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" The rise of the global left : "
Boaventura de Sousa Santos.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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962515
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Doc. No
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b716885
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Main Entry
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Santos, Boaventura de Sousa.
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Title & Author
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The rise of the global left : : the World Social Forum and beyond /\ Boaventura de Sousa Santos.
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Publication Statement
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London ;New York :: Zed Books,, ©2006.
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Page. NO
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1 online resource (xii, 222 pages) :: illustrations
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ISBN
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1281216143
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: 1848131674
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: 1848137745
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: 9781281216144
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: 9781848131675
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: 9781848137745
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1842778005
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1842778013
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9781842778005
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9781842778012
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 210-215) and index.
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Contents
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Introduction : forty years of solitude and the novelty of the World Social Forum -- The World Social Forum as critical utopia -- The World Social Forum as epistemology of the south --The World Social Forum and the sociology of absences -- The World Social Forum and the sociology of emergences -- The World Social Forum as an insurgent cosmopolitan politics -- The struggles for global social justice must be based on a very broad conception of power and oppression -- Counter-hegemonic globalization is built upon the equivalence between the principles of equality and recognition of difference -- Rebellion and non-conformity must be privileged to the detriment of the old strategic options (reform or revolution) -- The WSF aims at a new internationalism -- The WSF process progresses as transversal political terrains of resistance and alternative are identified as an ongoing process -- The struggle for radical democracy must be a struggle for demo-diversity -- Transcultural criteria must be developed to identify different forms of democracy and to establish hierarchies among them according to the collective quality of life they provide -- The WSF process must be conceived as promoting and strengthening counter-hegemonic forms of high-intensity democracy that are already emerging -- There is no democracy without conditions of democracy -- There is no global social justice without global cognitive justice -- The many names of another possible world--social emancipation, socialism, dignity, etc.--are in the end the name of democracy without end -- Organizing fragmented counter-hegemonic energies -- Internal democracy: relations between the organizing committee and the international council -- Transparency and hierarchies in participation -- Parties and movements -- Size and continuity -- The new organizational challenges: the evaluation of the 2003 WSF -- The new organizational models: the Mumbai demonstration and the 2005 WSF -- The 2006 polycentric WSF -- Representing this world as it fights for another possible world -- Whom does the WSF represent? -- Who represents the WSF? Composition and functionality of the international council -- Making and unmaking cleavages: strategy and political action -- Reform or revolution -- Socialism or social emancipation -- The state as enemy or potential ally -- National or global struggles -- Direct or institutional action -- The principle of equality or the principle of respect for difference -- The WSF as a space or as a movement -- The future of the World Social Forum: self-democracy and the work of translation -- Self-democracy -- The work of translation -- The World Social Forum and self-learning: the popular university of the social movements -- A proposal for collective transformative self-learning: the popular university of the social movements -- The PUSM, 2003-06 -- The left after the World Social Forum -- The phantasmal relation between theory and practice -- The twenty-first century left: depolarized pluralities -- Conclusion -- Annexes -- Annex I -- Composition of the International Council of the WSF (2005) -- Annex II -- Comparison between the charter of principles, the WSF India policy Statement, and the charter of principles and values of the African Social Forum -- Annex III -- Manifesto of Porto Alegre -- Annex IV- Organizations and institutions that have provided financial support to the World Social Forums.
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Abstract
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In this book the leading sociologist Boaventura de Sousa Santos makes an impassioned case for the politicization of the World Social Forum. Since its inception in Porto Alegre in 2001, the World Social Forum has refused to take political positions on world events, preferring instead to provide a platform for diverse social movements to come together. de Sousa Santos argues, however, that the Forum can only realize its full potential as a force for social, economic and political change, by taking a directly political stand against the evils of neo-liberal globalization, war, famine and corruption. Through a detailed consideration of the WSF's history and organization, he demonstrates that it has always been an inherently political organization. If, he claims, the WSF is able to realize its potential as an institution for a new form of subaltern, cosmopolitan politics, it will become a global power to be reckoned with in the 21st century.
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Subject
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World Social Forum.
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World Social Forum.
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Subject
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Democracy.
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Subject
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Equality.
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Subject
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Social justice.
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Subject
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Democracy.
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Subject
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Equality.
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Subject
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POLITICAL SCIENCE-- Public Policy-- Cultural Policy.
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Subject
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Social justice.
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Subject
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SOCIAL SCIENCE-- Anthropology-- Cultural.
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Subject
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SOCIAL SCIENCE-- Popular Culture.
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Subject
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Internationalisatie.
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Subject
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Links (politiek)
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Subject
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Sociale bewegingen.
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Dewey Classification
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306.209/0511
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LC Classification
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HN18.3.S263 2006
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NLM classification
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71.38bcl
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Parallel Title
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World Social Forum and beyond
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