ABSTRACT

Globalization and Civilizations challenges established assumptions about the nature of civilizations and the supposed inevitability of the conflict between the Islamic and Western worlds. Uniquely, this edited book critically interrogates the concept of 'civilization' by asking whether it is still valid in the globalized world economy of the twenty-first century. The first half of the book provides an historical and theoretical context to understand the idea of 'civilization' in political science and demonstrates how the various social, economic, political and cultural processes of globalization have radically altered perceptions of civilization. The second half of the book looks particularly at non-Western examples of the interaction between globalization and civilization and includes case studies on the Arab world, Islam, China, India and Europe

chapter |23 pages

Civilizations and the twenty-first century

Some theoretical considerations

chapter |27 pages

Globalization, civilizations and world order

A world-constructivist approach

chapter |26 pages

The first normative global revolution?

The uncertain political future of globalization

chapter |28 pages

Globalization, markets and democracy

An anthropological linkage

chapter |26 pages

European civilization

Properties and challenges

chapter |27 pages

The crisis of European civilization

An inter-war diagnosis

chapter |24 pages

What is “Chinese” about Chinese civilization?

Culture, institutions and globalization

chapter |22 pages

Globalization and Indian civilization

Questionable continuities