Critical Globalization StudiesRichard P. Appelbaum, William I. Robinson Psychology Press, 2005 - 488 pages Critical Globalization Studies is the first volume to map out a critical approach to the rapidly growing field of gloablization studies. Centrally concerned with global justice, the contributors both scrutinze and recast the subject. As well, the volume serves as a bridge connecting scholars of globalization, the policy world, and the global justice movement. The essays examine a wide range of topics too often left at the margin of globalization studies and in the process raise a host of crucial questions. Unique in its extensive and comprehensive approach, Critical Globalization Studies develops new and important theoretical perspectives on globalization while engaging global social activism. It is an indispenseable guide for both academics and practitioners. |
Contents
Advice to the Academic from a ScholarActivist | 3 |
What Is a Critical Globalization Studies? Intellectual Labor and Global Society | 11 |
What Is a Critical Globalization Studies? | 25 |
Globalization in WorldSystems Perspective | 33 |
Social Movements and Critical Global Studies | 45 |
for Critical Globalization Studies | 55 |
Errors of Globalism | 65 |
8 | 75 |
Paid Domestic Work | 237 |
Critical Globalization Studies and Gender | 249 |
Globalization Critical Hybridity | 259 |
Globalization and the Grotesque | 269 |
A Retrospective Look at the East | 293 |
Historical Dynamics of Globalization War and Social Protest | 303 |
Respectability Masculinity | 313 |
Reclaiming Development | 323 |
From Globalization to the New Imperialism | 91 |
The Crisis of the Globalist Project and the New Economics of George W Bush | 101 |
Globalization and Development Studies | 111 |
At Home and Abroad | 121 |
Toward a Critical Globalization Studies | 131 |
The MilitaryIndustrial Complex in Transnational Class Theory | 141 |
New Directions in Globalization Research and Implications | 153 |
Some Observations | 167 |
Implications | 177 |
Critical Globalization Studies and a Network Perspective on Global Civil Society | 187 |
Critical Globalization Studies and International Law under Conditions | 197 |
Critical Globalization Studies | 207 |
Reimagining the Governance of Globalization | 217 |
The Continuing Relevance of Strategic | 227 |
Bringing Third World Womens | 333 |
Globalization and Transnational Feminist Networks or How Neoliberalism | 349 |
Labor and the Global Logistics Revolution | 359 |
Problems of Enforcing Global Labor Standards | 369 |
Thread of Resistance in Vietnamese Textile | 379 |
A Revolution in Kindness | 393 |
45 | 401 |
403 | |
411 | |
426 | |
Contributors | 447 |
455 | |
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activists actors Afrocentrism analysis argues capitalist class carnival Central American century challenge colonial communities concept conflict context cosmopolitan countries crisis critical globalization studies critical pedagogy cultural democracy discourse dominant dynamics East Asian economic elites emerged empire Eurocentric European factory feminism feminist forces foreign forms gender global capitalism global cities global economy global justice movement global South globalist groups hegemonists hegemony hierarchy historical human rights identity ideology immigrant imperial important increasingly industrial inequality institutions intellectual international law Iraq issues Korea labor unions liberal migrant domestic workers military modernity nation-state neoliberal neoliberal globalization networks organizations percent postcolonial practices production racial regime relations resistance role sector social movements strategy structure struggle Tèo Third World tion Tòan trade transformation transnational feminism transnational feminist transnationalism United University unrest Vietnam Vietnamese wage women World Bank world-system