Longing for the global West: Georgian women’s organisation representatives’ perceptions of the global and the local
Abstract
In academic discourses, the “globalisation process” is often described as multidimensional,
non-unitary and erratic. Globally spread ideas, practices and values are commonly regarded as
being re-interpreted and changed in local contexts. Early theories about globalisation being
the same as homogenising “westernisation” have been criticised and many scholars claim that
the world is not becoming more and more uniform to the extent that the non-western world
looks more like the western world. Henrietta Moore suggests that all people, scholars and
ordinary individuals, have implicit assumptions and presuppositions about what constitutes
“the global” and “the local” and that these are concept-metaphors whose exact meaning
cannot be specified in advance. How we perceive these concepts and the connection between
them, informs the way we perceive globalisation. Adopting a people-oriented approach, I
have analysed how a group of women’s organisation representatives in Georgia perceive the
concept-metaphors the global and the local. I have focused on exploring how the women
perceive the connection between the nation’s amplified contacts with the western world,
combined with increasing involvement in the global neoliberal economy, and change of
gender structures. This specific case has served as a lens through which I have analysed the
interrelation between the global and the local. The data for my research has been collected
through interviewing ten women’s organisation representatives and their answers have been
analysed with the help of theories about NGOisation, cultural feminism, rights-based
approach and discursive market society etcetera. The interviewed women’s valuing of western
models, their gratefulness towards western donors and their ascribing of civil and political
rights and gender equality as being ethic-historical pillars of “the West”, indicate that the
women are desiring homogenising westernisation. They understand the West as being the
global in the sense of a “whole” or “holistic entity”. The global neoliberal economy is
perceived as an overarching but autonomous and unifying structure while Georgia is
perceived as one part, demarcated by local “culture”. The global is simultaneously viewed as
a one-dimensional homogeneity and a multidimensional heterogeneity, composed by different
local entities.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2012-10-02Author
Skog, Evelina
Series/Report no.
Global Studies
2012:9
Language
eng