ABSTRACT

World-system analyses have recast the study of between- and within-nation country inequality as constituent aspects of a single field of inquiry: the study of inequality and social stratification as processes that always have been global in their very essence. World-system analyses maintain that global social stratification pivots around institutional arrangements that render distributional outcomes as simultaneously “national,” “gendered,” “racialized,” and “global” processes.

This book takes stock of some of the enduring theoretical and empirical contributions of a world-system perspective, and identifies promising directions for future inquiry and discussion. Some chapters reassess the scope and methodologies of world-system analysis around several key problems (e.g., the spatial and temporal boundaries of global commodity chains, the construction and challenge of various dimensions of social inequality, systemic and antisystemic social movements). Others take stock of areas in which world-systems are promoting methodological innovation and/or generating useful global data, and identify questions that demand additional methodological and empirical attention for future research.

In different ways, this book help us to critically reconsider some of the enduring legacies within a world-system perspective (such as Karl Polanyi’s concept of the “double movement,” or the distinction drawn by Giovanni Arrighi or Immanuel Wallerstein between systemic and antisystemic movements). As argued by many of the authors in this book, a world-historical approach calls for greater sensitivity to the manifold ways in which conceptual boundaries change over time and space. Taking seriously the issue of unit of analysis, this book explores critically productive ways for better understanding global patterns of continuity and change.

chapter 1|5 pages

By Way of Introduction

Selected Discussions on the Scope and Empirics of World-System Analysis

chapter 3|10 pages

Coercion and Concrete Labor within Historical Capitalism

Reexamining Intersectionality Theory

chapter 5|14 pages

Great Convergence or the Third Great Divergence?

Changes in the Global Distribution of Wealth, 1500–2008

chapter 6|15 pages

Illusion in Crisis?

World-Economic and Zonal Volatility, 1975–2013

chapter 7|10 pages

The Longue DurÉe and Raw Materialism of Coal

Against the So-Called Death of Coal

chapter 8|11 pages

Contextualizing Global Inequalities

A Sociological Approach

chapter 9|12 pages

(Anti)Systemic Movements

Hegemony, the Passive Revolution, and (Counter)Revolutions

chapter 10|12 pages

Brokering Markets for Labor and Nature

Social Movements and the Transition to a Just Economy

chapter 11|10 pages

Exit Strategies

Marginalization, Social Movements, and Exit from the Capitalist World-System