세계화된 네트워크 자본주의 하의 국제사회운동과 헤게모니
피터 워터만 / 2005년 9월 
출처: http://www.choike.org/nuevo_eng/informes/3407.html
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INTERNATIONAL SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND 
HEGEMONY UNDER A GLOBALISED NETWORKED CAPITALISM 
The role of research, documentation, communication 
Peter Waterman 
September 2005 
Do international labour studies conferences constitute privileged places for moving forward the dialogue between the ‘old’ labour and union institutions, on the one hand, and the ‘new’ global justice movement, on the other? Drawing from earlier experience, this paper begins with the assumption that this is the case. Part 1 was written as an exercise of preparation for the International Colloquium on Anti-Globalism, Amsab/Institute of Social History, Ghent, Belgium, September 9, 2005. It has been only marginally edited. Part 2 was written after the event and suggests that more than such places are necessary. The old, established and traditional social movement (developed under a national industrial capitalism, institutionalised, Westocentric, incorporated into old understandings about and with capital, state and ‘development’) needs to take congnisance of its relative power and privilege. And it then needs to make space for something that might be relatively marginal and weak but that nonetheless comes out of a globalised and networked capitalism. The ‘movement of movements’ proposes new understandings of the world; it identifies new arenas of dispute with the hegemonic forces; and it suggests new forms of dialogue between social movements.
Part 1: A Privileged Place?
Introduction: a crucial triangle 
Documenting and researching 
Social movements and global ‘governance’
Part 2: Appropriate Spaces Need to be Created 
First the bad news 
So what could the good news possibly be?
Conclusion 
Extended Bibliography - Websites and lists 
Appendix 1 / Appendix 2/ Collection and Protection of Electronic Archives