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Miriam Solomon, "Lap-tops against communicative democracy:
international non-governmental organisations and the World
Bank", in Brian Martin (ed.), Technology and Public Participation
(Wollongong, Australia: Science and Technology Studies, University
of Wollongong, 1999), pp. 61-81.
Lap-tops against communicative democracy: international
non-governmental organisations and the World Bank
Miriam Solomon[*]
Abstract
This chapter draws from case study material from campaigns
by international non-governmental organisations (INGOs) against
the World Bank during its 50th anniversary to outline the
democratic tensions inherent in global activism and the way
these tensions are manifested in the differential usages of
technology. It schematically describes the complex matrix
of World-Bank-related INGOs along two intersecting axes: the
ideological orientations towards abolition or reform, and
the North-South hierarchy. A model of communicative democracy
is presented--a feminist reframing of deliberative democracy--which
incorporates three primary aspects of justice: recognition
justice, distributive justice, and political or representational
justice, projected onto the global field of INGO structures.
The model emphasises the expression and representation of
differences, while at the same time calling for equality of
access to material, social and political resources and opportunities.
I reflect on the constraints to realising such a model through
the usage of computer technologies, due to their rationalising,
homogenising and exclusory tendencies. They reflect and consolidate
social, economic and political inequalities, and are encoded
with the cultural horizon of instrumental rationality and
efficiency, centralisation and hierarchy. This highlights
the limits to the democratising potential of computer-mediated
communications within the global public sphere, and the contradictory
demands on INGOs to both remain within the machine of rationalised
modernity and yet at the same time to subvert it.
Back to: Table
of Contents
Footnotes
Introduction
International non-governmental organisations (INGOs) frequently
invoke arguments for the democratisation of the institutions
they are attempting to influence. However, in their own organisational
structures they themselves find that following democratic
principles is very challenging. Furthermore, their work is
vitally dependent on communication technologies, but these
technologies are not independent of their social context,
for they reflect and consolidate unequal power relations,
and in certain senses exacerbate the already enormous obstacles
for democratic participation in the global public sphere.
In this chapter I outline a model of communicative democracy
and describe a matrix of power relations amongst INGOs campaigning
against the World Bank, to ask two questions: what does a
model of communicative democracy have to offer for interpreting
this case study material, and what does a study of the role
of technology in global participation reveal about the model?
Background: INGOs and the World Bank eyeball
to eyeball
-
Madrid, October 1994 Thousands of economists,
government officials and other stakeholders gather in
a multimillion dollar conference centre, built for this
occasion. Spain feels privileged to be hosting the prestigious
50th anniversary celebrations of the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund (IMF). The Spanish Queen
will inaugurate the auspicious occasion.INGOs are likewise
gathering for their own parallel conference, "Alternative
Forum: Other Voices of the Planet." I am here to join
thousands of activists from around the world who are
coming to protest against the devastating results of
the World Bank's policies towards the so-called "developing"
countries.[1]The much touted
"development" model, imbued as it is with modernist
conceptions of reason and progress,[2]
has been a monumental failure. International "debt"
and the debacle of "structural adjustment," as it is
euphemistically termed, continues to drain many times
more money from the "third world" than the so-called
"aid" which is sold to them, conditions attached.
The World Bank is one of the most powerful institutions
in the contemporary world. Its model of aid becomes,
frequently, the imposition onto "developing" countries
of inappropriate technologies such as large dams or
highly polluting coal plants that devastate local, social
and environmental systems.[3]The
result, many say, is further poverty, starvation,
social dislocation, homelessness, disease, environmental
destruction and even, the INGOs claim, the Bosnian war[4]
and the Rwandan holocaust.[5]
The affected people and their supporters are outraged.
The operations of the World Bank, the INGOs claim, systematically
violate sovereign rights of nations, human rights of
local and indigenous peoples, and democratic principles.
It is itself completely undemocratic, essentially unaccountable[6]--run
from Washington as a giant corporate organisation on
the principle not of "one person (or one country)/one
vote," but "one dollar/one vote."[7]
With the IMF and the World Trade Organisation, it takes
its position as a finely-tuned machine for the spread
of market liberalism across the globe. It determines
the fate of billions with no means of influencing its
activities, other than through protest aimed at exposing
and delegitimising it.
With this goal the INGOs launched a global campaign
to publicise their objections during the entire year of the
World Bank's fiftieth anniversary. It consisted of protest
actions, conferences, seminars, meetings, numerous ongoing
computer conferences, and a concerted media campaign throughout
the world. The campaign was to culminate in a flurry of activities
surrounding the World Bank's own 50th anniversary celebrations
in Madrid, coinciding with its 49th annual meeting.
-
I arrive at the airport having received no information
about my accommodation, other than a phone number which
is not answering. I look around and see a man holding
a placard labelled "World Bank Conference," who will
usher people into a waiting air-conditioned bus which
is to deliver the dignitaries to their five-star hotels.
