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E-raamat: Routledge Handbook of World-Systems Analysis [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

Edited by (University of Sydney, Australia), Edited by (University of California, USA)
  • Formaat: 541 pages, 3 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-May-2012
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780203863428
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Taylor & Francis e-raamat
  • Hind: 258,50 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Tavahind: 369,29 €
  • Säästad 30%
  • Formaat: 541 pages, 3 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white
  • Sari: Routledge International Handbooks
  • Ilmumisaeg: 24-May-2012
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780203863428
Teised raamatud teemal:

World-systems analysis has developed rapidly over the past thirty years. Today's students and junior scholars come to world-systems analysis as a well-established approach spanning all of the social sciences. The best world-systems scholarship, however, is spread across multiple methodologies and more than half a dozen academic disciplines. Aiming to crystallize forty years of progress and lay the groundwork for the continued development of the field, the Handbook of World-Systems Analysis is a comprehensive review of the state of the field of world-systems analysis since its origins almost forty years ago.

The Handbook includes contributions from a global, interdisciplinary group of more than eighty world-systems scholars. The authors include founders of the field, mid-career scholars, and newly emerging voices. Each one presents a snapshot of an area of world-systems analysis as it exists today and presents a vision for the future.

The clear style and broad scope of the Handbook will make it essential reading for students and scholars of anthropology, archaeology, geography, political science, history, sociology, and development economics.

