{"title":"Subpolitics and the Campaign against Barclays’ Involvement in South Africa","authors":"Jakob Skovgaard","doi":"10.13154/MTS.54.2015.37-58","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In this article I examine the context for the British bank Barclays’ decision to disinvest from South Africa in 1986, with special attention to the impact of the Anti-Apartheid Movement’s campaign against the bank. The 18-year long campaign against Barclays – the largest bank in South Africa at the time and the fourth largest foreign-owned corporation – points to significant developments within the fields of corporate social responsibility and the potential influence of social movements on multinational corporations. Applying the theoretical approach of subpolitics as developed by Ulrich Beck in combination with the later subdivision by Boris Holzer and Mads P. Sorensen into a passive and an active form, it is possible to analyse the decisions of both anti-apartheid activists and Barclays on similar terms. The conclusions drawn in this article emphasise the idea that economic decisions taken by multinational corporations may have unintended political consequences and, furthermore, that the awareness of this phenomenon has contributed to the development of corporate social responsibility. Finally, I suggest that the campaign against Barclays generated public attentiveness towards the social responsibility of businesses.","PeriodicalId":218833,"journal":{"name":"Moving the Social","volume":"20 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-02-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Moving the Social","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.13154/MTS.54.2015.37-58","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
In this article I examine the context for the British bank Barclays’ decision to disinvest from South Africa in 1986, with special attention to the impact of the Anti-Apartheid Movement’s campaign against the bank. The 18-year long campaign against Barclays – the largest bank in South Africa at the time and the fourth largest foreign-owned corporation – points to significant developments within the fields of corporate social responsibility and the potential influence of social movements on multinational corporations. Applying the theoretical approach of subpolitics as developed by Ulrich Beck in combination with the later subdivision by Boris Holzer and Mads P. Sorensen into a passive and an active form, it is possible to analyse the decisions of both anti-apartheid activists and Barclays on similar terms. The conclusions drawn in this article emphasise the idea that economic decisions taken by multinational corporations may have unintended political consequences and, furthermore, that the awareness of this phenomenon has contributed to the development of corporate social responsibility. Finally, I suggest that the campaign against Barclays generated public attentiveness towards the social responsibility of businesses.
在本文中,我考察了1986年英国巴克莱银行决定从南非撤资的背景,并特别关注了反种族隔离运动对该行的影响。针对巴克莱(Barclays)——当时南非最大的银行和第四大外资企业——长达18年的运动,表明了企业社会责任领域的重大发展,以及社会运动对跨国公司的潜在影响。运用乌尔里希·贝克(Ulrich Beck)发展的亚政治理论方法,结合鲍里斯·霍尔泽(Boris Holzer)和马德斯·p·索伦森(Mads P. Sorensen)后来将亚政治细分为被动和主动两种形式,就有可能以类似的方式分析反种族隔离活动家和巴克莱的决策。本文得出的结论强调跨国公司所作的经济决定可能产生意想不到的政治后果,此外,对这一现象的认识有助于公司社会责任的发展。最后,我认为,针对巴克莱(Barclays)的运动引发了公众对企业社会责任的关注。