Sunday, November 23, 2008

Forging Progressive Education

Conclusion

The working dynamics and its purposes of the Gulen movement conclude that such a movement is not only addressing the student-education but is also addressing all members of the society who are interested in resolving their issues. It does that by providing them with a deeper understanding of human psyche, desires and aspirations of peace and co- existence. At the same time, this movement also addresses those people who are not interested in keeping aside the differences due to their ignorance and lack of vision. It does it by educating them with the renewed vision and understanding using the tools of dialogue and tolerance. In the movement there are inherent characteristics of ‘humanization’ and the avoidance of ‘dehumanization’ (Freire, P. 2000) through the inclusion of worldly factors being meshed with morality and ethics.

In its dynamics, it is evident that the way the movement operates, it avoids questioning the status quo by not confronting the State stand, but at the same time it also completely questions and demolishes the status quo manifested in the decades of ongoing conflicts and lack of understanding between civilizations, cultures and religions. This is the uniqueness of the movement, which ,on one hand offers a special kind of apparent irony while on the other, breaks that irony by it dynamics of results .One can also see an element of ‘quietness’ in the movement because of its deliberate choice of non- confronting stand and spiritual aspects. This is quite opposed to the Freirian notions, which clearly differentiates the ideas of the oppressed and the oppressors and questions the status quo, being created by the ‘oppressors’ for their own benefits and at the cost of the oppressed (Freire, P. 2000).Gulen movement seems to be borrowing the concept of a ‘dialogue’ that Freire writes about but at the same time deliberately excludes the exact notion of status-quo in the Freirian theory. Interestingly, the Gulen movement adopts the ‘culture of silence’ (Freire, P. 2000) for the sake of empowering the un-empowered by channelizing all its energies into the education rather than in the fight for the education. The clear differentiation between teaching and education and clear emphasis on mutual learning between student and teachers, however clearly matches with Freire’s ‘problem solving education process.’

It is also interesting to note that Gulen community functions without particularly classifying the environment of it working into two separate conflicting groups which Freire so strongly classifies as the ‘oppressor’ and the oppressor’.

In the dynamics of the Gulen movement what is seen is the complete exclusion of the potential ‘oppressor (Freire. P, 2000 ) such as the State, by a strategic agreement with it and thereby working on and working with the fighting communities who are both, oppressed, because of the belligerent behavior of the other and at the same being ‘oppressed’ due to their belligerent behavior towards the other. The movement however achieves and buys peace between the conflicting parties with the use of a ‘dialogue’ which is an integral part of the Freirian theory. Thus on one front, Gulen movement runs parallel with the Freirian movement without having to meet each other’s viewpoint, whereas on the other hands it clearly overlaps with its belief of ‘dialogue’.

One can also see the complete absence of ‘banking system of education’ in the Gulen movement, which uses its energies not only to let student learn from teachers but also to let teachers learn from students ,as well as from the constantly changing teaching environment.

The movement’s emphasis on the joy in the learning- process echoes with the experiences of Bell Hooks who experienced ‘classrooms as a place of sheer joy” (Hooks. B, 1994). The fact that Gulen schools embrace learners from a diverse religious, ethnic, class, and cultural background and foster social virtues such as respect, co-operation and tolerance to integrate its learners into pluralist, democratic society shows a dialectally opposite scenario, when seen with the experiences of Bell Hooks who enjoyed ‘Black schools’ as emancipating while tolerated ‘White schools as ‘prisons’(Hooks. B, 1994)

The broad inclusion of community as a family and the fact that the members of the community played an active role, not only as the beneficiaries of the movements but also as the active players of the movement itself, takes the movement very close to Myles Horton’s conceptualization and later construction of the Highlander School (Horton, M., 1990).Both Schools, Gulen’s and Horton’s, achieved its results by educating the members of the society by tools of sharing.

In order to address the masses with effective communication the ownership of media houses, foundations, trusts and other such organizational structures by of the Gulen community strengthens Myles Horton’s realization that ‘as individuals we are powerfulness but when we become organization, we become powerful”. (Horton. M, 1990)

Using the vales of dialogue and cooperation the Gulen movement is able to create and maintain a truly dynamic educational fabric, in many of its forms. These forms are schools, colleges and universities. They also include the unification of diversified communities and individuals through a common thread of compassion and love for each other’s diversity and acknowledgement of each other’s commonality. Also the secular structure of the Gulen schools has helped to create a balance between the individual’s needs as well as the collective needs of the society in which the individuals dwell. The constant emphasis of the movement to build the individual character and therefore the character of a collective society through universal moral values, prepares the new generation to become useful and constructive citizens of a more humane society, which is the purpose of a true education and a dream of the true educator.

Education of Gulen movement

Educational perspective and functions of the movement

The movement understands education broadly as a tool to bring a change for a peaceful coexistence. It regards ignorance, poverty, and internal schism as the greatest enemies of the human civilization and believes that only knowledge, work-capital and unification can help it overcome these. It acknowledges ignorance as the main source of all evils and uses education to struggle against it. The most visible manifestation of the struggle of the movement against ignorance are the schools being opened by the Gulen community across the globe .These schools which are in many forms, such educational dormitories, universities and conventional schools such Chartered schools in the United States, intends to pin down ignorance through education, poverty through work and internal schism and separatism through unity, dialogue, and tolerance. It regards education as the most effective tool for all kinds of paralyzed system whether social or political.
Gulen, as an educator believes that modern secular schools have been unsuccessful in freeing themselves from the pre- conceived notions and prejudices of the modern theology. He also believes that, the so called traditional schools have lacked the intellectual pace to cope up the ever increasing complicated concepts of science and technology and the challenges they pose. Both these institutions have therefore failed the test of changing times and developing the required flexibility with the new world’s vision.

The movement, therefore, believed in the integration of strengths of traditional education with modern educational system. For this , the movement believes, there is a need to mainstream the youth and help them rise above the present system of education, which only ‘informs’ them and keeps them devoid of absorbing the true education. The movement tries to establish a perfect balance. (Michel, T. 2003)
“With a balanced education learners can become agents of positive change; but if they do not have ideals, and are only taught marketable skills, they will add to the crises of the society. Intellectuals seem to prefer "the spiritually impoverished and technologically obsessed modern culture to a traditional cul tural foundation that grew in sophistication and subtlety over the centuries" (Michel, T. 2003).

Such a balance requires a holistic training, not only of the students in an educating atmosphere, but also of the teachers. But such trainings, movement believes, cannot be provided to nurture new learning environments unless there is new training environment.

