JWSR Volume 10, Number 1, Winter 2004 11 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism: The Case of the “Anti- Globalization” Movement Jeff rey M. Ayres Department of Political Science Saint Michael’s College Box 362, 1 Winooski Park Colchester, Vermont 05439 jayres@smcvt.edu http://academics.smcvt.edu/jayres/ journal of world-systems research, x, 1, winter 2004, 11–34 Special Issue: Global Social Movements Before and After 9-11 http://jwsr.ucr.edu/ issn 1076–156x © 2004 Jeff rey M. Ayres I N T RODUC TION The rise of the so-called “anti-globalization movement” represents one of the most signifi cant illustrations of social confl ict and contentious political behavior of the past several decades. Th e numerous boisterous and well-attended protest events against neoliberal globalization at the turn of the century, more- over, seemed to provide evidence of the rise of an incipient transnational move- ment, as from Seattle, to Chiang Mai, to Prague, to Quebec City and fi nally Genoa, domestic and internationally-represented protests developed solidarities, stirred public debate and attracted larger crowds committed to challenging neo- liberal policies and institutions. Th e transnational character of this movement attracted particular attention, and its emergence coincided with a remarkable and increasingly well-documented upsurge in transnational civic activity around a host of global issues (Smith, Pagnucco and Chatfi eld 1997, Della Porta, Kriesi and Rucht 1999; Tarrow 2001; Khagram, Riker and Sikkink 2002; Smith and Johnston 2002), while sparking a mini-publishing industry of “how-to” manuals for budding street activists (Danaher and Burbach 2000; Welton and Wolf 2001; Prokosch and Raymond 2002). One means of understanding the recent trajectory of this protest movement is to appreciate that its dynamics have been shaped by an underlying and quite ferocious contest over people’s interpretations and understandings of the sup- posed benefi ts of neoliberal economic policies. How people interpret and frame Jeff rey M. Ayres Th e rise of the protest movement against neoliberal globalization represents one of the most signifi cant illustrations of social confl ict and contentious political behavior of the past several decades. Th is paper contends that cen- tral to the movement’s rise and evolution has been the active mobilization of meanings or interpretations critical of neoliberal policies and institutions. In eff ect, the so-called “anti- globalization movement” has benefi ted particu- larly from a transnationally-shared diagnosis, which implicates neoliberalism for a host of global social ills. However, civil society activ- ists, especially after the Seattle World Trade Organization protests in 1999, have had a dif- fi cult time generating agreed upon strategic responses to neoliberal policies. In particular, the political environment for frame dissemina- tion has become a much more contested one in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, as regional and tactical diff erences within the protest move- ment have become much more apparent. Th e diffi cult experiences of civil society groups committed to sustaining protest against neo- liberal globalization are not unusual, but con- sistent with the history of other protest move- ments. Th ese movements similarly matured and positioned themselves as genuine forces for substantial political and social change. abstract http://academics.smcvt.edu/jayres/ http://jwsr.ucr.edu/ Jeff rey M. Ayres12 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 13 understandings of current economic globalization processes—and how these conceptual framings coalesce to structure global protest—is a process at least as important as how political-economic changes associated with globalization have provoked collective action.¹ In fact, part of the framing contest surrounding the globalization debate has centered on the label “anti-globalization;” what we have really been witnessing over the past several years is a maturing of a protest movement against contemporary neoliberal globalization processes. Moreover, critical to this contentious mobilization has been the crystallization of a broadly interpretive, increasingly transnationally-shared diagnostic frame that attributes a variety of social ills to the past 15–20 year span of neoliberal ascendancy. Th at the world’s economy has been undergoing a neoliberal transformation over the past twenty years is hardly in dispute (MacEwan 1999; Tabb 2003). Responding to the global economic slowdown as well as increased international competitiveness for markets, which characterized the 1970s, political and business leaders in several key Northern developed states undertook dramatic political- economic reforms designed to channel the globalization of the world’s economy in a so-called neoliberal direction. Proponents of neoliberalism, perhaps most notably the Reagan and Th atcher governments of the 1980s, thus pushed for more liberalized trade and investment, tax cuts and concurrent cuts in public spending on social services, deregulation and the privatization of state-owned industries or services. Notably, such a policy direction was at odds with the ini- tial legitimizing basis for the post-World War Two Bretton Woods international economic management system, in which government regulation, social welfare systems and full employment policies were considered an acceptable compliment to essentially still market-based fundamentals (Korten 1996). However, the break with the Bretton Woods regime in the 1970s and the resulting neoliberal turn in the global economy played an important role in shap- ing the incidences of national, regional and at times apparently transnational protest, which erupted in the 1990s to challenge the neoliberal globalization paradigm. Rising criticism and mounting public demonstrations directed at neo- liberal policies and institutions had been occurring globally for some time, but gained particular attention after the 1999 World Trade Organization (WTO) protests in Seattle, raising the specter of a budding legitimacy crisis within the neoliberal paradigm (Useem 2002; Finnegan 2003). Proponents of neoliberal policies insisted that there remained few alternatives to neoliberal globalization, while the protestors asserted that the globalization of the world’s economy in fact need not inevitably follow a neoliberal template. Rather, many varied proposals for what was argued to be a more socially, economically and ecologically equi- table globalization process began to emerge and to be debated.