Ideology of Globalization
Ideology of Globalization
Ideology of Globalization
10(1), 11–30
Ideologies of globalization
MANFRED B. STEGER
ABSTRACT Taking issue with Michael Freeden’s sceptical assessment that ‘it is
far too early to pronounce on globalism’s status as an ideology’, this article seeks
to establish that globalism not only represents a set of political ideas and beliefs
coherent enough to warrant the status of a new ideology, but also constitutes the
dominant ideology of our time against which all of its challengers must define
themselves. After drawing careful analytic distinctions between often-conflated
terms involving the concept of ‘globalization’, the main section of this article
relies on three criteria suggested by Freeden to assess the ideological maturity of
globalism. It is proposed that its conceptual structure be disaggregated not merely
into core, adjacent, and peripheral concepts, but—perhaps more dynamically—
into a set of six core claims that play crucial semantic and political roles. With
regard to semantics, this article argues that these claims absorb and rearrange
bits and pieces of several established ideologies and integrate them with new
concepts into a hybrid meaning structure of genuine novelty. Their political role
consists chiefly in preserving and enhancing asymmetrical power structures that
benefit particular social groups. The article ends with a short experimental
‘thought exercise’ designed to bring the insights gained from my critical analysis
of globalism to bear on the necessary project of reclassifying conventional
political belief systems.
Introduction
In a recent article on shifting ideological boundaries, Michael Freeden argues
convincingly that the ‘current fragmentation of established ideologies and the
revived uncertainty concerning whether ideology still exists’ have highlighted the
difficulty of capturing the changing morphologies of political belief systems. In
order to address this problem, the British political theorist proposes two fertile
lines of inquiry: first, to question ‘the implicit holism in the notion of an
ideological family’, and, second, to ‘query the dominant conventions of
classifying and categorizing ideologies, with a view to establishing the degree to
which they constitute useful clusters’.1 Examining the first line of inquiry more
closely, Freeden briefly discusses ‘globalism’ as a possible ‘holistic contender’,
ISSN 1356-9317 print; ISSN 1469-9613 online/05/010011–20 q 2005 Taylor & Francis Group Ltd
DOI: 10.1080/1356931052000310263
MANFRED B. STEGER
but quickly retreats to the sceptical view that ‘it is far too early to pronounce on
globalism’s status as an ideology’.2 Pursuing the second line of inquiry, Freeden
recommends imaginative ‘thought-exercises’ with the aim of providing ‘insight
into some organizing feature according to which ideologies can be reclassified’.3
Indeed, he ends his editorial with an experimental reclassification design based on
select features of human behaviour such as pride, fear, gregariousness,
complacency, vulnerability, insubordination, and self-depreciation.
Freeden’s article possesses a number of virtues. First, it wisely reminds students
of ideology that political belief systems are ephemeral constellations whose shifting
morphologies demand periodic scholarly reassessments. Second, it challenges
twenty-first century analysts of ideology to reappraise antiquated popular and
conventional classification systems that might obscure more than they illuminate.
This means that scholars must be willing to entertain the possibility of wholesale
ideological transformations, and thus be prepared to rethink, revise, and perhaps
replace outdated conceptual morphologies that no longer capture the dynamics of
actually existing political belief systems. Third, it displays considerable intellectual
imagination by calling for experimental thought-exercises designed to redraw old
ideological boundaries and reclassify ideological systems.4
While sharing Freeden’s interest in changing ideological systems as well as
sympathizing with his two proposed methodological lines of inquiry, I nonetheless
must resist his brief assessment of globalism. Contra Freeden, this article
maintains that it is not too early to pronounce on globalism’s status as an ideology.
In fact, it will seek to establish that globalism not only represents a set of political
ideas and beliefs coherent enough to warrant the status of a new ideology, but also
constitutes the dominant political belief system of our time against which all of its
challengers must define themselves.