According to Gulen, “Teacher training is essential; not only in methodology, but also in nurturing the whole person. Teachers should lead by example; otherwise they cannot hope to reform others. In order to bring others to the path of traveling to a better world, they must purify their inner worlds of hatred, rancor, and jealousy, and adorn their outer world with all kinds of virtues" (Michel, T. 2003)

Thus, teachers have to combine the study of science with character development. Success must be measured by scientific progress and moral progress. Material advancement without morality will destroy humanity.
It therefore proposes the following principles for all its educational institutions:

1) Dialogue and tolerance
2) Self-sacrifice
3) Avoidance of political and ideological conflict
4) Taking action on a positive and harmonious way
5) Taking responsibility
6) To give with no expectation of praise or reward. For example a person should be in the first line to give and the last row to receive any reward or thanks.
7) Humbleness.

Some of the basic educational pillars of the movement are the its emphasis of reading and listening ,which are extensively taught in all the institutions, relationships between the students and the teachers, which requires the presence of ethos such truth, respect and dignity, and highly ethical standards ,being attached with the schools working as well as the teachers employed.

The movement strictly differentiates between education and teaching. It holds that not all teachers are educators and therefore all teaching does not necessarily lead to education. It considers teaching as more superficial, and technical whereas education to be deeper, more meaningful and holistic activity.

In order to ensure true education, schools are defined as “a laboratory that offers an elixir that can prevent or heal the ills of life. Those who have the knowledge and wisdom to prepare and administer it are the teachers. A school is a place of learning about everything related to this life and the next. (Ibid, I. 2008). And that “a good school is not a building where only theoretical information is given but an institution or a laboratory where students are prepared for life. (Ibid, I. 2008).

The movement strongly believes that science and technology alone cannot explain the meaning and the purpose of human life. They are however facilitative the process of finding meanings and deveoping the broader purpose and aims of life. It also believes that science and technology must be used in the proper way to be beneficial for the humanity and if they are controlled by unjust and irresponsible people they a can in fact cause immense harm to the mankind. In the light of these believes, one can analyze the recent incidents of human miseries such as the Hiroshima –Nagasaki bombing, Worlds Wars, Worldwide conflict for resources such as oil and gas, abject poverty and inequality between communities, individuals and nations, and its ever increasing ills such as increasing suicide rates, diminishing heath care, rampant fatal dieses such as HIV/AIDs and cancer, human trafficking, child labor and many other avoidable human pains and suffering emanating from the vested interests of the few nations or individuals. Global problems such as environmental pollution and emergence of corruption and greed at local level further strengthen the above point.

In order to channelize all its energies to address the contemporary issues, through harmony and amicable ways rather than any confrontations’ with state or other interests groups, most of the Gulen schools follow national curriculum but what makes their education unique is the inclusion and rigorous emphasis on vales such as spirituality, idealism,good morals, scientific and technological progress as well as lessons on trades and crafts in the elementary level. Other vales such as reflection, thinking, active reading an listening skills, and mutual respect for the co fellows also remain at the very core of the conscious- teaching and learning processes.

These schools also take into account the specific qualities of teachers such as true dedication to education as tool for a social change and not just a mechanism to make a living, ability to inspire others with the conviction of this dedication. In most cases teachers are expected to be frugal; they are not permitted, or encouraged, to live in expensive apartments, drive expensive cars, and wear expensive clothes. It is believed that such extravagances could blemish the image of the school and damage the trust of the funders. However, teachers do not live in poverty; they earn a decent salary, receive hospital care and obtain a pension upon retirement. Also teachers are regularly transferred from one place to another place, with significantly different culture and sub-culture. This is expected to bring, the new inherent learning that comes to the new students with the new teacher, and hence more enriched learning atmosphere. It is also expected that with such practices the students will develop abilities to learn from different people while teachers will sharpen their abilities to absorb into a new teaching atmosphere and adapt to its intricacies. This practice however is practiced despite acknowledging its pitfalls such as the instability in the teaching structure that it brings along; the new teacher takes time to settle in a new place while new students take time to settle with new teacher and by the time both of them begin to understand each other’s attitudes and ways, which normally take 4 to 5 years, the teachers are transferred again. This instability, however, contains the potential to nurture, both in students and in teachers, the immunity to the fear of the ‘new’ and ‘unknown’. Thus, bringing along the experiential richness of the old, mingling with the new.
In the same context, movement believes that:

“For the ideal of love to live in schools, there must be a shift away from the school as a factory in which teachers view students as objectives rather than human beings, a factory in which knowledge is produced rather than character constructed. Instead, there must be a move toward schools and educators who not only have a mastery of their subjects but who also care for their students and seek their welfare past the ringing of the bell.” (Huebner, 1999)
With this belief the movement's activities within any community start by first making personal contacts with the individuals in that community. In other words, the movements’ vision enters the new community through an exiting human representation and shares that vision with the new individuals of the new community. Once this inter personal relationship is established between the party of the movement and the party of the community, the two become one and together they discuss the necessity of dialogue and the terms of education is then formed with mutual understanding. The resulting manifestation then takes the form of schools and educational institutions which carry the common vision, and act as the media of tolerance and dialogue to raise more people to join the movement.

In order to promote the holistic vision of education the movement also works on several fronts and with several communities, which it considers to be a part of its educational-family. It includes business networks and financial institutions that is it owns and that is backed by sixteen other partners, Its vast array of media outlets including a scientific monthly, an environment-related magazine, a theological journal, a weekly magazine, a daily newspaper, a TV station and an FM radio station. Besides the movement is supported by a powerful association of businessmen, which includes over 2000 businessmen and merchants, who support the educational activities by not only providing funding and logistical support but by also running the schools. The infrastructure support of the movement’s family includes universities and colleges, high schools, dormitories, summer camps, and over 100 foundations. All of these institutions are organized and are run by the people who are given roles on the basis of trust, obedience and duty to the community. These people are essentially businessmen, teachers, journalists, and students. Thus it is evident that the movement threads the member of the society as the member of a family. In such an environment the students are not only equipped with skills and knowledge necessary for their future careers but they also prepare them for the broader leadership roles that they may perform to construct a society that is expected to give importance to jobs, work, technology and consumerism while keeping the metaphysics of education above all.

The impact of this prioritization of worldly and spiritual values can be seen in the way the movement has played a key role in bringing or at least maintaining peace in conflict areas with a challenging and belligerent demography, such as Bosnia, Northern Iraq, Afghanistan and Philippines. In each of these areas the movement has established cordial relations with its tolerant, faith based, but not faith limited educational ways, to bring fighting communities together and build peace between them by emphasizing on their communities.

In Bosnia, the fighting communities were the Muslim Bosnians, Christian Serbs and Christian Croats. Despite their common ethic identity and culture coming from their common Yogoslovanin background, these communities have been involved, for over a decade in ethics conflicts. They differed on their nationalistic aspirations and religious differences.

