Globalization and Violence
Paul W. James(Editor)
SAGE Publications Inc (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 18. April 2006
Book
Hardback
1784 pages
978-1-4129-1954-8 (ISBN)
Description
Central Currents in Globalization Series:
The concept of 'globalization' has in an extraordinarily short time become the dominant motif of the contemporary social sciences. Central Currents in Globalization is an integrated collection of four multi-volume sets that represent the systematic mapping of globalization studies. The series sets out the contours of a field that now crosses the boundaries of all the older disciplines in the social sciences and humanities. The result is a gold-standard collection of over 320 of the most important writings on globalization, structured around four interrelated themes: Violence; Economy; Culture; and Politics.
The series editor, Paul James (RMIT, Australia), is joined by sixteen internationally-renowned co-editors from around the globe who bring their subject expertise to each volume, including Jonathan Friedman, Tom Nairn, R.R. Sharma, Manfred Steger, Ronen Palan and Micheline Ishay. Together the four sets provide an unparalleled resource on globalization, providing both broad coverage of the subject, historical depth and contemporary relevance.
Features:
- Compiles the most important English-language articles and translations in the various sub-themes of globalization.
- Combines contemporary and classic pieces, together with some lesser-known works that have nevertheless made a major contribution.
- Represents the vast range of cultural, philosophical and political approaches, both within and beyond the dominant British and North American traditions.
- Each volume employs the same accessible structure: Historical Developments, Key Debates and Critical Projections.
- Each volume is introduced by an accessible and broad-ranging 10,000 word overview, and each section is prefaced by short contextualizations of the chosen articles.
Globalization and Violence:
Volume 1 - Globalizing Empires: Old and New
(with Tom Nairn, RMIT, Australia) examines the historically-deep process of empire-building, bringing it up-to-date with contemporary debates about the existence and nature of 'empire'.
Volume 2 - Colonial and Postcolonial Globalizations
(with Phillip Darby, University of Melbourne, Australia) looks at the violence of colonialization and decolonization, as well as the military and structural forms of postcolonial violence visible today.
Volume 3 - Globalizing War and Intervention
(with Jonathan Friedman, Lund University, Sweden) focuses on the changing nature of military intervention, and covers the consequences of the 'world wars', the debates over humanitarian intervention and conditional sovereignty, and global terrorism.
Volume 4 - Transnational Conflict
(with R.R. Sharma, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India) complements the third volume by examining the different sources and consequences of contemporary transnational conflict including the international slave trade, refugee flows, and diaspora support for nationalist conflicts.
Each volume is introduced by a contextualizing essay written by Paul James and the co-editor.
The concept of 'globalization' has in an extraordinarily short time become the dominant motif of the contemporary social sciences. Central Currents in Globalization is an integrated collection of four multi-volume sets that represent the systematic mapping of globalization studies. The series sets out the contours of a field that now crosses the boundaries of all the older disciplines in the social sciences and humanities. The result is a gold-standard collection of over 320 of the most important writings on globalization, structured around four interrelated themes: Violence; Economy; Culture; and Politics.
The series editor, Paul James (RMIT, Australia), is joined by sixteen internationally-renowned co-editors from around the globe who bring their subject expertise to each volume, including Jonathan Friedman, Tom Nairn, R.R. Sharma, Manfred Steger, Ronen Palan and Micheline Ishay. Together the four sets provide an unparalleled resource on globalization, providing both broad coverage of the subject, historical depth and contemporary relevance.
Features:
- Compiles the most important English-language articles and translations in the various sub-themes of globalization.
- Combines contemporary and classic pieces, together with some lesser-known works that have nevertheless made a major contribution.
- Represents the vast range of cultural, philosophical and political approaches, both within and beyond the dominant British and North American traditions.
- Each volume employs the same accessible structure: Historical Developments, Key Debates and Critical Projections.
- Each volume is introduced by an accessible and broad-ranging 10,000 word overview, and each section is prefaced by short contextualizations of the chosen articles.
