Grassrooting Network Imaginaries: Relationality, Power, and Mutual Solidarity in Global Justice Networks
- 1 November 2007
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
- Vol. 39 (11) , 2575-2592
- https://doi.org/10.1068/a38338
Abstract
In this paper we draw critically upon actor network theory (ANT) in order to analyse the contours of relationality, communication, and operational logic within a global justice network—People's Global Action Asia. Drawing upon the concept of translation, we consider how connections are fostered and sustained within the network, focusing upon the work of key organisers (those we term the ‘imagineers’) and key events in producing the network. In so doing, we ground ANT in direct political engagement and introduce the concept of ‘grassrooting vectors’ to highlight the power relations at work within global justice networks, a consideration which is crucial to the formation of mutual solidarity between social movements.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Towards the Relational Construction of Militant Particularisms: Or Why the Geographies of Past Struggles Matter for Resistance to Neoliberal GlobalisationAntipode, 2005
- Thinking Through Networks and Their Spatiality: A Critique of the US (Public) War on Terrorism and its Geographic DiscourseAntipode, 2004
- The difference that difference makes in the mobilization of workersInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 2002
- Locating Globalization: Feminist (Re)readings of the Subjects and Spaces of GlobalizationEconomic Geography, 2002
- False Antitheses? Marxism, Nature and Actor‐NetworksAntipode, 2002
- Place, space, networks, and the sustainability of collective action: the Madres de Plaza de MayoGlobal Networks, 2001
- Grassroots Globalization and the Research ImaginationPublic Culture, 2000
- Networks and mobile arrangements: Organisational innovation in the US environmental justice movementEnvironmental Politics, 1999
- Inhuman/Nonhuman/Human: Actor-Network Theory and the Prospects for a Nondualistic and Symmetrical Perspective on Nature and SocietyEnvironment and Planning D: Society and Space, 1997
- Conceptualising Resistance to GlobalisationNew Political Economy, 1997