I open my arguments by drawing careful analytic distinctions between often-
conflated terms involving the concept of ‘globalization’. Following Freeden’s first
line of inquiry, the main section of this article examines globalism’s morphology,
with special consideration given to its ideological status. However, I propose to
disaggregate globalism not merely into core, adjacent, and peripheral concepts,
but—perhaps more dynamically—into a set of six core claims that play crucial
semantic and political roles. With regard to semantics, I argue that these claims
absorb and rearrange bits and pieces of several established ideologies and integrate
them with new concepts into a hybrid meaning structure of genuine novelty. Their
political role consists chiefly in preserving and enhancing asymmetrical power
structures that benefit particular social groups. Merely touching upon Freeden’s
second line of inquiry, I end with a short experimental ‘thought exercise’ designed
to bring the insights gained from my critical analysis of globalism to bear on the
necessary project of reclassifying conventional political belief systems.
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
In part, its conceptual unwieldiness arises from the fact that global flows occur in
different physical and mental dimensions, usefully divided by Arjun Appadurai
into ‘ethnoscapes’, technoscapes’, ‘mediascapes’, ‘finanscapes’, and ‘ideos-
capes’.6 Moreover, as I noted elsewhere, since its earliest appearance in the 1960s,
‘globalization’ has been used in both popular and academic literature to describe a
wide variety of phenomena, including a process, a condition, a system, a force, and
an age.7 Given the different meanings of these concepts, their indiscriminate usage
invites confusion. A sloppy conflation of process and condition, for instance,
encourages circular definitions that possess little explanatory power. For example,
the often-repeated truism that globalization (the process) leads to more
globalization (the condition) does not allow us to draw meaningful distinctions
between causes and effects.
I use the term globality to signify a future social condition characterized by
thick economic, political, and cultural interconnections and global flows that make
currently existing political borders and economic barriers irrelevant. Yet, it should
not be assumed that ‘globality’ refers to a determinate endpoint that precludes any
further development. Rather, this concept points to a particular social condition
destined to give way to new, qualitatively distinct, constellations. For example, it
is conceivable that globality could eventually be transformed into something we
might call ‘planetarity’—a new social condition brought about by the successful
colonization of our solar system. Moreover, we could easily imagine different
social manifestations of globality: one based primarily on values of individualism
and competition, as well as on an economic system of private property, another
embodying more communal and cooperative social arrangements, including less
capitalistic economic relations. These future alternatives expose the fundamen-
tally indeterminate character of globalization.
In my view, the term globalization should be confined to a set of complex,
sometimes contradictory, social processes that are changing our current social
condition based on the modern system of independent nation-states. Indeed, most
scholars of globalization have defined their key concept along those lines as a
multidimensional set of social processes that create, multiply, stretch, and intensify
worldwide social interdependencies and exchanges while at the same time fostering
in people a growing awareness of deepening connections between the local and the
distant.8 At its core, then, globalization is about the unprecedented compression of
time and space as a result of political, economic, and cultural change, as well as
powerful technological innovations.9 The slogan ‘globalization is happening’
implies that we are moving from the modern socio-political order of nation states
that gradually emerged in the seventeenth century toward the ‘postmodern’
condition of globality. Indeed, like ‘modernization’ and other verbal nouns that end
in the suffix ‘-ization’, the term ‘globalization’ suggests a dynamic best captured by
the notion of ‘development’ or ‘unfolding’ along discernable patterns. Such
unfolding may occur quickly or slowly, but it always corresponds to the idea of
change, and, therefore, denotes the alteration of present conditions. This crucial
focus on change explains why globalization scholars pay particular attention to
shifting temporal modes and the reconfiguration of social and geographical space.