I approach him and explain my plight. I am not actually
a delegate to the official conference, although I do
have "observer status" there. I have come to research
the INGOs. He graciously offers me a seat on the bus.
I will be deposited at a hotel in the centre of town,
from where I can go in search of my own conference accommodation,
if I can find it.I enter the bus in jeans and
t-shirt, my much-abused ruck-sack (house) on my back,
and smaller back-pack (office) on my shoulder. The immaculately
groomed occupants of the bus look at me bemusedly as
I walk past them to the back of the bus, until it is
"explained" to them that I am "one of the protesters."
On the way we pass a group of some 50 tents in a park
alongside the main road.[8]
Someone calls out "that's your people!," which incites
raucous laughter from the crowd in the bus. I smile
politely.One week later The Queen is hosting
a special concert in honour of the dignitaries. On the
plaza outside a group of about 300 activists is staging
an "alternative concert." Remember they have come to
Madrid with their "other voices of the planet." This
is a non-violent symbolic "concert," where they are
casually sitting on the pavement, joyously chanting
to the beat of home-made percussion instruments.The
police are there in full riot gear. One of them gives
a nod about 30 minutes before the Queen is due to arrive,
and within one minute the activists have been surrounded
by police to block their escape, and the batons start
thumping over their heads. For 15 minutes pandemonium
reigns as people desperately scramble for cover, screaming
and shouting out "murderers" at the police. The streets
are cleared in about 15 minutes. The ambulances that
are waiting on stand-by remove the broken people who
did not manage to escape. The casualty ward of the hospital
fills, and the next morning two women are flown back
home to Sweden with head injuries. I am relatively "lucky,"
since I was not actually in the demonstration but only
observing on the side: large purple bruises and welts
cover the entire length of both my thighs
Thus we see the dark face of "development," the level of
protection deemed necessary by our global masters against
any who would dare to challenge their legitimacy. The state
comes out in violent force against its own unarmed citizens
and international visiting activists. The vested interests
of the World Bank and the IMF, the financial markets and
transnational corporations who are the real beneficiaries
of "aid" and the global economy, must after all be protected.
The stakes are indeed high, as high as they get.
Enter our INGOs, putatively as representatives of "global
civil society." They occupy, it is said, an intermediary role
between "the people" (of the world) and the major global (governing)
institutions. However neither are the leaders of any of these
official institutions nor their opposing INGOs actually democratically
elected. The INGO members are mostly either self-appointed
voluntary workers or salaried professionals.
During the year of the fiftieth anniversary, thousands of
activists around the world joined the campaign to condemn
the Bank and to demand change. But what change? Who exactly
has the formula for eliminating global injustice, for devising
an alternative to global capitalism, and the crisis of "the
new world (dis)order"? And what political strategies might
the INGOs most usefully adopt? These are some of the difficult
questions INGOs confront. What might contemporary democratic
theory offer to assist INGOs in making such decisions?
Communicative democracy
Iris Young has proposed an idealised model of communicative
democracy.[9] It suggests procedures
for communicative exchanges in relationships in which others
are recognised and acknowledged on their own terms, in their
specific and particular needs, perspectives, feelings and
desires. Appropriate decisions can become clear when this
kind of understanding becomes available from all who will
be affected by them. This can only truly occur under ideal
conditions, with the elimination of domination and oppression.[10]
Young's model is aimed at including all social and cultural
groups, regardless of their backgrounds. Her starting point
assumes difference and distance. Because power sometimes enters
the form, the style and the content of speech itself, the
more marginalised groups usually tend to be excluded or silenced.
To counter this Young proposes "an equal privileging of any
forms of communicative interaction where people aim to reach
understanding."[11] This involves
speaking and listening across wide differences of culture,
social position, need and commitment, recognising others in
their particularity.[12] To facilitate
the participation of multiple voices in decision-making, she
advocates the entry of multiple modes and styles of communication,
in an open process with no predetermined outcomes, but through
which opinions, preferences and perspectives are transformed.
Communicative democracy expects conflict and difference,
and rather than presuming criticism and dissent to be dangerously
disruptive by creating divisions that need to be overcome,
this model celebrates difference, disagreement and challenge,
regarding them instead as resources to draw on for increased
understanding.[13]
Communication is integral to this theory of democracy. Young
writes of the need for "a broad and plural conception of communication
that includes both the expression and extension of shared
understandings, where they exist, and the offering and acknowledgment
of unshared meanings."[14] This
supports less conventional (by Western rationalist standards)
modes of communication than critical argument alone, affirming
"the culturally variant ways that humans produce and make
use of multiple representations,"[15]
including such things as greeting, rhetoric, story-telling,[16]
and gesture.[17] "Our task," Joan
Landes argues, "is surely not to resort to texts in place
of images, but instead to comprehend and deploy all means
of representation in a counterhegemonic strategy against established
power wherever it resides."[18]
These suggestions primarily focus on the recognition of difference.