Globalization and Violence:
Volume 1 - Globalizing Empires: Old and New
(with Tom Nairn, RMIT, Australia) examines the historically-deep process of empire-building, bringing it up-to-date with contemporary debates about the existence and nature of 'empire'.
Volume 2 - Colonial and Postcolonial Globalizations
(with Phillip Darby, University of Melbourne, Australia) looks at the violence of colonialization and decolonization, as well as the military and structural forms of postcolonial violence visible today.
Volume 3 - Globalizing War and Intervention
(with Jonathan Friedman, Lund University, Sweden) focuses on the changing nature of military intervention, and covers the consequences of the 'world wars', the debates over humanitarian intervention and conditional sovereignty, and global terrorism.
Volume 4 - Transnational Conflict
(with R.R. Sharma, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India) complements the third volume by examining the different sources and consequences of contemporary transnational conflict including the international slave trade, refugee flows, and diaspora support for nationalist conflicts.
Each volume is introduced by a contextualizing essay written by Paul James and the co-editor.
More details
Series
Edition
Four-Volume Set
Language
English
Place of publication
Thousand Oaks
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
3355 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4129-1954-8 (9781412919548)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Paul James is Director of the Globalism Institute at RMIT in Australia, an editor of Arena Journal, and on the Council of the Institute of Postcolonial Studies. He has received a number of awards including the Japan-Australia Foundation Fellowship, an Australian Research Council Fellowship, and the Crisp Medal by the Australasian Political Studies Association for the best book in the field of political studies. He is author/editor of many books including, Nation Formation: Towards a Theory of Abstract Community (Sage Publications, 1996). His latest books are Global Matrix: Nationalism, Globalism and State-Terrorism (Pluto, 2005), and Globalism, Nationalism, Tribalism: Bringing Theory Back In (Sage Publications, 2006). His interests are threefold: first, globalism, nationalism and localism, including the changing nature of the nation-state and the effects of an emergent level of global integration; second, social theory with a concentration on theories of culture, community and social formation; and third, contemporary politics and society with an emphasis on debates over technology and social change.
With
John Tulloch is Professor of Sociology at Brunel University, UK. His research and publications have ranged from film and television studies and theatre through literary theory to history and sociology. His work in film and television theory has shifted from historical analysis to more current production/audience analyses of popular television, such as Australian soap opera and British TV science fiction. Notable influences on his work have been Raymond Williams and Stuart Hall and more recently Ulrick Beck.
Peter Mandaville is an Associate Professor in the Department of Public and International Affairs and Co-Director of Mason's Center for Global Studies. He has authored numerous book chapters and journal articles, contributed to publications such as the International Herald Tribune and The New Republic, and consulted extensively for media, government and non-profit agencies. Much of his recent work has focused on the comparative study of religious authority and social movements in the Muslim world. His current research includes projects on Muslim leadership in the West and the relationship between globalization and development.
Imre Szeman is Senator William McMaster Chair of Globalization and Cultural Studies at McMaster University. He is the founder of the Canadian Association of Cultural Studies and a founding member of the Cultural Studies Association (U.S.). His main areas of research are globalization, visual cultural studies, contemporary popular culture and social and cultural theory. He has published more than fifty articles and book chapters on a range of topics.
Manfred B. Steger is Professor of Global Studies and Academic Director of the Globalism Institute at RMIT University. He is also Program Leader of 'Globalization and Culture', in the Global Cities Institute at RMIT University. He has delivered many lectures on globalization, ideology, and nonviolence in the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Australia. He serves on several editorial boards of academic journals as well as on the advisory boards of several globalization research centers around the world.
With
John Tulloch is Professor of Sociology at Brunel University, UK. His research and publications have ranged from film and television studies and theatre through literary theory to history and sociology. His work in film and television theory has shifted from historical analysis to more current production/audience analyses of popular television, such as Australian soap opera and British TV science fiction. Notable influences on his work have been Raymond Williams and Stuart Hall and more recently Ulrick Beck.