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MANFRED B. STEGER
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
At the same time, however, researchers have scarcely hesitated to put forward a
host of criteria and characteristics for separating ‘thin’ ideational clusters from
‘thick’ ideologies. Terry Eagleton, for example, insists that full-blown thought
systems typically contain ‘six meanings’; Goran Therborn (influenced by Louis
Althusser) defines them in terms of ‘three fundamental modes of interpellation’;
Teun van Dijk emphasizes their comprehensive cognitive functions; and John
Thompson associates mature ideologies with ‘five operational modes’.18
Committed to a philosophical-conceptual approach to the study of ideology,
Michael Freeden suggest that mature ideologies display unique features anchored
in distinct conceptual morphologies. Resembling well-furnished rooms containing
various pieces of furniture uniquely arranged in proximity to each other,
conceptual units ‘pattern’ an ideology and thus permit its categorization.19 Held
together by conceptual cores sufficiently fertile to bear the weight of adjacent and
peripheral concepts, mature thought systems exhibit a full spectrum of responses
to issues (as understood at the time and place) that political systems need to
address. In addition, their morphologies must be broad enough to encompass the
spread of conceptual decontestations characteristic of mature ideological
families.20 Thus, Freeden provides researchers with three useful criteria for
determining the status of a particular political belief system: first, its degree of
uniqueness and morphological sophistication; second, its context-bound
responsiveness to a broad range of political issues; and, third, its ability to
produce effective conceptual decontestation chains. Scoring high on these criteria,
a conceptual cluster might earn the designation ‘ideology’; ranking low on one or
all of them, however, it would probably be classified as a mere ‘module’. I will use
Freeden’s three criteria in my own assessment of globalism.
With regard to the third criterion, it is important to note that Freeden considers
‘decontestation’ a crucial process in the formation of thought systems because it
specifies the meanings of the core concepts by arranging them in a ‘pattern’ or
‘configuration’ that links them with other concepts in a meaningful way. As he
puts it:
This configuration teases out specific conceptions of each of the concepts involved. Its
precision of meaning, while never conclusive, is gained by the specific and constricted
interaction among the concepts it employs. An ideology attempts to end the inevitable
contention over concepts by decontesting them, by removing their meanings from contest.
‘This is what justice means’, announces one ideology, and ‘that is what democracy entails’.
By trying to convince us that they are right and that they speak the truth, ideologies become
devices for coping with the interdeterminacy of meaning . . .. That is their semantic role.
[But] [i]deologies also need to decontest the concepts they use because they are instruments
for fashioning collective decisions. That is their political role.21
Effective decontestation structures can thus be pictured as simple semantic chains
whose conceptual links convey authoritative meanings that facilitate collective
decision-making. Their interconnected semantic and political roles suggest that
control over political language translates directly into political power, that is, the
power of deciding ‘who gets what, when, and how’.22 Assembled and nurtured by
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
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MANFRED B. STEGER
the basis of ‘hard evidence’. And yet, the two most comprehensive empirical
assessments of changes in global income distributions in the last decade have
arrived at sharply conflicting results.49 Even those globalists who consider the
possibility of unequal global distribution patterns nonetheless insist that the
market itself will eventually correct these ‘irregularities’. As John Meehan,
chairman of the US Public Securities Association, puts it, ‘episodic dislocations’
such as mass unemployment and reduced social services might be ‘necessary in
the short run’, but, ‘in the long run’, they will give way to ‘quantum leaps in
productivity’.50
The al-Qaeda attacks of September 11 only seem to have added to the fervor
with which globalists speak of the supposed benefits accruing from the
liberalization and global integration of markets. Defending his view that the
benefits of globalization must be defended at all costs, President Bush asserted
that, ‘Free trade and free markets have proven their ability to lift whole societies
out of poverty—so the United States will work with individual nations, entire
regions, and the entire global trading community to build a world that trades in
freedom and and therefore grows in prosperity’.51
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
For Robinson, the thin concept of polyarchy differs from the thicker concept of
‘popular democracy’ in that the latter posits democracy as both a process and a
means to an end—a tool for devolving political and economic power from the
hands of elite minorities to the masses. Polyarchy, on the other hand, represents an
elitist and regimented model of ‘low intensity’ or ‘formal’ market democracy.