The case of Northern Iraq was no different. The communities involved were Kurds, Sunni Arabs, Turcoman, Shiites and Assyrian Christians. They again engaged in violent conflicts resulting from the differences of their religious beliefs and practices. Similar is the case with Afghanistan with ethic groups such as Pashtun, Tajik, Hazara, Uzbek, Aimak, Baluchi, Kyrgyz, Turkmen, Nuristani and Pamiri who had different political affiliations and ideology despite sharing common religious beliefs. Due to their differences, they were unable to identify and acknowledge their common beliefs and thus were unable to come to common terns of mutual respect and reconciliation. Finally Philippines which offers a different case of different religious groups such as Muslims and Christians, who had different locations in terms of demography and who tried to control each other with their respective political structure and nationalist ideologies.

In all of the above theses cases, the result was the same; Wars, conflicts and clashes. Gulen community with their schools in all of these played a key role of bringing the Christian and Muslims student together in a peaceful atmosphere, thus demonstrating a and creating a platform for dialogue between communities. The result of the dialogue was the strengthened understanding between communities, mutual acknowledgment of differences and the newly inspired will to work on commonalities, to resolve existing issues. The Gulen community led to the decrease of violent conflicts and it was seen that the conflicting communities either refused to take part in new conflicts or continue the existing ones or both

The Journey and Work of Gulen Movment

Abstract

21ST century is clearly one of the most turbulent times of the human history; wars, famine, diseases, riots, ethnic violence and all such kinds of disasters, both human and natural have been witnessed. But one thing that surpassed all disasters is the clash between of civilizations and religions. The result of such multiple clashes has caused immense loss, both to human lives and human spirit. Both have been severely wounded. In order to heal the pain, many attempts have been made in the past, while many are still are ongoing. Gulen movement is one such attempt which uses education as a tool to bring social change in the form a bride between the clashing parties. This is done by building schools, propagating dialogue and tolerance and indeed tolerant- dialogue. This paper explores the movement; its brief history, its methods, its dynamics and the values it stands for.

Introduction

This paper looks at Gulen movement as a way to create a culture of reconciliation on a world scale using Education as a tool. The movement started in Turkey by Fethullah Gulen and gradually spread across 90 countries of the world. Tolerance and dialogue are among the most basic and broad dynamics of this movement. It intends to build brides of peace between religion and civilization through interfaith dialogue. The movement believes that international relations of past empires were founded on conflict and war. Different civilizations emphasized more on their differences rather than their commonalities and remained distanced, separated by thick walls of individual identities of politics, ideology and religion. This led to the conflict and the lack of dialogue.

However with new technology and phenomenon like that of globalization, which has made world a global village, there is a possibility of creating a missing link through dialogue and social pluralism. Gulen movement intends to provide this missing link by building schools across the world especially in the areas of conflict, where there is an increased need of understanding between different cultures and faiths, given their ethno-religiously fractured societies. This movement works with civil societies, which are formed by the informed citizens from voluntary, government and non government organizations. The role that the movement plays is that of bringing the actors of civil societies together, unite and organize them for common goals, thus removing the differences of ‘us’ and ‘them’ and creating the solidarity of ‘we’. The movement believes that absence of education, dialogue and tolerance is the reason of all conflicts and under-development. Through its unifying dynamics, the movement envisions societies with idealistic and patriotic members, who share common values with their counterparts with different ethno-religious backgrounds. These values are mainly dialogue, tolerance and individual perfection, all of which can be achieved through education. This vision of the movement and it enables it to communicate with a wide range of communities and cultures across the world to unite on the principles of peace and cooperation.
History, Sociology and Politics of the Movement

As an educational movement, Gulen movement started in early 80’s under the leadership of an sufi educator Fethullah Gulen who is a Turkish and lives in the United States. His attempts to bring science and religion together began in early 70’s, where the emphasis was on the scientific discourses of religion and how one religion can co exist, peacefully with many others. Since then, the movement evolved from building a religious community to building a global educational system that leads to integration into the modern world. While trying to achieve its goals, the movement avoids any kind of confrontation with the State. In fact by consciously understanding the State-centric political culture, the movement builds strong ties with the state to build and expand its social base. But at the same time it also maintains a distance from a particular party especially the ones with political nature or affiliations, or those in power. In this context Gulen, as a leader argues,

“We do not support any ruling party just because it is in power. There are ways in which they come in power and leave it. We need to control the ways and doors that play a key to walk to power. We should respect the government and express our opposition as is done in the most developed, western countries”. (Gulen, F. 2004)
From this statement it is clear that the movement is impressed if not inspired by the western political system. It is however also clear the movement does not have political inspirations .In fact, movement's strict avoidance from politics and from being politicized makes it able to communicate communities that are radically distant from each other on the political spectrum”.

The movement communicates with these different communities through a wide array of outlets that it owns and which it uses for educational purposes. This includes its own newspaper, television channel and a radio station .In addition, it distributes video and audio tapes. To promote the movements’ views and its beliefs, the followers have also set-up a wide range of organizations in Turkey, where the movement made it origins. It includes the Turkish Teachers' Foundation, which publishes academic journals and organizes national and international symposiums, panel discussions, and conferences. Another foundation, the Journalists' and Writers' Foundation, works towards bringing together the intellectuals possessing different worldviews and inviting them to speak on issues such as dialogue among civilizations.

The Gulen community owns and runs about 100 schools in Turkey. Followers of Gulen movement have also founded more than 200 schools around the world from Tanzania to China, but mostly in the Turkic republics. The movement also founded more than 500 places of learning in 90 countries including Uzbekistan, South Africa, Iraq, Palestine, Philippines, Pakistan, Albania, Afghanistan and Bosnia.

Sunday, November 16, 2008

And finally..

