Networked Politics

Rethinking political organisation in an age of movements and networks
Hilary Wainwright, Oscar Reyes, Marco Berlinguer, Fiona Dove, Mayo Fuster I Morell and Joan Subirats (eds)
Enero 2007

In a world where the traditional institutions of democratic control have been weakened by an unconstrained global market and superpower military ambitions, it uncovers diverse forms of resistance with the potential to create new institutions for social change.

Networked Politics is the product of a collaborative research process for rethinking political organisation in an age of movements and networks. In a world where the traditional institutions of democratic control have been weakened by an unconstrained global market and superpower military ambitions, it uncovers diverse forms of resistance with the potential to create new institutions for social change. The authors set out the principles upon which such transformations should be based, and the challenges that stand in the way of their realisation.
The discussion is then pursued along four interrelated lines of inquiry. These examine social movements, including their development of new forms of knowledge and organisation; progressive political parties, and attempts to bring about transformative forms of political respresentation; the dangers and opportunities facing the development of political institutions in a network society; and the potential of new techno-political tools for facilitating and reconceiving political organisation. A series of case studies are also offered, drawing critical lessons from the experience of the German Green Party; the 2006 French mobilisation against the controversial CPE employment law; and an extended discussion on 'open source as a metaphor for new institutions'.
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Directora de investigación del programa Nuevas Acciones Políticas del TNI

Hilary Wainwright es una destacada investigadora sobre nuevas formas de responsabilidad democrática en los partidos, los movimientos y el Estado. Hilary es impulsora y redactora de una popular revista británica de la nueva izquierda y ha documentado un sinfín de movimientos democráticos, desde Brasil a Gran Bretaña, así como sus lecciones para una política verdaderamente progresista.

Además de investigadora del TNI, Hilary es también investigadora adjunta del Centro Internacional sobre Estudios de Participación (ICPS) del departamento de Estudios de Paz de la Universidad británica de Bradford y ex investigadora del Centro para el Estudio de la Gobernanza Mundial (CSGG) de la London School of Economics. También ha sido profesora invitada en la Universidad de California (Los Ángeles), en el Havens Center de la Universidad de Wisconsin (Madison) y en la Universidad de Todai (Tokio). Entre sus libros, cabe destacar Cómo ocupar el estado: experiencias de democracia participativa (Icaria, 2005) y Arguments for a New Left: Answering the Free Market Right (Blackwell, 1993).

Hilary fue fundadora de Unidad de Planificación Popular del Consejo del Gran Londres durante los años de Thatcher y actuó como enlace del grupo de trabajo sobre nueva economía de la Asamblea de Ciudadanos de Helsinki (HAC) entre 1989 y 1994.