Polyarchies not only limit democratic participation to voting in elections, but also
require that those elected be insulated from popular pressures, so that they may
‘govern effectively’.56
This semantic focus on the act of voting—in which equality prevails only in the
formal sense—helps to obscure the conditions of inequality reflected in existing
asymmetrical power relations in society. Formal elections provide the important
function of legitimating the rule of dominant elites, thus making it more difficult
for popular movements to challenge the rule of elites. The claim that globalization
furthers the spread of democracy in the world is thus largely based on a narrow,
formal-procedural understanding of ‘democracy’. The promotion of polyarchy
allows globalists to advance their project of economic restructuring in a language
that ostensibly supports the ‘democratization’ of the world.
After 9-11, Claim Five became firmly linked to the Bush administration’s
neoconservative security agenda. The President did not mince words in ‘Securing
Freedom’s Triumph’—his New York Times op-ed piece a year after the attacks:
‘As we preserve the peace, America also has an opportunity to extend the benefits
of freedom and progress to nations that lack them. We seek a peace where
repression, resentment and povery are replaced with the hope of democracy,
development, free markets and free trade’.57 Fourteen months later, he reaffirmed
his unwavering ‘commitment to the global expansion of democracy’ as the ‘Third
Pillar’ of the United States’ ‘peace and security vision for the world’.58
This idea of securing global economic integration through an American-led
military drive for ‘democratization’ around the globe became especially prominent
in the corporate scramble for Iraq following the official ‘end of major combat
operations’ on May 1, 2003. Already during the first days of the Iraq war, in late
March 2003, globalists had suggested that Iraq be subjected to a radical economic
treatment. For example, Robert Mcfarlane, former National Security Adviser to
President Reagan and current chairman of the Washington, DC-based corporation
Energy and Communication Solutions, LLC, together with Michael Bleyzer, CEO
and president of SigmaBleyzer, an international equity fund management com-
pany, co-authored a prominent op-ed piece in The Wall Street Journal bearing the
suggestive title, ‘Taking Iraq Private’. Calling on ‘major US corporations, jointly
with other multinationals’, to ‘lead the effort to create capital-friendly environ-
ments in developing countries’, the globalist duo praised the military operations in
Iraq as an indispensible tool in establishing the ‘political, economic and social
stability’ necessary for ‘building the basic institutions that make democracy
possible’. In their conclusion, the two men reminded their readers that ‘the US
must demonstrate that it is not only the most powerful military power on the planet,
but also the foremost market economy in the world, capable of leading a greater
number of developing nations to a more posperous and stable future’.59
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
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and other competing thought systems appear to make the prospect of globalism’s
undisputed hegemony highly unlikely, their unrelenting focus on countering the
claims of their ideological nemesis highlights globalism’s semantic and political
power.
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Seen in this light, the researcher’s necessary task of identifying and classifying
political ideas must retain a critical posture toward existing social relations of
domination. Perhaps the clearest recent formulation of this critical approach
comes from the pen of Pierre Bourdieu. Challenging the ‘famous “axiological
neutrality” that is wrongly identified with scientific objectivity’, the late French
social theorist argues that ‘Today’s researchers must innovate an improbable but
indispensable combination: scholarship with commitment, that is, a collective
politics of intervention in the political field that follows, as much as possible, the
rules that govern the scientific field’.69 In my view, such a commitment to critique
applies particularly to the evaluation of emerging conceptual clusters.