This analysis of No Logo and The Corporation will clearly show that media can be used to manipulate behaviors and the vulnerable members of the society. This is demonstrated in both films. In No Logo, Naomi’s research shows that branding is used as tool to ‘create’ unwanted desires and life styles. And people give in to it. In the corporation, Dr. Susan Linn, Professor of Psychiatry, Baker Children's Centre and Critic of the Nag Factor study and of exploiting children's developmental vulnerabilities, states that nagging of the children’ is being used by the marketers to push sales and make profits despite it being unethical. The representative of the Nag factor Study admits that she is ‘not sure’ of the ethics but felt that the campaign works. In both these instances it is clear that products of globalization such as media and concepts like branding and marketing campaigns are used to influence people against their wills. They are manipulated. Therefore it may be argued that the same tools are also used to produce slavery, which is characterized by the ‘absence of willingness’ of the subject. In one of the scenes of No Logo Naomi states that greater choices is a facade that branding creates; On the contrary it has not only lessen the choice but has also diminished the quality of work. Thus in essence creating a situation of desperation amongst the customers who become vulnerable and at the same time are put on a kind of assembly line where they see and think according to the branding missions. We therefore see that with branding people are controlled; their choices and their behavior are controlled. This again, is a symptom of slavery. Further, while talking about the mass production and mass transportation, No Logo observes that previously, in the market place, the customers personally knew and identified with the farmers. And therefore there was a communication taking place at the point of purchase. With mass production and mass transportation, the products, being manufactured at far-off places were sold in malls and stores and this took the communication away. Thus, creating a kind of ‘alienation’ amongst customers and farmers. It should be noted that alienation is also one of the tools which is used by the slave masters for the process of enslavement. Another factor that facilitates slavery is the control of solidarity amongst the groups( slaves).In No Logo, we see that in many cases multinationals do not allow unionization of the workers and keep them under extreme repressive working conditions to control their ‘groupings or solidarity’ and prevent any kind of resulting ‘reaction’. In spite of such observation and its similarity with slave-phenomenon, the reference of slavery in the film was not made. Although the film does narrate the experiences of workers who work for almost 24 hours in a shift without any breaks, are not allowed to go home, sleep under sewing machines, their work places being guarded by physical guards and high fences; all of which shows the physical control of the workers from the outer world, atypical slavery practice.

Also, in the film Naomi explicitly speaks about the women workers who were being hired by multinationals; these women worked under repressive regimes being mentioned above. More importantly ‘No Logo’ expose the recruitment process of these women which showed that they were not from the neighboring places and came from places which were 6to 7 hours away from the work place. The analysis of this clearly shows that this was done to control them with repression were young women as opposed to young men who are expected to have a greater tendency to rebel against the repression being inflicted. However inspite of such observations of physical and mental control by the organizations, the film did not draw any parallel, of these observations, with slavery which is exercised in the same fashion and using the same operating mechanism of control of threat to vulnerabilities. In fact the film categorically mentions that multinationals are competing with each other in terms of who abuse their workers more, and therefore who exercise more control for greater profits. A clear direct link to this is the slave master’s case, who also keeps the slave under inhuman conditions to squeeze the best out of him/her, while at the same time nullifying all kinds of potential reactions by force and violence. No logo also clearly talks about the financial institutions like the World Bank and International Monitory Fund. These big organizations support the business- cause on the assumption that anything good for these businesses would also be good for all. This, the film consider, as an assault on the democracy because it takes away the freedom of choices of people at large who are forced to make their choices same as that of the big corporations. This leads us to other key characteristics of slavery which is control of the masses by a few.

Big corporations supported by the IMF and the World Bank are able to force their opinions, choices and decisions on the majority of the nations of the world without any consultation with them what so ever. In essence, enslaving them, through the most undemocratic institutionalized, financial, global support systems. This is true to slavery also where slaves are sold and resold to slave masters, who are in complete organization with each other to ensure that they are able to exercise their terms on the slaves. However this aspect is completely ignored in the film. Globalized concepts like Mcjobs (Ritzer) offer no security, no respect, no benefits and no control over work, workplaces, or work timing. All of these are also the core characteristics of slavery system in which the democracy of the people is taken. No logo acknowledges that democracy is being hijacked by the barding mechanism but it does not refer to the resultant slavery situation amongst the workers across the globe.

The second film ‘The Corporation’ specifically talks about and shows the working on corporations, primarily the multinationals working across the global demography. The film begins to shadow that corporations are all pervasive and that they influence and exercise power over lives thus creating lack of public control and more of power concentration in the hand so privatized organizations and individuals. The film features 40 corporate insiders and critics including stalwarts like Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Milton Friedman, Howard Zinn, Vandana Shiva and Michael Moore. In the very beginning of the film, corporations are compared with an eagle which is prepared to strike. In another scene they are compared with a monster, which is shown to be squeezing a person almost to death. This shows a violent analogy. And therefore the use of violence by the corporations can be perceived by the visual narrative. Historically speaking the film says that corporations, as form ownership, came into being 1712 out of industrial revolution and those wars created massive scope for corporations. In the light of this we can understand that the very origins of corporations were based on the opportunistic attitude while the profits remains at the core, they try to exercise power. It is also interesting that in the film while tracing the origins of the corporation, the films informs us that after the 14 amendment which was meant to protect the newly freed slaves, corporate lawyers cunningly presented corporations as persons and therefore like all humans being could enjoy rights similar to a person. Interestingly between 1890 and 1910 there were 307 cases filed under the 14 amendment. Out of these, 288 were corporations and mere 10 were African Americans. This is a clear testimony of how corporations have historically used not only scientific inventions, discoveries but also laws for their own benefits. While the film makes this clear, it do not say anything about the potential emergence of modern slavery due to the character of corporations. It is, however, quite clear with the narrative of the film that such a potential does exist and is indeed being realized by the big corporations across the world. This was further strengthened in the film, by the fact that the corporations are considered as a ‘legal person’ without morals or conscience. Corporations remain responsible to their stockholders, which are the owners and not to the ‘stakeholders’ like the general public(Noam Chomsky, The corporation) .It can therefore be assumed that corporations as the film suggest are responsible to only a few and therefore takes all it decisions according the good of the these few. Can this not mean the use slavery if need be, through force, manipulations of laws and scientific technology. I think it can .with amble evidence available for this, this film also ignores the link of corporation and the exercise of slavery. The film also refers to the concept of externalities which means avoidance of any major responsibilities on the part of corporations’ like worker's unions, factory accidents, compensations and so on. Companies want to avoid these externalities. This is done through a very systemic institutionalization of organizations such as Manpower who supply labor to other organizations. The responsibility of labor in such cases do not lie on the organizations on companies like manpower who tale workers and labors at all levels, from lower to managerial , on their pay rolls. This relates to the mechanism of slavery too where the slave master is unwilling to nurture the slave or providing any compensation other than making use of its labor abilities without any accountability, moral or otherwise.

The corporation like No Logo also travels to some of the most oppressive workplace across the globe and exposes the realities of ruthless and inhumane conditions in which workers are force to work while remaining underpaid or unpaid and economically exploited through fear and violence. The Corporation in fact runs a parallel narrative in which it identifies certain traits of a psychopath and shows how they are present in the corporations of the globalized world. The diagnostic checklist was used to measure the mental disorders (drawn from World Health Organization) in The Corporation, thereby personifying the corporations. The result was this: Corporations, as persons, act like psychopaths with the following characteristics:

1. Callous unconcern for the feelings of others. In other words exploitative
2. Incapacity to maintain enduring relationships
3. Reckless safeguard to safety of others.
4. Deceitfulness- repeated lying and conning of others for profits.
5. Capacity to inexperience guilt.
6. Failure to conform to social norms, with respect to lawful behaviors.

