ABSTRACT

Civil society activism around issues of global justice has proliferated in Europe during the past two decades. Has such contestation and advocacy made a difference? This book examines whether and how the organizations, networks and campaigns involved have attained their policy objectives in the areas of debt relief, international trade, international taxation and corporate accountability. The analysis also considers the relationship between national and transnational activism. By comparing variations in the "activism-policy nexus" in France, Italy and the United Kingdom, it seeks to understand how such interaction and policy outcomes vary in different institutional and political contexts.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

Understanding the Activism–Policy Nexus

part I|97 pages

Actors, Institutions and Networks

chapter 2|25 pages

National Policy Regimes

Implications for the Activism–Policy Nexus

part II|209 pages

The Activism–Policy Nexus in Practice

chapter 5|25 pages

Global Networks on Trade Policy

The Case of the WTO Conference in Cancún 1

chapter 6|24 pages

Advocacy for Corporate Accountability and Trade Justice

The Role of ‘Noble Networks' in the United Kingdom

chapter 7|27 pages

Reforming Agricultural and Trade Policy in France

The Limits of Multi-Actor Coalitions 1

chapter 9|22 pages

Dropping the Debt?

British Anti-Debt Campaigns and International Development Policy

chapter 11|19 pages

Global Justice and/as Global Democracy

The UK Campaign for a Tobin Tax

chapter 12|24 pages

Campaign or ‘Movement of Movements'?

Attac France and the Currency Transaction Tax