ABSTRACT
As we enter the third decade of the twenty-first century, the world faces extraordinary system-level challenges—from deep inequality and xenophobic nationalism to militarism and neofascism, from the refugee crisis and environmental degradation to upsurges of social unrest and escalating rivalries among powerful states. This book begins from the premise that world-systems analysis can be a powerful tool for the study of these problems, with the potential to overcome the methodological and theoretical limitations of other social science perspectives. The editors argue, moreover, that world-systems analysis can be strengthened by drawing on its holistic methodologies, returning to its Third World roots, and learning from other critical approaches. The authors in this volume not only make important contributions to comparative and historical social science, they also bring a new vigor to the world-systems perspective. Facing critical junctures in both the "state of knowledge" and the "state of the world," this book demonstrates the continued utility of, and future possibilities for, world-systems analysis.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|51 pages
World-Systems Analyses, Concepts, and Methods
chapter 2|11 pages
Avoiding the Security Trap
chapter 3|14 pages
Terence K. Hopkins and Concepts as Relational Categories
chapter 4|12 pages
Symbolic Power and Geoculture in the World-System
part II|57 pages
Continuity and Transformation in World-System Hierarchies
chapter 8|17 pages
On the Lineages of World-Systems Analysis
chapter 9|14 pages
The Dialectics of Time and Value Accumulation
part III|54 pages
Social Contradictions of Capitalism in the Twenty-first Century