Protests in Seattle, Quebec City, and Genoa brought the anticorporate globalization movement to wide public
awareness. But what are the roots of this movement, and where is it going? Another World is Possible traces the
movement�s progress since 1994, and makes the case for the continued development of its anti-capitalist analysis
and activism. In this major new work, David McNally considers contemporary social activists, and the political
and economic orders they resist, in the context of historical capitalism in all its racial, gendered, and imperialist
dimensions. Drawing on the experiences of radical movements of workers, peasants and indigenous peoples in Mexico,
Korea, Bolivia, Indonesia and Brazil, among other countries, he sketches out an alternative, deeply radical politics
based on diversity, internationalism, and moving beyond commodifi cation and the market.