But as Nancy Fraser's formulation of justice emphasises, equitable
distribution of social, economic and political resources (distributive
justice) may be just as crucial as the recognition of differences
(recognition justice) for democratic communication.[19]
Unequal access to resources and cultural misrecognition both
impede democratic participation by disadvantaged groups, who
suffer differentially from the effects of domination, oppression
and isolation due to material, structural, social, political
and cultural constraints. I thus include redistribution also
in my model of communicative democracy.
Can this model be extended to the global field? From my research
I conclude that decision-making in global organisations, as
in national and local entities, absolutely requires personal
contact where relationships of trust, mutual respect and solidarity
can begin to develop. Especially for the hard decisions on
contentious issues, there is no substitute for face-to-face
contact, whatever logistical, financial and other difficulties
this entails. To this extent a communicative model of democracy
can provide valuable guidelines for global organisations,
since difference is even more pronounced in the global setting,
as is maldistribution. The vexed question of who gets to participate
in these meetings raises the problem of representation.
Below I examine my case study findings using a model of communicative
democracy, revised to include recognition, redistribution
and representation, as they affect participation in face-to-face
meetings.[20] Of course any model
of global democracy will always be highly contestable and
for good reasons, but I regard such proposals as a tactic
for addressing present day concerns. There is already a de
facto system of global governance that is entirely undemocratic,[21]
to which the INGOs rightly draw our attention. While these
institutions exist, there is no escaping the importance of
challenging them, such as by calling for their democratisation,
abolition or replacement with "genuinely" democratic structures.
It is clear that in their present form they could not survive
radical democratisation. As will be clear from the foregoing,
neither would the current structures of INGOs remain unchanged
by radical democratisation, for they themselves tend to mirror
this undemocratic global hierarchy.
The matrix of INGOs against the World Bank
The INGO world is pervaded by hierarchies of power, resources
and influence in a matrix along several intersecting axes.
Here I focus on two of these. The first depends on the philosophical
approach to change of the World Bank, roughly divided between
"reformists" and "abolitionists." The second I loosely describe
as the North-South hierarchy, arguing that power relations
and hence participation among INGOs reflects the international
hierarchy among nation-states. I suggest that the dynamics
of these relationships, and hence their communications and
the technologies associated with them, are preconditioned
by, but also reinforce, these power differentials.
Abolition-Reform axis
-
At Madrid it is plain that the activists here are roughly
divided between two principal approaches to the World
Bank: abolition and reform. To simplify, the abolitionists
feel that the Bank is the evil tool of the imperialist
capitalists, acting in the interests of global capital
and the G7,[22] an irredeemable
monster, agent of death and destruction, for which the
only solution can be its complete abolition. They mostly
eschew direct lobbying, preferring to work at the grassroots
level, believing that to lobby the Bank is to confer
legitimacy upon it. The reformists, on the other hand,
argue for exerting pressure to convert it into a friendly,
benevolent bank, by lobbying against specific projects
while at the same time pressuring for its democratisation
and structural reform.[23]
The reformists are primarily the leaders of NGOs in industrialised
countries and, here in Madrid, a very small number of representatives
from the South (and fewer from Eastern Europe). They have
the education and resources necessary for gaining access to
officialdom, and their prominence, international reputation
and influence are often substantially facilitated when they
are effective electronic communicators. These lobbyists have
worked relentlessly for over a decade, battling on in an unremitting
word war, fax machines at their sides, and lap-top computers
in their arms as they traverse the globe in search of information
and networks of support. Their campaigns against the Bank
have delivered some serious blows. By invoking the arguments
for democratic legitimacy, they have obtained some significant
concessions in recent years from the Bank.[24]
But in the words of one of my interviewees, a key figure in
the bureaucratic NGO lobbying centre of Washington: "We got
what we wanted. Now what?"
-
The lobbyists' arenas are the corridors of power, a
world dominated by meetings behind closed doors, where
they rely on rational argument produced on their computers,
combined with muscle-flexing based on their clever use
of the media to dramatise and sensationalise the scandal
of "aid." Here in Madrid they slip in and out of the
Alternative Forum, but consolidate their energies as
they gather together in the "NGO room" at the World
Bank's Annual Meeting.By contrast, abolitionists in
their thousands fill the streets and huge public halls
of the Foro Alternativo--"Las otras voces del planeta."[25]
These are the sites of rhetorical flourish and direct
protest, principally by the abolitionists. Justice and
survival is their battle cry: "50 Años Creando
Miseria, Desturyendo el Planeta"[26];
"Cinquento años bastan!"[27].The
two factions, the abolitionists and the reformists,
hardly talk to each other. They speak different languages,
ideologically and literally. The Foro Alternativo is
conducted mostly in Spanish, interpreted--where possible--into
several languages (via headsets in the large plenaries).
The lobbyists' business is in English.I manoeuvre between
the two arenas. On the streets at night I get beaten
up with the abolitionists, and the next day I wear my
"rational," middle-class professional hat to join the
reformists and talk bureaucratese and political expediency.