All of these characteristics are further complimented by other instances in the film like the practice of despotism by the corporations, involvement of IBM with Nazi government, provision of tax holidays by several government o corporations thus ripping poor of the basic facilities that government can provide through tax revenues, production of cancer epidemic by chemical industries and the use same chemical being produced by the corporation on people and farms during Vietnam War. In essence the film made clear that corporations are ruthless and despotic. They are also degrading environment, air and water and thus creating ill heath on mass scale. This in turn produces diseases but because corporations control the business of medical treatment through privatized hospitals and pharmaceutical companies, they control and hike the price of healthcare. This takes us back to the situation of creation of economic exploitation and also facilitating the emergence of slavery which finds fertility in such exploitative, poverty stricken situation. Historically understanding slavery and the way it changed and re emerged will help us understand the role that these global corporations play, not only in the creation but also the sustainability of slavery especially in the developing nations which are highly controlled by global financial hours like IMF and the World Bank. The film further shows a campaign in which, 100 of the world’s biggest corporate were being classified as criminals and were fined in the tunes for 500millon dollars for causing environmental and tax violations. These corporations includes name such as Pfizer, a drug company, GE, IBM, Roche. Exxon, Sears and others.In the light of these facts one also sees, in the film, that these corporations are quite aware of the violations that they cause and choose to look at it a business decision as long as the cost of compliance is higher than the cost of penalty, they continue to violate. All this is because the bottom-line is profits. While this is true, can the possibility of using slavery (because it also brings profits) be ruled out by the corporation given their ruthless and monstrous character? I do not think it can be because the fact have clearly shown that the mechanism which run these corporations are inherently enslaving and do produce slavery. The film does not, however, take this vantage point into account. It does make it clear that in their individual roles, mangers of corporations may be noble and kind, but in their institutional role, they are monstrous , producing ‘generational tyranny’. And therefore all possibilities should be taken into account with the exclusion of slavery.

In one of the interviews in the film (The Corporation) a commodity trader explains how the devastation of 9/11 was being looked upon as an opportunity for the gold holding clients. Thus again we see highly globalized economy where stocks and commodities are traded not only creates wealth but creates immune to human feelings and the ability to see opportunity where there is pain and suffering. This again is the most visible characteristic of classical form of slavery and is so highly manifested in our global systems. As one of the interviewees, Noam Chomsky speaks of privatization as a result of globalization, as process of taking over of public institutions by an unaccountable attorney. This means that schools, hospitals , road constructions , bridge building medicine, education , restaurants and many other institutions which have a direct bearing on the public’s life are now taken over by the private individuals, and are used not to benefit the people at large but to bring profit only to the few. This obviously is not possible unless there is exploitation of the masses by these few. As result of this exploitation the situations of economic inequality are created, human vulnerability is strengthened and the grounds of slavery are prepared. With new concepts such public relations, advertising, perception management which are highly scientific tools, the demands of insignificant products and services like fashion are created by boosting created-wants and created- desires for increased consumption. This leads to’ manufacturing consent’ (Chomsky).Such practices can create horrendous situations like the one anticipated in the film; two-third of the world will not have drinking water by 2025.

Support of oppressive regimes by global financial institutions as in the case of Indonesia where a military’s dictator was supported by the World Bank and the IMF in order to acquire Indonesian markets( john Pilger the new rulers of the world) will only make things worse and will provide favorable grounds for problems like slavery to re-emerge and prevail. What does this mean? I think it means increasingly high level of exploitations in the hand of multinational corporations to create enslavement for the want of more profits.It is ample clear that the globalized economy has also created globalized poverty and this, in turn has produced globalized slavery, a new form of slavery which is an inherent endowment of the process of globalization. The analysis of the facts produced by these two cases studies in addition to other work that I studied and research, it is quite clear that the rules and actors of slavery have changed; the slave masters are no longer remote individuals working within small physical boundaries controlling handful of slaves but they the globalized multinationals and white- nations of the west, operating at a vast scale controlling and enslaving millions with the use of modern technology, media and the process of institutionalization which is a part of larger process of modernization, enslaving the vast majority of ‘blank and brown’ people including women and children of the east. To complete the broader analysis of this paper it becomes necessary to answer the following questions while carefully looking at the present analysis, history and emergence of slavery and also the acts and actors of the prices of globalization to be able understand fully and therefore study more systematically, the relationship between silvery and globalizations:

1. How has slavery graduated from ‘one man or a small group of men enslaving another man or a small group of men’ to grand scale where one nation enslaves another nation, or one corporations enslaves another nation, or one nation or a group of nations together with one or corporations enslave another nation or a group of nation, or both

2. In this graduation of slavery what role does globalization plays; directly and indirectly?

3 Who are the national and international beneficiary if national and international
slavery that is being talked about in the paper?

4. What characteristics would a nation-slave master demonstrate and are these nation-master slaves not present today in the west?

5. What characteristics would a nation-slave demonstrate and are these nation-slaves not present today in the East?

6. What facilitates such new equations?

It is only in the light of these questions that the chapter of modern slavery be fully understood as it would take into account the nature of national and international political policies, funding, socio-economic conditions and over all fabric of human civilization, with it vast and varying interests amongst its member groups and individuals.

How's that?

In order to analyze the linkages between the globalization and the slavery, I used the case study method to textually analyze the two major documentaries namely No Logo and The Corporation. Both these documentaries have addressed the issues of globalization and its impact I chose these two particular cases because these are amongst the two most successful works in the recent times in terms of their impact, reach and range. Also the fact that they used a documentary genre to address globalization, which itself is a popular form, encouraged me to pick these cases. I was particularly conscious of the fact that despite being so popularly anti-globalization stands, both these work did not address slavery and therefore, I chose to study, in greater details, to do an in depth study.

‘No Logo’ features Naomi Klein, an award winning Canadian journalist and activist. ‘The Corporation’ also features her with many other corporate insiders and world renowned intellectuals and researchers. I therefore saw ‘No Logo’ echoing many popular, intellectual voices featured in The Corporation and vice verca.While looking into these two films, I noted the themes, visual characterization, narration, scenes and instances of interviews which were reflective of globalization and its impact. I then related these themes and their underlying concepts with slavery, as I understood and defined in the paper, both with contemporary and historical perspectives, to analyze how the later, despite stark similarities in the operationalization , the two were not interlinked and seen as second being the manifestation of the first.