Peter Mandaville is an Associate Professor in the Department of Public and International Affairs and Co-Director of Mason's Center for Global Studies. He has authored numerous book chapters and journal articles, contributed to publications such as the International Herald Tribune and The New Republic, and consulted extensively for media, government and non-profit agencies. Much of his recent work has focused on the comparative study of religious authority and social movements in the Muslim world. His current research includes projects on Muslim leadership in the West and the relationship between globalization and development.
Imre Szeman is Senator William McMaster Chair of Globalization and Cultural Studies at McMaster University. He is the founder of the Canadian Association of Cultural Studies and a founding member of the Cultural Studies Association (U.S.). His main areas of research are globalization, visual cultural studies, contemporary popular culture and social and cultural theory. He has published more than fifty articles and book chapters on a range of topics.
Manfred B. Steger is Professor of Global Studies and Academic Director of the Globalism Institute at RMIT University. He is also Program Leader of 'Globalization and Culture', in the Global Cities Institute at RMIT University. He has delivered many lectures on globalization, ideology, and nonviolence in the Americas, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Australia. He serves on several editorial boards of academic journals as well as on the advisory boards of several globalization research centers around the world.
Content
VOLUME ONE: GLOBALIZING EMPIRES: OLD AND NEW
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: TRADITIONAL EMPIRES, EAST AND WEST
The Global Animus - Roland Robertson and David Inglis
In the Tracks of World Consciousness
Unsettling Geographical Horizons - Rhys Jones and Richard Phillips
Exploring Premodern and Non-European Imperialism
Revolt of Islam, 1700-1993 - Nikki R Keddie
Comparative Considerations and Relations to Imperialism
SECTION TWO: MODERN GLOBALIZING EMPIRES: FROM NINETEENTH CENTURY TO THE PRESENT
The Imperialism of Free Trade - J Gallagher and R Robinson
The Imperial Peace - Tarak Barkawi and Mark Laffey
Democracy, Force and Globalization
Dreams of Global Hegemony and the Technology of War - Jerry Harris
Culture, US Imperialism and Globalization - John Carlos Rowe
SECTION THREE: GLOBALIZATION AND EMPIRE AFTER SEPTEMBER 11
The Post-September 11 Debate over Empire, Globalization and Fragmentation - Walter LaFeber
"A Parallel Globalization of Terror" - Mikkel Vedby Rassmussen
9-11, Security and Globalization
Globalization and the Unchosen - Tom Nairn
Leaving America behind
Imperial Headaches - Michael C Hudson
Managing Unruly Regions in an Age of Globalization
SECTION FOUR: DEBATING 'EMPIRE'
Empire - Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri
World Order
Globalization, the Pudding and the Question of Power - Sebastian Olma
Virgilian Visions - Gopal Balakrishnan
A Review of Empire
An American Empire - Tim Watson
Make for the Boondocks - Tom Nairn
SECTION FIVE: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Neo-Liberal Empire - Jan Nederveen Pieterse
'Network Power and Globalization', Ethics and International Affairs, vol. 17, no. 2, 2003, pp. 89-98. Carnegie Council. - David Singh Grewal
Post-Dependency - Paul James
The Third World in an Era of Globalism and Late Capitalism
VOLUME TWO: COLONIAL AND POST-COLONIAL GLOBALIZATIONS
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: COLONIZATION AND AFTER
The Future Results of British Rule in India - Karl Marx
Global Africa - Ali A Mazrui
From Abolitionists to Reparationists
What Is the Concept of Globalization Good For? An African Historian's Perspective - Frederick Cooper
SECTION TWO: NARRATIVES OF COLONIALISM: EXPRESSIONS OF PAIN
'Draupi'(including her translation of the story by Mahasweta Devi) - Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
The Song of Ourselves - Chinua Achebe
Race, Empire and the Historians - Christopher Fyfe
