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Globalization and Social Movements: Comparing Women's Movements responses to NAFTA in Mexico,the USA and Canada
Authors:Laura MacDonald
Institution:1. Department of Anthropology and Sociology , Pace University , 41 Park Row, New York, NY, 10038, USA afoerster@pace.edu
Abstract:The article examines the responses of women's movements in Canada, the United States and Mexico to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) from a comparative perspective. It argues that while some women's groups have raised important critiques of trade agreements from a feminist perspective, they have largely failed to make the gendered dimension of regionalization visible in public debate on NAFTA and have had virtually no impact on public policy. The nature of the women's movements in the three countries limited the possibilities of greater contestation of the form of economic liberalization at both the national and transnational levels. Drawing upon the literature on social movements, the article suggests that the ability of women's movements to respond to NAFTA was conditioned by: (1) the shifting universe of political discourse in each country - whether it permits the identification of macroeconomic policy as a gender issue - which is conditioned in part by the diverse forms of engagement with liberalism as a political philosophy in each country, and (2) the organizational structure of women's movements in each country, their relationships with their respective states, and their role within broader coalitions.
Keywords:Nafta  Women'S Organizations  Canada  United States  Mexico
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