² Th is paper examines the importance of the mobilization of contentious beliefs and interpretations critical of neoliberal globalization. Th e record of neo- liberalism has given activists a wealth of shared experiences from which to fash- ion a meaningful and increasingly transnationally-shared understanding of the perceived negative eff ects of such policies. Th e discussion herein focuses broadly on the challenges facing civil society activists as they have tried to fashion and sustain such a transnational consensus that both attributes blame and devel- ops strategies of action against neoliberal policy initiatives. Yet, the events of September 11, 2001 have clearly muddied the potential trajectory of this protest movement: while some activists have maintained that the mobilization potential of the movement has been little changed by the fallout from the terrorist attacks on the United States, others in the media and various political establishments have been quick to write off the movement’s potential. Clearly, the protest move- ment after September 11 has evolved within a more constrained political environ- ment, with activists facing a markedly resilient state, and a resurgent neoliberal agenda (Ayres and Tarrow 2002). At the same time, the events of September 11 and its aftermath have had an unintended eff ect of illustrating the durable char- acter of the protest movement, which has surprisingly wide geographic reach. COLLE C TI V E AC TION F R A M E S AGA I NST N EOLI BE R A L GLOBA LIZAT ION Th e concept of framing processes is analytically useful for highlighting how the development and spread of mobilizing ideas are integral to social movement dynamics (Snow et al. 1986; Snow and Benford 1988). For movement activists, framing is “meaning work”: an active and contentious process where actors are engaged in producing and disseminating meanings that diff er from and may in fact challenge existing socio-political conditions (Benford and Snow 2000). As such, when movement participants “frame” a particular social condition, “they frame, or assign meaning to and interpret events and conditions in ways that are ¹. Th e amount of research documenting the role played by political opportunities and mobilizing structures in social movement development is voluminous; a good begin- ning approach for sampling this literature would be to consult McAdam, McCarthy and Zald (1996) and Tarrow (1998) for excellent synthetic overviews. ². For just a few examples see Clark (2003), Henderson (1999), and Foster and Anand (1999). Jeff rey M. Ayres14 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 15 ing South. Th us, while various movement and region-specifi c collective action frames were emerging throughout the 1980s and early 1990s in diff erent parts of the world, it would require the development of more inclusive master frame to bind disparate actors into a protest movement against neoliberalism that increas- ingly had achieved international scope. Diagnostic Framing: Identifying Neoliberalism as “the Problem” Again, by the early-to-mid-1990s, many regions of the world had become settings for contentious political debates and social confl icts between opponents and proponents of neoliberal globalization policies. Across these disparate areas, activists were increasingly linking a variety of social, political and economic prob- lems with some of the major developments in the global political economy. In particular, activists labeled international institutions and regimes associated with the advancement of neoliberal policies, as those actors responsible for some of the economic dislocations and political confl icts of recent years. Th us a process of diagnostic framing was unfolding, serving to motivate individuals through movement specifi c collective action frames that attacked tenets of neoliberalism. For example, across Western Europe, the fi rst salvos in what would ultimately evolve into what have become the tens-of-thousands strong European Union (EU) summit protests in recent years emerged with opposition to the European Monetary Union proposals implicit in the Maastricht Treaty. Some states, such as Denmark, outright rejected the treaty (Geyer and Ayres 1995), while others witnessed widespread popular upheaval against the accord’s perceived mandate for fi scal austerity and social cutbacks. Th e massive and disruptive French gen- eral strike against the then Juppé government’s economic proposals in the winter of 1995 was but the most dramatic example of this public discord (Rodrik 1997; Bourdieau 1998; Ancelovici 2002). More widespread and mainstream concerns about an emerging Maastricht-induced European democratic defi cit linked con- straints bearing down on the sovereign policy-making capacities of EU-member governments, and fed growing popular perceptions of an aloof clique of European business and political elite more concerned with maximizing continental eco- nomic effi ciency than with addressing mounting social insecurities such as rising unemployment (Habermas 2001). Meanwhile, by 1994, a series of popular campaigns against neoliberal poli- cies had buff eted the North American publics in successive waves, from North to South. In Canada, widespread public opposition to the proposed Canada- US Free Trade Agreement coalesced in 1988 into a cross-country anti-free trade movement (Ayres 1998). Canadian social activists and nationalists feared liber- alizing trade with the U.S. would result in the exodus of jobs, pressure to har- monize social programs and the possible loss of cultural identity. Th e anti-free intended to mobilize potential adherents and constituencies, to garner bystander support and to demobilize antagonists” (Snow and Benford 1988: 198). Framing processes thus will be seen to provide a useful conceptual guide for understand- ing the ongoing struggle to produce and disseminate mobilizing ideas critical of neoliberal globalization. So-called collective action frames result from this meaning production and serve several crucial functions for movements. Collective action frames are “con- structed as movement adherents negotiate a shared understanding of some prob- lematic condition or situation they defi ne as in need of change, make attributions regarding who or what to blame, articulate an alternative set of arrangements and urge others to act in concert to aff ect change” (Benford and Snow 2000: 613). In other words, collective action frames provide diagnostic attribution, which is concerned with problem identifi cation, and prognostic attribution, which is concerned with problem resolution (Snow and Benford 1992). So-called “master frames” serve similar functions to movement specifi c collective action frames. However, master frames provide broader interpretive paradigms for multiple movements, shaping the outlook of activists and movements. When faced with what are interpreted as unjust social conditions, activists, then, develop move- ment specifi c, and sometimes master collective action frames, to highlight the unjust character of events or conditions which are no longer tolerable and are now framed as undefendable (Ibid: 137). Such frames then provide “legitimiz- ing accounts” (McAdam, McCarthy and Zald 1988: 713) shaping