Frontiers of Globalization Research:: Theoretical and Methodological Approaches

Front Cover
Ino Rossi
Springer Science & Business Media, 2007 M03 21 - 453 pages

Paperback features updated introductions and post-script

For more than twenty years globalization has been a prominent topic in the social sciences and humanities because it deals with processes that impact all societies at the international, national, and local levels. Controversies and conflicting approaches have dominated this field of studies. To understand the variety and strength of different approaches, the editor asked many of their leading exponents to outline their own “research framework”.

The book's contributors are world renowned experts in their field, including G. John Ikenberry, Michael Doyle, Layna Mosley, Alex Callinicos, Anthony McGrew, Thomas Risse, Roland Robertson, John Tomlinson, Saskia Sassen, David Held, Thomas Pogge, Chris Brown and Andrew Kuper.

These writings have been organized into four sections: theoretical perspectives and cultural globalization, economic globalization, political globalization, and methodological approaches. The extensive coverage and the interdisciplinary flavor of the volume makes it suitable for a large interdisciplinary audience.

“Ino Rossi has assembled a stimulating collection of insightful essays by many of the world’s leading analysts of globalization. The essays more than live up to the book’s title, and the critical commentaries included in the volume, by the editor and other widely renowned contemporary social theorists, add a welcome dialogical dimension to the work. This is first-rate scholarship that merits careful reading by a wide audience.”

John Boli, Professor and Chair, Department of Sociology, Emory University, Atlanta, GA

“Many of the scholars in this volume were writing about political, social, and economic change from a global perspective long before the term ‘globalization’ became so widely used. It is very useful to have their recent thoughts as well as that of some younger experts about where the world is going, and how to study this, all combined in a single, fascinating book.”

Daniel Chirot, University of Washington, Seattle, WA

“Rossi has assembled an array of leading experts to dissect globalization’s realities and myths. Globalization emerges as a multi-dimensional process, structurally uneven, with deep measures of continuity and discontinuity from what went before. The global frontier has rarely been so penetratingly explored.”

Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania

“In a compelling volume, pioneers who shaped globalization studies now take a fresh look at the field. This series of reflections deepens analysis and will help map research for many years to come.”

James H. Mittelman, Professor of International Relations, American University, Washington, DC, and Vice President of the International Studies Association

From inside the book

Contents

Rationale of the Volume and Thematics of the Contributions
1
Microglobalization
65
A Transnational Framework for Theory and Research in
93
Global Systems Globalization and Anthropological
109
The Eigenstructures of World Society and the Regional
133
Global Complexities
151
Trajectories of Trade and Investment Globalization
165
Globalization and Uneven Development
185
Theoretical and Empirical Elements in the Study
287
Three Steps Toward a Viable Theory of Globalization
307
Situating Global Social Relations
317
Durkheim
333
In Search of a Paradigm
353
A New Global Age but Are There New Perspectives on
361
The
371
Rationalization and Globalization in NeoWeberian
383

Substitutionist
203
Governance
221
911
243
Finding Frontiers in Historical Research on Globalization
271
Paradigmatic
397
Index
437
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Page 192 - Argentina Barbados Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Costa Rica Cuba Dominican Republic Ecuador El Salvador Guatemala Haiti...
Page 293 - The intensity of transactions among these cities. particularly through the financial markets. trade in services. and investment. has increased sharply. and so have the orders of magnitude involved. At the same time. there has been a sharpening inequality in the concentration of strategic resources and activities between each of these cities and others in the same country.
Page 192 - Spectacular prizes much greater than would have been necessary to call forth the particular effort are thrown to a small minority of winners, thus propelling much more efficaciously than a more equal and more "just" distribution would, the activity of that large majority of businessmen who receive in return very modest compensation or nothing or less than nothing, and yet do their utmost because they have the big prizes before their eyes and overrate their chances of doing equally well.
Page 293 - ... cities raises questions about the articulation with their nation-states, their regions, and the larger economic and social structure in such cities. Cities have typically been deeply embedded in the economies of their region, indeed often reflecting the characteristics of the latter: and they still do. But cities that are strategic sites in the global economy tend, in part, to disconnect from their region. This conflicts with a key proposition in traditional scholarship about urban systems, namely,...
Page 296 - Nonetheless, telematics and globalization have emerged as fundamental forces reshaping the organization of economic space. This reshaping ranges from the spatial virtualization of a growing number of economic activities to the reconfiguration of the geography of the built environment for economic activity. Whether in electronic space or in the geography of the built environment, this reshaping involves organizational and structural changes.
Page 99 - Although the four fractions are distinguishable analytic categories with different functions for the global capitalist system, the people in them often move from one category to another (sometimes described as the revolving door...
Page 294 - The city has indeed emerged as a site for new claims - by global capital which uses the city as an "organizational commodity," but also by disadvantaged sectors of the urban population, frequently as internationalized a presence in large cities as capitaL The denationalizing of urban space and the formation of new claims by transnational actors raise the question, "Whose city is it?

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