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Call for Papers

"Global Discontent? Dilemmas of Change"
21st IPSA World Congress
International Political Science Association (IPSA)
Asociación Chilena de Ciencia Política (ACCP)
Santiago (Chile)
12-16 July 2009

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The term “global discontent” sums up many of the challenges
of our times. Globalization, while old in origins, has come
to dominate our lives during the last couple of decades. If
technological change has been the driving force, the
collapse of the bipolar world system has opened the
floodgates for it to reach all corners of the world.
Internationalization as a phenomenon has been with us for a
long time. As communication and transportation systems
around the world improved, we were constantly told that the
world was becoming a smaller place. But globalization as a
process is of more recent vintage. It refers not only to the
speed with which information, money and goods travel around
the world but also to the reorganization of the world
economically and politically in ways that were not possible
before. Finally, globalization has become an ideology. Its
proponents perceive the world through this cognitive
framework and mobilize it in their efforts to shape how the
world system operates and where it should be going.

Globalization continues to be employed casually as an
umbrella category. It covers the economic and financial
integration of emerging market societies into the world
system as well as the social and political implications of
the “information era.” The latter includes technological
developments making possible e-government and e-politics on
a worldwide scale. Such richness of meaning has encouraged
the evolution of many conceptual frameworks and analytical
trends. Thus, more recently, “global processes” has been
offered as an alternative to “globalization” to permit
greater specification of the dimensions involved and to
avoid some of the ideological undertones of the term. We
face, as political scientists, both an opportunity and a
challenge to advance our theoretical and empirical
understanding of the phenomenon that we have loosely
referred to as globalization.

Globalization influences politics in numerous ways, directly
and indirectly. As the removal of barriers to movement of
capital, goods and information has gained ground, the nation
state, the primary unit of human political organization
since 1648, has come under challenge. One response has been
the emergence of multi-level governance with the state
redefining the space it occupies so as to reinvigorate
itself and with new or strengthened entities forming at the
regional and global levels. Some argue that states are
increasingly constrained in the exercise of their
sovereignty by multi-national corporations, international
financial institutions and international organizations, both
governmental and non-governmental. The nation state, in
striving to bring prosperity to its citizens appears these
days to rely less on its coercive powers and more on
securing the consent of independent economic actors. The
so-called “enabling state” has become more accommodating to
the wishes of such actors in marked contrast to earlier
times when economic actors had to persuade the nation state
to be understanding of their needs and preferences.

One way the nation state has tried to meet the challenge of
globalization, as already indicated, has been by forming
regional unions and/or establishing multi-level governance.
The European Union is the most complex example of a regional
union since it aims for political union while others tend to
limit their domain to trade. All share a similar intention,
however: to form a bloc that can influence and give
direction to globalization-derived developments so as to
minimize their negative and maximize their positive
outcomes. Similarly, nowadays, institutions of multi-level
governance are proliferating throughout the world.

The re-formation and possible weakening of the nation state
has invited the resurgence of sub-national groups who demand
acknowledgement of their existence, recognition of cultural
and sometimes political rights. Integration has returned as
a central concern of national governments. Some countries,
for historical or cultural reasons, may possess attitudinal
and institutional frameworks that facilitate coping with
such challenges while others do not. Nowadays, however, most
countries face these challenges, as people discover
forgotten origins, identities and cultures. The search for
new formulae for holding societies together is continuing,
frequently accompanied by violence.

Globalization produces a variety of trends, some convergent,
others contradictory. A marked trend, for example, is the
one toward democratization of societies, a global process
harboring many challenges. In the emergent “market
democracies”, economic integration goes hand in hand with
populations clamoring for constitutional democracy. Elected
politicians and government elites face unprecedented new
challenges when striking a balance between two distinct
constituencies and two distinct set of policy goals. The
expectations and the changing moods of domestic and
international markets and the perceptions and the demands of
the electorate are rarely in harmony. Policymakers have
little room to maneuver, yet they are under pressure to
satisfy both constituencies. Is that an impossible task?

