ABSTRACT

World-systems analysis has developed rapidly over the past thirty years. Today's students and junior scholars come to world-systems analysis as a well-established approach spanning all of the social sciences. The best world-systems scholarship, however, is spread across multiple methodologies and more than half a dozen academic disciplines. Aiming to crystallize forty years of progress and lay the groundwork for the continued development of the field, the Handbook of World-Systems Analysis is a comprehensive review of the state of the field of world-systems analysis since its origins almost forty years ago.

The Handbook includes contributions from a global, interdisciplinary group of more than eighty world-systems scholars. The authors include founders of the field, mid-career scholars, and newly emerging voices. Each one presents a snapshot of an area of world-systems analysis as it exists today and presents a vision for the future.

The clear style and broad scope of the Handbook will make it essential reading for students and scholars of anthropology, archaeology, geography, political science, history, sociology, and development economics.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

part |75 pages

Origins

chapter |35 pages

Before the long sixteenth century

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |10 pages

Market cooperation and the evolution of the pre-Hispanic Mesoamerican world-system

ByRichard E. Blanton, Lane F. Fargher

chapter |9 pages

The Afroeurasian world-system

Genesis, transformations, characteristics
ByLeonid Grinin, Andrey Korotayev

chapter |3 pages

Agricultural origins and early development

ByE. N. Anderson

chapter |2 pages

Qubilai and the Indian Ocean

A new era?
ByPaul D. Buell

chapter |37 pages

Historical processes of incorporation and development

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

Incorporation into and merger of world-systems

ByThomas D. Hall

chapter |8 pages

The social foundations of global conflict and cooperation

Globalization and global elite integration, nineteenth to twenty-first Century
ByThomas Ehrlich Reifer

chapter |9 pages

The East Asian path of development

ByAlvin Y. So

chapter |2 pages

Darfur

The periphery of the periphery
ByYounes Abouyoub

part |109 pages

Theory and critiques

chapter |42 pages

Theoretical frontiers in world-systems analysis

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |10 pages

Externality, contact periphery and incorporation

ByJon D. Carlson

chapter |7 pages

Wallerstein's world-system

Roots and contributions
ByW. L. Goldfrank

chapter |8 pages

The structures of knowledge

Conceptualizing the sociocultural arena of historical capitalism
ByRichard E. Lee

chapter |9 pages

The multiplicity of national development in the world-system

A critical perspective
ByNobuyuki Yamada

chapter |2 pages

Crises in the world-system

Theoretical and policy implications
ByJohn Barnshaw, Lynn Letukas

chapter |2 pages

Core, semiperiphery, periphery

A variable geometry presiding over conceptualization
ByNicole Bousquet

chapter |2 pages

Terminal crisis or a new systemic cycle of accumulation?

ByChristopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |34 pages

Explicit modeling as a research strategy

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |8 pages

World-systems as dissipative structures

A new research agenda
ByPeter E. Grimes

chapter |3 pages

Mathematical models of world-system development

ByAndrey Korotayev, Sergey Malkov

chapter |31 pages

Critical contributions to world-systems analysis

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

World-system history

Challenging Eurocentric knowledge
ByRobert A. Denemark, Barry K. Gills

chapter |9 pages

The failure of the “Modern World-System” and the new paradigm of the “Critical Theory of Patriarchy”

The “civilization of alchemists” as a “system of war”
ByClaudia von Werlhof

chapter |8 pages

Authenticating seventeenth century “hegemonies”

Dutch, Spanish, French, or none?
ByDavid Wilkinson

part |97 pages

The contemporary world-economy

chapter |33 pages

Markets and exchange

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

Surplus drain and dark value in the modern world-system

ByDonald A. Clelland

chapter |9 pages

The silence of finance and its critics

Portfolio investors in the world-system
ByAaron Z. Pitluck

chapter |9 pages

Debt crises in the modern world-system

ByChristian Suter

chapter |2 pages

The other side of the global formation

Structures of the world lumpeneconomy
ByZbigniew Galor

chapter |33 pages

Networks and chains

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |8 pages

Trade, unequal exchange, global commodity chains

World-system structure and economic development
ByDavid A. Smith

chapter |9 pages

Global cities and world city networks

ByMichael Timberlake, David A. Smith

chapter |2 pages

How individuals shape global production

ByFrederick William Lee

chapter |2 pages

World cities in Asia

ByKyoung-Ho Shin

chapter |2 pages

The Internet and the world-system(s)