I scurry between the tightly packed schedules of the
two conferences, on opposite sides of town, from the
large crowds of the Foro Alternativo to the plush setting
of the World Bank Annual Meeting, where a small elite
group of lobbyists are vigorously tapping on their lap-tops,
in between their meetings with World Bank officials.
North-South axis
Lobbying power in relation to the Bank is however not equally
distributed. It parallels the governing structure and influence
within the Bank itself. NGOs in the wealthy countries, led
by the United States (the Bank's major shareholder with the
highest voting rights in the Bank), have the greatest opportunities
for exerting direct pressure. They understand the bureaucratic
language of "development" and bear down hard on the Bank with
the full force of their critique. They have a sophisticated
understanding of political processes which they use to full
effect. They assess the full range of political contingencies
impacting on the Bank, and effectively manoeuvre to take advantage
of its vulnerable points. They strategically gather, process
and disseminate information and resources. Information is
often leaked to them, particularly those in Washington where
the World Bank is based, by anonymous sympathetic officials
with whom they cultivate a trusting relationship.
But conflicts inevitably arise. Assessments of what is deemed
to "work" in terms of political influence in the United States
(influence that is crucial for decision making within the
Bank) or in terms of broad longer term goals, at times differ
from assessments by people directly affected by these decisions
in the here and now.[28] How may
these differing perspectives and opinions be reconciled? What
is the effect of this matrix of power relations on the scope
for democratic communications between the groups, and what
role do communication technologies play in these dynamics?
The next section examines these questions through the application
of distributive and recognition aspects of the model of communicative
democracy presented above, and their impacts on participation
and representation.
Technology for communicative democracy?
Distribution and representation
Consider the abolition-reform axis in terms of distribution.
The abolitionists are a highly diverse and complex group,
consisting of the more radical NGOs and their social movement
constituencies. In the Alternative Forum there was a multitude
of mostly poorly resourced groups from disparate backgrounds
(mainly Spanish and other European), most of whom either had
a disdain for high technology (associating it with the "dominant
paradigm") or limited access and skills for using it.
The principal media of communication by the abolitionists
are the microphone at large meetings, the megaphone at mass
actions, the written word conveyed in their newsletters, and
of course the telephone and the fax machine. They also make
use, where possible, of cameras, videos and tape-recordings.
Many groups do have access to computers, some with email facilities,
but they are not dependent on them for the greatest part of
their work. Their power lies in their capacity to mobilise
masses onto the streets.
The principal tools for campaigning by the lobbyists are
the lap-top computer and the fax machine. They strategically
employ the internet and produce instantaneous press-releases
(often pre-planned) for high speed dissemination to national
and global publics. In the current geopolitical context, these
technologies, particularly the fast and efficient usage of
fax and email, are indispensable for the effectiveness of
their campaigns.
The Foro Alternativo was organised primarily by the abolitionists,
and in evidence at Madrid were deep tensions between them
and the Northern lobbyists, so much so that the abolitionists
received limited financial and practical support from the
lobbyists for the organisation of the conference. As a consequence,
they did not have the resources to create an organisational
structure that would promote ease of communication between
the organisers and the delegates. The conference was plagued
from the outset by logistical problems and confusion of the
program and agendas. This was in evidence in the availability
of technical facilities and of resources for follow-up documentation.
Gaining access to email was difficult. For the thousands of
delegates present, there were in fact only two computers available
publicly with the facility for email.
The Northern lobbyists, however, had no need for them, having
brought with them their lap-tops which gave them 24-hour access
to document, fax and email facilities, and having computer
facilities available to them in the NGO room of the World
Bank. Communications by the abolitionists to the local Spanish
media was predominantly via fax messages and press conferences,
while the reformists made representations to the outside world
via the internet, to the international media via press releases
and personal contact in the media room at the World Bank Annual
Meeting, and directly to Bank officials via lobbying. Here
we see the impact of the distribution of resources on representation,
across the abolition-reform axis.
The North-South axis also affects representation. Madrid
was an opportunity to bring NGOs together from around the
world to jointly consult on goals and priorities for future
campaigns. There were vital and controversial decisions to
be made in the coming months. To achieve this would have required
funding for Southern representatives to travel to Madrid,
in time to overcome the considerable political and logistical
obstacles to such travel.
But this funding and logistical support was minimal. Few
Southern INGO representatives were in fact present. In practice,
the dependence of Southern NGOs on Northern NGOs means that
the people from the South who receive funding to attend these
conferences tend to be those who are preferred by their Northern
partners. For those Southern lobbyists who gained accreditation
to the World Bank Annual Meeting from the few Southern governments
that granted it, the Northerners went to enormous lengths
to provide the support necessary for their effectiveness at
lobbying. Nevertheless, they were still in the minority amongst
the larger number of Northerners, and were still working in
a socially and culturally unfamiliar environment, and still
constrained by the conditions in their home countries.
