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In this second volume of The Information Age trilogy, with an extensive new preface following the recent global economic crisis, Manuel Castells deals with the social, political, and cultural dynamics associated with the technological transformation of our societies and with the globalization of the economy. * Extensive new preface examines how dramatic recent events have transformed the socio-political landscape of our world * Applies Castells' hypotheses to contemporary issues such as Al Qaeda and global terrorist networks, American unilateralism and the crisis of political legitimacy throughout the world * A brilliant account of social, cultural, and political conflict and struggle all over the world * Analyzes the importance of cultural, religious, and national identity as sources of meaning for people, and its implications for social movement * Throws new light on the dynamics of global and local change
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2011
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
List of Charts
Preface to the 2010 Edition of The Power of Identity
God’s Planet
My People, My Home, My Nation
Project Identities
The Network State
Informational Politics and the Crisis of Democracy
The World is Not Flat
Preface and Acknowledgments 2003
Acknowledgments 1996
Our World, our Lives
1 Communal Heavens: Identity and Meaning in the Network Society
The Construction of Identity
God’s Heavens: Religious Fundamentalism and Cultural Identity
Nations and Nationalisms in the Age of Globalization: Imagined Communities or Communal Images?
Ethnic Unbonding: Race, Class, and Identity in the Network Society
Territorial Identities: The Local Community
Conclusion: The Cultural Communes of the Information Age
2 The Other Face of the Earth: Social Movements against the New Global Order
Globalization, Informationalization, and Social Movements
Mexico’s Zapatistas: The First Informational Guerrilla Movement
Up in Arms against the New World Order: The American Militia and the Patriot Movement
The Lamas of Apocalypse: Japan’s Aum Shinrikyo
Al-Qaeda, 9/11, and Beyond: Global Terror in the Name of God
“No Globalization without Representation!”: The Anti-globalization Movement
The Meaning of Insurgencies against the New Global Order
Conclusion: The Challenge to Globalization
3 The Greening of the Self: The Environmental Movement
The Creative Cacophony of Environmentalism: A Typology
The Meaning of Greening: Societal Issues and the Ecologists’ Challenge
Environmentalism in Action: Reaching Minds, Taming Capital, Courting the State, Tap-dancing with the Media
Environmental Justice: Ecologists’ New Frontier
4 The End of Patriarchalism: Social Movements, Family, and Sexuality in the Information Age
The Crisis of the Patriarchal Family
Women at Work
Sisterhood is Powerful: The Feminist Movement
The Power of Love: Lesbian and Gay Liberation Movements
Family, Sexuality, and Personality in the Crisis of Patriarchalism
The End of Patriarchalism?
5 Globalization, Identification, and the State: A Powerless State or a Network State?
Globalization and the State
The Nation-state in the Age of Multilateralism
Global Governance and Networks of Nation-states
Identities, Local Governments, and the Deconstruction of the Nation-state
The Identification of the State
The Return of the State
The Crisis of the Nation-state, the Network State, and the Theory of the State
Conclusion: The King of the Universe, Sun Tzu, and the Crisis of Democracy
6 Informational Politics and the Crisis of Democracy
Introduction: The Politics of Society
Media as the Space of Politics in the Information Age
Informational Politics in Action: The Politics of Scandal
The Crisis of Democracy
Conclusion: Reconstructing Democracy?
Conclusion: Social Change in the Network Society
Methodological Appendix
Appendix for Tables 5.1 and 5.2
Appendix for Figure 6.9: Level of Support for Mainstream Parties in National Elections, 1980–2002
Summary of Contents of Volumes I and III
References
Index
The Information Age
Economy, Society, and Culture
Volume II
The Power of Identity
Originally published in 1997, The Power of Identity, the second volume in The Information Age trilogy, saw the writing on the global wall – recognizing identity as a defining principle of social organization and analyzing the importance of cultural, religious, and national identities as sources of meaning for people, and the implications of these identities for social movements.
Now with an extensive new preface following the recent global economic crisis, this second edition analyzes the major social and political events directly derived from the diagnosis of the book: Al Qaeda and fundamentalist terror networks; the Iraq War; the geopolitics of fear under the Bush Administration; and the Internet-based networking of global social movements fighting for global justice.
Studying grassroots mobilizations against the unfettered globalization of wealth and power, and the formation of alternative projects of social organization, this book charts the transformation of the nation-state into a network state, and the submission of political representation to the dictates of media politics.