Bringing Them Home - Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
National Enquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families
SECTION THREE: NARRATIVES OF POST-COLONIALISM: ANALYSES OF VIOLENCE
Dead Certainty - Arjun Appadurai
Ethnic Violence in the Era of Globalization
At the Edge of the World - Achille Mbembe
Boundaries, Territoriality and Sovereignty in Africa
Terror as Usual - Michael Taussig
Walter Benjamin's Theory of History as a State of Seige
In Defense of the Fragment - Gyanendra Pandey
Writing about Hindu-Muslim Riots in India Today
Globalization, Culture and War - Tarak Barkawi
On the Popular Mediation of 'Small Wars'
SECTION FOUR: DEBATING THE CLASH OF TRADITIONALISM AND MODERNISM
Globalization and the Power of Indeterminate Meaning - Peter Geschiere
Witchcraft and Spirit Cults in Africa and East Asia
Being in the World - Jonathan Friedman
Globalization and Localization
Histories Forgotten Doubles - Ashis Nandy
Ethnography on an Awkward Scale - Jean Comaroff and John Comaroff
Post-Colonial Anthropology and the Violence of Abstraction
SECTION FIVE: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Post-Colonialism and Globalization - Simon During
Towards a Historicization of Their Inter-Relation
Post-Colonial Questions for Global Times - David Slater
Globalization and the Claims of Post-Coloniality - Simon Gikandi
The Criticism of Culture and the Culture of Criticism - Revanthi Krishnaswamy
At the Intersection of Post-Colonialism and Globalization Theory
VOLUME THREE: GLOBALIZING WAR AND INTERVENTION
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: FROM INTERSTATE TO GLOBALIZING WARS
Understanding Global War - George Modelski and Patrick M Morgan
Connection and Constitution - Tarak Barkawi
Locating War and Culture in Globalization Studies
Wars of the Globalization Era - Zygmunt Bauman
Globalization and the Study of International Security - Victor D Cha
SECTION TWO: THE WAR ON TERROR AS A GLOBAL CONFLICT
On Global Terror - John Hinkson
September 11 One Year on
Globalicities - Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Terror and Its Consequences
The Silence of Words - Ulrich Beck
On Terror and War
Perpetual War within the State of Exception - Simon Cooper
Behind the Curve - Audrey Kurth Cronin
Globalization and International Terrorism
SECTION THREE: DEBATING HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION
Global Security and Military Intervention - Gwyn Prins
Peacekeeping and the Constraints of Global Culture - Roland Paris
The Globalization of Responses to Conflict and the Peace-Building Consensus - Oliver P Richmond
The Transformation of United Nations Peace-Keeping in the 1990s - Peter Viggo Jakobsen
Adding Globalization to the Conventional 'End of the Cold War Explanation'
War, Globalization and Reproduction - Silvia Federici
Intervention and State Failure - Michael Ignatieff
SECTION FOUR: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Violence and the Systematic Pattern of Declining Global Hegemony - Jonathan Friedman
Globalization, Power and Society - Sean Kay
Globalization, Democratization and the Prospects for Civil War in the New Millennium - T David Mason
VOLUME FOUR: TRANSNATIONAL CONFLICT
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS
'Archaic' and 'Modern' Globalization in the Eurasian and African Arena - C A Bayly
Global Migration, 1846-1940 - Adam McKeon
Transnational Relations and World Politics - Joseph S Nye and Robert O Keohane
A Conclusion
SECTION TWO: REFUGEES, SLAVES AND REGIMES OF GLOBAL DISPLACEMENT
Expendable People - Kevin Bales
Slavery in the Age of Globalization
Bad Neighbours, Bad Neighbourhood - Myron Weiner
An Enqury into the Causes of Refugee Flows
Military Responses to Refugee Disaster - Barry R Posen
Refugees and the Global Politics of Asylum - Jeff Crisp
News from Nowhere - Liisa H. Malkki
Mass Displacement and Globalized "Problems of Organization"
Globalization and Migration - Stephen Castles
Some Pressing Contradictions
SECTION THREE: DIASPORAS AND TRANSNATIONAL VIOLENCE
Diasporas - James Clifford