Those societies that have a greater role in shaping the
globalization process are projecting their political and
economic values to the world. Having an operating market
economy and democratic government seem to be the main
elements of this ideological movement. Yet, there are doubts
as to how well democracy has recently been working in its
original habitat. Furthermore, the application of democratic
forms in societies that have previously been ruled by other
systems has often produced outcomes that are problematical.
The integration of protected national economies into the
international market economy, similarly, has frequently had
destabilizing consequences. Rationalization of economies,
privatization of state enterprises, reduction or termination
of food and fuel subsidies have generally worsened the lot
of the already downtrodden and swollen their ranks.
Interestingly, those who have defended the rewards of the
free movement of goods and capital have been adamant in
instituting ever-new barriers to the free movement of labor.
There is much debate on whether the economic distance
between the rich and the poor both within and between
countries is widening. The disadvantaged are demanding
changes to the current international economic order so
cherished by the international markets and sometimes
euphemistically called the “new financial architecture”. Yet
no new international arrangement capable of establishing
basic rules for a new international order has come to
replace the Bretton Woods system, a situation that generates
instabilities in the developing nations. Indeed, the WTO
Doha round designed as a “development round” has encountered
serious difficulties and been suspended.

Economic despair and frustration have proven to be fertile
ground for a set of negative developments. Turning to
terrorism is one such outcome. The spread of organized crime
is another. Criminal networks organized globally are engaged
in the drug trade, people smuggling, prostitution, internet
fraud, the arms trade and the dissemination of the weapons
of mass destruction. A third outcome is the movement of
unauthorized labor across boundaries. Some citizens in the
rich world find this labor economically threatening and
culturally inferior. They seek to arrest the inflow and turn
to ideologies that justify driving foreign elements out of
their societies. The incoming workers, on the other, hand
enjoy only an uneasy and marginal existence. They are
usually ignored and their presence is not acknowledged in
politics. They can neither make its presence felt nor
communicate their needs and frustrations except through
unorthodox means, involving occasional outbreaks of
violence.

At least in its initial stages, there is a widely shared
feeling that at the international level globalization is
working to the advantage of the already developed and
industrialized countries. At the national level, on the
other hand, it is thought to favor those that are already
well off at the expense of the middle and the less
well-endowed layers of society. In historical perspective,
these judgments may prove to be too harsh or even
inaccurate. China and India as well as a number of other
countries, after all, are enjoying levels of growth and
overall prosperity they have never enjoyed before. Yet many
countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America, feel deprived
of the benefits globalization is supposed to bring and yearn
for a new world order which serves their interests better. A
few have even turned to employing low-cost instruments to
challenge the existing order. Some of the so called rogue
states are suspected of extending support to terrorist
movements, of trying to develop and export weapons of mass
destruction and of using proxies to intervene in the
politics of other countries. Such policies have on occasion
invited retaliatory acts, including military intervention,
on the part of the major actors in the global system.

Globalization has brought with it global problems of
environment, producing climatic change seen by many to be
threatening the survival of societies. Politics has failed
to bring about a solution. Developed societies work to
insure a safer environment for themselves while exporting
some of their problems to the less developed. The poor find
it difficult to devote their limited resources to
environmental problems. Globalization also results in the
increased trafficking of women, both for prostitution and
for domestic work - part of the new global care economy in
which care in rich nations are increasingly supplied by
migrant women.

Globalization has produced a redistribution of power both
within societies and within the world. Like any other major
transformative process, it produces winners and losers. As
the process moves on, it generates its own discontents, its
critics, its opponents. It produces politics of resistance
as well as politics of compliance in which both states and
NGOs take part. At this critical juncture, we believe that
the globalization process and its outcomes constitute
critical topics of study for all political scientists. We
propose that global discontent constitute the central theme
at our 21st World Congress. The broad framework of
globalization offers opportunities to participate in a grand
intellectual enterprise to analyze, criticize and evaluate
the prevalent phenomenon of our times whether students of
international relations, comparative politics, political
economy, political thought, public policy, political change
and development, politics of the environment, gender
politics, ethnic politics, urban politics, local government,
politics of resistance or of reaction.

Deadline to submit paper proposals is November 1, 2008.


Contact:

International Political Science Association (IPSA)
1590 Docteur-Penfield Ave, Office 331
Montreal, QC H3G 1C5
Canada
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://registration.santiago2009.org

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