Nctu logo
活動  
 
張貼者:蘇淑芬/台灣聯合大學系統文化研究國際中心 推薦出版:Rethinking the Failed Project of Equality
 
活 動 類 別 活 動 對 象 起 始 時 間 結 束 時 間 地           點
藝文 教職員生 2021/07/14 2021/07/31 無標示地點
 

聯絡人:蘇淑芬   聯絡電話:31658


 

 
Rethinking the Failed Project of Equality

Table of Contents

 

 

1.    The #MeToo Movement and the Potential of Feminist Digital Activism Combat Sexual Harassment in Vietnam

2.    Cyber Harassment, Misogyny, and the South Korean Online Sphere

3.    Transgression of Female Stereotypes and Empowerment of Women in The Third Wife

4.    The Geostrategic Location of Myanmar and its Influence on the Rohingya Conflict

5.    Why has American White Nationalism been on the Rise in Recent Years?

6.    Racialized Migration: Indonesian Fishers on Taiwanese Fishing Vessels

7.    Freedom to Move, No Freedom to Settle: The Labor Migrancy Dilemma in Contemporary China’s Urbanization

8.    Borders and Museums: Exclusion through Social Inclusion

-------------------
Rethinking the Failed Project of Equality

Introduction

Over the past centuries, we have witnessed emerging insights and projects that attempted to point out the origins of inequality and to free people from conditions of being enslaved, exploited, and colonized. Efforts in pursuit of a more equal world widely emerge in many aspects, such as popular movements, superstructure design, and technological progress.

 

Modern projects of equality circulated both in the forms of knowledge and practice in a reciprocal passage between the West and the non-West. For instance, in the post-war age, when former colonies successively pursued independence, the idea of universal emancipation in the third world influenced people in the West to fight against global imperialism structure as well as domestic elite groups. During the late 1960s, in the so-called global ’68 movements, students and workers in different countries protested for equal salary, women’s rights, liberty, and democracy. Strikes and mass demonstrations inspired intellectual concerns in specific disciplines like race, gender, labor, and post-colonialism.

The social revolution of the global ‘68 movements eventually faded out in the face of the domination of the neo-liberalism ideology, the collapse of the Soviet Union, the endless wars and conflicts in the Middle East, and the centralization of wealth and power around the world. Idealish welfare systems and social justice have been somewhat achieved in some high-income countries, however at the cost of increasing labor exploitation and environmental pollution in offshore developing regions. Currently, the global situation is worsening as a new wave of populism and racism towards migrants and refugees is rising everywhere.