Having acknowledged these important caveats, I end this article with a brief
‘thought-exercise.’ If globalism indeed constitutes a new ideological configuration
that dominates today’s ideational landscape, then what does this mean with regard
to the crucial task of reclassifying political belief systems? Most importantly, I
believe, it would mean that students of ideology could no longer rely on the
outdated categories of the last two centuries to make sense of current ideological
dynamics. And yet, virtually all contemporary scholarly surveys of political
ideologies remain wedded to conventional categories such as ‘socialism’,
‘conservatism’, ‘liberalism’, ‘anarchism’, and so on. The authors of these major
texts address the widening gap between their antiquated typology and actual
ideological phenomena merely by dedicating a few pages at the end of each
chapter to a discussion of ‘current trends’ or ‘twenty-first century develop-
ments’.70 What would happen if we were to reclassify ideologies on the basis of
contemporary relevance?
It seems to me that we would have to introduce a new classification scheme that
divides the ideological landscape into three regions. At the center, we would find
the ideological family of globalism with its two main variants, namely, pre-9-11
market globalism and post-9-11 imperial globalism. Oppositional ideological
families on the political Right and Left would take up the remaining two con-
ceptual areas.71 Challengers of globalism on the Right might include national-
populism, new localisms, and various religious fundamentalisms with strong
political inclinations. Oppositional ideologies on the Left might include global
feminism, international-populism, and various ideational clusters associated with
‘global social justice’ movements. Whether these thought systems constitute full-
blown ideologies or merely rising ‘modules’ would remain, of course, subject to
further research. Such a novel classification system would be interested in the
historical significance of conventional ideologies, but its primary focus would be
on tracing their conceptual influence on current political belief systems rather than
making them main players on the contemporary ideological stage.
The tumultuous opening years of the new century have been a powerful reminder
of the ancient Greek adage—attributed to Heraclites—that ‘everything flows and
nothing stays fixed’. For students of ideology, this means that the reality of change
must find its way into their traditional analytic models and typologies. In our era of
globalization, we must be prepared to step outside familiar conceptual terrain and
re-evaluate the utility of conventional ideological boundaries and long-held
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MANFRED B. STEGER
categories. Our efforts may not always lead us to new insights, but our complacency
would surely condemn us to political and theoretical irrelevance.
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IDEOLOGIES OF GLOBALIZATION
interests of any particular group; ‘critical conceptions’ are those which convey a negative, critical, or
pejorative sense, implying that these distorted meanings serve to establish and sustain relations of domi-
nation. See J.B. Thompson, Ideology and Modern Culture: Critical Social Theory in the Era of Mass
Communication (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1990), pp. 52– 6.
18. T. Eagleton, Ideology: An Introduction (London: Verso, 1991), pp. 28–30; G. Therborn, The Ideology of
Power and the Power of Ideology (London: New Left Books, 1980), p. 18; T. van Dijk, Ideology:
A Multidisciplinary Approach (London: Sage, 1998), pp. 313–315; and Thompson, op. cit., Ref. 17, pp. 60–7.
19. M. Freeden, Ideologies and Political Theory: A Conceptual Approach (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1996), pp. 86–7.
20. Freeden, ibid., pp. 485–6.
21. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 16, pp. 54– 5.
22. H.D. Lasswell, Politics: Who Gets What, When and How (New York: Meridian Books, 1958).
23. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 19, p. 485.
24. Steger, op. cit., Ref. 13, Chapter 3.
25. See A. Wolfson, ‘Conservatives and neoconservatives’, The Public Interest (Winter 2004), ,http://www.the
publicinterest.com/current/article2.html . . See also M. Lind, ‘A tragedy of errors,’ The Nation (February
23, 2004), pp. 23–32.
26. For many more textual examples of these six core claims, see M.B. Steger, Globalism: Market Ideology
Meets Terrorism, 2nd edn (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2005), Chapter 3.
27. BusinessWeek (December 13, 1999), p. 212.
28. W. Bole, ‘Tales of globalization’, America 181. 18 (December 4, 1999), pp. 14– 6.
29. T. Friedman, The Lexus and the Olive Tree: Understanding Globalization (New York: Farrar, Strauss and
Giroux, 1999), p. 9.