and sustaining mobilization campaigns. Activists by the late 1990s successfully developed a contentious, increasingly transnationally-accepted master collective action frame to challenge the pre- vailing neoliberal orthodoxy as it existed in such institutions as the WTO, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and regional trade agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Th e construction of such an anti-neoliberal globalization collective action frame involved an especially long, contentious and diffi cult process, as movement activists faced two espe- cially daunting challenges: a powerful and wealthy set of interests in those states, corporations and other social actors supportive of neoliberal policies; and the diversity of diff erent regions, states, languages, cultures and popular experiences aff ected by neoliberal globalization. For example, where Canadian social activists in the mid-1980s may have crafted one of the earliest collective action frames in the developed North against neoliberalism in their protest movement against the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (CUSFTA), the experiences of these Canadians diff ered considerably from the socially disruptive eff ects of the IMF’s structural adjustment programs, which had encouraged numerous incidents of riots, strikes and other acts of acute collective action across states in the develop- Jeff rey M. Ayres16 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 17 trade movement that emerged played a highly public and intrusive role in the Canadian federal election that autumn, which turned into a de facto referendum on the proposed accord. Despite the eventual ratifi cation of the CUSFTA, due in no small part to the splintering of the anti-free trade opposition party vote in the federal election, the Canadian cross-country coalition-building campaign provided a useful model for U.S. and Mexican groups to adopt in the subsequent campaign against the NAFTA. Anti-NAFTA mobilizing drew from both national-level campaigns as well as trilateral strategizing and protest actions mounted between Canadian, U.S. and Mexican civil society groups (Macdonald and Schwartz 2002). More spe- cifi cally, while national groups may have had diff erent mobilization agendas, there was an emergent trilateral collective action frame rooted in a distrust of NAFTA as a thinly veiled neoliberal document. Nationally, innovative new coalitions emerged, such as the Alliance for Responsible Trade (ART) and the Citizens Trade Campaign (CTC) in the U.S. (Dreiling 2001), and the Mexican Action Network on Free Trade (RMALC) in Mexico, the latter notably model- ing itself after the Canadian anti-free trade coalition (Sinclair 1992). NAFTA’s eventual ratifi cation, despite persistent public doubts and civil society organiz- ing, ultimately would not be the end of popular discontent. Th e Zapatista guer- rilla movement in the southern Mexican state of Chiapas, began its uprising on behalf of the majority poor indigenous people of Chiapas on January 1, 1994, specifi cally targeting NAFTA and its neoliberal economic prescriptions for con- tinentally liberalized trade and investment. Meanwhile, as European and North American collective action frames, which focused on the perceived ills of liberalizing economies, buttressed these conti- nental-level protest campaigns, state actors and civil society organizations across the developing South had been mounting their own protests for years against the social fallout caused by IMF structural adjustment programs, the repressive policies of brutal dictatorships or the generalized inequities of the post-World War Two Bretton Woods system.³ In the immediate post-war period through to the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system in the early 1970s, many state actors frequently in partnership with business associations and non-governmen- tal associations (NGOs), pursued state-led policies such as import substitution industrialization or cartels, in largely futile eff orts to alter the international divi- sion of labor, improve the terms of trade, or improve developing states’ positions relative to the global economy. Th e United Nation’s sponsored New International Economic Order project also represented an attempt by state and civil society actors from the developing South to negotiate new and more favorable economic arrangements with the wealthier Northern industrialized states. Yet, the oil shocks of the 1970s and the emergence of the debt crisis in the early 1980s largely shifted the locus of resistance in the developing South to civil soci- ety actors. As numerous states across Africa, Latin America and Asia sought to stave off fi scal insolvency, structural adjustment programs were arranged with the IMF, the negative repercussions of which almost always fell on the more vulner- able social actors. In exchange for desperately needed loans, the IMF prescribed deep budget cuts to social spending, a lowering of taxes, increases in interest rates and a general liberalization of trade and investment policies to encourage states across the South to become more hospitable to the arrival of multinational cor- porations and capital. Frequently lacking institutional allies within the aff ected polities or organizational resources, including independent labor unions, social actors often responded to these austerity programs with much less organized acts of resistance and protest, including food riots, strikes and other sometimes violent urban street actions (Walton and Ragin 1989; Acuna and Williams 1994; Walton and Seddon 1994). Th ose groups that did mount better organized grass- roots responses to this so-called “shock therapy” also found themselves harassed if not shut down by the military dictatorships and authoritarian regimes which were frequently on the receiving end of IMF loans. Th us, by the mid-1990s, a number of regional protest campaigns were being shaped by collective actions frames that implicated neoliberal policies and institu- tions for the mounting inequalities and dislocations of the post-Bretton Woods era. In fact, the record of neoliberalism around the world was less than auspi- cious and made it easier for activists to assign blame: the total external debt of developing countries had skyrocketed, the gap between the richest and poorest states had grown demonstrably, poverty had increased in many developing states, and the average per capita income growth rate was signifi cantly lower across the developing south than had been the case in the roughly twenty years before the onset of the debt crisis and the policy generalization of the neoliberal model.