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Global anti-corporate struggle: a preliminary analysis

The British Journal of Sociology
Volume 53 No 4 December 2002
pages 667-691

Abstract

This paper offers a preliminary analysis of the recent wave of anti-corporate protest that has swept across numerous countries throughout the world. In the first part of the paper the social structure of this phenomenon is examined. Specifically, it is argued that it should be understood as a 'field', in Pierre Bourdieu's sense of the term. In the second part of the paper the factors which account for the emergence of this field are explored, using a 'value-added' model which focuses upon the interplay of strains, situational definitions, focal events, opportunities and the circulation of protest relevant resources. The paper is conceived as a preliminary analysis which outlines a framework and draws out important themes. It is not offered as a complete account but rather as a basis from which more specific and focused studies might stem.

Keywords: Social movements, protest, fields, Bourdieu, anti-corporatism, anti-capitalism, anti-globalization

Nick Crossley
Department of Sociology University of Manchester

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