Global Social Change: Historical and Comparative Perspectives

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Christopher Chase-Dunn, Salvatore J. Babones
JHU Press, Sep 22, 2006 - Political Science - 371 pages

This informative and exciting volume brings together accomplished sociologists and scholars to offer an introduction to ways of studying and understanding global social change.

The essays in Global Social Change explore globalization from a world-systems perspective, untangling its many contested meanings. This perspective offers insights into globalization's gradual and uneven growth throughout the course of human social evolution.

In this informative and exciting volume, Christopher Chase-Dunn and Salvatore J. Babones bring together accomplished senior sociologists and outstanding younger scholars with a mix of interests, expertise, and methodologies to offer an introduction to ways of studying and understanding global social change.

In both newly written essays and previously published articles from the Journal of World Systems Research, the contributors employ historical and comparative social science to examine the development of institutions of global governance, the rise and fall of hegemonic core states, transnational social movements, and global environmental challenges. They compare post–World War II globalization with the great wave of economic integration that occurred in the late nineteenth century, analyze the rise of the political ideology of the "globalization project"—Reaganism-Thatcherism—and discuss issues of gender and global inequalities.

 

Contents

Global Social Change in the Long Run
33
Competing Conceptions of Globalization
59
A WorldSystems Perspective
79
Global Inequality
109
Exploring the LongTerm Implications
135
Accumulation as an Ecological
161
Global Social Change Natural Resource Consumption
176
Spatial and Other Fixes of Historical Capitalism
201
Contemporary Intracore Relations and WorldSystems Theory
213
Female Labor and Womens
241
Environmentalism and the Trajectory of the AntiCorporate
269
National and Global Foundations of Global Civil Society
289
Transnational Social Movements and Democratic Socialist Parties
317
Globalization and the Future of Democracy
336
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About the author (2006)

Christopher Chase-Dunn is a Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Riverside, where he is the director of the Institute for Research on World-Systems. He is the coauthor of Global Struggles and Social Change: From Prehistory to World Revolution in the Twenty-First Century. Salvatore J. Babones is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Pittsburgh.

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