In the final analysis I parallely looked at and compared the characteristics of slavery and that of globalization to see how the first is facilitated, produced and sustained by the second.

What is and what is not?

There is a vast literature both on slavery and globalization. However mostly both these are being dealt separately and are rarely interlinked. Same is true for audio visuals in documentary genres. Both “No Logo and “The Corporation” takes the stand of an anti-globalization campaign and view globalization as more evil than good. “No Logo” looks at branding, which itself is a highly globalized term, as production and not as mere promotional tool. In fact, it takes into its domain, the practice of advertising. The film which is based on a book by the same name argues that branding makes the product or a service secondary while placing the image or the idea in the minds of the customer as primary. It further discusses how branding has taken ways the sense of public and has placed high level of control in the choices that customers make today. This is done through systematic bombarding of messages through different media. This has taken the public’s freedom to maintain public spaces and sustain public institutions like public libraries. As a result of this highly controlling communicative mechanism called branding, global economy has disengaged itself from human rights and environmental concerns. The corporation works on a different level. It sees corporate a global force that controls the global resources. And hence the most visible between No Logo and the corporation is that the first’s theme is an intangible process called branding whereas the second’s theme is an entity which exist with all physical tangibles , and it’s called the corporation. First theme, however, is the need of the second. Both films looked at globalization as a process and its two evil products. But they excluded slavery. Another work that took the similar anti-globalization stand was John Pilger’s book called Globalization: The New Rulers of the World. This book draws lot from an audio-visual by the same title –Globalization: The new rulers of the world, written and directed by John Pilger.

Both, the book and the documentary investigates how control is being used by financial institutions like the IMF and the World Bank to gain new markets in Indonesia at the cost of creating immense exploitation, economic, political and social, through extending support to a violent regime being headed by an oppressive dictator. As a result of this oppression and an unfair deal between an oppressing head of the head and the oppressing financial institutions, the result was the people working under extreme conditions. Conditions such as 40 degrees workplace temperature, 36- hour shifts with no breaks, income almost 50% of the legal minimum
wage without any rules or regulations. Despite all such investigations, neither the book nor the corresponding audio visual related such oppression and its slave-like results with slavery. It completely excluded the notion of slavery.

Two monumental works of Kevin Bales, one of which was translated into an audio visual, are probably the only reliable and extensive work that connects globalization and its manifestations in slavery. The book Disposable People (and an article extracted from it called Expendable people, both by Kevin Bales), which was also used as the basis of the audio visual documentary called Slavery; The Global Investigation traces the role of globalization in slavery. Additionally, the other two books by Kevin Bales, New Slavery 2000 and Ending Slavery: How we free today’s slaves, 2007, explores slavery in the new globalized world. However in the description thereof, despite fine investigation and analysis of slavery, the author restricted the presence of slavery in its “one person enslaves another one” form. It almost excludes the possibility that one nation or a group of nations can use all the tools of slavery to enslave another nation or a group of nations. Undoubtedly, the work of Kevin Bales has provided a new insight into the world of globalization by navigating the threats of slavery but it did not investigate the role of one state as an individual, trying to enslave another state. This was the void that I recognized and if, indeed this void is proven to exist, it would require a new investigative study to look at state(s) as an ‘institutionalized slave master’ trying to enslave another institutionalized state.

George Ritzer’s the McDonaldization of the Society provides the basic framework to understand the application of Max Weber’s theory of rationalization and how it could be used to exercise control by the use of an assembly line and mechanisms of bureaucracy. Ritzer argued that that corporations like McDonalds’ homogenized the systems thereby building simple models with higher efficiency, effectiveness, lower costs, higher profits and minimal liabilities. All of these are also the characteristics of a modern day slavery, which is deliberately and strategically being used by the organizations that Ritzer mentions in his work.( including, but not limited to McDonalds’ and Ford Motors) Slavery also involves the employment of similar tools to achieve results that Ritzer mentions like high efficiency, least liability and instant disposability. I, therefore, found the exclusion of slavery amongst the grossly negative manifestations of globalization which was not recognized. However, wherever it was, like in the case of Kevin Bales’s work, it was only seen as ‘one to one’ and not as ‘group’ (nation or corporation) to ‘group’ (nation or corporation)

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Globalization and Slavery.

Looking at the differences between the two,the parallels between the process of globalization and slavery can be drawn. Globalization has all the above characteristics of a new form of slavery; in the globalized markets it is the not the ownership but the control that work. Be it through direct or indirect ways of tariff, embargos or through policies privatization, control-mechanism remains at the core. The costs are always kept low through mass production and mass transportation. The profits are outrageously high due this. More than often there is surplus due to 'created’ needs, wants and desires through advertisement, perception management techniques, branding and public relations. The relationship between the customer/ employees and seller/ employer is kept to short term. This is done through highly concentrated ownership of organizations and resources. And finally with high mobility, information bombardment and media, the ethic differences have become futile. The relationship between globalization and slavery also becomes clear if we see the circumstances and conditions in which slavery exists and by seeing the role of globalization towards the creation or facilitation of such circumstances. One of the first facilitating factors of slavery is poverty and economic exploitation. Use or support of violence, unfair means, and sense of control, alienation and lack of concern of feelings are some others. It is not difficult to understand that globalization has created and is continuously increasing eh gap between the poor and the rich. In fact today bill gates is bigger than entire continent of Africa, general motors’ is bigger than Denmark and ford motors is bigger south Africa.(John Pilger, The mew rulers of the world).This has concentrated the financial resources in too few a hands and thus there is exploitation, inequity and eventually conditions of poverty. Thus, in essence, facilitating slavery. Through the mechanism of institution such as world bank, IMF and GATT, farmers and peasant across third world are forced to grow cash crops and are also forced to compete with the highly subsidized agribusinesses of the US, Europe and Canada. All this is done on the most unfair conditions which are created by the architecture of globalization. Through patents and intellectuals right, vast majority of workers in developing word are unable to utilize their skills and are thus forced to move towards cities where they join the urban poverty, ultimately becoming the labor force. This immense mobility of the labor from the villages to the cities leads to excess labor and thus lower wages and again the condition of poverty which harbingers slavery. And those who do not move towards city are forced to compete with multinationals of the US and Europe and thus sell for far less than they afford. Further with mechanisms practiced by the IMF and the World Bank such as de-valuation being forced upon developing or underdeveloped nations, the net result of exchange is this:
Poor farmer pays more (with devalued currency) to buy from MNC’s whereas MNC pays less (with overvalued currency) to buy form the farmer and make huge profits by selling in their own markets.
Most world- economic statistics demonstrate the ever increasing gap between the rich and the poor. But more recently statistics states that 200 biggest corporations control the 25% of the world wealth (John Pilger, 2007, The New Rulers of the World). And that 500 richest people’s income is more than 416 million people of the world (Duncan Green, From Poverty to Power
2008).
All theses drastic inequalities have forced people to abandon their traditional abandon traditional occupations to try to meet the ever-changing demands of a new and growing labor market. More often, unsuccessfully so and thus eventually being exploited in the hands of power to become powerless-slaves.