Southern NGOs who are involved in international activist
networks often find themselves deluged by excessive quantities
of information often coming at prohibitive costs,[29]
and usually already filtered by their Northern colleagues.
They have limited resources with which to interpret, translate
and further filter it so as to make it accessible, comprehensible
and pertinent for their local context.
Thus along the North-South axis, the distribution effects
severely limit the opportunities for representation of the
poor, as do problems with recognition, discussed below. The
resource and access constraints of poorer groups, particularly
those in the South, including their difficulties with the
English language as well as with computer technology, and
with often highly inadequate infrastructural support in their
host countries,[30] limit their
capacity to make full use of computer technologies, or to
participate in any other way. But presumably they have a better
understanding than the Northerners of their own needs and
justice claims. These cannot often be adequately communicated
by technological means alone, nor even by the written word,
for it requires face to face contact in an atmosphere of cooperative
problem-solving, under conditions of "free and equal participation."
Recognition and representation
There were many advocacy NGOs from the South concerned with
the World Bank but not present in Madrid. This was partly
due to a lack of funding and other support, but more interestingly
due also to a conscious decision on their part to boycott
the kind of global activism that involves travel to exotic
conferences. I travelled to the Philippines and Thailand to
interview some of them. Whilst many of them agreed that global
networking and campaigning is important, they prioritised
work at the local level, largely because of their frustrations
in operating in Northern dominated global arenas so distant
from their local base. Many of them spoke about the difficulty
that Northerners have of listening to them and respecting
their preferences of agenda-setting and actions. They were
keenly aware of the limits of resources available to them
and their financial and political dependence on Northern NGOs,
particularly for information. On the other hand they felt
frustrated that Northern NGOs rarely acknowledged their dependence
on their Southern partners for other kinds of information
and support.[31] Without support
from their Southern counterparts, and information about their
circumstances and their perspectives, Northern NGOs cannot
claim to legitimately represent their needs.
I contend that the lack of distributive justice both promotes
the conditions for a lack of recognition justice, and is also
rooted in this same lack of recognition justice. The two are
thoroughly imbricated with each other.[32]
I am suggesting then that the full potential for redistributive
support for participation by Southern NGOs is not realised
in practice in large measure because of the cultural
factors that interfere with the capacity of the dominant groups
to seek out, hear and respond to a diversity of other voices.
While Northern groups tend to place high value on rational
arguments expressed through the written word, Southern cultures
are often more orally disposed, and less exclusively oriented
towards "rational" argument. Furthermore, it is clear that
communication technologies, particularly the lap-top in this
case, are inextricably tied to these social structures of
domination and dependency. They "lock into institutional arrangements
and social forces; they link up with those perennial structures
of power and hierarchies of class, ethnicity, race, and gender
that have dominated much of the substance of politics in history."[33]
Not only is the South disadvantaged in terms of economic
and political resources, but the few Southerners who do manage
to overcome this to the extent of being able to attend international
meetings are also disadvantaged by the difficulty of finding
a suitable avenue for expressing their needs and perspectives.
In Young's terms, power entered speech itself. It particularly
privileged those who were most proficient at producing rational
discourse on their lap-tops.
And what they produced on their lap-tops largely determined
the content and agendas for the global lobbying and media
campaigns. They used them to produce influential press releases
and other documents, many of which did not address needs and
priorities of groups outside their own circles. This regularly
happens at international conferences, despite the occasional
requests from Southern groups to raise different agenda items.
When they at times do so, it commonly occurs by the appropriation
of the Southerners' ideas as their own.[34]
Here we see an example of conflict suppression by the exclusion
of disadvantaged groups.
In the Alternative Forum of Madrid, conflict suppression
manifested itself by the confusion of the program and agendas
at the Forum, so that different factions held separate meetings
without notifying the public (that is "outsiders") of them.
In lobbying meetings the little conflict which was aired appeared
limited both by the unrepresentativeness of those present
and by the domination of the discussions by the more numerous
Northerners using "rational" discourse. Lobbyists from the
North, particularly the men,[35]
were very comfortable with their lap-tops, but their receptiveness
to alternative modes of communication appeared limited. The
poor, by contrast, had little access to this technology, and
were often not comfortable expressing themselves by a "rationalised"
Western procedure.
It is widely recognised that during consultations, even within
the INGO community, Northerners commonly do most of the talking.[36]
Perhaps less widely discussed, however, is that another inhibitor
of intercultural communication occurs when the ambience of
a meeting is pervaded by the sound of the most influential
among the Northern lobbyists pounding on their lap-tops, hardly
lifting their gaze towards the others in the room. Here the
primary relationship is not between the typist and the other
people present but between the typist and his lap-top,[37]
and unknown distant audiences of the future. Arguably their
effectiveness at campaigning hinges on such efficient usage
of time and resources, and on a pragmatic acceptance of the
unequal distribution of these resources, lamentable as this
reality may be. Equally, however, it may be that their effectiveness,
far from being compromised, would be instead enhanced by promoting
the conditions for mutual recognition through reciprocal listening
aimed at encouraging mutual understanding. For this would
be an effectiveness grounded in satisfying interpersonal relationships
and solidarities-in-sameness-and-difference, freed from the
effects of suppressed resentments.