Table of Contents for Volumes I and III of Manuel Castells’ The Information Age: Economy, Society, and Culture
Volume I: The Rise of the Network Society
Prologue: The Net and the Self
1 The Information Technology Revolution
2 The New Economy: Informationalism, Globalization, Networking
3 The Network Enterprise: The Culture, Institutions, and Organizations of the Informational Economy
4 The Transformation of Work and Employment: Networkers, Job-less, and Flex-timers
5 The Culture of Real Virtuality: The Integration of Electronic Communication, the End of the Mass Audience, and the Rise of Interactive Networks
6 The Space of Flows
7 The Edge of Forever: Timeless Time
Conclusion: The Network Society
Volume III: End of Millennium
A Time of Change
1 The Crisis of Industrial Statism and the Collapse of the Soviet Union
2 The Rise of the Fourth World: Informational Captalism, Poverty, and Social Exclusion
3 The Perverse Connection: The Global Criminal Economy
4 Development and Crisis in the Asian Pacific: Globalization and the State
5 The Unification of Europe: Globalization, Identity, and the Network State
Conclusion: Making Sense of our World
This second edition with a new preface first published 2010© 2010 Manuel CastellsEdition history: Blackwell Publishing Ltd (1e, 1997), Blackwell Publishing Ltd (2e, 2004)
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Castells, Manuel, 1942–The power of identity / Manuel Castells. – 2nd ed.p. cm. — (The information age: economy, society, and culture)Includes bibliographical references and index.ISBN 978-1-4051-9687-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) 1. Information society. 2. Social movements. 3. Information technology—Social aspects. 4. Information technology—Political aspects. 5. Identity (Philosophical concept) I. Title.HM851.C37 2009303.48′409–dc222009030162
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
Para Irene Castells Oliván,
historiadora de utopías
Figures
2.1Geographical distribution of Patriot groups in the US by number of groups and paramilitary training sites in each state, 19964.1Marriage survival curves for Italy, West Germany, and Sweden: mothers born in 1934–38 and 1949–534.2Evolution of first marriage in countries of the European Union since 19604.3Crude marriage rates in selected countries4.4Percentage of women (15–34 years) with first birth occurring before first marriage, by race and ethnic origin, in US, 1960–894.5Synthetic index of fertility in European countries since 19604.6Total fertility rate and number of births in US, 1920–904.7Growth in service sector employment and in female participation rates, 1980–904.8aWomen as a percentage of the labor force by type of employment4.8bMarried couple families with wives in the labor force, in US, 1960–904.9Women in part-time employment by family status in European Community member states, 19914.10Interrelation of different aspects of same-gender sexuality4.11Gay residential areas in San Francisco4.12aHousehold composition in US, 1960–904.12bHousehold composition in US, 1970–954.13Living arrangements of children under the age of 18, by presence of parent, in US, 1960–904.14Lifetime occurrence of oral sex, by cohort: men and women5.1General government gross financial liabilities5.2Labor costs in manufacturing, 19946.1Credibility of news source in US, 1959–916.2Average number of corruption stories per periodical in US, 1890–19926.3Percentage of citizens expressing not very much or no confidence in government in selected countries6.4Percentage of citizens expressing not very much or no confidence in political parties for selected countries6.5Percentage of people in selected countries expressing the view that their country is run by a few big interests looking out for themselves6.6Perception of government by citizens of 60 countries (1999)6.7Percentage of citizens in 47 countries expressing the view that their country is governed by the will of the people (2002)6.8Trust in institutions to operate in society’s best interest (2002)6.9Level of support for the mainstream parties in national elections, 1980–2002Tables
4.1Rate of change in crude divorce rate in selected countries, 1971–904.2Trends in divorce rates per 100 marriages in developed countries4.3Percentage of first marriages dissolved through separation, divorce, or death among women aged 40–49 in less-developed countries4.4Trends in percentage of women aged 20–24 who have never been married4.5Non-marital births as a percentage of all births by region (country averages)4.6Trends in single-parent households as a percentage of all households with dependent children and at least one resident parent in developed countries4.7Trends in percentage of households headed by women de jure4.8Indicators of recent changes in family and household formation: selected Western countries, 1975–904.9Percentage of one-person households over total number of households for selected countries, 1990–934.10Total fertility rate by main regions of the world4.11Labor force participation rates by sex (%)4.12Total employment by sex (% average annual growth rates)4.13Economic activity rates, 1970–904.14Growth of women’s economic activity rate, 1970–904.15Female service employment by activities and rank of information intensity of total employment (%), 1973–934.16Rates of growth for each category of female service employment as a percentage of total female employment, 1973–934.17Distribution of female employment by occupation, 1980 and 1989 (%)4.18Size and composition of part-time employment, 1973–94 (%)4.19Share of self-employment in total employment, by sex and activity (%)5.1Internationalization of the economy and public finance: rates of change, 1980–93 (and 1993 ratios, unless otherwise indicated)5.2Government role in the economy and public finance: rates of change, 1980–92 (and 1992 ratios, unless otherwise indicated)6.1Sources of news in the US, 1993–2002 (%)6.2Sources of political information of residents of Cochabamba, Bolivia, 19966.3Opinion of Bolivian citizens on which institutions represent their interests6.4Turnout in national elections: recent figures compared to rates for the 1970s and 1980s (%)Charts
2.1Structure of values and beliefs of insurgent movements against globalization3.1Typology of environmental movements4.1Analytical typology of feminist movementsPreface to the 2010 Edition of The Power of Identity
This volume explores the construction of collective identities as they relate to social movements and power struggles in the network society. It also deals with the transformation of the state, politics, and democracy under the conditions of globalization and new communication technologies. The understanding of these processes aims to provide new perspectives for the study of social change in the Information Age. In this preface I use the vantage point offered by a new publication of this book in 2010 to assess social and political developments in the early twenty-first century by using the analytical framework proposed in 1997 and updated in 2004 in the first and second editions of The Power of Identity.
The most dramatic social conflicts we have witnessed since the publication of the first edition of this volume have been induced by the confrontation between opposing identities. Having detected the construction and assertion of identity as being a fundamental lever of social change, regardless of the content of such change, the theoretical interpretation I proposed in my trilogy on The Information Age was anchored on the dynamic contradiction between the Net and the Self as an organizing principle of the new historical landscape. The rise of the network society and the growing power of identity are the intertwined social processes that jointly define globalization, geopolitics, and social transformation in the early twenty-first century. In fact, I updated the 1997 analysis of identity in the 2004 edition of this book to document the explosion of fundamentalism and its impact on world affairs without modifying the original argument, as the observation of Al Qaeda and other expressions of religious fundamentalism came to confirm (unfortunately) the main hypotheses I had formulated earlier while abstaining from any prediction, as is customary in my approach. Furthermore, the revolt of oppressed nations around the world, the conquest of governments by indigenous movements in Latin America, the growing importance of religious movements as sources of social challenge and social change, the grassrooting of democracy in territorial identity, the affirmation of the specificity of women’s values, the critique of patriarchalism by the gay and lesbian movement, and the constitution of new forms of individual and collective identity, often using electronic communication networks, have shown the prevalence of cultural values over structurally determined economic interests in constructing the meaning of human action. After the relentless rationalist effort of the last two centuries to proclaim the death of God and the disenchantment of the world, we are again in – if we ever left – an enchanted world, where the way we feel determines what we believe and how we act, in coherence with recent discoveries in neuroscience and behavioral psychology.