30. J.E. Spiro, ‘The challenges of globalization’, Speech at the World Economic Development Congress in
Washington, DC, September 26, 1996, ,http://www.state.gov/www/issues/economic/960926.html . .
31. G.W. Bush, National Security Strategy of the United States (2002), ,http://www.whitehouse.gov/nsc/print/
nssall.html . .
32. W.J. Clinton, ‘Remarks by the president on foreign policy’, San Francisco, February 26, 1999, ,http://www.
pub.whitehouse.gov/urires/12R?urn:pdi://oma.eop.gove.us/1999/3/1/3.text.1.html . .
33. F.W. Smith cited in ‘International finance experts preview upcoming global economic forum’, April 1, 1999,
,http://www.econstrat.org/pctranscript.html . .
34. M. Villar, Jr., ‘High-level dialogue on the theme of the social and economic impact of globalization and
interdependence and their policy implications’, New York, September 17, 1998, ,http://www.un.int/
philippines/villar.html . .
35. See F.A. Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 1994 [1941]); and
M. Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom (Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 1962).
36. U. Beck, What Is Globalization? (Cambridge, UK: Polity Press, 2000), p. 122.
37. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 16, pp. 55– 60.
38. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 19, p. 334.
39. H. Cox, ‘The market as God: living in the new dispensation’, Atlantic Monthly (March 1999), pp. 18–23.
40. See M.B. Steger, The Quest for Evolutionary Socialism: Eduard Bernstein and Social Democracy
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1996).
41. J. Gray and S. Roach cited in ‘Is it at risk?—globalisation’, The Economist (February 2, 2002), p. 65.
42. R.J. Samuelson, ‘Globalization goes to war’, Newsweek (February 24, 2003), p. 41.
43. C. Shays, ‘Free markets and fighting terrorism’, The Washington Times (June 10, 2003).
44. R. Hormats, ‘PBS interview with Danny Schechter’ (February 1998), ,http://pbs.org/globalization/
hormats1.html . .
45. Friedman, op. cit., Ref. 31, pp. 112 –3.
46. R. Kagan, ‘The U.S.-Europe divide’, Washington Post (May 26, 2002).
47. The post-9/11 literature on ‘American Empire’ is vast and rapidly growing. See, for example, C. Johnson, The
Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic (New York: Metropolitan Books, 2004);
C. Boggs, The New Militarism: U.S. Empire and Endless War (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield
Publishers, 2004); E. Todd, After Empire: The Breakdown of the American Order (New York: Columbia
University Press, 2003); G. Soros, The Bubble of American Supremacy: Correcting the Misuse of American
Power (New York: Public Affairs, 2003); M. Mann, Incoherent Empire (London: Verso, 2003); and
D. Harvey, The New Imperialism (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, 2003). Michael Walzer, for
example, suggests that the post-9/11 American Empire constitutes a ‘new beast’ characterized by ‘a looser
form of rule, less authoritarian than empire is or was, more dependent on the agreement of others’. At the
same time, Walzer concedes that ‘George W. Bush’s unilateralism is a bid for hegemony without
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MANFRED B. STEGER
compromise; perhaps he sees America playing an imperial—perhaps also messianic—role in the world’. See
M. Walzer, ‘Is there an American empire?’, Dissent (Fall 2003), pp. 27–31.
48. Economic Communiqué, Lyon G7 Summit, June 28, 1996, ,http://library.utoronto.ca/www/g7/96ecopre.
html . .
49. Columbia University economist Xavier Sala i-Martin argues that his evidence shows that inequality of
individuals across the world is declining; but according to World Bank economist Branko Milanovic, global
inequality has risen. See L. Secor, ‘Mind the gap’, The Boston Globe (January 5, 2003).
50. J.J. Meehan, ‘Globalization and technology at work in the bond markets’, Speech given in Phoenix, AZ,
March 1, 1997, ,http://www/bondmarkets.com/news/Meehanspeechfinal.html . .
