%0 Journal Article %T Occupy Wall Street? Position-Blindness in the New Leftist Revolution %A Agnes Gagyi %J Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies (JCGS) %D 2012 %I Journal of Critical Globalisation Studies %X The following I write as an Eastern European sociologist and activist, departing from the basic question of how local movements in my region might connect with Occupy Wall Street (OWS). By this time, it is evident that OWS has made an indelible mark on present-day discussions on globalisation and world order. Immanuel Wallerstein (2011), for example, has spoken directly of an ongoing transformation in world economy, asking whether the present crisis in the dominant model of capitalism-cum-democracy will be resolved through a shift towards a less democratic and more unequal system, or whether global social movements might help bring about a more equal and democratic social order. Keeping in sight the controversial lessons of the alter-globalism movement in Eastern Europe, I will argue that certain characteristics of the OWS movementthemselves pose an obstacle to the development of a truly global social movement %K Occupy Wall Street %K Globalisation %K World Order %K Social Movements %K Capitalism %U http://www.criticalglobalisation.com/issue5/143_148_POSITION_BLINDNESS_JCGS5.pdf