⁴ Furthermore, the international economy had become increasingly unstable, buf- feted by a number of fi nancial shocks encouraged by unregulated capital fl ows. Th ese shocks in Mexico, and then eventually East-Asia, Russia and Brazil, which ³. Certainly some would argue that people across the developing South have been resisting the economically dominating, colonialist and imperialist policies of the devel- oped North for centuries. See Heckscher (2002) as well as Cavanagh (2002). ⁴. Evidence abounds of the uneven results of neoliberal globalization over the past two decades. Th ese examples are drawn from the United Nations (1999) and the World Bank (2000). Also see Weller, Scott and Hersch (2001) and Stiglitz (2002). Jeff rey M. Ayres18 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 19 had evolved out of a globally deregulated market for currency speculation, would further blemish the neoliberal record. Even across portions of the developed North, especially in Western Europe, rising unemployment and the image of increasingly fi nancially straightjacketed welfare systems provoked more wide- spread public unrest. In conjunction with this at best uneven neoliberal record, an expanding array of international agreements, which codifi ed neoliberal principles to promote and safeguard liberalized trade and investment, encouraged new expressions of social discontent. NAFTA, the EU Maastricht Treaty, and perhaps most notably, the creation of the WTO in 1995, raised concerns about the hierarchical and elit- ist structure of trade negotiations and institutions. Moreover, the WTO’s new agenda also attracted concern, as in an eff ort to enforce a rules-based trading system, the institution turned its attention beyond such traditional protectionist devices as tariff s and quotas to a much broader and increasingly controversial array of state laws and regulations that could potentially now be interpreted as trade restrictive. Finally, in light of the WTO’s new expanded mandate, atten- tion focused on the lack of international safeguards for labor and human rights, environmental protection and other social concerns. Towards the Coalescing of a Master Frame Against Neoliberalism As these disparate collective action frames were shaping regional protests, several important trends were also working to more thoroughly discredit neo- liberal policies and institutions, while at the same time legitimate a more widely shared critique of neoliberalism. As the neoliberal record received more wide- spread and vocal criticism, more space opened up for civil society networking, collective bargaining and political lobbying across a number of developing states, especially across Latin America and South-East Asia, where many states had made transitions to electoral democracies over the previous decade. At the same time, national civil society organizations from developing states were increasingly networking transnationally with organizations from the developed North at so- called countersummits as well as through the Internet. In particular, so-called “People’s Summits,” became venues for social activists to meet to share experi- ences, workshop, strategize and align their national diagnostic frames against the perceived inequities of neoliberal policies and institutions (Korzeniewicz and Smith 2001). Th ese summits, and the increased availability of the Internet, set the stage for the crystallization of an increasingly transnationally-shared diag- nostic master frame against neoliberalism. People’s Summits were held parallel to trade minister and heads-of-state gatherings negotiating the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) in Chile, Brazil and Costa Rica. Similar-style summits were being held to coun- ter the Asia Pacifi c Economic and Cooperation Forums (APEC) in Vancouver and Manila. One of the more notable counter gatherings took place in Paris in 1997 to strategize and share national perspectives on the proposed Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI). Th e anti-MAI strategy meetings attended by a coterie of civil society organizations helped to spearhead subsequent domestic and international campaigns against the MAI. Th e MAI negotiations ultimately collapsed when France pulled out, and credited its decision in part to what it referred to as a “global civil society” of anti-MAI activists.⁵ Th e explosive use of the Internet by thousands of NGOs would also in fact serve as a key means of bridging a variety of national and regional anti-neolib- eral collective action frames. Th rough the use of listservs, email and web sites, international NGOs as varied as the International Forum on Globalization, the Th ird World Network, the Hemispheric Social Alliance and the Focus on the Global South,⁶ shared information and developed similar critiques of neoliberal- ism. Hundreds of more nationally-focused NGOs, which were either members of or linked to such larger international organizations, also shared information and critical perspectives gleaned from the Internet in more face-to-face grass- roots settings. Hemispheric civil society groups crafted the Alternatives for the Americas text,⁷ a social-democratic and sustainable-developmental alternative to the proposed FTAA, during parallel People’s Summits to the FTAA negotia- tions, and subsequently edited and revised it via Hemispheric Social Alliance- member Internet exchange (Ayres forthcoming). Opponents of neoliberalism were also energized by U.S. Congressional opposition to the renewal of fast-trade authority. Fast-track power authorizes the U.S. President to negotiate trade accords with foreign countries, with Congress relegated to a reduced role of simply approving or rejecting the proposed accord. With every president since Richard Nixon in the 1970s enjoying this privilege, U.S. President Clinton sought congressional renewal in 1997. However, Clinton withdrew the request in the face of a groundswell of opposition from both labor unions upset with his strong-arming of NAFTA through Congress in 1993, as ⁵. See http://www.fi nances.gouv.fr/pole_ecofi n/international/ami0998/ami0998. htm. For more on the role played by civil society groups and the Internet in opposing the MAI, see Smith and Smythe (1999) and Diebert (2000). ⁶. See Steger (2002) for an excellent discussion of the role played by NGOs in coun- tering neoliberal ideology, as well as a substantive index of NGO web sites. ⁷. To read the Alternatives for the Americas document, or to retrieve information on the Hemispheric Social Alliance, see http://web.net/comfront. http://www.finances.gouv.fr/pole_ecofi n/international/ami0998/ami0998.htm http://web.net/comfront Jeff rey M. Ayres20 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 21 WTO meetings, and contributed to the failure by WTO bureaucrats to estab- lish a negotiating agenda,⁸ sent a signal of widening discontent both outside and within the U.S. over its offi cial policy embrace of neoliberal principles. Moreover, the image of failure emanating out of Seattle raised some of the most signifi cant questions to that date about the legitimacy of neoliberal policies. Th ese Seattle protests were