Elif Uzgören
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Globalisation and struggle in political and civil society
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Chapter 4 extends the class struggle to three further categories: political parties, state institutions and struggles in the social factory of capitalism. It questions to what extent the ruling class can transcend their economic vested interests – the economic-corporate phase – in articulating pro-membership on a universal terrain in the 2000s for the hegemonic moment in political and civil society. It also questions whether counter-hegemonic social forces can transcend their economic corporate phase and contest pro-membership in political and civil society. Can struggles around ecology, feminism and human rights form a united struggle with the labour movement? The book argues that the pro-membership project was hegemonic in the 2000s as ideas associated with membership were defended on universal terms in political and civil society. I suggest that, rather than one project for and one project opposing membership, there were two rival class strategies contesting pro-membership: neo-mercantilism and Ha–vet (‘No–Yes’), neither of which provided an overall alternative. The former opposed the capitalist nature of European integration and supported Social Europe under the motto ‘Another Europe is possible’; the latter advocated ‘membership on equal terms and conditions’, supporting membership so long as Turkey would benefit from the EU’s social policy, structural funds and the free movement of workers.

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