Conclusion
I have adapted Young's model of communicative democracy to
address Fraser's concerns, projected it onto the global public
sphere and used it to examine the role of communication technologies
in participation in INGO decision making. Through this lens,
the ambivalence of the lap-top for these INGOs becomes apparent.
Tensions emerge as they employ communication technologies
while articulating with hegemonic powers. In their lobbying
work they are forced, as they challenge the legacies of modernity,
to be inside the machine created by it. Although technology
cannot be said to be determinative, neither is it neutral.
It is socially and normatively biased to favour hegemonic
interests and exclude difference. Its influence is by structural,
socio-economic and cultural means, all of which tend to be
mutually reinforcing. "Once introduced, technology offers
material validation of the cultural horizon to which it has
been preformed."[38] This is a
cultural horizon of instrumental rationality and efficiency,
centralisation and hierarchy. "The technical object," Feenberg
argues, "is fully accommodated to a particular culture, the
culture of the West. The planetary triumph of that culture
results not so much from superior rationality as from the
fantastic accumulation of political and military power in
the long networks built by congruent design."[39]
Lap-tops are thus revealed as a double-edged sword for international
activists. While their usage of communication technologies
is subversive of global power relations, it is also simultaneously
reinforcing of hierarchical relations amongst their own networks.
These technologies undoubtedly enhance effectiveness and influence,
being well suited for campaigning purposes and for sharing
information--these aspects themselves reflecting democratic
aspirations of INGOs vis-a-vis the World Bank--but they are
ill suited as mediators for communicative democracy within
INGO networks. Their unintended consequence is that they reflect
and augment unequal power relations across the globe amongst
INGOs, symbolically and practically. Far from offering a solution
to the difficult task of democratic decision making, they
facilitate diffusion into the NGO context of those obstacles
to democratic functioning inherent in the wider context of
economic, social, political and cultural injustices, locally
and globally. They can easily stifle relationships of solidarity,
even as they facilitate the effectiveness of campaigns based
on the solidarities that do exist; they affect, and are affected
by, the distributive and recognition aspects of INGO interrelationships,
both of which limit democratic representation and participation.
Viewing the model through the impact of technologies on communication
amongst INGOs, distributive aspects of participation emerge
as equally significant for participation as recognition aspects,
but the interdependence between the two also becomes apparent.
The findings also bring to light yet another critical factor,
that of political representation, not reducible to the other
two. Inequitable distribution of resources profoundly distorts
the representativeness of participants present at meetings,
and this occurs in conjunction with historical and ongoing
misrecognitions which also exclude many who might otherwise
participate. Once present, marginalised people can feel inhibited
by the difficulty others have of listening to them in diverse
modes and styles of communication (often due to the fears
of conflicts that might surface), and this is further exacerbated
by inequitable distributive effects such as the ways in which
lap-top computers are used, even during consultative meetings,
and their non-recognition effects.
Communicative democracy is about creating the conditions
for speaking, listening and hearing different others on their
own terms and through their own modes of expression, to open
up the scope for enhanced mutuality and trust, and hence for
democratic approaches to the most difficult decisions. It
depends on respect for the plurality of needs, perspectives,
interests and desires and their expressions through diverse
cultural forms of communication. Despite their effectiveness
for lobbying, lap-tops perform badly at these tasks. At best,
they can only be tools for campaigning on predetermined goals,
or adjuncts as one among many forms of human communication,
each of which expresses something unique and important that
needs to be heard.
The implications of this for INGOs are two-fold. Firstly,
it suggests that computer technology should be regarded as
both invaluable for achieving strategic goals, but also hazardous
due to their rationalising, homogenising and exclusory tendencies.
Reliance on Western procedures for "rational" discourse--so
thoroughly inscribed in the usage of the lap-top--are indispensable
for campaigning purposes, but it can also have the effect
of suppressing other modes of expression, and in this way
fostering the exclusion of a diversity of other voices from
participating in deliberations. The result is a tendency to
homogenise the outputs towards the preferences of those with
the greatest opportunities to participate in this manner.
Secondly, I propose that to improve the opportunities for
more participation and more appropriate representation, these
tendencies could be countered with concerted efforts towards
enhancing distributive, recognition and representational justice
in INGO interrelationships, to the extent that this is possible.
Ideally this would entail redistribution of economic, social
and political resources, and a commitment to recognising others
in their differences as well as their commonalities, to create
the conditions in which relationships of respect and solidarity
can flourish.
