Restructuring and resistance: Diverse voices of struggle in western Europe

Av Kolya Abramsky

250,00kr

This is absolutely packed with information, perspectives and analysis on a wide range of issues relevant not only to our region but at a global level aswell. Each chapter is written by a grassroots group involved in resisting and changing current society. This is a truly awesome collection of writings direct from the frontlines of anti-capitalism. 566 pages long with contributions from Poland to Portugal and from organisations including CARF, CAGE, Earth First!, EuroDusnie, Greenpeace, Peasant Solidarnosc, Workers Solidarity Movement and Ya Basta! (the list could go on and on). While it may be bewildering to many who desire to get involved in anti-capitalist activities, this would certainly give you added insight into what you can get your teeth into. We may be a ”circus” Mr. Blair but we sure as hell know what we are talking about (in detail, with footnotes!). If you want to really understand why the cops are beating and shooting us, these are the ideas and actions they hate.

Restructuring and Resistance is an inspired book that succeeds in explaining why many people in western Europe are opposing capitalist globalisation. It does this by doing what the mainstream media will not, giving them a voice.

The book consists of 77 individual chapters, almost all of them written by activists based on their experiences of struggle against the different aspects of capitalist globalisation. Those that aren’t are chapters that give a theoretical background that links these struggles together, particularly in the opening section, ‘The Europe of Capital’. This makes it essential reading for Irish activists looking forward to the second Nice referendum.

But it doesn’t isolate itself to the EU; the Zapatistas and Indian farmers put in an appearance. A substantial section deals with the attempt of the EU to criminalise and exclude immigrants and the methods that we are using to struggle against this. And there are contributions from the ‘edges’ of the EU, particularly from Poland and Turkey.

There are flaws, the lack of an index being one, but despite this the book gives one a real feel of the anti-capitalist movement that is entirely lacking from the left and mainstream press. Without trying to, it answers in part the ‘where did we come from’ question that is so essential to planning ‘where we should go to’. Here we see all those ‘disconnected’ struggles of the 90’s in Europe; road protests, GMO’s, privatisation, urban sprawl and Fortress Europe as the source of this movement. In particular, numerous essays mention the global J18 protests and the conferences and caravans that immediately preceded it.

Given its thickness (550+ pages) it is also remarkably cheap. This book is written by the movement and is very much for the movement. It is essential reading and like the ads tell us something you won’t find in the shops.

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This is absolutely packed with information, perspectives and analysis on a wide range of issues relevant not only to our region but at a global level aswell. Each chapter is written by a grassroots group involved in resisting and changing current society. This is a truly awesome collection of writings direct from the frontlines of anti-capitalism. 566 pages long with contributions from Poland to Portugal and from organisations including CARF, CAGE, Earth First!, EuroDusnie, Greenpeace, Peasant Solidarnosc, Workers Solidarity Movement and Ya Basta! (the list could go on and on). While it may be bewildering to many who desire to get involved in anti-capitalist activities, this would certainly give you added insight into what you can get your teeth into. We may be a ”circus” Mr. Blair but we sure as hell know what we are talking about (in detail, with footnotes!). If you want to really understand why the cops are beating and shooting us, these are the ideas and actions they hate.

Restructuring and Resistance is an inspired book that succeeds in explaining why many people in western Europe are opposing capitalist globalisation. It does this by doing what the mainstream media will not, giving them a voice.

The book consists of 77 individual chapters, almost all of them written by activists based on their experiences of struggle against the different aspects of capitalist globalisation. Those that aren’t are chapters that give a theoretical background that links these struggles together, particularly in the opening section, ‘The Europe of Capital’. This makes it essential reading for Irish activists looking forward to the second Nice referendum.

But it doesn’t isolate itself to the EU; the Zapatistas and Indian farmers put in an appearance. A substantial section deals with the attempt of the EU to criminalise and exclude immigrants and the methods that we are using to struggle against this. And there are contributions from the ‘edges’ of the EU, particularly from Poland and Turkey.

There are flaws, the lack of an index being one, but despite this the book gives one a real feel of the anti-capitalist movement that is entirely lacking from the left and mainstream press. Without trying to, it answers in part the ‘where did we come from’ question that is so essential to planning ‘where we should go to’. Here we see all those ‘disconnected’ struggles of the 90’s in Europe; road protests, GMO’s, privatisation, urban sprawl and Fortress Europe as the source of this movement. In particular, numerous essays mention the global J18 protests and the conferences and caravans that immediately preceded it.

Given its thickness (550+ pages) it is also remarkably cheap. This book is written by the movement and is very much for the movement. It is essential reading and like the ads tell us something you won’t find in the shops.

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Vikt 1,01 kg
Författare

Kolya Abramsky