A summary overview of social trends in the last decade as they relate to the construction and expression of identity may provide a measure of the accuracy or inadequacy of the analysis presented in this volume, as the only criterion to judge the interest of any social theory is its capacity to make sense of the observed human experience. I will not re-state my theory of identity and power in this Preface, instead inviting the interested reader to make the effort to turn a few pages to find the passages that are relevant to the issues discussed here.
God’s Planet
The news about God’s death has been greatly exaggerated. She is alive and well, as she inhabits our hearts and thus shapes our minds. She is not everywhere and is not for everybody, but she is present for most human beings, in growing numbers, and with greater intensity every day. Only about 15 percent of people on the planet are non-religious or atheists, while between 1990 and 2000 the number of Christians increased worldwide at an average annual rate of 1.36 percent, accounting in 2000 for about 33 percent of the world’s total population. Muslims increased at an annual rate of 2.13 percent to reach 19.6 percent of the total population. Figures for Hindus are 1.69 percent annual growth rate and 13.4 percent of the population, and for Buddhists, 1.09 percent annual growth rate and 5.9 percent of the population (Barrett et al., 2001). This simple observation often surprises the intellectuals of a very small but still highly influential area of the world: Western Europe. With the exception of Ireland, in most Western European countries religious observance has dwindled and religious beliefs are lukewarm at best for the large majority of the usually Christianized population, in spite of the continuing influence of the Church as a political institution. Even in Italy, Spain, and Portugal, the mainstays of Catholicism throughout history, only a fraction of the population attends mass on Sundays and the vast majority of the youth feel disaffected from religion in general. It would be interesting to explore the causes of such historical reversal but it would distract us from the main thrust of my argument. Furthermore, even in these lands of religious indifference there is a revival of beliefs and practice among a small but very vocal segment of young people, although not enough to refill the overwhelmingly abandoned convents and seminaries or the empty coffers of what used to be the wealthiest institution in the world. Significantly enough, the active presence of God in Western Europe is mainly due to the growing Muslim community (4.3 percent of Europeans in 2000), whose submission to God in everyday life clashes with the secular character of public institutions, including the school.
Eastern Europe is becoming increasingly religious as the remaining ashes from the historical communist drive to subdue alternative idols have been reignited while, of course, Poland has maintained its identity as a beacon of unreconstructed Catholicism. Turkey, one of the most populous European countries, has accentuated its Muslim identity, placing its democracy on a collision course with the intransigent secularism embodied in the armed forces modeled by Ataturk.
Beyond the European shores, East Asia was never committed to God, as Buddhism and its derivatives oscillated between a collection of spiritual practices (mainly Mahayana and Theravada Buddhism) and philosophical guidelines (Confucianism, Taoism) and a series of rituals legitimizing the power of the state (explicitly in the case of Shintoism). The most important act of worship for Chinese, Japanese, or Korean families concerns the cult of the ancestors, in the form of household gods for domestic consumption (the so-called ethno-religion and folk religion). Yet, this noncommittal form of religiosity does not preclude the appearance of religious fundamentalism in East Asia, as exemplified by Aum Shinrikyo, the Japanese Buddhist-based cult that I analyzed in this volume. This is an indication that fundamentalism is not necessarily an exacerbation of religiosity but an expression of radicalized resistance identity that nests in any cultural form that fits its development.
Elsewhere in Asia, there is strong religious influence in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, among Muslims, Hindus, and Sikhs alike with growing fundamentalist tendencies in all religions. Christianity dominates in the Philippines (in spite of a strong Muslim minority in Mindanao), and is growing in South Korea and Vietnam. Of course, Indonesia and Malaysia are largely devout Muslim countries, although Malaysia has considerably reduced the impact of fundamentalist Islam, another interesting lesson to follow. The Central Asian republics have very large Muslim populations, even if the state keeps religion in the service of its political interests.
Naturally, the endless crises of the Middle East are constructed on the basis of conflicting religious identities. Islamic fundamentalism in all its versions is the dominant cultural and political trend, as the project of a secular Arab nationalist state (Nasser, Sadat, Saddam Hussein, Assad, Khadafi) collapsed in all countries, and its successors (e.g. Mubarak, Khadafi in its new incarnation, Assad’s son) had to repress God on behalf of God in order to survive. As for Israel, religious identity, ethnic identity (the Jewish people), and territorial identity in support of historical identity combine to make any negotiation based on a non-identity principle practically impossible to achieve success. The Jewish people were prosecuted throughout history because of who they were and so their survival, in their view, depends on the existence of a land-based state, constructed around their identity. This is why there is a strong current of Jewish fundamentalism (remember the assassination of Yizhak Rabin) that is symmetrically opposed to the Islamic fundamentalism of the most popular component of the Palestinian movement (Hamas). And this is why peaceful coexistence between Jews and Palestinians will have to deal not just with coexisting states but with coexisting identities, as exemplified by the thorny issue of sharing Jerusalem.
Africa is also a continent of religion, based on the juxtaposition of Christianity, Islam and animism. Yet, identity politics in sub-Saharan Africa is mainly constructed around ethnicity and territoriality rather than religion, as I will review later. It is important to remember that this continent largely forgotten by the outside world has not forgotten God, who is usually most welcome among the distressed people who seek refuge from despair.
Latin America continues to be God’s territory, with the particularity that where the powerful Catholic Church became too obviously uninterested in the plight of its huddled masses in order to indulge in the favors of the rich and powerful, new cults arose, usually under the form of Pentecostalism often imported from the United States – perhaps the most successful American influence in a subcontinent obviously fatigued from Yankee imperialism. Indeed, Pentecostalism is the fastest growing religion worldwide, expanding from 155 million to 588.5 million global adherents between 2000 and 2005.
