Synopses & Reviews
This collection explores transnational peace and social-justice movements, their implications for international relations, and their potential for democratizing global governance. Contributors examine case studies on issue areas including human rights, security, environment, and social/economic justice. The core objective is to determine whether and how progressive actors are able to break free of the entrapments of global arrogance.
Review
"Comprehensive, cutting-edge coverage of perhaps the most timely topic on the global agenda today. Highly recommended for all students and scholars interested in the normative implications of the American hegemon's promotion of democracy throughout the world as a security policy"
--Charles W. Kegley, Pearce Professor of International Relations, University of South Carolina
"Leatherman and Webber's book contributes to our knowledge of transnational social movements not only by assembling an important and timely collection of case studies but also by suggesting the creative and provocative lens of "global arrogance" through which to explore relations of power, dominance, and resistance in the global system. By increasing flows of information across political and social divides, social movements challenge the willful ignorance and mythmaking of global arrogance. The chapters in this collection help strengthen understandings of how social movements can contribute to democratic learning as they provide guidelines for avoiding the replication of global arrogance within these movements."
--Jackie Smith, associate professor of sociology and peace studies at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies at the University of Notre Dame and co-editor of Transnational Social Movements and Global Politics: Solidarity Beyond the State, Globalization and Resistance: Transnational Dimensions of Social Movements, and Coalitions AcrossBorders: Transnational Protest and the Neoliberal Order.
"The study of transnational processes is enriched by this collection, which examines challenges to non-democratic global governance by transnational social movements and advocacy networks. Original research and conceptual sophistication are hallmarks
of the book.
--Val Moghadam, Illinois State University and UNESCO.Author of Globalizing Women: Transnational Feminist Networks
"The authors critically examine a particular kind of dominance - arrogance; they do so within and across global, national, local and organizational levels. The significant cases analyzed in this book illustrate many ways that people resist arrogance and create alternative relationships. Significantly, too, the authors recognize the arrogance that can arise within organizations challenging domination in larger social systems. This is an exciting book about the new global realities."
--Louis Kriesberg, Maxwell Professor Emeritus of Social Conflict Studies, Syracuse University “Leatherman and Webber have edited a timely and groundbreaking collection which elucidates how the effects of global arrogance in the world has been nebulous. They are outstanding individuals in the intellectual field of International Affairs who have not only carefully gathered collective voices of substance, but empirically grounded work that speaks to the diminishment of accountability where global arrogance is prevalent. This is a required reading for all that find interest in fostering a New World order of global reform. Indeed, here exist profound voices that must be heard.”
- Dr. Laurence Konmla Bropleh, Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Commission of the Churches on International Affairs, World Council of Churches
About the Author
Janie Leatherman is Professor of Politics and Government and Director of the Office of International Affairs, College of Arts and Sciences at Illinois State and Julie A. Webber is Assistant Professor of Politics at Illinois State University.
Table of Contents
Global Arrogance and the Crisis of Hegemony--Janie Leatherman * Outline of a Generic Will: Global Arrogance, Social Movements and the Net--Julie A. Webber * Making Democratic Space for Poor People: The Kensington Welfare Rights Union--Diana Zoelle and Jyl J. Josephson * The Peaceful Superpower: The Movement against War in Iraq--David Cortright * Truth Commissions and U.S. Hegemony--Carlos A. Parodi * Environmental Movements in East-Central Europe: Between Technocracy and the Third Way--Lars K. Hallström * Challenging and Reinforcing Dominant Myths: Transnational Feminists Use the Internet to Contest the War on Terrorism--Krista Hunt * Knowing the Promises, Facing the Challanges: The Role of the Internet in Development and Human Rights Campaigns and Movements in the Arab Middle East--Marlyn Tadros * Transnational Environmental Activism after Seattle: Between Emancipation and Arrogance--Kate O'Neill and Stacy D. VanDeveer * Global Movement to Ban Landmines: A Case Study in Transformative Politics--Jim L. Nelson * World Social Forum: Arena or Actor?--Teivo Teivainen * Making Space for Global Democracy--Janie Leatherman