ByPiotr Konieczny

chapter |27 pages

Globalization and distribution

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

Globalization: Theories of convergence and divergence in the world-system

ByKelly F. Austin, Laura A. McKinney, Edward L. Kick

chapter |9 pages

Social stratification and mobility

National and global dimensions
ByTimothy Patrick Moran

chapter |3 pages

Income inequality in the world

Looking back and ahead
ByVolker Bornschier

chapter |2 pages

Billionaires and global inequality

Does an increase in one indicate an increase in the other?
ByJenny Chesters

chapter |2 pages

The pervasiveness of ICT in our present modern world-system

ByMelsome Nelson-Richards, Kandu E. Agbimson

part |88 pages

Development and underdevelopment

chapter |30 pages

Models of growth and stagnation

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

Position and mobility in the contemporary world-economy

A structuralist perspective
BySalvatore J. Babones

chapter |8 pages

The embedded periphery

Slums, favelas, shantytowns and a new regime of spatial inequality in the modern world-system
ByDelario Lindsey

chapter |2 pages

Urbanization and poverty in the global “South”

ByShahadat Hossain

chapter |24 pages

Food and agriculture

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |2 pages

Incorporating comparison

BySandra Curtis Comstock

chapter |2 pages

Equalizing exchange through voluntary certification?

The case of palm oil
ByKristen Shorette

part |69 pages

Sustainability

chapter |30 pages

Natural resources and constraints

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |8 pages

World-system structure, natural capital and environmental entropy

ByEdward L. Kick, Laura A. McKinney

chapter |2 pages

What is old and what is new?

Considering world-systems in the twenty-first century and beyond
ByThomas J. Burns

chapter |2 pages

Glad moon rising

A world-systems perspective on the world in space
ByMarilyn Dudley-Flores, Thomas Gangale

chapter |2 pages

Extraction and the world-system

ByPaul K. Gellert

chapter |2 pages

Energy use and world-systems dynamics

ByKirk S. Lawrence

chapter |37 pages

The environment

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

Forests, food and freshwater

A review of world-systems research and environmental impact
ByRebecca Clausen, Stefano B. Longo

chapter |9 pages

The sociology of ecologically unequal exchange in comparative perspective

ByAndrew K. Jorgenson, James Rice

chapter |2 pages

Interacting landscapes

Toward a truly global environmental history
ByAlf Hornborg

chapter |3 pages

The environmental impacts of foreign direct investment in less-developed countries

Toward a truly global environmental history
ByAndrew K. Jorgenson, Jessie Winitzky

part |73 pages

Society

chapter |30 pages

Individuals and families

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |9 pages

International migration in the world-system

ByMatthew R. Sanderson

chapter |2 pages

The world-system, inequality and violent conflict

Shifting the unit of analysis
ByKevin Doran

chapter |3 pages

Child marriage in India

An overview
ByGolam Sarwar Khan

chapter |2 pages

Impacts of individualism on world-system transformation

ByRoksolana Suchowerska

chapter |41 pages

International and transnational interactions

BySalvatore J. Babones, Christopher Chase-Dunn

chapter |7 pages

Geography and war

ByAlbert J. Bergesen

chapter |9 pages

The global justice movement and the social forum process

ByEllen Reese, Ian Breckenridge-Jackson, Edwin Elias, David W. Everson, James Love

chapter |9 pages

Global civil society or global politics?

ByJon Shefner

chapter |2 pages

Language in the world-system

ByGary Coyne

chapter |2 pages

Anti-systemic movements compared

ByValentine M. Moghadam

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

World-systems analysis as a knowledge movement
ByImmanuel Wallerstein