highly visible, drawing upon on eclectic repertoire of tactics (Smith 2001): weeks of strategic Internet usage prepared activists with intimate knowl- edge of Seattle’s downtown layout and WTO delegate’s schedules; cellphones aided activists as they spread out across the city engaging in traffi c blockading affi nity groups; black bloc anarchists resorted to property damage to highly vis- ible corporate symbols of neoliberal success, such as Nike and Starbucks; while thousands of people participated in union rallies and marches. Moreover, Seattle brought together a collection of diverse, international groups,⁹ whose protests were buttressed by the highly visible and now transna- tional master collective action frame against neoliberalism. Protestors decried the hierarchical, elitist and closed-door character of the WTO negotiations, and argued that WTO decisions aided and abetted “corporate rule” over popular sov- ereignty, and facilitated a global “race to the bottom,” where corporations exploited conditions of liberalized trade and investment by constantly relocating produc- tion to areas with low wage costs and limited government enforcement of social or environmental regulations. Th ere are in fact numerous examples of what could be considered attempts at both diagnostic and prognostic frame alignment pro- cesses in books activists produced and disseminated after Seattle (Danaher and Burbach 2000; Starr 2000; and Barlow and Clarke 2001). Beyond such books, Internet web sites, activist listservs and the Independent Media Center outlets established throughout the world after Seattle served crucial frame dissemina- tion roles. Th ese activities thus challenged the inevitability thesis of neoliberal globalization, stirred what would become a more widespread public debate about the supposed benefi ts of related policies, and put business and political elites on the sudden unexpected defensive against a newly aggressive master frame that challenged the underlying precepts of neoliberalism. well as opposition from grassroots lobbying eff orts from the CTC and ART coalitions. Th e following year a reintroduced fast-track proposal went down to defeat, marking a signifi cant trade policy victory for the growing number of civil society organizations across the U.S. who had shown increased skepticism of the supposed benefi ts of neoliberalism (Shoch 2000). Th e Clinton Administration’s eff orts to reframe the debate over fast-track, by renaming it “trade promotion authority,” thereby putting a more benign spin to what was otherwise a tool to promote neoliberal policy proposals, had failed to win reauthorization. In short, as the 1990s came to a close, a master diagnostic frame critical of neoliberal globalization slowly crystallized and gained a wider international acceptance. It was not a completely hegemonic counter frame—regional and national-level variations persisted. Yet, the strength of this anti-neoliberal master frame lay in its breadth and capacity to absorb and accommodate the variety of movement and region specifi c frames that spurred collective action against neoliberal agreements and institutions over the previous several years. In fact, this master frame clearly took on a suffi ciently broad interpretive scope in its inclusiveness, cultural reach and fl exibility (Benford and Snow 2000) arguably to function as a master “injustice frame” (Carroll and Ratner 1996; Klandermans et al. 1999), indicting neoliberalism for a variety of perceived injustices: from environmental degradation, the shifting of jobs to low wages production sites, human rights abuses in sweatshops, and still growing poverty and persistent indebtedness across the developing world. Th us, on the eve of the autumn 1999 protests against the WTO millennial round in Seattle, the parameters of a more clearly transnational diagnostic master collective action frame that would help guide for nearly two years a burgeoning array of large and geographically-varied anti-neoliberal protests came into focus. Framing Mobilizations from Seattle to Genoa Th e WTO protests in Seattle certainly did not initiate organizing against neoliberalism, but because the protests took place in the United States, they represented an important milestone in such eff orts. United States business and political offi cials in the Clinton Administration were some of the most vocal sup- porters of neoliberal policies. Clinton, in fact, risked political capital and alien- ated members of the Democratic labor-left constituency with his combative and ultimately successful push for NAFTA’s ratifi cation (Cohen 2000), as well as his failed eff orts to secure fast-track renewal. Th e emergence of the WTO in 1995, again with the solid backing of U.S. offi cials, as well as the start of FTAA nego- tiations, cemented the U.S. as a leading proponent of expanding the neoliberal paradigm globally. Yet, the tens of thousands strong protests, which disrupted the Seattle ⁸. While the protests played a dramatically disruptive role during the meetings, and publicized signifi cantly the anti-neoliberal collective action frame, disagreements over trade policy between the European Union and the U.S. as well as between Northern and Southern states, contributed to the overall failure of the Seattle WTO Ministerial. ⁹. While a majority of the protestors who descended on Seattle were from the U.S. and Canada, (Almeida and Lichbach 2001), there was still a notable representation of international civil society groups among the demonstrators. Jeff rey M. Ayres22 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 23 After Seattle, the contest over what “globalization meant”—between the struggle to convince a wider set of domestic and international audiences of the supposed benefi ts or downsides of neoliberalism—grew intense. Th is is under- standable, as the political context for framing processes frequently changes dra- matically between early and more mature periods of collective action, especially after a “movement has established itself as a serious force for social change” (McAdam, McCarthy and Zald 1988: 17). Moreover, framing processes in a maturing movement are the “subject of intense contestation between collective actors representing the movement, the state, and any existing coutermovements” (Ibid: 16). Th at political and business elites around the world would react much diff erently to the anti-neoliberal protest movement following Seattle was then unsurprising. In fact, a microcosm of the hotly contested framing debate emerged in the middle of the Seattle protests on the opinion pages of the New York Times. Following the fi rst and most disruptive day of Seattle protests, Times’ colum- nist Th omas Friedman wrote an essay entitled, “Senseless in Seattle,” in which he decried the WTO protestors as “a Noah’s ark of fl at-earth advocates, protec- tionist trade unions and yuppies looking for their 1960s fi