Beschreibung:
Lessons for Social Change in the Global Economy: Voices from the Field provides a global perspective on efforts to create social change. Contributors ground their case studies in strong relationships with activists and advocates, while introductory and concluding chapters aid the reader in understanding the common themes that tie these case studies together.
Discussion questions developed by the authors can be found here.In the face of globalization’s massive social and economic transformations and the resulting persistent inequality, activists, labor organizers, and advocacy NGOs are seeking and creating change beyond the confines of formal state politics and across national borders. Given the breadth of local issues activists face, the ways they define the problem and seek redress vary widely. This book provides a unique perspective on these efforts, gathering into one volume concrete examples of the implementation of different strategies for social change that highlight the challenges involved. This provides useful lessons for those involved in social change, as well as for those studying it. Contributors to the volume are scholars and practitioners around the world, and they draw on strong connections with people working in the field to improve working conditions and environmental standards of global production systems. This allows readers to develop a more comprehensive and grounded understanding of strategies for social change.
This book maintains a strong balance between breadth and specificity. It provides an overview of the themes of social change, which contextualizes and draws common threads from the chapters grounded in specific geographic locations and political spaces of change. The chapters analyze environmental and social problems and the varying degrees of success activists have had in regulating industries, containing environmental hazards, and/or harnessing aspects of an industry for positive social and economic change. Contributors draw upon different ways of creating change, which include corporate social responsibility schemes, fair trade regimes, and community radio. By providing insight into the potential and limitations of actions taken at different levels, the book encourages a critical perspective on efforts for social change, grounded in an understanding of how conditions around the world can affect these activities.
Foreword by Mark Barenberg
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Agents and methods of social change in the global economy
Shae Garwood and Sky Croeser
Chapter 2: The Right to organize, living wage, and real change for garment workers
Sarah Adler-Milstein, Jessica Champagne and Theresa Haas
Chapter 3: Waste for Life: poverty-reducing technologies for repurposing waste at the margins
Baillie and Eric Feinblatt
Chapter 4: From toxic to green: turning mountains of e-waste into green jobs
Bharati Chaturvedi
Chapter 5: Social justice and fairness in global food systems
Michael Heasman and Ralph Early
Chapter 6: Challenging work: working conditions in the electronics industry
Marisol Sandoval and Kristina Areskog Bjurling
Chapter 7: Global supply chains – struggle within or against them?
Sanjiv Pandita and Fahmi Panimbang
Chapter 8: Increased visibility for marginalized voices in the production and consumption of First Nations media
Claire Litton-Cohn and Sky Croeser
Chapter 9: Reflections on lessons for social change
Sky Croeser and Shae Garwood