\(
\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
\)
Fences and windows : dispatches from the front lines of the globalization debate / Naomi Klein.
2002
B 78 KLE.F
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
Fences and windows : dispatches from the front lines of the globalization debate / Naomi Klein.
Author
Description
xxvii, 267 pages ; 20 cm
ISBN
0007150474
9780007150472
9780007150472
Alternate Call Number
B 78 KLE.F
Summary
Naomi Klein has been writing a weekly column in Canada's leading newspaper, the Toronto Globe & Mail (syndicated worldwide recently, in the Guardian in the UK). She has now, by selecting, rewriting and rearranging these columns, prepared what amounts to a first-hand historical record of the gradual rise to prominence of the anti-global-corporatism movement, and of its most notable successes and its failures. It has a truly international scope, covering everything from the Zapatistas' rebellion in Mexico to the Social Centres in Italy, from the biggest peaceful protest demos since the 1960s to the gassings and shootings at Genoa. Naomi analyses developments in local democracy, in law enforcement, in privatization laws, in capital migrations, in union behaviour, in marketing, in summitry. She gets close to the suited summits -- the WTO, the G8, the IMF, NAFTA. She looks at bioterrorism, pollution, hypocrisy, fear and confusion. It is a portrait, or rather the underlying negative, of the planet's torrid time between the Seattle summit and the world-changing events of 11 September 2001. It makes for dramatic, immediate, indispensable history writing, and reading.
Note
Part of the Caledonian Special Collection.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note
1. Windows of dissent
2. Fencing in democracy
3. Fencing in the movement: criminalizing dissent
4. Capitalizing on terror
5. Windows to democracy.
2. Fencing in democracy
3. Fencing in the movement: criminalizing dissent
4. Capitalizing on terror
5. Windows to democracy.
Series
Published
London : Flamingo, 2002.
Language
English
Record Appears in
Review
Naomi Klein has been writing a weekly column in Canada's leading newspaper, the Toronto Globe & Mail (syndicated worldwide recently, in the Guardian in the UK). She has now, by selecting, rewriting and rearranging these columns, prepared what amounts to a first-hand historical record of the gradual rise to prominence of the anti-global-corporatism movement, and of its most notable successes and its failures. It has a truly international scope, covering everything from the Zapatistas' rebellion in Mexico to the Social Centres in Italy, from the biggest peaceful protest demos since the 1960s to the gassings and shootings at Genoa. Naomi analyses developments in local democracy, in law enforcement, in privatization laws, in capital migrations, in union behaviour, in marketing, in summitry. She gets close to the suited summits -- the WTO, the G8, the IMF, NAFTA. She looks at bioterrorism, pollution, hypocrisy, fear and confusion. It is a portrait, or rather the underlying negative, of the planet's torrid time between the Seattle summit and the world-changing events of 11 September 2001. It makes for dramatic, immediate, indispensable history writing, and reading.