The United States, the harbinger of representative democracy and the leading scientific power in the world, is one of the most religious countries on Earth, with over 85 percent declaring themselves religious (76 percent of Americans are Christians) 50 percent of people believing that the Bible is the source of truth, and 70 percent believing in a personal god. In 2008, 34 percent of Americans considered themselves “Born Again or Evangelical Christian” (ARIS, 2008). Thus, in spite of a recent growth of atheists and agnostics (from 8.2 percent in 1990 to 15 percent in 2008), churches, in their diversity, remain the main form of social organization for ethnic minorities; evangelicals play a decisive role in American politics; and Christian fundamentalism, as documented in this book, is a major force in shaping the values and social practices of American society. The strength of religion in America shows that scientific and technological development, supposedly the harvest of rationalism, can expand in a highly religious context. There are many ways to scientific discovery based on the deployment of reason, but more often than not they share the path with God’s way, in spite of obvious contradictions, as exemplified by the religious opposition to stem cell research. Why and how the United States is both the land of science and the kingdom of God is one the themes addressed in this volume.
However, the analysis presented here does not refer to the continuing presence of religion as a basic feature of societies around the world in the twenty-first century, but to its decisive role in nurturing the construction of resistance identities against the dominance of market values and the so-called Western culture in the process of globalization. Large segments of people that are economically, culturally, and politically disenfranchised around the world do not recognize themselves in the triumphant values of cosmopolitan conquerors (not even in the depressed lands of old industrial and rural America), and so they turn to their religion as a source of meaning and communal feeling in opposition to the new order. A new order that not only fails to benefit most of the poor on the planet but also deprives them of their own values, as they are invited to sing the glory of our globalized, technological condition without the possibility of relating to the new lyrics. What follows is not only marginalization but something deeper: humiliation. In this volume, I show how the terrorist leaders of the global Muslim jihad are often intellectuals, some of them members of wealthy families, whose revolt is not against economic oppression but against the disrespect of their culture and traditions, as symbolized in the Quran.
And so, since my early writing on religious fundamentalism in the mid-1990s, we have witnessed a global uprising, spearheaded by Al Qaeda, whose actions, together with our often misguided reactions, have transformed the political and geopolitical landscape as well as our everyday lives, marked by fear and the rituals of security measures. Al Qaeda is a loose global network of networks of activists who follow their own impulses and strategies while alluding to the mythical command of Osama bin Laden. It is an extraordinary example of the effectiveness of networking as an organizing form, but it is also an expression of a relentless revolt among the Muslim youth of the world, with an increasing influence among the Muslim minorities of Western Europe, who are often submitted to discrimination and abuse. Significantly, fundamentalism can hardly be found among the relatively affluent communities of Arab Americans in the United States. The rare cases of Muslim militants suspected of terrorist inclinations in America are usually poor African-Americans or Muslim immigrants.
But the growing influence of Muslim fundamentalism, whose roots and characteristics are studied in this volume, goes beyond al-Qaeda and terrorist networks. It is also behind the process of destabilization in Pakistan, a nuclear power, as an influential group of its armed forces and intelligence services supports the Taliban and similar groups in Afghanistan, in Kashmir, and in Pakistan itself, where the armed revolt of fundamentalists has been growing over the last decade. Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines are submitted to pressures from radical Islamic groups with a growing presence in the mosques, the universities, and among the impoverished public bureaucracy. The connection between radical Islam and warlords is feeding war and banditism in Africa.
Even more significant is the emergence of fundamentalist Iran as a dominant power in the Middle East, playing the nuclear card as a bargaining chip to obtain an international guarantee of its safety. Furthermore, because of the extraordinary blunder of the Bush–Cheney administration, which is also analyzed in this volume, the US has established a Shiite-dominated regime in Iraq, paving the way for a future strategic alliance between the two mainstays of the Shiite minority in the world: Iran and Iraq. Such an alliance is conducive to confrontation not only with Israel, but also the opposing Sunni fundamentalism represented by the House of Saud. The economic and political interests of different actors in the Middle East are at play in this chain of potential conflicts. But religious fundamentalism is more than a pretext; it is the value system that binds together different social groups and political actors: the Iranian Ayatollahs, the sectarian Shiite leaders of Iraq, Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Palestine, and, on the opposite side, the network of Sunni fundamentalist groups throughout the Middle East, from the Muslim Brothers in Egypt to the radical religious opposition in the Arabian Peninsula, Syria, and beyond.
Religious militancy, in its different forms, is playing a growing role in the political and cultural dynamics of a variety of countries. One-third of American voters are Christian fundamentalists, ready to mobilize on behalf of their cause, with no particular allegiance to any leader or party other than their God. Falun Gong (a spiritualist cult rather than a religion) has been the most feared source of political opposition in China in the last decade, prompting the Communist party to unleash all its repressive power to prevent a sort of modern Taiping rebellion against the process of globalization in China. In sum, the crisis of political legitimacy analyzed in this volume has created a vacuum in the mechanisms of political representation and social mobilization that is being filled with identity-based movements, the most important of which are the religious movements. What appeared as embryos of an emerging social dynamics a decade ago are now at the forefront of the social struggles and political dramas of our world. The analysis contained in this volume explains why and how.
My People, My Home, My Nation
Data show time and again that the more the world becomes global, the more people feel local. The proportion of “cosmopolitans,” people who feel they are “citizens of the world,” remains at barely 13 percent of people surveyed worldwide, as documented in this volume. More recent surveys show a continuation of this trend. People identify themselves primarily with their locality. Territorial identity is a fundamental anchor of belonging that is not even lost in the rapid process of generalized urbanization we are now experiencing. The village is not left behind; it is transported with its communal ties. And new urban villages are constructed, shrinking the size of the human experience to a dimension that can be managed and defended by people feeling lost in the whirlwind of a destructured world. When people need to expand their community, they refer to their nations, their islands in the global ocean of flows of capital, technology, and communication. Sometimes these nations coincide with the historically constructed nation-state, but not always; and then we abet the process of affirming nations without states, as well as opposing the nation to the state.
