open access publication

Article, Early Access, 2024

Getting action for global economic justice: the micro-foundations of transnational activism

SOCIO-ECONOMIC REVIEW, ISSN 1475-1461, 1475-1461, 10.1093/ser/mwad077

Contributors

Seabrooke, Leonard 0000-0001-5581-3293 (Corresponding author) [1] Wigan, Duncan 0000-0001-9805-7408 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] Copenhagen Business Sch, Dept Org, Kilevej 14A, DK-2000 Copenhagen, Denmark
  2. [NORA names: CBS Copenhagen Business School; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Generating momentum for activist campaigns on complicated economic issues is difficult, especially in a transnational context. So, how did activists get action on tax justice and create a movement that has changed global tax policy? Drawing on 20 years of para-ethnographic fieldwork with the Tax Justice Network, we suggest that activists initially engaged in 'identity switching' tactics to access professional or policy arenas from a footing in one identity, to then switch identities to activate policy shifts. A first-generation leveraged multiple professional identities to access forums, build credibility and introduce a tax lexicon to activists and policymakers. These tactics were not, however, replicable, leading a second generation to concentrate on 'identity fixing', including professionalization and a tightening of organizational strategy over access and activation points. Here we theorize identity switching and fixing as underappreciated micro-foundations of transnational activism and demonstrate their importance for global economic justice.

Keywords

H26 tax evasion and avoidance, L31 nonprofit institutions, NGOs, Z13 economic sociology, activism, economic anthropology, identity switching, language, professionalization, social and economic stratification, social entrepreneurship, taxation, transnational policymaking

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