Movimientos Sociales/Política Mundial
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.30612/rmufgd.v10i20.15608Palabras clave:
Movimientos sociales, Política mundial, Pensamiento político moderno, Sociedad civil globalResumen
En este artículo central para las perspectivas críticas de las Relaciones Internacionales, Rob Walker discute las posibilidades y los límites que surgen de los intentos de analizar los movimientos sociales en relación con la política mundial. Los movimientos sociales frecuentemente no son considerados importantes para las Relaciones Internacionales y a menudo quedan relegados al ámbito político nacional. Walker destaca el predominio, en el imaginario político moderno, de epistemologías universalizantes y basadas en la trascendencia, por un lado, y fuertemente arraigadas en la experiencia política del Estado soberano moderno, por otro. A través del análisis de un movimiento social indio, el autor señala la pluralidad real y la movilidad de los imaginarios y prácticas políticas existentes en los movimientos sociales de diferentes localidades, enfatizando las epistemologías de la inmanencia que encuentran tensiones con las lecturas tradicionales y universalizantes de cómo los movimientos sociales se relacionan con las dimensiones internacionales de la política. Walker analiza los intentos de incorporar seriamente los movimientos sociales en los análisis de la política mundial, destacando los límites de tales intentos, como la sobregeneralización de las explicaciones estructuralistas y la permanencia de una perspectiva estatista, basada en el ámbito político nacional, en concepciones como las de la sociedad civil global.
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