ABSTRACT

In this collaboratively authored book world-system scholars critically synthesize Asia's re-emerging centrality despite the myriad financial crises that have punctuated the end of the U.S.-dominated Cold War world order. From different vantage points the authors review the turbulent landscape of the region that points toward a new Asian world order as well as contradictory symptoms and signals. The text highlights the salience of Northeast Asia; the resurgence of Russia and Eurasianism; and the class, gender, and ecological implications of a conflict-ridden regional ascent for the future of the North-South divide and for the struggle between the spirit of Davos and the spirit of Porto Alegre.

part 1|82 pages

Asian Regionality and the Geopolitics of the World-System

part 2|74 pages

Asian Struggles

chapter 6|14 pages

Dictatorship and Development in China

Their Impact on the Workers of the World

chapter 9|18 pages

Utopystics and the Asiatic Modes of Liberation

Gurdjieffian Contributions to the Sociological Imaginations of Inner and Global World-Systems