The ideal of communicative ethics urges participants toward
agreement on procedural rules and commitment to internal justice
and equal respect. However theory alone, in my reading, has
not provided adequate guidance as to how such agreement and
commitments may be obtained within a context of pre-existing
structural inequalities. If anything, it presents a pessimistic
view of such possibilities, and the long history of distributive
and cultural injustices everywhere indicates that the obstacles
are indeed massive and should not be underestimated. This
indicates that the inevitable obstacles to representation
and participation will always remain, since conditions will
always remain non-ideal. But it is precisely through ongoing
practical struggles of groups such as INGOs working on the
ground, engaging with the multiple dilemmas that confront
them, that advances in the theory will occur.[40]
A model of democracy thus revised must acknowledge these dilemmas
and must acknowledge that any agreements that are made necessarily
remain provisional, pending new and emerging interpretations
and needs from interests hitherto unrepresented. Crucially,
more inclusive and hence more representative decisions will
be facilitated when space is created for disadvantaged groups
to openly express difference, dissonance and conflict.
Once again, lap-tops (and computer technologies generally)
perform contradictorily in this regard. While they can in
limited ways assist in revising decisions among those who
have access to these avenues of communication, they do not
easily lend themselves to challenges by those excluded from
them. Moreover, in rationalised structures of governance,
the specific powers of the written word often endure long
after non-written communications have been forgotten.
Technology can too easily become a safe refuge from the fears
of dealing with interpersonal conflicts, and yet still uphold
a feeling that we are working for justice. The hardest questions
still need to be addressed in face-to-face meetings. No technology
can substitute for human relationships in which all parties
feel that they have exercised their voice, been listened to,
heard and respected, and that others are prepared to institute
structural changes to support their justice claims.
"We whities [who are] sitting here comfortably
and spending
our time on policy decisions and having organisations
with
resources and offices and travel budgets are by far
the minority
of the world's population and the majority world
is rarely
represented in our thinking and our contacts and
the networks
we operate in."[41]
Acknowledgments: I thank Jim Beatson, Sharon Beder,
Johan Frijns, David Germon, Therese Kutis, Brian Martin, Ilana
Solomon, Vivienne Porzsolt, Wendy Varney and Ben Weiss for
helpful comments on a draft of this chapter.
Footnotes
[*] Miriam Solomon (B.Pharm, M.C.H.)
is currently completing a PhD at the Australian National
University. She has previously taught and researched in Physiology,
Health Sociology (Community Health and Health Promotion),
and Development Studies, and has several years experience
in activism.
[1]. These are primarily advocacy
and activist organisations, not aid groups that did not participate
at Madrid.
[2]. Feenberg describes modern societies
as encoding the cultural horizon of instrumental rationality
and efficiency, which are often prioritised over social values.
Andrew Feenberg, "Subversive rationalization: technology,
power, and democracy," in Andrew Feenberg and Alastair Hannay
(eds.), Technology and the Politics of Knowledge (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1995).
[3]. On INGO responses to the World
Bank, see Kevin Danaher (ed.), 50 Years is Enough: The
Case Against The World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund (Boston: South End Press, 1994); John Cavanagh, Daphne
Wysham and Marcos Arruda, Beyond Bretton Woods: Alternatives
to the Global Economic Order (London: Pluto Press, 1994);
Bruce Rich, Mortgaging the Earth: The World Bank, Environmental
Impoverishment and the Crisis of Development, (London:
Earthscan Publications, 1994); Susan George and Fabrizio Sabelli,
Faith and Credit: The World Bank's Secular Empire (Harmondsworth:
Penguin, 1994); "The Madrid Declaration Resolution of the
Alternative Forum: Other Voices of the Planet conference,"
Eco (Facultad de Medicina, Universidad Autónoma
of Madrid, 1994).
[4]. Laszlo Andor, "Stabilisation
and structural adjustment in Hungary," paper delivered to
Alternative Forum: The Other Voices of the Planet, Madrid,
1994.
[5]. Michel Chossudovsky, "IMF and
World Bank and the Rwandan holocaust," Aid/Watch Newsletter
(Sydney), No. 5, February 1995, p. 7 (reprinted from Third
World Resurgence, No. 52).
[6]. Accountability is to the board
of executive directors, bureaucrats who are appointed, in
many cases, by undemocratic regimes.
[7]. The number of votes each country
has reflects its financial contribution to the Bank.
[8]. This was the camp of the Spanish
0.7 movement, campaigning for Spanish foreign aid to be increased
to 0.7% of gross national product.
[9]. Iris Marion Young, "Justice
and communicative democracy," in Roger S. Gottlieb (ed.),
Radical Philosophy: Tradition, Counter-Tradition, Politics
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1993); Iris Marion
Young, "Communication and the Other: beyond deliberative democracy,"
in Margaret Wilson and Anna Yeatman (eds.), Justice and
Identity: Antipodean Practices (Sydney: Allen & Unwin,
1995).
[10]. In her model, Young draws
on, but modifies, Habermas's communicative ethics. See also
Jodi Dean, Solidarity of Strangers: Feminism after Identity
Politics (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996);
Johanna Meehan (ed.), Feminists Read Habermas: Gendering
the Subject of Discourse (London: Routledge, 1995), especially
chapters by Johanna Meehan, Jane Braaton, Georgia Warnke and
Joan Landes.
