Professor John Urry - Offshoring as a way of undermining the Commons?
Duration: 43 mins 5 secs
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Professor John Urry, Lancaster University
Offshoring as a way of undermining the Commons? 8 September 2014 Offshoring has become a pervasive feature of contemporary societies, posing huge challenges both for governments and citizens. Elements of contemporary offshoring come in diverse forms - in work, finance, pleasure, waste, emissions, energy, security, and taxation - but each generates new patterns of power, reducing responsibilities for a privileged and powerful 'offshore class,' and undermining the possibilities of democratic governance. The offshore secret worlds that result directly or indirectly undermine various kinds of 'commons'. But can offshoring of these commons, and the dark side of globalization, be resisted and reversed? John Urry explores the potential for 'reshoring' such commons, for strengthening democracy and for promoting low carbon futures. |
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Created: | 2014-10-20 08:42 |
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Collection: |
Shrinking Commons Conference
Shrinking Commons |
Publisher: | University of Cambridge |
Copyright: | Glenn Jobson |
Language: | eng (English) |
Distribution: | World (downloadable) |
Keywords: | Shrinking Commons; John Urry; |
Explicit content: | No |
Aspect Ratio: | 16:9 |
Screencast: | No |
Bumper: | UCS Default |
Trailer: | UCS Default |
Abstract: | Professor John Urry, Lancaster University
Offshoring as a way of undermining the Commons? 8 September 2014 Offshoring has become a pervasive feature of contemporary societies, posing huge challenges both for governments and citizens. Elements of contemporary offshoring come in diverse forms - in work, finance, pleasure, waste, emissions, energy, security, and taxation - but each generates new patterns of power, reducing responsibilities for a privileged and powerful 'offshore class,' and undermining the possibilities of democratic governance. The offshore secret worlds that result directly or indirectly undermine various kinds of 'commons'. But can offshoring of these commons, and the dark side of globalization, be resisted and reversed? John Urry explores the potential for 'reshoring' such commons, for strengthening democracy and for promoting low carbon futures. |
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