Global Battlefields: Memoir of a Legendary Public Intellectual from the Global South
- Globalization & PoliticsTheory of Politics
- Categories:Professionals & Academics Politics & Government
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:February,2025
- Pages:356
- Retail Price:(Unknown)
- Size:152mm×228mm
- Publication Place:United States
- Words:(Unknown)
- Star Ratings:
- Text Color:(Unknown)
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Review
——Maria Ressa, recipient of Nobel Peace Prize, 2021
Description
It traces Walden Bello’s life trajectory from a leader of the movement against the Vietnam War at Princeton to Salvador Allende’s Chile, where he provides a startling take on its “peaceful road to socialism”.
His participation in the US-based movement to cut off US assistance to the Marcos dictatorship led to iconic acts of protest – using Sesame Street’s Miss Piggy and Kermit to depict the Filippino leadership; infiltrating a Lincoln Center event as officials, greeting Imelda Marcos warmly in English followed by “We’re going to get you bastards” in Filippino, as the audience remained oblivious; and a celebrated heist of 6000 pages of confidential documents from the World Bank that were then turned into the best-selling international expose Development Debacle: The World Bank in the Philippines.
Bello provides a detailed account and analysis of the anti-dictatorship movement in the Philippines, where the leading National Democratic Front led by the CPP was eventually marginalized following the so-called “EDSA Uprising” that ousted Ferdinand Marcos, Sr, in 1986. He exposes the Reagan administration officials’ maneuvering that prevented the Left from coming to power, and the subsequent CPP runaway purge that triggered his departure from it.
Bello became one of the leaders of the of the global struggle against neoliberalism and its key institutions, the WTO, IMF, and the World Bank. He captures the din and smoke of the historic street battles of the 2000’s―in Seattle, Prague, Genoa, and Cancun―then gives an engaged intellectual’s analysis of the anti-globalization and anti-empire movements.
While an elected official in the Philippines Congress, Bello engaged in parliamentary battles over family planning and agrarian reform. The New Slave Trade chapter addresses his efforts to assist trapped Filipino domestic workers. He outlines his efforts to make the Philippines steer an independent course between the United States and China.
In 2015 he resigned from the Philippine Congress in 2015 after 6 years’ service―the only recorded resignation on a matter of principle in the history of the Congress.
Truly, a life well lived, with much to offer by way of hope and example.





