campaigns associated with opposition to globalization are and/or can 
be sustainable, cumulative and generalizable.  Is the phenomenon of 
international resistance truly a "movement" (a "Mobilization for 
Global Justice" as it was termed in Washington last April) or instead 
merely a set of discrete, disconnected and untenable 
issues/organizations which may never achieve a lasting alliance and 
gain sufficient power to make change?

To answer these questions will require an analysis of the balance of 
forces across a broad front and, in particular, a sensitivity to 
question of the politics of scale.  Thus the relative importance of 
local, national, regional, hemispheric and global activities will be 
examined, as will the nature and degree of the interrelationship 
amongst struggles at these different levels.  Various contradictions 
said to haunt the new global resistance movement -- the tensions 
between North/South and national/global preoccupations; the relative 
claims of labour-based, identity-based and environmental concerns; 
and of populist, socialist, feminist and green politics -- will also 
be explored, as will a number of concrete case studies of key global 
policy areas.

The course is grounded in an awareness that both the mounting of 
resistance to the process of "globalization from above" and the 
theorizing of any such resistance represent relatively new 
undertakings amongst political economists.  Controversies that are at 
once practical and analytical have arisen in the recent international 
literature about such phenomena; moreover, the dilemmas such 
controversies evoke continue to make the work of alliance-building 
between various forces extremely challenging.  This course must 
therefore proceed with precisely the fine balance of modesty and 
boldness that its ambitious agenda, scientific but also profoundly 
political, demands.

Visiting Professor:

This course will be led by PATRICK BOND, currently Associate 
Professor at the Graduate School of Public and Development Management 
of the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg.  Bond has 
written dozens of articles and a number of books on issues of 
capitalist globalization, notably with respect to the impact of that 
process on southern Africa (his books include "Elite Transition: From 
Apartheid to Neoliberalism in South Africa;" "Uneven Zimbabwe: A 
Study of Finance, Development and Underdevelopment;" "Cities of Gold, 
Townships of Coal: Essays on South Africa's New Urban Crisis;" and 
four forthcoming works, "Sustainable Development in South Africa?;" 
"South Africa: Apartheid and After" [with John S. Saul]; "Zimbabwe's 
Plunge;" and "Threatening Global Apartheid: South Africa's Windows on 
the World Bank, the IMF and International Finance.")  He is also 
closely linked to a wide range of initiatives that assist in 
coordinating and analyzing resistance to capitalist globalization (as 
a participant in the Alternative Information and Development Centre 
in Cape Town, the 50 Years is Enough South Council in Washington, and 
the Center for Economic Justice in Albuquerque, for example, and as a 
contributor to a wide range of progressive periodicals) and continues 
to travel extensively in undertaking both scientific and political 
work relevant to the subject-matter of this course.  In addition to 
Professor Bond, special guest participants in one or more of the 
sessions in the course will include Canadian authors NAOMI KLEIN and 
LINDA MCQUAIG, whose recent books will be studied. Professor JOHN S. 
SAUL of the Department of Political Science will coordinate the 
course.

Required Preparatory Reading:

All participants in this course should read Jeremy Brecher, Tim 
Costello and Brendan Smith, Globalization from Below: The Power of 
Solidarity (South End Press: Boston, 2000) prior to the commencement 
of this course, as well as one additional text (drawn from a list 
prepared by the coordinator and specifically assigned to each 
registered participant), the main arguments of which that participant 
will be expected to present briefly to the seminar sometime in the 
course of our deliberations.  A course kit will also be available for 
purchase with key extracts from a range of relevant readings.

Assignments:

A grade will be established on the following basis: (1) the extent 
and quality of the student's active participation in the seminars; 
(2) a brief book review of the text assigned for seminar 
presentation, due at the end of the first week of the seminar 
(Friday, July 6); a short paper on an assigned topic, due NOT LATER 
THAN Monday, July 16.

Format:

The seminar will meet every weekday morning from 9:30 to 12:30 
between July 3 and July 13; in addition, there will be one or two 
additional sessions held in the afternoon or early evening during the 
two week period and a one-day workshop (which is also to involve 
participants from the wider Toronto community but which students are 
expected to attend) at the end of the course.

Information and Application:

Graduate students in York's Faculty of Environmental Studies who wish 
to apply to take this course should contact Ms. Peggy McGrath at 
416-736-2100, ext. 33254/<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.  Similarly, graduate 
students in York's Department of Political Science who wish to apply 
should contact Ms Jlenya Sarra at 416-736-2100, ext. 
88825/<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.  The number of spaces in this course is 
limited, but some of these spaces have also been set aside for 
interested persons from the wider community, engaged in either 
academic and non-academic pursuits, whom we would encourage to apply; 
any such potential participants should also contact Ms Sarra for 
further information. (Please note that for all participants who are 
not seeking academic credit, the fee for the course is CDN $500.) 
John S. Saul, the host York professor who will coordinate the course, 
may be reached at <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.   *****

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