PoliticsPartiesWSFHeikki
many thanks for your message and comments on our article. Your points are
interesting even if not unpredictable. We have discussed the politics of
NIGD before, particularly in terms of our relationship to capitalism. A year
ago (1 Feb) I responded to you as follows:
"I think you are after some kind of a statement about whether NIGD is in
favour or against global capitalism. Upon returning from India, I re-read
Marx's short text on India from 1853. Besides being simultaneously arrogant
in making judgements yet, in some parts, very insightful about India, it
ends at a call to assume cosmopolitan control over capitalist forces of
production. One possible and plausible interpretation of Marx's somewhat
vague programme is to think about it in terms of global democracy (he
mentions something that could be called common governance). Global
Keynesianism might well be fully compatible with that programme, to the
extent that the point is also to enable and cultivate more democratic
relations of production and exchange, in a pluralist fashion. Assuming that
after the prevalence of capitalist social relations, there would still be
markets, including world markets, global Keynesianism and democratic
regulation would be a necessary counterpart to that kind of a pluralist
system too (which would possibly allow for perhaps carefully confined
capitalist relations too)."
This time Peter, I think you have an additional insight. It is indeed true
that I sometimes avoid the term 'capitalism' -- and particularly the term
'socialism' -- "because of its past association with Marxism, Communism and
strategies of insurrection, and its current use, in the archaic, schematic
and reductionist manner, by Simplistic Workers Parties." I explain this in
some detail in a *rejoinder to Branwen Gruffydd Jones otherwise excellent
review of my book "After International Relations", in the Journal of
Critical Realism. However, she maintained that "Patomäki refuses to
contemplate the necessity of radical social transformation (in the sense of
socialist transformation) in the struggle for human emancipation".
Towards the end of this rather long response, I argue that "in
fact, 'after international relations' and 'after capitalism' are essentially
connected. If we are interested in pluralizing and democratizing the control
over means of production and world markets, while creating and sustaining
decommodified contexts of social actitivity, we have to analyse and assess
ways of building emancipatory world political spaces."
PS. At the moment, I am working on a book project I mention at the end of
that rejoinder. A preliminary outcome of this project is entitled "The Long
Downward Phase of the Capitalist World Economy and the Potential for Future
Crises and Wars. Three Scenarios of Change of Global Governance". In
September, I presented it in the Hague. If you, or anyone else, is
interested, I can send it by e-mail (it should have been available also at
the conference website [http://www.sgir.org/conference2004/papers], but
there seems to be something wrong with the server at the moment).
*Heikki Patomäki (2003): "After International Relations, After Capitalism: A Rejoinder to Branwen Gruffyd Jones", Journal of Critical Realism, (1):2, pp.175-181.