Diaspora Politics - Charles King and Neil J Melvin
Ethnonationalism and the Global 'Modernizing' Project - Asafa Jalata
Virtual War - Rowena Robinson
The Internet as the New Site for Global Religious Conflict
SECTION FOUR: DEBATING THE SOURCES OF INSECURITY
Nationalism and Globalization - Mary Kaldor
International Terrorism and the World System - Albert J Bergenson and Omar Lizardo
Trouble in Paradise - Jean-Germain Gros
Crime and Collapsed States in the Age of Globalization
PART FIVE: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Transnationalism, Socio-Political Disorder and Ethnification as Expressions of Declining Global Hegemony - Jonathan Friedman
Relationg Global Tensions - Paul James
Modern Tribalism and Postmodern Nationalism
Cosmopolitanism and Violence - Gerard Delanty
The Limits of Global Civil Society
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: TRADITIONAL EMPIRES, EAST AND WEST
The Global Animus - Roland Robertson and David Inglis
In the Tracks of World Consciousness
Unsettling Geographical Horizons - Rhys Jones and Richard Phillips
Exploring Premodern and Non-European Imperialism
Revolt of Islam, 1700-1993 - Nikki R Keddie
Comparative Considerations and Relations to Imperialism
SECTION TWO: MODERN GLOBALIZING EMPIRES: FROM NINETEENTH CENTURY TO THE PRESENT
The Imperialism of Free Trade - J Gallagher and R Robinson
The Imperial Peace - Tarak Barkawi and Mark Laffey
Democracy, Force and Globalization
Dreams of Global Hegemony and the Technology of War - Jerry Harris
Culture, US Imperialism and Globalization - John Carlos Rowe
SECTION THREE: GLOBALIZATION AND EMPIRE AFTER SEPTEMBER 11
The Post-September 11 Debate over Empire, Globalization and Fragmentation - Walter LaFeber
"A Parallel Globalization of Terror" - Mikkel Vedby Rassmussen
9-11, Security and Globalization
Globalization and the Unchosen - Tom Nairn
Leaving America behind
Imperial Headaches - Michael C Hudson
Managing Unruly Regions in an Age of Globalization
SECTION FOUR: DEBATING 'EMPIRE'
Empire - Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri
World Order
Globalization, the Pudding and the Question of Power - Sebastian Olma
Virgilian Visions - Gopal Balakrishnan
A Review of Empire
An American Empire - Tim Watson
Make for the Boondocks - Tom Nairn
SECTION FIVE: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Neo-Liberal Empire - Jan Nederveen Pieterse
'Network Power and Globalization', Ethics and International Affairs, vol. 17, no. 2, 2003, pp. 89-98. Carnegie Council. - David Singh Grewal
Post-Dependency - Paul James
The Third World in an Era of Globalism and Late Capitalism
VOLUME TWO: COLONIAL AND POST-COLONIAL GLOBALIZATIONS
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: COLONIZATION AND AFTER
The Future Results of British Rule in India - Karl Marx
Global Africa - Ali A Mazrui
From Abolitionists to Reparationists
What Is the Concept of Globalization Good For? An African Historian's Perspective - Frederick Cooper
SECTION TWO: NARRATIVES OF COLONIALISM: EXPRESSIONS OF PAIN
'Draupi'(including her translation of the story by Mahasweta Devi) - Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
The Song of Ourselves - Chinua Achebe
Race, Empire and the Historians - Christopher Fyfe
Bringing Them Home - Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
National Enquiry into the Separation of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children from Their Families
SECTION THREE: NARRATIVES OF POST-COLONIALISM: ANALYSES OF VIOLENCE
Dead Certainty - Arjun Appadurai
Ethnic Violence in the Era of Globalization
At the Edge of the World - Achille Mbembe
Boundaries, Territoriality and Sovereignty in Africa
Terror as Usual - Michael Taussig
Walter Benjamin's Theory of History as a State of Seige
In Defense of the Fragment - Gyanendra Pandey
Writing about Hindu-Muslim Riots in India Today
Globalization, Culture and War - Tarak Barkawi
On the Popular Mediation of 'Small Wars'
SECTION FOUR: DEBATING THE CLASH OF TRADITIONALISM AND MODERNISM
Globalization and the Power of Indeterminate Meaning - Peter Geschiere