[11]. Young, 1995, op. cit., p.
139.
[12]. On democracy and difference,
see Chantal Mouffe (ed.), Dimensions of Radical Democracy:
Pluralism, Citizenship, Community (London: Verso, 1992);
Anne Phillips, Democracy and Difference (Cambridge:
Polity Press, 1993); Seyla Benhabib (ed.), Democracy and
Difference: Contesting the Boundaries of the Political (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1996); Susan Bickford, The
Dissonance and Democracy: Listening, Conflict, and Citizenship
(London: Cornell University Press, 1996).
[13]. See also Dean's (op. cit.,
p. 29) discussion of Uttal's concept of "getting messy."
[14]. Young, 1995, op. cit., p.
149.
[15]. Joan B. Landes, "The public
and the private sphere: a feminist reconsideration," in Meehan,
op. cit., pp. 91-116, at p. 109.
[16]. Young, 1995, op. cit.
[17]. Landes, op. cit., p. 101.
[18]. Ibid., p. 110.
[19]. Nancy Fraser, Justice Interruptus:
Critical Reflections on the "Postsocialist" Condition
(New York: Routledge, 1997), chapters 1, 7 and 8.
[20]. See Iris Marion Young, "Unruly
categories: a critique of Nancy Fraser's dual systems theory,"
New Left Review, Spring 1997, for a critique of Fraser's
dichotomous "redistribution/recognition dilemma."
[21]. David Held, Democracy and
the Global Order: From the Modern State to Cosmopolitan Governance
(Cambridge: Polity Press, 1995).
[22]. The group of seven countries
with the largest industrialised economies, as it was known
in 1994, has now been converted to the G8 with the inclusion
of Russia.
[23]. This is of course a somewhat
simplified dichotomy. The terms abolitionist and reformist
are in some senses misnomers, as they conceal both internal
differences within each group, the overlap between them, and
alternative categorisations. See Paul Nelson, "Conflict, Legitimacy
and Effectiveness: Who Speaks for Whom in Transnational NGO
Networks Lobbying the World Bank?" Occasional Paper No. 17,
Harrison Program on the Future Global Agenda, http://www.bsos.umd.edu/harrison/papers/paper17.htm,
also published in Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly,
Vol. 26, No. 4, Winter 1997.
[24]. For example, the Bank installed
an ombudsman-like complaints mechanism called the Inspection
Panel, which was invoked to withdraw its support for the Arun
III dam in Nepal. The Bank has subsequently further curtailed
the power of this already constrained body. But see Shripad
Dharmadhikary, "Large dams--the beginning of the end?" Aid/Watch
Newsletter, No. 13, November 1997.
[25]. Alternative Forum--"The Other
Voices of the Planet."
[26]. "50 years of creating misery
and destroying the planet."
[27]. "Fifty years is enough!"
[28]. See Nelson, op. cit.
[29]. This expense is compounded
by the large volumes that are often sent indiscriminately.
[30]. Communicating between rural
and remote areas in Southern countries can take weeks. They
may not have a telephone at all, the cables may be faulty,
there may be poor service support, a lack of training facilities,
and language problems. Fax machines are dependent on telephone
lines, and even mail is not always reliable.
[31]. On the difficulty of acknowledging
mutual interdependence, see Jessica Benjamin, "The shadow
of The Other (subject): intersubjectivity and feminist theory,"
Constellations, Vol. 1, No. 2, 1994, pp. 231-254.
[32]. Fraser, op. cit., chapter
1, admits this, despite her dichotomous treatment of them.
See Young, 1997, op. cit.
[33]. Majid Tehranian, Technologies
of Power: Information Machines and Democratic Prospects
(Norwood, NJ: Ablex, 1990), p. 242. Tehranian suggests that
for technologies to assist democratic world development and
augment public discourse and democratic will formation, they
have to be interactive, universally accessible and linked
to participatory, democratic institutions and networks.
[34]. Iris Marion Young, Justice
and The Politics of Difference (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1990), p. 15, makes this same point which I consistently
heard from my interviewees.
[35]. Judy Wacjman, Feminism
Confronts Technology (University Park: Pennsylvania State
University Press, 1991), pp. 141-142, discusses gender differences
in the use of computer technologies.
[36]. "We do far too much talking
and not enough listening." Northern INGO member.
[37]. Judith A. Perrole "Conversations
and trust in computer interfaces," in Charles Dunlop and Rob
Kling (eds.), Computerization and Controversy: Value Conflicts
and Social Choice (Boston: Academic Press, 1991).
[38]. Feenberg, op. cit., p. 12.
[39]. Andrew Feenberg, Alternative
Modernity: The Technical Turn in Philosophy and Social Theory
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995), p. 230.
[40]. Accordingly, I am currently
adapting this model further in my "global cacophonous democracy."
[41]. Northern NGO interviewee.
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