Page 14 - Fighting Against the Injustice of the State and Globalization
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Introduction
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                                                   ing to humanize and democratize the world by establishing a single standard for hu-
                                                   manity. Through examining the dynamic interplay of social structures and human
                                                   agencies that facilitated the development of these two movements in the global and
                                                   comparative contexts, this work employs interdisciplinary, multidimensional, histori-
                                                   cal, and comparative methods, and critical approaches. As Theda Skocpol has noted:
                                                   “Findings about social revolutions need to be theoretically integrated with findings in
                                                   closely related kinds of studies. Further scholarship, both causal and interpretive, must
                                                   be done to clarify the place of ideas, culture and ideologies in the origins and course
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                                                   of social revolutions.”
                                                      Using comparative causal analysis, this book explains the movements of these two
                                                   peoples as cultural, social, and political projects that have aimed at transforming the op-
                                                   pressive and exploitative relationships between the colonizing structures of the United
                                                   States and Ethiopia and the colonized African American and Oromo societies respec-
                                                   tively. Exploring how such an approach is useful in this kind of study, Skocpol asserts,
                                                   “convincing narratives of historical processes—at least narratives of those continuities
                                                   and changes that are relevant to macroscopic social science—cannot be devised at all
                                                   without the use of systematic comparative analyses to sort out causal hypotheses and
                                                   discover new causal analogies.Without tough-minded, analytical comparisons—neces-
                                                   sarily cutting through the webs of history for the duration of a given investigation—
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                                                   we can never get straight which structures matter, or which processes count.” The
                                                   comparative problem of this book also requires critical social history that looks at so-
                                                   cietal issues from the bottom up, specifically critical discourse and the particular world
                                                   system approach that deal with long-term and world-scale social changes.
                                                                      Nationalism and the Nation-State:
                                                                     Born in the Era of Global Capitalism
                                                   Nationalism in this era is best understood by exploring its dialectical connection with
                                                   the nation-state and global capitalism. Global capitalism brought large-scale and long-
                                                   term structural changes beginning in the sixteenth century. Mercantilism successfully
                                                   developed into capitalism in Western Europe through the expropriation of the Euro-
                                                   pean actual producers and the resources of the indigenous Americas, international
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                                                   trade, and enslavement of some Africans. The development of capitalism, the accu-
                                                   mulation and concentration of capital or economic resources through the separation
                                                   of the actual producers from their means of production, led to racialization/ethni-
                                                   cization and socialization of labor. Exploring the nature of European feudal society
                                                   and how it was dissolved through the process of original accumulation of capital, Karl
                                                   Marx observed,“The expropriation of the agricultural producer, of the peasant, from
                                                   the soil, is the basis of the whole process. The history of expropriation, in different
                                                   countries,assumes different aspects,and runs through its various phases in different or-
                                                   ders of succession, and different periods.” 15
                                                      Colonial expansion played a significant role in the processes of capital accumula-
                                                   tion and its concentration and the emergence of the Industrial Revolution. 16  Marx
                                                   contened that further socialization of labor through expropriation of the means of
                                                   production and colonialism resulted in “the entanglement of all peoples in the net of
                                                   the world-market, and with this, the international character of the capitalist regime.” 17
                                                   These factors involved war, genocide or ethnocide, cultural destruction, the intensifi-
                                                   cation of social stratification, and racial slavery, justified by the ideologies of racism,
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