Globalization Under Construction
Govermentality, Law, and Identity
Richard Warren Perry(Author)
University of Minnesota Press
Will be published approx. on 22. October 2003
Book
Hardback
392 pages
978-0-8166-3965-6 (ISBN)
Description
A kaleidoscopic look at the intersections of globalization and governance
The future outlines of the new global order are the constant object of speculation-economic, political, and metaphysical. From the sunny new world proclaimed by global free marketers to the rebellion against globalization unleashed in the streets of Seattle and Genoa, to the doomsdays envisioned by transnational terrorists and counterterrorists alike, this emerging global-millennial epoch is foretold alternately as redemption or apocalypse. The authors consider these sweeping descriptions of humankind's future, as well as the discourses of globalization that filter and frame them, from perspectives in anthropology, geography, law, sociology, and cultural studies. Their goal is not to resolve the ultimate semantic or philosophical question of what "globalization" really is; instead, their essays explore the forms, practices, and effects of governmentality integral to global modernity's architecture.
In Globalization under Construction, the authors ask: What are the rationalities of government implicit in global modernity's project of mobilizing space, time, and difference? And what difference does it make to the globalization debates to put those rationalities in the foreground of critical analysis? Altogether, their work attempts to discern in the disparateness of contemporary events an emerging pattern of governmentality, techniques of governance and assemblages of intersecting arguments about the history of the present and the nature of the future that our present portends.
Contributors: Kitty Calavita, U of California, Irvine; Rosemary J. Coombe, York U; Susan Bibler Coutin, U of California, Irvine; Karen Leonard, U of California, Irvine; Sally Engle Merry, Wellesley College; Aihwa Ong, U of California, Berkeley; Susan Roberts, U of Kentucky; Lisa Sanchez, U of California, San Diego; Liliana SuArez-Navaz, AutOnoma U, Madrid.
The future outlines of the new global order are the constant object of speculation-economic, political, and metaphysical. From the sunny new world proclaimed by global free marketers to the rebellion against globalization unleashed in the streets of Seattle and Genoa, to the doomsdays envisioned by transnational terrorists and counterterrorists alike, this emerging global-millennial epoch is foretold alternately as redemption or apocalypse. The authors consider these sweeping descriptions of humankind's future, as well as the discourses of globalization that filter and frame them, from perspectives in anthropology, geography, law, sociology, and cultural studies. Their goal is not to resolve the ultimate semantic or philosophical question of what "globalization" really is; instead, their essays explore the forms, practices, and effects of governmentality integral to global modernity's architecture.
In Globalization under Construction, the authors ask: What are the rationalities of government implicit in global modernity's project of mobilizing space, time, and difference? And what difference does it make to the globalization debates to put those rationalities in the foreground of critical analysis? Altogether, their work attempts to discern in the disparateness of contemporary events an emerging pattern of governmentality, techniques of governance and assemblages of intersecting arguments about the history of the present and the nature of the future that our present portends.
Contributors: Kitty Calavita, U of California, Irvine; Rosemary J. Coombe, York U; Susan Bibler Coutin, U of California, Irvine; Karen Leonard, U of California, Irvine; Sally Engle Merry, Wellesley College; Aihwa Ong, U of California, Berkeley; Susan Roberts, U of Kentucky; Lisa Sanchez, U of California, San Diego; Liliana SuArez-Navaz, AutOnoma U, Madrid.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Minnesota
United States
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 149 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-8166-3965-6 (9780816639656)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Bill Maurer is associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at University of California, Irvine.
Content
Global strategic vision : managing the world / Susan Roberts -- Zones of new sovereignty in Southeast Asia / Aihwa Ong -- International political economy as a cultural practice : the metaphysics of capital mobility / Bill Maurer -- Spanish immigration law and the construction of difference : citizens and "illegals" on Europe's southern border / Kitty Calavita and Liliana Surez-Navaz -- South Asian workers in the Gulf : jockeying for places / Karen Leonard -- Illegality, borderlands, and the space of nonexistence / Susan Bibler Coutin -- Christian conversion and racial labor capacities : constructing racialized identities in Hawai'i / Sally Engle Merry -- Sex and space in the global city / Lisa Sanchez -- Works in progress : traditional knowledge, biological diversity, and intellectual property in a neoliberal era / Rosemary J. Coombe -- Globalization as a graphical user interface for the end times: global revelation, redemption, and apocalypse / Richard Warren Perry.