NEWS AND EVENTS
TWSC's new publication
Lopez Wui, Ma. Glenda S. and Teresa S. Encarnacion Tadem, eds. 2006. People, profit, and politics: State-civil society relations in the context of globalization. Quezon City: Third World Studies Center. ISBN 971-912464-4. PhP 350.00.
The TWSC is
pleased to announce its latest
publication, People, Profit, and Politics,
edited by Ma. Glenda S. Lopez Wui and Teresa S. Encarnacion Tadem. The
book is based on the findings of TWSC's research project on state-civil
society relations in the context of globalization, which focused on
four sectors widely known to have been affected by economic
globalization: vegetable, hog, garments, and telecommunications. The
project investigates two interrelated aspects of state-civil society
relations: how civil-society actors engage with official state agencies
through various formal and informal strategies of dialogue,
negotiation, and bargaining; and the extent to which civil-society
actors have been able to influence governmental policy making.
"It is both significant and interesting that this study
undertakes the examination of state-civil society engagement within the
context of globalization—a dimension to the analysis that gives the
exercise a timely and particularly enriching perspective. Indeed, it
was the process of globalization and the problems that accompanied it
that spurred intensified civil society activity within countries around
the globe, and in the international arena. The empirical focus on four
particular sectors of the Philippine economy is another dimension of
the study that gives it concrete significance and lends direct policy
implications to its analyses."
--Cielito Habito, Professor of Economics, Ateneo de Manila
University and former Secretary of Socioeconomic Planning and
Director-General of the National Economic Development Authority
"This study will be of great interest to various types of
readers: social scientists of various disciplines who are interested in
state-society relations in developing countries, the stakeholders in
the policy areas discussed in the cases, various multilateral donor
agencies and international financial institutions, and promoters and
serious critics of the principles that constitute what has come to be
known as 'globalization.' The strength of the collection lies in the
provision of important information on state-society relations that is
industry-specific, and the articulation of an evaluation per industry
based on a unified framework built around the concept of political
opportunity structure."
--Jose Magadia, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Ateneo de
Manila
University and author, State-society dynamics: Policy making in a
restored democracy
"The case studies of four industries presented in this book
show the complex, contradictory, and highly contextual nature of the
relations between the state and civil society organizations amidst the
often intractable problems as well as the rare opportunities attendant
to globalization, revealing these as falling far short of the ideal.
They demonstrate the interplay of often conflicting interests, with the
national interest and the specific interests of the more numerous but
politically weaker sectors losing out to the bigger players in a far
from even field. They also provide hard lessons and difficult
challenges for social movements still seeking to make change happen
through constructive but no less critical engagement with the state,
knowing that to a great extent, the state has been captured by the
elite."
--Rosalinda Pineda-Ofreneo, Professor of Social Work and Community
Development, University of the Philippines-Diliman
"'People, Profit, and Politics' is an excellent
collection
of studies that looks at how civil society organizations in economic
sectors subjected to trade liberalization and deregulation have
mobilized to defend their interests within a liberal democratic state.
The picture that emerges is both reassuring and disconcerting.
Reassuring in that civil-society organizations can easily establish
political spaces or beachheads from which to exert pressure on key
political actors in the executive or in parliament. Reassuring, too, in
that there is a great space for coalition building with many other
interest groups facing the challenge of globalization. But
disconcerting in that no amount of skilled mobilizing and coalition
building appears to have been able to save key groups, such as the
Benguet vegetable producers and textile and garment workers, from
massive dislocation brought about by cheap imports or capital flight.
Active lobbying by hog raisers and poultry producers appears to have
mainly bought them time, not eliminate the threat of ruinous
competition from cheap imports. The picture of the Philippine state
that emerges is one that allows significant space for pressure groups
opposed to liberalization, to the point where key actors within both
the bureaucracy and parliament can, in fact, be mobilized as allies.
And yet, when push comes to shove, liberalization wins out. What
emerges is a resilient state that can entertain opposition, but where
the ideology of neoliberalism so permeates the bureaucracy and the
legislature that it can override the coalitions and coalition
formations that the threatened sectors can put together... This is, of
course, just one lesson that one draws from the case studies of this
book. There are other dimensions of the state-civil society
relationship in the Philippines that are illuminated here. The authors
and editors are to be congratulated for bringing out an indispensable
guide to the topic."
--Walden Bello, Professor of Sociology, University of the
Philippines-Diliman (from the Foreword)
The book is published in cooperation with the United Nations Development Programme-Philippine Office.