Witchcraft and Spirit Cults in Africa and East Asia
Being in the World - Jonathan Friedman
Globalization and Localization
Histories Forgotten Doubles - Ashis Nandy
Ethnography on an Awkward Scale - Jean Comaroff and John Comaroff
Post-Colonial Anthropology and the Violence of Abstraction
SECTION FIVE: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Post-Colonialism and Globalization - Simon During
Towards a Historicization of Their Inter-Relation
Post-Colonial Questions for Global Times - David Slater
Globalization and the Claims of Post-Coloniality - Simon Gikandi
The Criticism of Culture and the Culture of Criticism - Revanthi Krishnaswamy
At the Intersection of Post-Colonialism and Globalization Theory
VOLUME THREE: GLOBALIZING WAR AND INTERVENTION
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS: FROM INTERSTATE TO GLOBALIZING WARS
Understanding Global War - George Modelski and Patrick M Morgan
Connection and Constitution - Tarak Barkawi
Locating War and Culture in Globalization Studies
Wars of the Globalization Era - Zygmunt Bauman
Globalization and the Study of International Security - Victor D Cha
SECTION TWO: THE WAR ON TERROR AS A GLOBAL CONFLICT
On Global Terror - John Hinkson
September 11 One Year on
Globalicities - Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Terror and Its Consequences
The Silence of Words - Ulrich Beck
On Terror and War
Perpetual War within the State of Exception - Simon Cooper
Behind the Curve - Audrey Kurth Cronin
Globalization and International Terrorism
SECTION THREE: DEBATING HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION
Global Security and Military Intervention - Gwyn Prins
Peacekeeping and the Constraints of Global Culture - Roland Paris
The Globalization of Responses to Conflict and the Peace-Building Consensus - Oliver P Richmond
The Transformation of United Nations Peace-Keeping in the 1990s - Peter Viggo Jakobsen
Adding Globalization to the Conventional 'End of the Cold War Explanation'
War, Globalization and Reproduction - Silvia Federici
Intervention and State Failure - Michael Ignatieff
SECTION FOUR: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Violence and the Systematic Pattern of Declining Global Hegemony - Jonathan Friedman
Globalization, Power and Society - Sean Kay
Globalization, Democratization and the Prospects for Civil War in the New Millennium - T David Mason
VOLUME FOUR: TRANSNATIONAL CONFLICT
SECTION ONE: HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENTS
'Archaic' and 'Modern' Globalization in the Eurasian and African Arena - C A Bayly
Global Migration, 1846-1940 - Adam McKeon
Transnational Relations and World Politics - Joseph S Nye and Robert O Keohane
A Conclusion
SECTION TWO: REFUGEES, SLAVES AND REGIMES OF GLOBAL DISPLACEMENT
Expendable People - Kevin Bales
Slavery in the Age of Globalization
Bad Neighbours, Bad Neighbourhood - Myron Weiner
An Enqury into the Causes of Refugee Flows
Military Responses to Refugee Disaster - Barry R Posen
Refugees and the Global Politics of Asylum - Jeff Crisp
News from Nowhere - Liisa H. Malkki
Mass Displacement and Globalized "Problems of Organization"
Globalization and Migration - Stephen Castles
Some Pressing Contradictions
SECTION THREE: DIASPORAS AND TRANSNATIONAL VIOLENCE
Diasporas - James Clifford
Diaspora Politics - Charles King and Neil J Melvin
Ethnonationalism and the Global 'Modernizing' Project - Asafa Jalata
Virtual War - Rowena Robinson
The Internet as the New Site for Global Religious Conflict
SECTION FOUR: DEBATING THE SOURCES OF INSECURITY
Nationalism and Globalization - Mary Kaldor
International Terrorism and the World System - Albert J Bergenson and Omar Lizardo
Trouble in Paradise - Jean-Germain Gros
Crime and Collapsed States in the Age of Globalization
PART FIVE: CRITICAL PROJECTIONS
Transnationalism, Socio-Political Disorder and Ethnification as Expressions of Declining Global Hegemony - Jonathan Friedman
Relationg Global Tensions - Paul James
Modern Tribalism and Postmodern Nationalism
Cosmopolitanism and Violence - Gerard Delanty
The Limits of Global Civil Society