In the first case, nations as cultural communities have become trenches of mobilization and resistance against secular repression of their rights and identities. A nation-state as historical as Spain continues to be shaken by the unresolved conflict of the integration of Catalunya, Euskadi, and Galicia into the democratic Spanish state, in spite of the considerable effort of administrative decentralization conducted by Madrid in the last 30 years. Belgium is on the edge of disintegration at the time of this writing, as Wallonie and Flanders, two national communities, cannot resolve the differences resulting from their historical marriage of convenience. The quiet Scots, the fiery Irish, and the nostalgic Welsh are in the gradual but relentless process of reminding England that they are not the same nation; not only for historical reasons or economic grievances, but because many of them feel this way, as the national community is constructed primarily in the minds of its members. In less institutionalized contexts, nationalist struggles have been a fundamental component of social dynamics and political confrontation in the decade since I called attention to the preeminence of modern nationalism in the first edition of this volume. Serbian, Croatian, Eslovenian, Bosnian and Albanian nationalism have made the Balkans explode in a process that is far from resolution. Chechnya, Abkhazia, and Osetia continue to be the key sources of conflict for Russia, and the brief war provoked by Georgia almost induced a new cold war, which was ultimately deactivated by the pacifist standing of President Obama. Furthermore, the reconstruction of state power in Russia under Putin has operated on the basis of the recovery of Russian national pride, including the strengthening of military power as the ultimate attribute of the state.
In Latin America, after the collapse of the neoliberal discourse, nationalism has recovered its dominant role as the ideological rallying banner for countries around the continent, with Hugo Chavez engaging in latter-day socialism on behalf of the Venezuelan nation, in spite of his claims to the pan-continental Bolivarian revolution. In Asia, nationalism has replaced communism as the most effective ideology of the Chinese regime, as it has the support of the majority of the population, who cheer for the rise of Chinese power in the context of the historical humiliation they have suffered from the West. Both Japan and South Korea have accentuated their nationalist stand, often in opposition to each other, so that Japan remains the object of nationalist ire for both China and South Korea while the Japanese elites affirm themselves against the world in spite of the massive Americanization of their powerless youth.
This is a world of nations increasingly at odds with the nation-states that have engaged in networks of global governance to manage the global dimension of everything, at the expense of representing the nations’ interests. This is a process that I identified in the first edition of this volume and it is now in full swing around the world, with social movements and political actors challenging the globalizing state on behalf of the national interests betrayed by the nation-state. This has been the case in most Latin American countries, with the exception of Chile and Colombia, leading to a reversal of the globalization process in Latin America, while the Washington consensus has become a bad memory and a political liability. But this is also the case in the United States, as shown by the depth of the opposition to the NAFTA treaty among large segments of the working class, to the point that political candidates must be careful with their support of free trade, as the winds of protectionism are fueled by the crisis of the global economy.
Ethnicity has always been a basic attribute of self-identification. Not only because of shared historical practice, but because “the others” remind people everyday that they are “others” themselves. This generalized “otherness,” be it defined by skin color, language, or any other external attribute, characterizes the reality of our multicultural world. It is precisely because people from different cultures live side by side that they differentiate themselves in terms of ethnicity in order to find solidarity in the in-group as a refuge and a defense against uncontrollable market forces and the prejudice of the dominant ethnic groups in each context. When oppression and repression induce revolts, ethnicity often provides the material basis that constructs the commune of resistance. Thus, the crises resulting in Latin America from the failed process of integration of local and national societies into the global economy have intensified the strength and reach of indigenous social movements, spearheaded some time ago by the Mexican Zapatistas, a group that I analyzed in this volume. In Bolivia, in one of the most fascinating, albeit dramatic, laboratories of social transformation in the world, the indigenous people, led by Evo Morales, have not only secured access to the parliament and the government, but have also restructured the country under a new constitution that enshrines the principle of a plurality of ethnic nations as a foundational component of the nation-state. Throughout the Andean region, with the exception of Chile, indigenous movements have become a defining social actor, either in government or in opposition, so that the voices of the original inhabitants can no longer be ignored. Elsewhere on the planet, ethnicity has become a major source of self-organization, confrontation and, often, hatred and violence. Ethnicity continues to be the dominant factor in the politics of sub-Saharan Africa, as the nation-states constructed on the boundaries of colonialism have never coincided with the cultural roots of their people. Furthermore, ethnicity has been used by most African political elites as a key mechanism to build their networks of patron-age, and to make sure that their constituents hate each other, thus weakening their autonomy as political subjects.
And while the United States has learned throughout its history as an immigrant nation to cope with ethnicity (to the point that ethnic politics is fully acknowledged in political practices), Europe is painfully discovering that the abstract principle of individual citizenship is directly challenged by the multiculturalism of an increasingly multiethnic continent. The more Europe integrates new nations and the more it globalizes its labor force, the more ethnicity becomes a major component of social dynamics and power struggles. Paradoxically, for most people in this global Information Age, who they are matters more than what they do.
Project Identities
A key conceptual component of the analysis presented in this volume is the distinction between three major forms of collective identities: legitimizing identity, resistance identity, and project identity. I refer the reader to the elaboration of these concepts as presented in chapter 1 of this volume. I have commented above on how resistance identities, usually constructed by using the materials inherited from history (god, nation, ethnicity, locality), have intensified their significance in the social conflicts and social organization of our world in the last decade. In a parallel trend, we have also witnessed a major development of project identities aiming to change society by introducing new sets of values. In my view, a project identity emerges when social actors, on the basis of whatever cultural materials are available to them, build a new identity that redefines their position in society and, in so doing, seek the transformation of overall social structure. This has been the case of major proactive social movements throughout history. And this was the case of what I consider to be two of the most significant such social movements in our context: feminism and environmentalism. In both cases, the last decade has been the time when the values that both movements have projected on to society have become either dominant or at least very influential in most countries around the world, paving the way for their institutionalization in the state and their broadcasting in the media.
