Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name.
Start the Anti globalization movement article.
Search for Anti globalization movement in other articles.
Look for Anti globalization movement in Wiktionary, our sister dictionary project.
Look for Anti globalization movement in the Commons, our repository for free images, music, sound, and video.
Look for pages linking to this page
If you have created this page in the past few minutes and it has not yet appeared, it may not be visible due to a delay in updating the database. Try purge, otherwise please wait and check again later before attempting to recreate the page.
If you created an article under this title previously, it may have been deleted. See candidates for speedy deletion for possible reasons.
Members of the anti-globalization movement generally advocate socialist or social democratic alternatives to capitalist economics, and seek to protect the world's population and ecosystem from what they believe to be the damaging effects of globalization.
The anti-globalization movement as it is now known stems from the convergence of these different political experiences when their members began to demonstrate together at international meetings such as the Seattle WTO meeting of 1999 or Genoa G/8 summit in 2001.
Some see the movement as a critical response to the development of so-called neoliberalism, which is widely seen to have commenced with Margaret Thatcher's and Ronald Reagan's policies toward creating liaise-fare capitalism on a global scale by promoting the privatization of countries’ economies and the weakening of trade and business regulations.