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Global Citizens Movement

Global Citizens Movement. Vivi Indra Amelia Nasution Alarico Da Costa Ximenes Postgraduate School of International Relations Gadjah Mada University. Definition.

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Global Citizens Movement

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  1. Global Citizens Movement Vivi Indra Amelia Nasution Alarico Da Costa Ximenes Postgraduate School of International Relations Gadjah Mada University Social Movement

  2. Definition • Charles Tilly defines social movements as a series of contentious performances, displays and campaigns by which ordinary people made collective claims on others [Tilly, 2004]. For Tilly, social movements are a major vehicle for ordinary people's participation in public politics [Tilly, 2004:3]. • He argues that there are three major elements to a social movement [Tilly, 2004]: • Campaigns: a sustained, organized public effort making collective claims on target authorities; • Repertoire: employment of combinations from among the following forms of political action: creation of special-purpose associations and coalitions, public meetings, solemn processions, vigils, rallies, demonstrations, petition drives, statements to and in public media, and pamphleteering; and • WUNC displays: participants' concerted public representation of worthiness, unity, numbers, and commitments on the part of themselves and/or their constituencies. Social Movement

  3. continued • Sidney Tarrow defines [Tarrow, 1994] a social movement as collective challenges [to elites, authorities, other groups or cultural codes] by people with common purposes and solidarity in sustained interactions with elites, opponents and authorities. He specifically distinguishes social movements from political parties and interest groups. • social movements as networks of relationships which connect informally - i.e., without procedural norms or formal organisational bindings – a multiplicity of individuals and organisations, who share a distinctive collective identity, and interact around conflictual issues (Diani, 1992a) • originated in reference to the labor movements of the late nineteenth century, which sought to organize the new class of workers created by capitalist industrialization (dellaPorta, 2005). Social Movement

  4. History • The term "social movements" was introduced in 1850 by the German Sociologist Lorenz von Stein • According to Tilly the "social movement" was invented in England and North America during the first decades of the nineteenth century and has since then spread across the globe. He argues that the early growth of social movements was connected to broad economic and political changes including parliamentarization, market capitalization, and proletarianization [Tilly, 2004] Social Movement

  5. In 1945, Britain after victory in the Second World War entered a period of radical reform and change. • In the post-war period, women's rights, gay rights, peace, civil rights, anti-nuclear and environmental movements emerged, often dubbed the New Social Movements. • Some find in the end of the 1990s the emergence of a new global social movement, the anti-globalization movement. Social Movement

  6. [Humanity has] the capacity to turn toward a truly planetary civilization, one that reflects universal social and ecological values while respecting differences. Today, our collective wealth and technological prowess could defeat the scourges of destitution, war, and environmental destruction.… The choices we make now and in the critical decades ahead will [set the trajectory of global development for generations to come]. (GTI Proposal, 2003) Social Movement

  7. Global civil society (GCS) • As individuals, we are all members of civil society, participating in sports leagues, church groups, book clubs, or any organized activity with our neighbors. Civil society includes civic action by individuals, associations, foundations, faith-based groups, and nonprofit organizations, and has been active on a global level for centuries (initially in the form of missionary work). Social Movement

  8. GCS phase • The early nineteenth century campaign spearheaded by religious organizations to end the slave trade was perhaps the first concerted effort by civil society organizations to exert influence on global affairs. • Since the end of World War II, global civil society has been growing at an unprecedented and escalating rate. (Florini, 2000). • As one indicator of the growth of civil society, we examine the rise of globally active NGOs. NGOs have been steadily accumulating, so that now there are over 25,000 active at the global level, with more added each year. Social Movement

  9. The Influence factor of the rise and development of NGO • an increase in state funding for civil society activity. For example, today Northern European NGOs receive 50-90% of their funding from government. Additionally, governments and private foundations in wealthy countries finance much of the growth in civil society in developing countries (Florini, 2000). Social Movement

  10. The reasons • The reasons for this increase in funding are complex, but several important factors are: 1) public demand due to the failure of other institutions to address societal problems, and a decline in public trust of government and corporations; 2) economic growth and the rise of a sympathetic middle class in developing economies; and 3) appreciation by state officials for the role of civil society, in part due to the strong belief that a healthy market system is connected to functioning democracies which, in turn, depend on a robust civil society. Social Movement

  11. Facts • People’s psychological responses to a shrinking world include some mixture of fear and hope. • When fear dominates, this leads to xenophobia, retreating into protected enclaves, and projecting militaristic solutions. It can also fuel fundamentalist movements that offer reassurance and simple answers for an increasingly perplexing world. • When hope is strong, people’s highest aspirations motivate them to uphold their moral responsibilities to their fellow humans and the larger community of life. Countless new cultural developments manifest the growing awareness that one’s narrow self-interest is dependent on general social and ecological interests (Ray and Anderson, 2000). Social Movement

  12. Cosmopolitan Identity • The identification of oneself as part of the human family, with responsibility for one’s brothers and sisters, is an extension of the sense of kinship many already feel for their nation, hometown, and family. Political theorists discussing the sense of belonging and responsibility to an “imagined community” (Anderson, 1991) have introduced the concept of an implicit social contract that characterizes the presumed rights and obligations of individuals to the community, and of the community to individuals. This implied citizenship can precede explicit constitutional and institutional manifestation, and even challenge the form of established institutional structures • by highlighting their failure to live up to the ideals which define the community. The emergence of a global identity is a new implicit social contract in which increasing numbers of people understand themselves practically and aspirationally as global citizens. They share the broad values and principles that would underlie a transition to a just and sustainable planetary society, such as human rights, freedom, democracy, pluralism, and environmental protection. This new global identity need not subsume or eliminate particular subglobal or group identities, although it would certainly transform them. Social Movement

  13. under what circumstances might the identity of global citizen emerge? • Stoic ~coined the term “cosmopolitan” meaning “citizen of the cosmos”. • Cosmopolitanism rejects chauvinism and values diverse cultures, regarding all people of the earth as branches of a single family tree. • Culture can play a powerful role in expressing and reinforcing identity. Social Movement

  14. Global Citizens Movement needs a shared vision emerging from a process of engaged dialogue effectively coordinated through new forms of leadership Social Movement

  15. Dynamics of social movements • Social movements are not eternal. They have a life cycle: they are created, they grow, they achieve successes or failures and eventually, they dissolve and cease to exist. Social Movement

  16. References • Wikipedia • Orion Kriegman,”Dawn of The Cosmopolitan: The Hope of a Global Citizens Movement ” Social Movement

  17. Thank You Social Movement

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