x” (Freidman 1999). Friedman, an ardent believer in the benefi ts, if not the inevitability of neoliberal globalization, as he argues in Th e Lexus and the Olive Tree (Friedman 2000), in eff ect repudiated the protestors’ diagnostic collective action frame. He also con- tributed to what would become a major plank in the counter-response by sup- porters of neoliberalism, by characterizing protestors as “anti-globalization.” Naomi Klein, Canadian author of No Logo (Klein 2000), characterized as a “bible” for activists mobilizing against neoliberalism, met Friedman’s charges the following day in her own Times’ essay, entitled, “Rebels in Search of Rules” (Klein 1999). Here Klein refuted Freidman’s critique, reiterating the concerns protestors had with neoliberal globalization and pointedly contesting the “anti- globalization” label. Protestors in Seattle were not against the globalization of economies, cultures and technologies, Klein argued, but against the current WTO-dominated rules-based system that focused mostly on promoting trade and investment liberalization, while remaining silent on consumer, labor, envi- ronmental or human rights concerns. What the protestors wanted, Klein argued, were rules for a global economic system that would consider such concerns and a new global institution that matched a focus for economic growth with consid- erations of the social and environmental consequences of trade and investment promotion. Interestingly, Klein was rearticulating the contours of the diagnostic frame against neoliberalism, while searching out possible parameters for a prog- nostic frame. In fact, while the anti-neoliberal “injustice frame” performed reasonably well in crafting a transnationally shared diagnosis of neoliberalism’s faults, movement activists were having more diffi culty undertaking prognostic framing. Th at is, proposing and agreeing upon plans for attacking neoliberal policies and institu- tions, as well as in encouraging new movement recruits to literally take to the streets to oppose neoliberal policies, was proving to be a far more diffi cult task. For, out of Seattle emerged a variety of visions for challenging neoliberalism and for presenting an alternative model to neoliberal globalization. While some groups sought to “deratify” the existing neoliberal trade and investment arrange- ments, others sought to reform the WTO, giving it the mandate and enforcement mechanisms to address social and environmental concerns. While some sought to attack and quite literally destroy global capitalism, branding the protest move- ment “anti-capitalist,” others sought a global “New Deal” to create a more social- democratic global system that included such protections as a global minimum wage. Yet, despite these divisions, over the course of the nineteen months from the Seattle protest to the much larger protests in July 2000 against the Group of Eight (g8) Summit in Genoa, Italy, the protest movement mobilized eff ectively and primarily on the strength of its well-received diagnostic master collective action frame, and was less hobbled by diff erences at this time over longer-term goals. After Seattle, increasing numbers of people attended protests, which tar- geted neoliberal summits and institutions. Notable protest events occurred at: the IMF/World Bank meeting in Washington, DC, April 2000; meetings of the World Economic Forum in Melbourne, Australia, September 2000; IMF/World Bank meetings in Prague, Czech Republic, September 2000; the Asian-Development Bank meetings in Chiang Mai, Th ailand, May 2000; the 3rd Summit of the Americas FTAA meeting, Quebec City, Canada, April 2001; and the g8 summit, Genoa, Italy, July 2001. Notably, these large summit gather- ings did not take place in a vacuum, but were accompanied by numerous parallel national protests across developed and developing states. However, the larger gatherings, especially the summit protests, alternative People’s Summits, and the fi rst World Social Forum, which met in Porto Allegre, Brazil in Winter 2001, served as critical diagnostic frame dissemination sites, publicizing, reinforcing and spreading transnationally tenets of the anti-neoliberal collective action frame. Frame alignment processes have been found to be most successful in collective settings (McAdam, McCarthy and Zald 1988), where ideas and sentiments are shared and interpreted. And the proliferation of teach-ins, countersummits, street theater and dramaturgy proved crucial in transnationalizing the anti-neo- liberal diagnostic frame. Actors Arguments/Claim Policy Proposals anti-neoliberal protest movement • civil society activists • national/transnational social movement organizations • Independent Media Centers • Internet web sites • race to the bottom • democratic deficit • hierarchical • non-transparent • deliberate political process • corporate rights • deratify • reform existing treaties • debt relief • strengthen state sovereignty • deglobalize • return to the local neoliberalism proponents (countermovement) • states • multi-national corporations • currency speculators • financial media outlets • IMF/World Bank/WTO • there is no alternative • inevitable, desirable process • irreversable • best prescription for economic growth • liberalized trade and investment • deregulate • cut taxes • privatize • reduce public expenditures Figure 1 – Contested Interpretations of Globalization Processes Jeff rey M. Ayres24 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 25 A F T E R SEP T E M BE R 11: T H E A LT E R E D T E R R A I N FOR A N TI N EOLI BE R A L PROT E ST Th e terrorist attacks on the United States on September 11, 2001 had a dra- matic and immediate eff ect on the mobilization potential for activism against neoliberal institutions. Th e fallout from the attacks exposed weaknesses in the anti-neoliberal collective frame, temporarily dampened enthusiasm, at least in the U.S., for large-scale contentious protest, and illustrated forcefully the con- tinued relevance of the state in the structuring of movement activity. Over time, moreover, the limits especially of prognostic framing processes became apparent as activists struggled to develop coherent plans of action for challenging neolib- eral policies and institutions. Figure 1 illustrates both the framing contest that had ensued, especially following the Seattle WTO protests, as well as the dif- ferences between interpretive beliefs germane to anti-neoliberal diagnostic and prognostic framing processes. In fact, state authorities—particularly in the U.S. after September 11— adopted a much more aggressive approach towards containing protests as well as in reasserting a multi-pronged neoliberal agenda. On the one hand, with the pas- sage of such legislation as the USA Patriot Act, it became easier for U.S. govern- ment agencies to criminalize dissent—a tactical approach that had begun prior to September 11 (Stewart 2001; Scher 2001; della Porta and Tarrow 2002)—but one that gained greater legitimacy thereafter as authorities publicly equated protests against neoliberal globalization with terrorism (Panitch 2002).