This is the case for environmentalism. In the first decade of the twenty-first century the awareness of global warming, and its potentially catastrophic consequences, became universal. While scientific knowledge on the process has existed for a long time, at least since the 1950s, it took the increasing influence of a multifaceted environmental movement in the media and in society at large to bring the issue to the attention of a majority of the population, and not only in developed countries. Today, most people consider global warming a threat to humankind that should be counteracted with decisive policy measures. Indeed, the United Nations Conference on Climate Change held in Paris in February 2007 represented a watershed of information, awareness, and public commitment from governments and international institutions to act on the matter. While politics as usual often lags on solemn promises, in this case there has actually been a significant follow-up in terms of public policies, partly thanks to the election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the most polluting country in the world. The process by which an issue that was largely ignored until the 1980s, both in public opinion and in public policies, came to the forefront of policy making, was long and complex. It was the result of weaving together the practices of scientists and environmental activists with those of mainstream media and, later, global Internet networks, so they could be heard by a small group of daring politicians (such as Al Gore or Margot Wallstro¨m) who became the conveyors of the movement’s warnings in the hallways of power. It was amplified by the mobilization of celebrities from the world of music and cinema who took the opportunity to use their fame for a good cause while increasing their own celebrity. Finally, it mobilized citizens to put pressure on their political representatives so that, barring an increasingly discredited group of reactionary politicians, such as the Bush–Cheney clique and their friends around the world, the majority of political campaigns included a “green platform” in their programs, with an emphasis on policies to counter the process of climate change. It followed a flurry of meetings, conventions, agreements, and treaties that slowly but surely trickled down into national legislations. To provide a rough measure of the extent of mobilization achieved by the global environmental movement, let me remind the reader that Earth Day, the symbolic annual celebration that started in the United States, was celebrated by 20 million people in its first year (1970), a stunning success at the time. It was celebrated by 1 billion people around the world in 2008. If the grand-children of our grandchildren can still live on this planet one day, it will be because of what the environmental movement has accomplished in the last four decades. The movement acted on behalf of our collective identity as a human species searching for our harmonious coexistence with the blue planet, after millennia of being submitted to the forces of nature and our catastrophic attempt during the last two centuries to use our environment for its consumable resources rather than preserve it as our irreplaceable home.
The crisis of patriarchalism, largely induced by feminism and by the gay and lesbian movement, has intensified in the first decade of this century, although in specific forms depending on cultural and social contexts in each area of the world. The most important revolution has already occurred: the transformation of the way in which women think about themselves and the way in which gays and lesbians think about themselves. Because domination is primarily based on the construction of reality in the human mind, along the lines suggested by Michel Foucault and demonstrated by contemporary neuroscience, if patriarchalism is not internalized by the subjects under patriarchalism, its demise is only a matter of time, struggle, and suffering, with much suffering still to come. Occasional backlash periodically invokes the forces of religious fundamentalism to re-state the sanctity of the patriarchal family, even in the midst of its disintegration as a way of life in many countries. Yet, in a growing number of countries, women have conquered legal parity in the work place, in spite of persistent, yet diminishing discrimination; the political system is gradually opening up to female leadership; and the majority of college graduates are women, even in fundamentalist countries, such as Iran.
Gays and lesbians continue to be imprisoned and executed around the world, yet in a number of countries, including the historically homophobic United States, they have won battle after battle (though losing some as well), in the streets, in the courts, in the media, and in the political system, so that they have undoubtedly torn down the walls of the closet to live out in the open, thus transforming the way society thinks about sexuality, and therefore personality as a whole.
As suggested in chapter 4 of this volume, written in 1997, the key battleground has been the transformation of the family. Regardless of what the laws say or what the state tries to enforce, if people form different kinds of families, the cornerstone of patriarchalism is called into question. The heterosexual, nuclear, patriarchal family built around a long-lasting marriage is today the exception rather than the rule in the United States and in the majority of Western Europe. Interestingly enough, the gay and lesbian movement has focused its efforts during the last years on obtaining legal recognition of their right to marry, form families, and have children. This is a major example of what an identity project is. By asserting their equal rights as humans, they transform the most basic institution of human organization throughout history.
The more women have conquered their autonomy, and the more new generations of women can no longer relate to the conditions under which their mothers and grandmothers used to live, the more feminism diversifies and transforms gender relations by shifting from emancipation to liberation, ultimately dissolving gender as a cultural category and a material institution that uses biological differences to construct the sexual division of labor. The old battles between the feminism of equality and the feminism of difference (see chapter 4) have been largely superseded by the new frontier of feminism: the de-gendering of society that implies the transformation of men.
The “new masculinities,” as analyzed by Marina Subirats, are based on the deployment of a new project identity, this time enacted by men in strategic alliance with the most innovative feminists: to find new perspectives of meaningful existence by liberating themselves from the burden of their responsibility as patriarchs (Castells and Subirats, 2007). Sharing life without defining roles could be a win–win situation for post-patriarchal men and women. Granted, only a tiny minority of men and women recognize themselves in this discourse. But the very fact that it exists in observable practices, in actual men’s groups, beyond the writings of feminists, is an indication of how far the feminist movement has reached. By mobilizing women against the institutions of patriarchalism, feminism has reached a stage of transformation in which the new project is to cancel the distinction between men and women as a cultural category. Neither men nor women, but individuals with specific biological attributes searching to share life under a variety of organizational forms, is the historical horizon that has emerged in the twenty-first century on the basis of the liberation struggles of the last half century.
The Network State
The analysis of globalization has been dominated for a long time by the debate about the fate of the nation-state in a world in which the key processes at the source of wealth, technology, information, and power have been globalized.
Some observers predicted or even argued for the demise of the nation-state and its replacement by new institutions of global governance. Most social scientists however emphasized the obvious fact of the continuity of nation-states that were, and still are, the primary subjects in the exercise of power and government. In this volume, however, I formulated a different hypothesis, on the basis of the observation of new trends in political systems around the world. I could observe simultaneously the persistence of nation-states and their transformation as components of a different form of state able to operate in the new historical context by managing the challenges to the traditional nation-state by the opposing processes of globalization and identification: globalization of wealth and power, identification of culture and representation.
