Death of distance or tyranny of distance? The Internet, deterritorialization, and the anti-globalization movement in Australia

Much of the analysis of the anti-globalization movement that has emerged in the last five years has focused on the degree to which the Internet has played a crucial role in contemporary social movements. It is commonly argued that the Internet helps create ‘virtual communities’ that use the medium to exchange information, coordinate activities, and build and extend political support. Much of the commentary on the web as a means of political mobilization for social movements stresses the degree to which the Internet compresses both space and time, accelerating the exchange of information among whomever has access to this technology. Equally important in this view is the deterritorialized nature of on-line protest and the diminution in importance of ‘place’ in current anti-globalization campaigns. Certainly this argument features prominently in analyses of the campaign against the Multilateral Agreement on Investment (MAI) in 1997-98 and the protests against the World Trade Organization (WTO) meetings in Seattle in November and December 1999. Our examination of the antiglobalization movement in Australia however leads us to a different conclusion: that while the Internet does indeed compress time, it compresses space in a different, and indeed quite variable, way. We examine the way in which Australians protested against the MAI and against the WTO meetings in Seattle, and show the differences in the nature of protest in each case. In the MAI case, the protests were well-organized and national in scope, with the Internet playing an important role in organizing the movement. By contrast, in the case of the WTO, the movement was minor and relatively marginal, with the Internet playing little discernible role in galvanizing protest. We conclude that crucial to an understanding of the differences was the considerable difference in the importance of ‘place’ in each case.

[1]  J. Scholte,et al.  Contesting Global Governance: References , 2000 .

[2]  M. Albrow,et al.  The Global Age: State and Society Beyond Modernity , 1996 .

[3]  Stephen J. Kobrin,et al.  The MAI and the Clash of Globalizations , 1998 .

[4]  Ronald J. Deibert International Plug 'n Play? Citizen Activism, the Internet, and Global Public Policy , 2000 .

[5]  Francesca Polletta,et al.  Activists Beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics , 1998 .

[6]  J. Crump Spaces of globalization, reasserting the power of the local , 1998 .

[7]  David J. Rothkopf Cyberpolitik: The Changing Nature of Power in the Information Age , 1998 .

[8]  J. Sempsey The death of distance: How the communications revolution will change our lives , 1998 .

[9]  K. Jarausch,et al.  Disembeddedness and Localization: The Persistence of Territory , 1998 .

[10]  L. Salamon The Rise of the Nonprofit Sector , 1994 .

[11]  John H. Jackson,et al.  World Trade Organization , 2019, Encyclopedia of Food and Agricultural Ethics.

[12]  Jeffrey Ayres,et al.  From the Streets to the Internet: The Cyber-Diffusion of Contention , 1999 .

[13]  R. Freeman,et al.  Democracy in the Digital Age , 1997 .

[14]  Thomas Wilhelm Democracy in the Digital Age , 2000 .

[15]  David Henderson,et al.  The Mai Affair: A Story and Its Lessons , 1999 .

[16]  Peter J. Spiro New global communities: Nongovernmental organizations in international decision making institutions , 1995 .

[17]  J. Wiseman,et al.  Global Nation?: Australia and the Politics of Globalisation , 1998 .

[18]  Leslie A. Pal,et al.  Digital Democracy: Policy and Politics in the Wired World , 1998 .

[19]  Alan K. Henrikson Distance and Foreign Policy: a Political Geography Approach , 2002 .

[20]  H. Cleaver The Zapatista Effect: The internet and the rise of an alternativa political fabric , 1998 .

[21]  W. Russell RUSSIAN POLICY TOWARDS THE 'NEAR ABROAD': THE DISCOURSE OF HIERARCHY , 1995 .

[22]  Cecelia M. Lynch Social Movements and the Problem of Globalization , 1998 .

[23]  J. Agnew,et al.  Mastering Space: Hegemony, Territory and International Political Economy , 1995 .

[24]  A. Capling Who makes trade policy? Australia and the Uruguay round agreement on trade‐related investment measures (TRIMS) , 1997 .

[25]  N Casey,et al.  The Fourth World Conference on Women. , 1995, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[26]  Wade Rowland Spirit of the Web: The Age of Information from Telegraph to Internet , 1997 .

[27]  Ilan Vertinsky,et al.  Information technologies and transnational interest groups: The challenge for diplomacy , 1994 .

[28]  Michael Leach,et al.  The rise and fall of One Nation , 2000 .

[29]  G. Blainey The Tyranny of Distance: How Distance Shaped Australia's History , 1969 .

[30]  Peter J. Smith,et al.  Globalization, citizenship and technology: The mai meets the internet , 1999 .

[31]  After the Garden? , 1999 .

[32]  Kim Richard Nossal,et al.  The International Politics of Liminality: Relocating Australia in the Asia Pacific , 1997 .

[33]  David Harvey,et al.  The Geopolitics of Capitalism , 2020, The Anti-Capitalist Chronicles.