Brian Holmes on Mon, 29 Sep 2003 05:46:07 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> markets, states, associations (was: reverse engineered freedom...) |
Ryan Griffis wrote: >i'm just wondering what it means to break politics >down into 3 categories that distinguish between >"markets, governments and voluntary associations," and >saying they are representative of all modern social >activity. The theoretical point of looking at human organization in terms of those three poles (not categories) is to conceive a field of tension which is structured by all three, but where you can still distinguish the differences. Thus, the state conditions the market (pretty obviously: that's why people talk about state capitalism), but can't be reduced to it; the reverse it also true (neoliberalism really has brought about a reduction of certain aspects of the state in favor of market transactions where corporations play the leading role); and volontary associations are squeezed and provoked in all kinds of ways by the state bureaucracies and the commercially provided services (not to mention all the work you're supposed to do to get them). This appears quite evident but there are always people saying that the market is the only true force, or that it's actually the state pulling all the strings, or that tomorrow we will find ourselves in a libertarian world without either of these nuisances. I think that the state, everywhere that it's instituted (i.e. throughout the modern, technologically advanced societies) is here to stay in a big way and that it's absurd (and to some extent dangerous, as David points out) to imagine you're going to escape it. Capitalism is always a little more fragile because crisis-prone (but people like their markets). However I also think it's extremely interesting to create autonomous formations which can carve out more space at a distance from the state and the market. In the end though, the kind of "autonomous" formations that actually exist, and specifically, the kinds of social movements that exist, have everything to do with the changing balance between the state and the market - as over the last twenty years, when there's largely been a shift from a Keynesian welfare state, focusing on universal provision of services in an at least partially planned economy (a situation in which unions and collective bargaining could still channel most of the social movement activity) to a more stripped-down form of the state, giving up most of the universal entitlements, focusing on coercive forces like justice, police, prisons, etc., and using "workfare" type programs to push people toward jobs which themselves are much more individualized, flexible, less amenable to collective bargaining, etc. So in this period you have seen the rise, or really, the black hole, of "excluded people" with their really desperate social movements (homeless, jobless, paperless, etc.) and also the rise of a more individualized kind of activism that draws on the new skills and possibilities opened up by the flexible professions (tactical media, anyone?). In both cases, the changing form of the autonomous movements parallels the changes in the other two poles. This way of looking at things (which is derived from the work of Karl Polanyi and his many followers) gets interesting when you start considering the way that the market or capitalist end, with the "myth of the free market" that you mention, has tried in recent years to more fully commodify the fundamentals of land (or the natural environment, the ecology), labor (the human capacity to directly transform the world), knowledge (the accumulated transformative potential of symbolic insciption, ranging from hard science to art and literature) and money (the means for keeping track of exchanges). Under the central planning state, public institutions had a larger role in caretaking all of these fundamentals, whose reproduction can never be assured only by the logic of market transactions, which tend just to prey on them, resulting in increased pollution and exploitation, more hierarchized and commodified access to knowledge, and periodically intensifying economic crises (untenable spirals of shaky private debts backed up by other shaky private debts, which threaten the very value of public money). In these situations, which I actually think are quite dangerous, you do have the interesting phenomenon of people forming voluntary associations to try and restore the balances, but without forming permanent institutions to do so. This is the tremendously innovative side of the recent movements, which for me are the most interesting game to play right now. I was just saying in my earlier post that it's always a kind of limited game, where you might get more achieved by thinking strategically about what kind of changes you'd like to wring out of the state and the market, rather than just kind of getting enthusiastic about the idea that they might disappear. I really think that the current state form has come extremely close to the market, and at the same time, it has oriented the market formations (corporations, that is) toward coercive and military activities, giving us a nasty looking world of what you can also call "transnational state capitalism." That all of this has been possible proves how little the state has really responded to any so-called "democratic" pressures. Let's also say the union, co-management model in particular has proven to have all kinds of disadvantages in terms of successfully controlling the corporations. So the interesting thing would be to try to establish some new balance of power (what they call a "rapport de forces" in French) where you'd have more input coming from the civil society or voluntary asociation side - which in its turn presupposes access to knowledge and tools and education and free time for the people wanting to do the freely associating politics. There is a real possibility for gains in this respect, in Europe anyway, and I think a lot of the struggles around intellectual property right now are oriented by that perspective (in addition to good old solidarity with all the people who are getting burned very badly by the current transnational state capitalism). If we lose the freedoms, but also the service provisions of the Internet, for instance - well, we're fucked, to use a little more street-level kind of language. It'd be nice to have libraries in the future too, don't you think? Good reason to go to Geneva for the WSIS meetings with Florian and Geert and Steve Cisler (a librarian) and probably a quarter of the people on this list! I hope that all this has the slighest grain of usefulness. If not, a little ASCII is cheap at this point and the delete button is always handy. best, Brian # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]