My theorization, as has always been the case in my work, was inspired by the observation of a concrete process: the creation and deployment of the European Union. European nation-states became increasingly aware of the difficulty in managing the economic and technological transformation induced by globalization within the boundaries of their sovereign territories. So, they traded some degree of sovereignty for a greater capacity to intervene jointly in the shaping of the world economy. It followed the increasing integration of economic institutions, which paved the way for joint action on some of the key issues that required global governance, such as environmental policy and national and international security. At the same time, they responded to increasing pressures from their citizenry’s claims of identity in terms of their territorial and cultural specificity by engaging in a process of devolution of power that decentralized most European states, and even permitted, in certain cases, the participation of nongovernmental organizations in policy deliberations. Thus, over time, a new form of state emerged in practice: a state made of ad hoc networking in the practice of government between nation-states, European institutions, global institutions of governance, regional and local governments, and civil society organizations. While the core of political power remained in the nation-states, their actual decision-making process became characterized by a variable geometry of co-sovereignty, involving a plurality of actors and institutions depending on the issue and the context of each decision to be made.
While in the rest of the world the level of co-national and transnational political integration was considerably less institutionalized, the process of governance became increasingly characterized by the networks of cooperation (not exempt from competition) between nation-states and international institutions. The emergence of an objectively multilateral order induced the gradual rise of a multilateral institutional system of co-governance. In this sense, there was indeed a supersession of the classic nation-state of the Modern Age through the resumption of the existing nation-states in a different form of state. In order to survive in the new context of global governance, the nation-states morphed into a different form. Not a global government, as some have prophesied, but a network of national and international political actors jointly exercising global governance (Castells, 2007).
Then, 9/11 happened and the world changed. Or so it appeared. As analyzed in this volume, the United States, governed at the time by Bush–Cheney (a bicephalous entity), felt directly threatened by fanatic violence and mobilized in self-defense by using military power, the only dimension in which the US was, and remains, an autonomous superpower. In the first stage of the counter-offensive, America received the solidarity and, to a lesser extent, the support of the international community. But the neo-conservative clique that had captured an inexperienced president decided to seize the opportunity to use military might to go beyond Afghanistan and to remodel the geopolitical order according to the interests of the United States, aligned, in their view, with the interests of the civilized world at large (Kagan, 2004). Thus the invasion of Iraq, and the attempt to restore unilateralism in the conduct of international affairs; not only in the geopolitical arena, but in the management of all global issues, from environmentalism to human rights, international security, and financial regulation (or the lack thereof). The Iraq invasion was the return of the state in its most traditional form of exercising its monopoly of violence, and it followed a major crisis of international governance institutions, starting with the United Nations, marginalized by the United States, and the apparent triumph of unilateralism in spite of an objectively multilateral world. The dynamics of agency (in this case, the American state asserting its superpower status) seemed to prevail over the logic of the structure. It was an illusion that only a few years later had to reckon with the harsh reality of the limits to military power in a globally interdependent world. Not only was the United States drawn into protracted, draining wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, as al-Qaeda wanted, but its inability to build a global governance system led to a multidimensional, global crisis of which the financial collapse of 2008 was only its most damaging expression. The election of Barack Obama to the presidency of the United States signaled a return to the acceptance of the fundamental reality of the interdependence of our world, and America’s involvement in a more determined practice of global expansion of the network state: the London consensus has come to substitute the now discredited Washington consensus. This is to say that in the long term the trends that characterized the social structure ultimately imposed their logic, but in the short term the autonomy of the political agency could oppose such logic because of the interests and values of the actors occupying the commanding heights of the agency. When such is the case, as during the Bush–Cheney administration period, the discrepancy between structure and agency induces systemic chaos, and ultimately destructive processes that add to the difficulties of managing the adaptation of the nation-state to the global conditions of the network society.
Informational Politics and the Crisis of Democracy
Power struggles have always been decided by the battle over people’s minds; this is to say, by the management of processes of information and communication that shape the human mind. Because the Information Age is precisely characterized by the revolution in information and communication technologies, a new form of politics has emerged in the last two decades, a form that I conceptualized in the first edition of this volume as informational politics. In fact, all politics since the beginning of time have been, to some extent, informational. But the centrality of mass media in our society, and the technological transformation of information processing and mass communication have placed informational politics at the heart of the processes by which power is allocated and exercised in our society. As I proposed years ago in this volume, politics in the network society is primarily media politics.
The predominant role of media politics has two major consequences. First, while the media are not the power-holders because they are diverse and subjected to business and political influences, they constitute the space of power. Therefore, the understanding of power in our society requires a comprehension of the structure and dynamics of mass media, a structure characterized by their organization around a core of global multimedia business networks (Arsenault and Castells, 2008). Second, the characteristics of the political message in the mass communication context induce the personalization of politics. Political leaders are the face of politics. Media politics is based on personality politics everywhere in the world. The direct consequence of this observation is that the most potent political weapon is the discrediting of the opponent’s persona. Character assassination is the most effective way to conquer power. This opens the door to scandal politics as the key strategy for power-making in our society (Thompson, 2000). While political scandals are as old as the known history of humankind, the technology of their fabrication and communication has been perfected in recent times. And because any party or leader must be ready to retaliate against the damaging tactics of the opponent, everybody stockpiles ammunition, and ultimately everybody fires. In the years after the original publication of this volume, scandal politics has wrecked governments, parties, leaders, and political systems almost everywhere in the world. Leaking information to the media, or diffusing it over the Internet, has supplanted investigative reporting and has become both a political strategy and a freelance business, with public opinion as the target of the strategy. In May 2009, dozens of British MPs saw their political reputations destroyed (and probably their careers as well) when information was leaked regarding their use of taxpayers’ money to cater to their daily needs, even for modest expenses associated to their personal comfort. More than the amount of money involved, what provoked public outrage was the reality of the reckless behavior of elected representatives in the context of the daily pain experienced by people in the midst of an economic crisis. Studies on the political effects of the generalized practice of scandal politics show the variability of its damaging impact on politicians. For instance, public opinion of Bill Clinton was not diminished by his lies regarding the Monica Lewinsky affair. The reason for this is that most citizens consider all politicians equally immoral, and so they use other criteria than morality to decide their preferences. However, available evidence points to the fact that what suffers as a result of repeated scandals is the credibility of political parties, politicians, and government institutions as a whole. This is tantamount to saying that there is a direct link between media politics, scandal politics, and the crisis of democracy, not as an ideal, but as it is practiced in actuality in most of the world. The data of the crisis of political legitimacy as presented in this volume have been followed by new data in recent years showing the aggravation of such a crisis. The large majority of citizens around the world despise their representatives and do not trust their political institutions (Castells, 2009).
