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Will new social forces rein in nations' power and capitalist markets? Date published: 10/16/2005
EWTON, MASS.--How will current U.S. social and political trends--amid the rise of the right--affect the world in the decades ahead? Surprisingly, some sociologists say that they augur for curbing the excesses of national power and capitalist markets, while strengthening the U.N. and other forms of global governance. Though it sounds counterintuitive in an age of corporate globalization and U.S. unilateralism, there is evidence of powerful social forces stirring that could do just that. These are the forces of civil society: community groups, trade associations, labor unions, churches, and other voluntary associations in the nonprofit sector. Some sociologists who study them say they will broaden social consensus at home, and global governance abroad. The argument goes something like this: Civil society carries the core values on which America was founded, and on which civic-minded When these values conflict with the bottom line or maintenance of power, corporations and government may jettison them. This leaves a values vacuum that generates polarized, often futile politics along pro- vs. anti-corporate and pro- vs. anti-nationalism fault lines--leaving people feeling stymied and cynical. But into the breach leap the forces of civil society, by which citizens re-engage with issues. They bridge left-right impasses, appealing directly to core values, to doing the right thing regardless of profitability, political power, or ideological stereotypes. Not only liberals embrace environmentalism or alternative energy. Witness conservatives from Western states who oppose coal-bed methane, or conservative columnists who support a gasoline tax. Not only conservatives want more jobs, fundamental tax reform, and smaller government; witness bipartisan support for cutting payroll taxes. Many burning domestic and global issues are not "left-right" but "right-wrong" issues, transcending party lines. Civil society, not politics or business, is increasingly where citizens engage them. With the unprecedented expansion and wealth transfer in the U.S.--and also globally--civil society increasingly affects markets and policymaking, evolving voluntary and transnational systems of governance that may someday alter our very ideas of trade and national sovereignty themselves. In fact, alterations are already under way. Big corporations support voluntary standards such as the CERES environmental principles. The nonprofit Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations sets and monitors standards of for-profit health care. And the U.N. actively supports collaboration between global business and civil society--and even encourages nongovernmental organizations to mediate international conflicts.
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