Now and Then?

The drastic increase increase in the world population has increased the potential of slavery and this has resulted in “in a dramatic example of supply and demand of slaves’. (Kevin Bales, Disposable People). Due to this increased supply, the value of slaves has come down. This has also changed the way slaves are used.
The fact that people can be treated as ‘use and throw”, the new form of slavery become less and less permanent. It is, therefore, just not profitable to keep slaves after their immediate use. And hence they are they are treated like Mcjobs(George Ritzer, 1996, The McDonaldization of Society) where usage is time bound and time periods are extremely flexible(flexi hours).The time of enslavement varied from business to business, or trade to trade. A crop grown in a particular month would enclave only for that season. In the 19th century slavery this was not the case. Slaves were owned by the masters and masters were responsible for the upkeep, they were kept even when the work was “done”. Slaves were kept in order to ensure that they live up the time enslavement so as to recover the coat and also to produce more slaves. It was expensive to buy new adult slaves and so cheaper to have new slaves through the old slave’s family. In fact in many cases especially with African American cases of slavery, slaves were ripped off their family names and their’ master’s sir name would become their sir name. This would help to identify the owner of the slaves. This was also one of the ways to kill the identity of slaves and alienate them. Today, no slaveholder wants to spend money supporting useless infants. Keeping the dynamics of old and new slavery following differences can be seen in old and modern slavery:



Old Forms of Slavery New Forms of Slavery

1.Legal ownership asserted
1.Legal ownership avoided

2.High purchase cost

2.Very low purchase cost

3.Low profits
3.Very high profits

4.Shortage of potential slaves
4.Surplus of potential slaves

5.Long-term relationship
5.Short-term relationship

6.Slaves maintained
6.Slaves disposable

7.Ethnic differences important
7.Ethnic differences less important

(Kevin Bales, 1999, Disposable people)

Slave Shopping?

Free The Slaves claims that in Mali a young adult slave can be sold for as low as US$ 40, while in Thailand a young HIV free female slave can be sold for US$ 1000 to work in a brothel (Kevin Bales, Disposable People). Slavery is also taking place in parts of Africa, South Asia and the Middle East (http://www.anti-slaverysociety.org/slavery.htm, Does Slavery Still Exist, Anti Slavery Society.Retrieved on Nov 2 2008). The Middle East Quarterly reports that slavery has taken a form of epidemic in Sudan (http://www.meforum.org/article/449, The Middle East Quarterly. Retrieved on Nov. 2 2008). Chinese government had released 570 people who were enslaved in brick manufacturing in the months of June and July of the year 2007(http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/6902459.stm,conviction in China Slave Trials. Retrieved on Nov. 3 2008).Out of these people 69 were children(http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-06/15/content_894802.htm, China Daily. Retrieved on Nov 3 2008).Additionally an estimated of 600,000 men , women and children which form 205 of the population of Mauritania were used as bonded slaves.(http://www.saiia.org.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=635:mauritani amadeslaveryillegallastmonth&catid=62:governance-a-aprm-opinion&Itemid=159, Mauritina Made Slavery Illegal Last Month. Retrieved on Nov. 7 2008).In Nigeria the scene is no different. It is found that 800,000 thousand people are enslaved, a whopping 8% of the population.( http://abcnews.go.com/International/Story?id=813618&page=1, The Shackles of Slavery in Niger. Retrieved on Nov. 4 2008).
Similarly the traces of slavery are found in places like Central Africa, Ivory Coast, India, Pakistan, Burma and Iraq

Slavery NOW!

The best account of modern slavery is given by Professor Kevin Bales in his award winning book called The Disposable People: Slavery in the Age of Globalization, where he argues that “ once officially abolished slavery was transformed: adopted as an illicit enterprise , it has mirrored changes in the general economy. No longer viewed as property, people today are seen merely as disposable inputs into production”.Kevin Bales, who is the president of Free the Slaves, defines slavery as “The complete control of a person for economic exploitation by violence or the threat of violence”. Taking this definition into account, Bales’s “best estimate of the number of slaves in the world today is 27 million. Where are all these slaves? An estimated 15 to 20 million are bonded laborers in India, Pakistan, and Nepal. The remainder is concentrated in Southeast Asia, Northern and Western Africa, and parts of South America, though slavery can be found in almost every country in the world including the United States, Japan, and many European countries. Today's total slave population is greater than the population of Canada and nearly five times greater than the population of Israel.”Some other estimates however place the number of slaves in the range of 200 million. These slaves are engaged in work such carper weaving, sex trade, cocoa farming, carpets, fireworks, jewellery, metal goods, steel (made with slave produced charcoal), and foods such as grains, rice and sugar are exported directly to North America and Europe after being produced using slave labor. Presence of slavery in the industry keeps wages low and increases the profits of the manufacturers. The ongoing campaigns such American Anti- Slavery Group, Anti -Slavery International, Free the Slaves and Anti- Slavery Society are enough to speak volumes about this evil and its presence in the ‘modern’ world we are living in. According to the research of Kevin Bales, who is the world's leading expert on Modern slavery and President of Free the slaves, which is the US sister organization of Anti- Slavery International (the world’s oldest human rights organization), classifies slavery into three forms:
“Chattel Slavery is the form closest to old slavery. A person is captured, born, or sold into permanent servitude, and ownership is often asserted. The slave's children are normally treated as property as well and can be sold by the slaveholder. Occasionally, these slaves are kept as items of conspicuous consumption. This form is most often found in Northern and Western Africa and some Arab countries, but represents a small proportion of slaves in the modern world.”
“Debt Bondage is the most common form of slavery in the world. A person pledges him or herself against a loan of money, but the length and nature of the service is undefined, and the labor does not diminish the original debt.2 The debt can be passed down to subsequent generations, thus enslaving offspring, while 'defaulting' can be punished by seizing or selling children into further debt bonds. Ownership is not normally asserted, but there is complete physical control of the laborer. Debt bondage is most common in South Asia.”
“Contract Slavery illustrates how new forms of slavery are hidden within the framework of modern labor relations. Contracts are offered which guarantee employment, perhaps in a workshop or factory, but when the workers are taken to their place of employment they discover that they have instead been taken into slavery. The contract is used as an enticement to trick the
person. It is also a way of making the slavery appears legitimate if necessary; and, if legal questions arise, the contract is produced. While ownership is not asserted, the slave is under threat of violence, has no freedom of movement and is paid nothing. This is the most rapidly growing form. of slavery, and perhaps the second largest form today. Contract slavery is most often found in Southeast Asia, Brazil, some Arab states and some parts of South Asia.”
(Kevin Bales, 1999, Disposable People)

History of slavery ?