The widespread diffusion of the Internet and of wireless communication networks has increased people’s awareness about the wrongdoing of their leaders. Any citizen with a mobile phone may be able to catch such a wrongdoing in the act and instantly upload damaging images on the Internet, to expose the politician to the shame of the world. The only way for the powerful to escape the surveillance of the powerless is to remain invisible in their secluded spaces. The Internet has multiplied the chances for the distribution of damaging political information, thus contributing to the exposure of corruption and immorality, and ultimately to the crisis of political legitimacy.
Meanwhile, access to the Internet, which bypasses the controlled world of the mass media, has democratized information, making it less dependent on money and political bureaucracies. Thus, while there is a growing crisis of politics-as-usual, there is simultaneously a process of transformation of democracy by offering political avenues to grassroots expression and to political leaders who are not afraid of confronting scandal politics because they have little to hide. For the time being, this is the exception rather than the rule, but it offers the possibility of regenerating the processes of democratic representation. This is what appears to have been at work in the presidential electoral campaign of Barack Obama, which I studied in 2008 (Castells, 2009), in which the use of the Internet was decisive in mobilizing millions of citizens and ultimately electing as president a most unlikely candidate. Thus, there is no historical inevitability of the demise of democracy under the new forms of informational politics. Instead, what seems to be emerging is the simple fact that without acting on the means of communication and by the means of communication (including the Internet) there is no possibility of enacting power or, for that matter, counter-power. Therefore, the democratic institutions of the Information Age are confronted with the dilemma of how to overcome their current enclosure in the institutional system to democratize the means of mass communication, including the networks of mass communication organized around the Internet.
The World is Not Flat
For a brief moment in our recent history the rise of the global network society was interpreted by some influential ideologues as the coming of a flat world; a world following common institutional rules and slowly adopting a similar set of values modeled on the Western (e.g. Anglo Saxon) culture. Globalization would ultimately lead to a largely homogeneous global society whose logic would only be resisted by the obscure forces of traditionalists and fanatics who should be suppressed with the utmost energy so as to reach the superior state of capitalism: the achievement of world peace by enshrining the twin rules of unfettered markets and liberal democracy. The popularity of this view of the world did not come from the partial reading of the diagnostic I had formulated much earlier concerning the emergence of a global social structure (the network society), diversified in its practice by a diversity of cultures and institutions. It resulted, as with all other attempts in history to propose a unified form of civilization (naturally defined by the “civilized” for the “uncivilized”), from the last hurrah of the American empire, when it felt alone at last in its superpower status after the disintegration of the Soviet empire. The perceived military, technological, economic, and cultural dominance of America appeared to provide an opportunity for the country to benevolently reshape the world to the image, and therefore the interests, of the United States and its allies. Since the world was already moving spontaneously toward cultural and institutional homogeneity, led by global financial markets, global free trade, and global networks of communication (spearheaded by the Internet), it was logical to assume that the culture that was the matrix of globalization (the American culture) would become the global culture, even if spoken in a diversity of funny accents.
In fact, the diversity of human experience and historical trajectories is not reducible to markets, technology, and liberal democracy as the readers of this volume will hopefully come to appreciate. When one-dimensional globalization was imposed from the central nodes to the entire system by enforcing the logic of financial markets and multinational networks of production and trade, people around the world resisted and counteracted, finding their forms of resistance in the materials of their cultural specificity, hanging onto their god, their family, their locality, their ethnicity, and their nation. When cultural domination threatened to obliterate their beliefs, they sometimes reacted with senseless violence. Furthermore, the global economy itself, while based on global interdependence of markets, was interpreted in different ways in different areas of the world. And so, China and India, rather than becoming just sources of low-cost manufacturing and future markets for American or European goods, embarked on an ambitious process of industrialization and capital accumulation that has substantially modified economic power relations in the world, with the US government surviving only by borrowing Chinese capital. The disregard of the human cost of globalization has reestablished nation-states in Latin America and other countries in the world as a last resort against poverty and marginalization. Moreover, the ideology of laissez faire, supposedly the lever of riches in the new, flat world, led to financial irresponsibility and political neglect in the management of Western capitalism, ultimately inducing the structural crisis of 2008. Global interdependency then was not the act of capital and capitalists, who became dependent on their respective national governments, but of nation-states helping each other to weather the storm in their hope to escape the wrath of their duped citizens.
Not even the global networks of culture and communication displayed the flatness that they were supposed to symbolize. The Internet is a global network of communication, but it expresses the diversity of the cultures of the world, with more Chinese than Americans on the Internet, and with English accounting for only 29 percent of global Internet interaction (Castells, Tubella, Sancho, Roca, 2007). There is indeed a globalization of the production and distribution of cultural products, including movies, television programs, and music. But most television programming is local and national, not global, and global products are not synonymous with Hollywood production, as Latin American tele-novelas, Bollywood (India), Nollywood (Nigeria), and multiple other sources of global cultural production increase their market share in the global multimedia networks. In other words, the networks are global, but the narratives, values, and interests are diverse, and globally produced and distributed, albeit asymmetrically, around the world.