¹⁰ Th us, while protestors still rallied at the New York City meeting of the World Economic Forum in January 2002, the police presence was so extensive, and the aftershocks of September 11 still so fresh, that both the opportunities and the appetite for large contentious protests were missing. Th is pattern of maintaining a large police presence continued to thwart large-scale demonstrations, especially across North America. From the meeting of the Group of 8 leading industrialized states in Kanaskas, Alberta in summer 2002, to the following July WTO ministerial meeting in Montreal, Quebec, police curtailed demonstrations and kept activists off -balance with preemptive arrests and security perimeters (Th anh Ha 2003). On the eve of the Genoa, Italy g8 protest, then, politicians, business leaders and media outlets were paying increased attention to the concerns of the move- ment, as the “Washington Consensus” that had sustained the neoliberal global- ization frame appeared to be cracking (Broad and Cavanaugh 1999; Useem 2001). Suddenly the World Bank was professing an interest in sustainable development projects, international institutions were becoming more open to NGO participa- tion, politicians were entertaining thoughts of much more dramatic debt relief for impoverished states as well as taxes on global currency speculation, while debates over neoliberalism became much more common editorial page fare. At the same time, the anti-neoliberal protest movement appeared to have gained momentum, propelled by an eclectic set of protest repertoires combined with a general transnational consensus between civil society groups against the abuses of corporate power and corporate infl uence over popular democratic decision- making processes. Civil society groups and activists shared a strong sense of what they felt was “wrong” with neoliberalism; what remained unresolved was the development of collectively shared and agreed upon solutions and strategic responses to these problems. ¹⁰. In the immediate aftermath of the terrorist attacks Italian Prime Minister Sylvio Berlusconi mused on the “singular coincidence” between the terrorist attacks in the U.S. and the protests against neoliberal globalization, while U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick in a speech in Washington D.C. hinted at what he felt were “intellectual connections” between terrorists and “others who have turned to violence to attack inter- national fi nance, globalization and the United States.” See Erlanger (2001) and Palast (2001). Jeff rey M. Ayres26 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 27 It was clear, moreover, that U.S. activists were on the defensive and hesitant about their tactical direction after September 11, as large-scale raucous protests seemed out of step with the national mood.¹¹ Th e state responses to both the ter- rorist attacks as well as to anti-neoliberal protest, posed a challenge to prognostic frame dissemination, as activists now had to engage in a public relations battle to de-link in the minds of an anxious U.S. public, protest against neoliberal policy from acts of terrorism. Moreover, growing anti-war activism—fi rst as the U.S. invaded Afghanistan to overthrow the Taliban regime, and then once the Bush Administration quickly refocused for a possible war with Iraq—posed a chal- lenge to sustaining an anti-neoliberal collective action frame. Th e energy devoted to straightening out the protest movement’s identity and the meaning behind any new demonstrations was draining, as many protest groups struggled to rec- oncile being both opposed to neoliberal globalization and pro-peace (Huber and McCallum 2002). At the same time, as activists across the U.S. worked to clarify their post- September 11 strategies for challenging neoliberalism, the Bush Administration embarked on a campaign to strategically reassert the neoliberal agenda. Only weeks after the terrorist attacks, President Bush told business leaders at the Shanghai meeting of the APEC forum, that terrorism could be defeated through the promotion of free trade, while U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Greenspan argued that the attacks on the U.S. made it even more urgent that the WTO talks in Qatar succeed (Wayne 2001). Th e renewal of fast-track trade negotiating authority became a test of patriotism for waffl ing members of Congress (Sanger 2001), and by July 2002, Bush had won reauthorization of this power. Once equipped with this negotiating tool, the Bush administration would focus on aggressively advancing neoliberal policy goals through parallel tracks in the ongo- ing FTAA hemispheric discussions, as well as within the Doha, Qatar round.¹² Beyond the challenges faced by activists in the U.S., regional and tactical dif- ferences within the protest movement against neoliberalism became much more apparent. Clearly, civil society groups during the late 1990s had found it increas- ingly easier to develop shared and ultimately transnational understandings of the experiences and problems fostered on diff erent regions by neoliberal economic policies, than in devising mutually reconcilable strategic responses to these prob- lems (Stuart 2003). Diff erences of opinion, illustrative of the limits of anti-neo- liberal prognostic framing, starkly emerged in setting such as the World Social Forum (Cooper 2002; Faux 2003), over a variety of tactics and goals. Questions that confronted activists included: what are the more eff ective tactics for chal- lenging neoliberal policies: more consultative and collaborative engagement in neoliberal summitry by NGOs, or grassroots mobilization and contentious pro- test?¹³ Moreover, what are the appropriate and mutually acceptable goals for the movement: to reform the existing global capitalist system, or to deratify existing trade agreements? Should activsts work to strengthen state sovereignty or move beyond the state to “return to the local” in the pursuit of “deglobalization?”