Mission 2026: Binge reviewing all previous Reads, I was too slothful to review back when I read them
This is one of those books that quietly changes how you understand power. Activists beyond Borders argues that global politics isn’t just shaped by states and armies—it’s shaped by networks, narratives, and moral pressure. Keck and Sikkink introduce the concept of transnational advocacy networks: NGOs, activists, journalists, and institutions that coordinate across borders to influence policy. What’s radical here is the idea that power can flow sideways, not just top-down. The case studies—human rights, environmental movements, women’s rights—show how information becomes a weapon. Shame, exposure, and moral framing matter. This is politics beyond ballots and borders. The book is academically rigorous but deeply optimistic. It acknowledges limits—activism can fail, co-optation is real—but it refuses cynicism. In a world obsessed with hard power, this book insists that soft power can bend history. It’s essential reading for anyone who still believes ideas matter.
Recommended.