51. G.W. Bush, National Security Strategy of the United States of America (2002), ,http://www.whitehouse.
gov/nsc/print/nssall.html . .
52. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 19, p. 392.
53. See Steger, op. cit., Ref. 28, Chapter 3.
54. ‘Economic globalization and culture: a discussion with Dr. Francis Fukuyama’, ,http://www.ml.com/woml/
forum/global2.html . .
55. H. Rodham Clinton, ‘Growth of democracy in Eastern Europe’, Speech in Warsaw, October 5, 1999, ,http:/
www.whitehouse.gov/WH/EOP/First Lady/html/generalspeeches/1999/19991005.html . .
56. W.I. Robinson, Promoting Polyarchy: Globalization, U.S. Intervention, and Hegemony (Cambridge, UK:
Cambridge University Press, 1996), pp. 56–62.
57. G.W. Bush, ‘Securing freedom’s triumph’, New York Times (September 11, 2002).
58. G.W. Bush, ‘Transcript of his Address in London on Iraq and the Middle East’, New York Times (November
19, 2003).
59. R. Mcfarlane and M. Bleyzer, ‘Taking Iraq private’, The Wall Street Journal (March 27, 2003).
60. S. Williams, ‘The seeds of Iraq’s future terror’, The Guardian (October 28, 2003).
61. C. Powell cited in J. Treaster, ‘Powell tells Arab-Americans of hopes to develop Mideast’, New York Times
(September 30, 2003); and A. Olivastro, ‘Powell announces U.S.-Middle East partnership initiative’,
The Heritage Foundation (December 12, 2002), ,http://www.heritage.org/research/middleeast/ wm179.
cfm . .
62. R. Falk, ‘Will the empire be fascist?’, The Transnational Foundation for Peace and Future Research Forum
(March 24, 2003), ,http://www.transnational.org/forum/meet/2003/Falk_FascistEmpire.html . .
63. See, for example, S. Latouche, The Westernization of the World (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1996); and
G. Ritzer, The McDonaldization of Society: An Investigation Into the Changing Character of Contemporary
Social Life (Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press, 1993).
64. T.P.M. Barnett, ‘The Pentagon’s new map’, Esquire (March 2003), http://www.nwc.navy.mil/newrulessets/
ThePentagon’sNewMap.htm . ; and The Pentagon’s New Map: War and Peace in the 21st Century
(New York: Putnam, 2004). For a similar illustration of Claim Six, see R.D. Kaplan, ‘Supremacy by Stealth’,
The Atlantic Monthly (July/August 2003), ,http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2003/07/kaplan.htm . .
65. Barnett, ibid.
66. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 1, p. 8.
67. Freeden argues that, ‘While the function of ideologies is to guide practical political conduct, the analysis of
ideologies. . .is not geared to directing or recommending political action. Its purpose is to explain, to interpret,
to decode, and to categorize’. Freeden, op. cit., Ref. 19, p. 6.
68. A. Scott (Ed.) The Limits of Globalization: Cases and Arguments (London: Routledge, 1997), p. 2.
69. Pierre Bourdieu, Firing Back: Against the Tyranny of the Market 2 (New York: The New Press, 2003),
pp. 18, 24.
70. See, for example, L.T. Sargent, Contemporary Political Ideologies: A Comparative Analysis, 12th edn
(New York: Harcourt Brace College Publishers, 2004); T. Ball and R. Dagger, Political Ideologies and the
Democratic Ideal, 5th edn (New York: Longman, 2003); and A. Heywood, Political Ideologies:
An Introduction, 3rd edn (London: Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003).
71. While conceding that the conceptual line dividing the political left and the right always has been shifting with
changing historical circumstances, the Italian thinker Norberto Bobbio recently defended the significance
of this distinction—anchored in two fundamentally different perspectives on equality—for our era of
globalization. See N. Bobbio, Left and Right: The Significance of a Political Distinction (Chicago, IL:
The University of Chicago Press, 1996).
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