¹⁴ Th e persistent North-South divide, in terms of resource availability, orga- nizational strength, and the underlying technological digital disparities, also challenged diff erently the capacity of regional civil society groups to continue to connect local grassroots concerns to transnational protest campaigns (Smith 2002). Such resource asymmetries have become apparent, for example, in the hemispheric mobilization against the FTAA. Civil society group divisions over tactics and resources have challenged the legitimacy of the Hemispheric Social Alliance as a broadly-based transnational social movement organiza- tion (Massicotte 2003), and revealed strategic splits between groups desiring an insider role in summit deliberations and those groups who view themselves as outsiders and supportive of large-scale civil disobedience against FTAA neolib- eral summitry (Korzeniewicz and Smith 2001). CONC LUSION Th e mobilization of beliefs and interpretations critical of neoliberal global- ization had been central to the eruption of a protest movement that achieved global proportions by 2003. Movement and region-specifi c collective action frames critical of the impact of neoliberal policy were shaped out of contentious struggles that preceded by well over a decade the eventual development of pro- tests of larger scale and global scope. A master collective action frame rooted in ¹¹. See for example Carter and Barringer (2001); Wayne (2001); Fries, (2002); and Bygrave (2002). ¹². Despite marginalizing protestors from the FTAA and WTO negotiating ses- sions, policy divisions especially between developing and developed states over agricul- tural subsidies in the developed North, increasingly threaten to derail both the regional and global neoliberal trade agenda. See Drohan (2003). ¹³. To sample such discussions see Klein (2001), Grundy and Howell (2001), Penniman (2002) and Smith and Korzeniewicz (2003). ¹⁴. For discussions of the diff erent possible goals for the anti-neoliberal movement, see Narsalay (2002); Scholte (2002); Bello (2002); Laxer (2003). Jeff rey M. Ayres28 Framing Collective Action Against Neoliberalism 29 a diagnosis of neoliberalism’s policy ills served as a broadly inclusive interpre- tative medium, targeting for blame neoliberal policies such as unfettered trade and investment and the rulings of institutions such as the WTO and the IMF. However, it was the very inclusiveness and accommodating character of this anti- neoliberal master frame—embracing in its diagnosis such varied concerns as the degradation of the environment, emerging democratic defi cits and the decline of popular sovereignty, human rights abuses under sweatshop conditions, or even opposition to the U.S. war with Iraq or the rights of Palestinian refugees—which limited prognostic framing processes, exposing divisions within the international community of activists over proposed strategies for carrying out plans of action against neoliberalism. Yet, despite the more challenging environment for prognostic framing, the fallout from the terrorist attacks on the United States has had an unanticipated eff ect: it has served to illustrate the durable character of the protest move- ment against neoliberalism. Th at is, the movement has evolved and prospered despite the constraints bearing down particularly on U.S. activists. Events since September 11 refute those claims by critics asserting that the movement was largely comprised of labor union protectionists from wealthy Northern states. Rather, the most signifi cant and innovative protest events have continued out- side North America. A transnational diagnostic frame critical of neoliberalism has remained a durable feature of demonstrations against neoliberal policies after September 11, even if these protests have retained a national or regional fl avor dependent especially on the availability of activists and organizations most closely at hand. For example, the World Social Forum, held fi rst in Brazil, and in 2004 in Mumbai, India, continues to draw greater numbers of people and represents a crucial forum for potentially developing a more widely accepted prognostic frame against neoliberalism. Th e European Social Forum held in Florence, Italy in November 2002, drew over one million people, the Asian Social Forum held in Hyderabad, India in January 2003 attracted 15,000 activists, while organiz- ers across North America planned for a series of social forums in select cities throughout 2003 and into 2004. Th ese regional social forums are rooted in the experiences of national civil society group opposed to neoliberal policy, but are tied together in the larger transnational diagnostic collective action frame that continues to express itself out of Porto Alegre with the slogan, “Another World Is Possible” (Bidwai 2003). Th ere continues to be as well numerous examples of regional and transna- tionally-coordinated contentious protests against neoliberal policy initiatives. Hundreds of protest events took place in cities around the world to coincide with the 4th Ministerial meeting of the WTO in Doha, Qatar in November 2001.¹⁵ Regionally, anti-FTAA protests occurred in Quito, Ecuador in autumn 2002, against the 7th Ministerial Meeting of the FTAA. Th ese protests were backed by a variety of North and South American solidarity events, with the Quito pro- tests specifi cally benefi ting from North-South civil society collaboration (Ruben 2002).¹⁶ In September 2003, activists also undertook numerous global solidar- ity actions to complement the protests against the WTO meetings in Cancun, Mexico. In fact, prognostic hemispheric frame alignment against the FTAA seems to be increasingly rooted in a growing option for the use of more combat- ive tactics, indicative of the degree of opposition that exists across this region to the possible implementation of a hemispheric neoliberal agreement. Finally, it is clear that in the midst of this continued transnational activ- ism, the state has not lost the capacity to control events within its boundaries, and it will continue to play an important role in structuring protest. Th e current economic crisis spreading across Latin America, captured in the Argentine melt- down and the rejection of neoliberal policy prescriptions by the tens-of-millions who elected the Brazilian Workers Party candidate, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva into the president’s offi ce, suggests that critically positioned states in the world economy may become vocal opponents of the expansion of neoliberal policy, with Brazil potentially the leading roadblock to the successful completion of FTAA negotiations. In short, the protest movement against neoliberalism may gain new momentum from states, which ultimately retain the greatest capacity to infl u- ence and reform those political processes that have produced over two decades of hotly contested neoliberal policy initiatives. Any success in developing widely shared prognostic frames against neoliberalism may in turn depend upon the concerted opposition of centrally placed states who may share with activist civil society organizations innovative ideas for reforming current neoliberal arrange- ments. ¹⁵. A chart of November 2001 protests events worldwide against the Doha WTO round can be viewed at http://www.tradewatch.org. ¹⁶. For more on the events in Quito, see “Police Rebel and Anti-Free Trade Protests in Quito End on Positive Note.” http://foodfi rst.org/progs/global/trade/ quito2002/2002-11-01-update.php. http://www.tradewatch.org http://foodfirst.org/progs/global/trade/quito2002/2002-11-01-update.php Jeff rey M. 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