Slavery has been the part of some of the major civilizations such as ancient Egypt, Akkadian Empire, Ancient Greece, Ancient Persia and Rome. The records can be traced as early as 1760 BC. With the expansion of Roman Republic huge populations were converted into slaves thus creating a vast pool of slaves. These slaves came from wide demography including Greeks, Berbers, Germans, Briton, Jews and Arabs. Slaves were used not only as labors but were also used for the purposes of amusements like gladiators and sex slaves. It is recorded that by the end of republican era, slavery had become a vital economic pillar in the wealth of Rome. In the 15 century Europe colonialism of Africa further brought and strengthened slavery. In fact the maritime town of Lagos, Portugal was the first slave market created in Portugal for the sale of imported African Slaves. During the middle 16th century the focus of European trade in African slaves shifted from import to Europe to slave transport directly to tropical colonies in Americas. Slaves were also exchanged for gold in the African slave market. Subsequently the slavery spread across Spain, Brazil and Arab world. In fact all the 13 American colonies had legitimatized slavery and the profits that came from these slaves were huge. Same was the case of profits of the slave trade and of the West Indian plantations which amounted to 5% of the British economy at the time of industrial revolution. Historians say the Arab slave trade lasted more than millennium. Ibn Battuta told several times that he was given or purchased slaves. Some historians estimate that between 11 and 18 million black African slaves crossed the Red sea, Indian ocean and Sahara desert from 650 AD to 1900 AD, or more than the 9.4 to 12 million Africans brought to the Americas. According to Robert Davis between 1 million and 1.25 million Europeans were captured by Barbary pirates and sold as slaves in North Africa and Ottoman Empire between the 16th and 19th centuries. (http://www.dl.ket.org/latinlit/mores/slaves/, Slavery, retrieved on Nov. 4 2008)

Globalization NOW!

The post World war II globalization has usually been a work of businessmen, economists and politicians. These groups recognized the cost of protectionism and declining global economic integration. The work of these groups collectively lead to the Bretton Woods Conference and the formation of many institutions which would oversee the process of globalization, work for the growth of economies of the world as well as the crisis situation of the world. Some of these institutions are the World Bank, International Monitory Fund. It also resulted in agreements such as GATT (General Agreement on Trade and Tariff ) which was a combination of agreements to wash restrictions and make way for free trade. This was done through removal or reduction of tariffs, capital controls, transportation costs, subsidies for local businesses, creations of free trade zones and through the mechanism of patents and intellectual rights.
The most visible manifestations of globalization can be measured in three terms which are economic, social and political. Economic manifestations are the movements of goods and services from one nation to another by multinationals, mobility of global workforce, Technology and capital across nations. The social manifestation could be seen in the cultural globalization where western style, thoughts and ideas threatened the indigenous culture, diversity and sub cultures while at the same western lifestyles of clothing, food habits, education system language preferences and so on were adopted across the world. The political globalization is easily seen in the way nations like the USA and Europe influenced the local policies, issues and national programs of developing nations. Recent war on terror after 9/11 is another manifestation of political globalization as it affected the foreign and economic policies, markets and global alliance-interests amongst the nations of the world. It also globally affected the price of basic commodities such oil and gas across the world.
The effects of modern globalization were multi fold and multi dimensional. Its affects were industrial, economic, financial, informational, political, linguistic, social, legal and ethical. No aspect of human life across the world is left unaffected by globalization. While these effects produced many advantages like easy access to information, low technology and cheap products and services, it also produced many evils. Some of which, like loss of local diversity, individuality, and uniqueness of local culture and sub- culture, environmental degradation, pollution, death or extinction of many species of flora and fauna, besides others, are more visible and measurable while other evils remain hidden and under the shadow of the advantages.
One of these evils is the emergence of slavery which globalization creates, facilitates and nurtures.

History of globalization?

Economists have been using the term globalization since 1980s while social scientists have been using it since 1960s but the term has gain momentum in its more common usage only in the late 80s and early 90s. However the early forms of globalization existed during Roman Empire, the Parthian empire, with silk route in china and also during mogul empire.However ,globalization as a business proposition came into being with the established of British east India company , which is often termed as the first multinational corporation in the early 16th century with its counterparts in Portugal and Netherland. The credit of first era of globalization goes to the 19th century because this period demonstrated a lot of investment in trade between the European imperialist powers, its colonies and later the United States. It was also during this period that sub Saharan Africa and the island pacific were incorporated in to the world system. This period however began to come to an end with the First World War.

What is Globalization?

Globalization in its simple definition can be defined as the system which moves the local to other part(s)of the globe thus making it global. According to Wikipedia it “is the process of transformation of local or regional phenomena into global ones. It can be described as a process of blending or homogenization by which the people of the world are unified into a single society and function together. This process is a combination of economic, technological, socio-cultural and political forces. Globalization is often used to refer to economic globalization, that is, integration of national economies into the international economy through trade, foreign direct investment, capital flows, migration, and the spread of technologyIn essence the practical manifestation of the process of globalization is:
1. Multinational corporations
2. International and national mobility of human recourses, products and services
3. Easy Access to global communication through new, modern and in expensive technology
of media, internet and telecommunication
4. International laws
5. International trade and human rights agreements
6. Standardization of choices in terms of global tastes and global ideas
7. Diminishing importance of nations and increasing relevance and control of organizations
which can operate transnational?

Slavery: Under the Banner of Globalization

Let me argue how globalization creates modern day slavery.By analyzing two of the most successful anti-globalization video documentaries (No Logo and The Corporation) in recent times. I argue that globalization has taken slavery to a new height where not only a person can be enslaved by another but nations and corporations can enslave a substantial population of the world. By drawing from the contents of these films, I note how, despite being anti- globalization, both of these documentaries exclude the notion of slavery in their narrative. I also study modern slavery and globalization as the “new ruler “drawing from the work of Kevin bales and john Pilger respectively. My aim is to identify how, in the shadow of globalization, slavery is created and sustained by the global systems of economics, mobility, control and exploitation and also how these systems are rarely called a slavery-system despite having substantially visible characteristic of slavery in their mechanisms and in their results. It is my observation that people still have the notion of late19th century slavery in mind and therefore are unable to see its new forms and manifestations. This paper will explore these forms and manifestation in a way that they can seen as globalized slavery, an expensive and all pervasive product of globalization.