List of illustrations
xiii
List of contributors
xiv
Introduction 1(6)
Salvatore J. Babones
Christopher Chase-Dunn
PART I Origins
7(76)
1 Before the long sixteenth century
9(36)
Richard E. Blanton
Lane F. Fargher
1.1 Market cooperation and the evolution of the pre-Hispanic Mesoamerican world-system
11(10)
1.2 Assessing the debate between Abu-Lughod and Wallerstein over the thirteenth-century origins of the modern world-system
21(9)
Elson E. Boles
1.3 The Afroeurasian world-system: Genesis, transformations, characteristics
30(9)
Leonid Grinin
Andrey Korotayev
1.4 Agricultural origins and early development
39(3)
E. N. Anderson
1.5 Qubilai and the Indian Ocean: A new era?
42(3)
Paul D. Buell
2 Historical processes of incorporation and development
45(38)
Thomas D. Hall
2.1 Incorporation into and merger of world-systems
47(9)
2.2 The great transition debate and world-systems analysis
56(7)
Eric Mielants
2.3 The social foundations of global conflict and cooperation: Globalization and global elite integration, nineteenth to twenty-first century
63(8)
Thomas Ehrlich Reifer
2.4 The East Asian path of development
71(9)
Alvin Y. So
2.5 Darfur: The periphery of the periphery
80(3)
Younes Abouyoub
PART II Theory and critiques
83(110)
3 Theoretical frontiers in world-systems analysis
85(42)
Jon D. Carlson
3.1 Externality, contact periphery and incorporation
87(10)
3.2 Wallerstein's world-system: Roots and contributions
97(7)
W. L. Goldfrank
3.3 The structures of knowledge: Conceptualizing the sociocultural arena of historical capitalism
104(8)
Richard E. Lee
3.4 The multiplicity of national development in the world-system: A critical perspective
112(9)
Nobuyuki Yamada
3.5 Crisis in the world-system: Theoretical and policy implications
121(2)
John Barnshaw
Lynn Letukas
3.6 Core, semiperiphery, periphery: A variable geometry presiding over conceptualization
123(2)
Nicole Bousquet
3.7 Terminal crisis or a new systemic cycle of accumulation?
125(2)
Christopher Chase-Dunn
4 Explicit modeling as a research strategy
127(34)
Raymond J. Dezzani
4.1 Measuring transition and hierarchy of states within the world-systems paradigm
129(10)
4.2 World-systems as dissipative structures: A new research agenda
139(8)
Peter E. Grimes
4.3 Narrating stories about the world-system of the First Global Age, 1400-1800
147(8)
J. B. Owens
4.4 World-systems theory and formal and simulation modeling
155(3)
Hiroko Inoue
4.5 Mathematical models of world-system development
158(3)
Andrey Korotayev
Sergey Malkov
5 Critical contributions to world-systems analysis
161(32)
Robert A. Denemark
Barry K. Gills
5.1 World-system history: Challenging Eurocentric knowledge
163(9)
5.2 The failure of the "Modern World-System" and the new paradigm of the "Critical Theory of Patriarchy": The "civilization of alchemists" as a "system of war"
172(9)
Claudia von Werlhof
5.3 Authenticating seventeenth century "hegemonies": Dutch, Spanish, French, or none?
181(8)
David Wilkinson
5.4 Challenges of globalization theory to world-systems analysis
189(4)
Leslie Sklair
PART III The contemporary world-economy
193(98)
6 Markets and exchange
195(34)
Donald A. Clelland
6.1 Surplus drain and dark value in the modern world-system
197(9)
6.2 The silence of finance and its critics: Portfolio investors in the world-system
206(9)
Aaron Z. Pitluck
6.3 Debt crises in the modern world-system
215(9)
Christian Suter
6.4 Economic-political interaction in the core/periphery hierarchy
224(2)
Mikhail Balaev
6.5 The other side of the global formation: Structures of the world lumpeneconomy
226(3)
Zbigniew Galor
7 Networks and chains
229(34)
Christof Parnreiter
7.1 Global cities, global commodity chains and the geography of core-ness in the capitalist world-system
231(8)
7.2 Trade, unequal exchange, global commodity chains: World-system structure and economic development
239(8)
David A. Smith
7.3 Global cities and world city networks
247(9)
Michael Timberlake
David A. Smith
7.4 How individuals shape global production
256(2)
Frederick William Lee
7.5 World cities in Asia
258(2)
Kyoung-Ho Shin
7.6 The Internet and the world-system(s)
260(3)
Piotr Konieczny
8 Globalization and distribution
263(28)
Kelly F. Austin
Laura A. McKinney
Edward L. Kick
8.1 Globalization: Theories of convergence and divergence in the world-system
265(9)
8.2 Social stratification and mobility: National and global dimensions
274(9)
Timothy Patrick Moran
8.3 Income inequality in the world: Looking back and ahead
283(3)
Volker Bornschier
8.4 Billionaires and global inequality: Does an increase in one indicate an increase in the other?
286(2)
Jenny Chesters
8.5 The pervasiveness of ICT in our present modern world-system
288(3)
Melsome Nelson-Richards
Kandu E. Agbimson
PART IV Development and underdevelopment
291(88)
9 Indigeneity and incorporation
293(32)
Robbie Ethridge
9.1 Early capitalist inauguration and the formation of a colonial shatter zone
295(9)
9.2 Indigenous peoples, globalization and autonomy in world-systems analysis
304(9)
James V. Fenelon
9.3 Peasants, peasantries and (de)peasantization in the capitalist world-system
313(9)
Eric Vanhaute
9.4 Chiefdom world-systems (with a focus on Hawaii, 1390-1790)
322(3)
Elena Ermolaeva
10 Models of growth and stagnation
325(30)
Salvatore J. Babones
10.1 Position and mobility in the contemporary world-economy: A structuralist perspective
327(9)
10.2 O'Connorian models of peripheral development---or how third world states resist world-systemic pressures by cloning the policies of states in the core
336(9)
Samuel Cohn
10.3 The embedded periphery: Slums, favelas, shantytowns and a new regime of spatial inequality in the modern world-system
345(8)
Delario Lindsey
10.4 Urbanization and poverty in the global "South"
353(2)
Shahadat Hossain
11 Food and agriculture
355(24)
Brian J. Gareau
John Borrego
11.1 Global environmental governance, competition, and sustainability in global agriculture
357(9)
11.2 Hunger and the political economy of the world food system
366(9)
Stephen J. Scanlan
11.3 Incorporating comparison
375(2)
Sandra Curtis Comstock
11.4 Equalizing exchange through voluntary certification? The case of palm oil
377(2)
Kristen Shorette
PART V Sustainability
379(70)
12 Natural resources and constraints
381(30)
Paul S. Ciccantell
12.1 New historical materialism, extractive economies, and socioeconomic and environmental change
383(9)
12.2 World-system structure, natural capital and environmental entropy
392(8)
Edward L. Kick
Laura A. McKinney
12.3 What is old and what is new? Considering world-systems in the twenty-first century and beyond
400(2)
Thomas J. Burns
12.4 Glad moon rising: A world-systems perspective on the world in space
402(2)
Marilyn Dudley-Flores
Thomas Gangale
12.5 Extraction and the world-system
404(2)
Paul K. Gellert
12.6 Geopolitical and socio-ecological constraints to the reproduction of the capitalist world-economy
406(3)
John L. Gulick
12.7 Energy use and world-systems dynamics
409(2)
Kirk S. Lawrence
13 The environment
411(38)
Philipp Babcicky
13.1 Single and composite sustainability indicators in comparative sociology
413(9)
13.2 Forests, food and freshwater: A review of world-systems research and environmental impact
422(9)
Rebecca Clausen
Stefano B. Longo
13.3 The sociology of ecologically unequal exchange in comparative perspective
431(9)
Andrew K. Jorgenson
James Rice
13.4 The displacement of hazardous products, production processes, and wastes in the world-system
440(3)
R. Scott Frey
13.5 Interacting landscapes: Toward a truly global environmental history
443(2)
Alf Hornborg
13.6 The environmental impacts of foreign direct investment in less-developed countries
445(4)
Andrew K. Jorgenson
Jessie Winitzky
PART VI Society
449(73)
14 Individuals and families
451(30)
Wilma A. Dunaway
14.1 The centrality of the household to the modern world-system
453(9)
14.2 International migration in the world-system
462(9)
Matthew R. Sanderson
14.3 The world-system, inequality and violent conflict: Shifting the unit of analysis
471(2)
Kevin Doran
14.4 Child marriage in India: An overview
473(3)
Golam Sanvar Khan
14.5 The migration of reproductive labor from the periphery to the core and semiperiphery under neoliberal globalization
476(3)
Ligaya Lindio-McGovern
14.6 Impacts of individualism on world-system transformation
479(2)
Roksolana Suchowerska
15 International and transnational interactions
481(41)
Albert J. Bergesen
15.1 Geography and war
483(7)
15.2 The global justice movement and the social forum process
490(9)
Ellen Reese
Ian Breckenridge-Jackson
Edwin Elias
David W. Everson
James Love
15.3 Global civil society or global politics?
499(9)
Jon Shefner
15.4 Language in the world-system
508(2)
Gary Coyne
15.5 Anti-systemic movements compared
510(2)
Valentine M. Moghadam
15.6 Stabilization operations and structural instability in the contemporary world-system
512(3)
Jeremy Simpson
15.7 Conclusion: World-systems analysis as a knowledge movement
515(7)
Immanuel Wallerstein
Index 522
Salvatore Babones is a senior lecturer in Sociology and Social Policy at The University of Sydney and the author of the Benchmarking America blog. He is the author or editor of three books focusing on development, social change, and global health inequalities.

Christopher Chase-Dunn is the Director of the Institute for Research on World-Systems at the University of California at Riverside and was the founding editor of the Journal of World-Systems Research. He is the author or editor of fifteen books on topics ranging from pre-modern world-systems to the future of capitalism.