Critiques and developments in world­systems analysis: an introduction to the special collection Cover Image

Critiques and developments in world­systems analysis: an introduction to the special collection
Critiques and developments in world­systems analysis: an introduction to the special collection

Author(s): Richard E. Lee
Subject(s): Philosophy, Social Sciences, Economy, Special Branches of Philosophy, Sociology, Philosophy of Science, Social Theory, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Editura Rosetti International
Keywords: world-systems analysis; critiques of world-systems analysis; Immanuel Wallerstein; commodity chains; households; world-ecology; structures of knowledge;

Summary/Abstract: From its inception, the world-systems perspective was not only enormously influential in long-term, large-scale social research; it also attracted a set of serious critiques. These fell into the general areas of the emergence of the capitalist world-economy; reductionism in the mode of argument; surplus appropriation and accumulation, including the question of class; and the general exclusion of an analysis of any role for “culture.” It is concrete developments in world-systems analysis over the past three decades, although not to the exclusion of explicit responses to critiques, that have gone a long way in addressing these concerns. They fall most notably into the areas of commodity chains, households, world-ecology, and the structures of knowledge.

  • Issue Year: IV/2010
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 5-18
  • Page Count: 14
  • Language: English