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The Case Against the Global Economy and for a Turn Toward the Local

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A great political debate has emerged over the many unexpected and profound consequences of the rush toward the global economy. The world’s political and corporate leaders are restructuring the planet’s economy and political arrangements in ways that are affecting humans and the environment more than anything since the Industrial Revolution. Global institutions such as GATT, the World Trade Organization, NAFTA, and the World Bank—created with scant public debate or scrutiny—have moved real power away from citizens and nation-states to global bureaucracies, with grave results.
The Case Against the Global Economy is the first comprehensive, point-by-point analysis of the global economy, its premises, and its social and environmental implications. Represented here are forty-three leading economic, agricultural, and environmental experts who charge that free trade and economic globalization are producing exactly the opposite results from what has been promised.
Contributors include William Greider, Jeremy Rifkin, Ralph Nader, Vandana Shiva, David Korten, Wendell Berry, Kirkpatrick Sale, Herman E. Daly, Richard Barnet, Helena Norberg-Hodge, and more than thirty other analysts of the global economy.

560 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1996

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Jerry Mander

28 books75 followers

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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
112 reviews2 followers
June 29, 2008
Widescale replacing of the dollar with a barter economy...

Great.

I'll stick with Ayn Rand.
11 reviews
December 11, 2021
I enjoyed reading this book. Published the year I graduated high school looking back from 25 years in the future. It is interesting to see the ways in which its predictions have been fulfilled or proven false. Definitely worth the effort
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707 reviews32 followers
April 28, 2022
This book brilliantly brings together a who's who of mid 90's thinkers and activists who have dedicated their lives to studying the history of and current trends related to globalization and the marketplace. The book is broken into logical sections and within each there are accessible essays (of just the right length) which provide the reader with a comprehensive understanding of what effectively works out to a master class on globalization and what is meant by the phrase 'race to the bottom'. Unfortunately this book came out nearly 30 years ago and it gives me no satisfaction to write this review in 2022 and say that the contributors were all correct when they predicted where we would end up if we continued down the path we were on at the time.

This book is still incredibly relevant today and the last section about solutions still offers prescient ideas and action items that can make a difference.

I attended and worked the launch party weekend during which there were panels by many of the writers and this book changed my life or perhaps I should say it clarified and focused me onto the path I took to get here.
217 reviews2 followers
May 29, 2015
It would have been better to read this book a dozen or more years ago. A lot of what the various authors wrote about, while interesting and important at the time, is not as relevant now in the age of terror lists, an increasingly accepted police state in the US, and the rule of the 1%. There are some bright spots out there but Clinton moved the Democratic Party to be Republican-light and things have been going downhill since then for the left. But that's just the US, right. Hardly. The almighty dollar and the WTO ensures what's good for business is what happens and terror watch means major protests are not always welcome. We had the Occupy movement which was strong for a while but, as with most movements not backed by billions of Koch brothers money, ultimately fizzled. There was some hope but hope can only sustain for so long. Anyway, I like a lot of the authors but the stories are a bit dated. They could be updated, unfortunately, very easily and expanded upon, though.
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20 reviews14 followers
May 26, 2007
Written in '94 I believe, does feel a bit dated, but still entirely relevant.
The really exciting part was the last section of four, which deals with actual initiatives one can take on the local level, rather than the same old bad-old-Bretton-Woods-institutions lecture, which the book has quite the redundantly excessive share of. Would even go almost as far as to suggest ripping that last section out and tossing the rest (into the compost pile, of course).
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Author 12 books34 followers
March 26, 2008
A prescient read. From the environment to labor, this is a must for anyone who wants to understand the dark follies of the global market. Hard to believe Sierra Club books published this one, given their close affair with Mr. Neoliberal himself, Bill Clinton.
195 reviews16 followers
November 10, 2007
This book lives in my bathroom too. I've had it for years but it's too much for me to just read through, I do find it really useful and informative (and depressing) though...
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9 reviews1 follower
February 20, 2008
makes you think...i took an ethics class that taught a certain teaching and the exact same concept was taught in the opposite way for my international business class...go figure
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17 reviews5 followers
Want to read
February 18, 2009
It's time to refocus on the local economy, while stringently protecting the human rights of those abroad.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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