Chapter 18: From Nation to Global Order: David Held and Mary Kaldor

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Marxian Political Economy Labor theory of value –Each commodity has a use value and an exchange value –The labor is the only source of value –The exchange.
Advertisements

Development Strategies Evidences from East Asia. Developmental state Paradigm of developmental state in development economics and comparative political.
MACROECONOMIC POLICY IN THE ASIA-PACIFIC GECO6400 ECONOMIC GROWTH MACROECONOMIC POLICY CHALLENGES COURSE REVISION.
International Business
Globalization By: Allison Chen. Overview  “Globalization is a process that results in the growing interconnectedness of the world”  Driven by technological.
17:Long-Term Economic Growth
World Views – Part 2 Structuralism and Marx and Lenin Linda Young POLS 400 International Political Economy Wilson Hall – Room 1122 Fall 2005.
Chapter 1 Globalization.
Latin America, continued Relatively weak internal trade relationships compared to Europe or North America Relatively strong trade relationships with Europe.
Chapter 2, continued Colonialism: Capitalism on a World Scale –The exploitation of foreign resources by European industrializing nations –Simultaneous.
Theoretical perspectives of international communication
The feminization of Labor in an era of global capitalism
Globalisation Concepts and ideas. What is globalisation? An economic phenomenon? A social, cultural and technological exchange?
Introduction Advent of ICT Increased integration of market Mobility of people for job and vacation Reach of satellite channels Internet Global Village.
UNIT 4 REVIEW Social Studies 10. HUMAN RIGHTS  Human Rights are needs or privileges that are believed to be basic entitlements for all human beings because.
Introduction to Sociology
Changing world systems
International Political Economy
Development and Trade The Geography of the Global Economy.
Wallerstein’s world-systems Theory
VIEWS OF OUR WORLD. GLOBALIZATION  The process by which societies, cultures, politics, and economies around the world are becoming increasingly integrated.
People and Government. Principles of Government  Population, the most obvious essential feature of a state. ◦ State: a political community that occupies.
Four Models of Development 1. Self Sufficiency Approach 2
What is Globalization? The stretching of economic, political and cultural activities and their integration at increasingly broader scales Economic Political.
Chapter 1 GlobalizationGlobalization 1. What Is Globalization? The globalization of markets refers to; “The merging of historically distinct and separate.
© 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 1 ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Modern System The Emergence of the World System.
Core and Periphery – Economic Model of the World The world is a core - periphery dichotomy. This idea is called the World Systems Theory. It was developed.
Disparity! Economic and Social Development. In addition to the demographic transition discussed in the Population unit. Countries go through economic.
Chapter 16 Globalization. Chapter Outline  The Development of Global Trade  The Emergence of the Global Economy  Globalization: The Continuing Process.
Accelerating Global Interaction, Since 1945
October 29, 2015S. Mathews1 Human Geography By James Rubenstein Chapter 9 Key Issue 4 Why Do Less Developed Countries Face Obstacles to Development?
Economic Globalization What does this mean for the developing world.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 9: Development The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography.
Chapter 16, Globalization The Development of Global Trade The Emergence of the Global Economy Globalization: The Continuing Process Population Growth and.
 Core & Periphery Relations.  The Global Economy – Basic features Single World market – Producers produce to exchange rather than use. Price is determined.
Rostow’s stages of Economic Growth or Development Model. -Proposed in the 1950s, this 5 stage model of development was adopted by several countries in.
International Trade. International economics as a field of study in economics; one may ask: What makes economic relations among nation states different.
Globalization, Boundaries and Territoriality INR 456 Political Geography.
A Developing World: Comparing Countries and Economies
Road to Development. Balanced Growth through Self-Sufficiency A country should spread investment as equally as possible across all sectors of its economy.
B&RB&R and the New Order Of the World System By Shengsheng Wang Tsinghua University.
Theories Regarding Development
Warm-up: Tuesday Write down 3 observations from the data.
Models of Economic Development
U.S. Economic Geography/Preindustrial Most economic activity was in the Primary Sector. That is extracting raw materials. This included agriculture, mining,
Theoretical attempts to explain disparities in development.
Why are some countries poor?
GLOBALIZATION.
Objectives Describe the ways in which countries around the world are interdependent. Understand how international treaties and organizations make global.
Essential Features of a State
The Industrialized World Since 1990
Globalization & Economics
Chapter 11: The Less Developed Countries
Theories Explaining the Growth of Superpowers
Theories of Economic Growth
It’s a lot but it’s all good…
Rostow and Wallerstein
Rostow and Wallerstein
The Contemporary Transformation of the International System Professor John Wilton Lecture 6 The impact of the global network society on the contemporary.
Financial Globalization
Globalization.
Industrialization & Global Capitalism
The Industrialized World Since 1990
Economic and Social Development
Human Resource Management
Globalization.
Colonialism and Nation-States
Development in the LDCs
International Business 12e
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 18: From Nation to Global Order: David Held and Mary Kaldor From the late 18th to the 19th centuries, nation-states emerged as the basic social unit of an international order International law recognized the territorial sovereignty of states, their rights and laws David Held believes that globalization signals the interconnectedness of societies or nation-states due to the intensity and extent of global relations since WWII Global Economy: a new international order due to economic forms such as multinational corporations which account for the majority of world trade, foreign investment and a significant percentage of world output have greatly expanded a global economy Global Politics: the development on Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) demonstrate the power and influence of global political groups Global Culture: telecommunication networks give access to information and a variety of cultural forms (e.g., television, news, Internet), creating the global spread of cultural forms

Chapter 18: From Nation to Global Order: David Held and Mary Kaldor Mary Kaldor suggests that a global democracy can be a meaningful social force in the world through the rise of global civic organizations These organization, such as Amnesty International or Oxfam or Doctors without Borders, can increasingly hold national governments accountable to international legal principles Thus they expand a global civic sphere through spreading human rights and social justice and limiting nation-states that violate minority rights, suppress dissidence and promote inequality

Chapter 19: Global Capitalism: Immanuel Wallerstein and Manuel Castells Wallerstein pioneered “world-systems theory,” which argues that nation-states can only be understood as part of a network of other states and their economic processes The capitalist world-economy is divided into 3 zones: 1. the core; 2. the periphery; and 3. the semiperiphery Core societies are economically diverse, technologically advanced, involve high capital intensive economies of skilled, educated workers and are centers of manufacturing, commerce and finance Core nations are rivals with one another to exploit peripheral states that are dependent on the core economically and otherwise

Chapter 19: Global Capitalism: Immanuel Wallerstein and Manuel Castells Peripheral nations are economically specialized, labor intensive and technologically underdeveloped, and lack an elaborate financial, commercial and manufacturing base Semiperiphery states share features of both core and periphery societies and serve as a buffer for the core nations Wallerstein rips large the Marxian concept of surplus value, arguing that the core extract surplus value from the periphery and exercises social and political dominance in order to sustain economic exploitation Like Marx, Wallerstein pins his hopes on economic cycles and trends to create the conditions for a world revolution. He thinks world capitalism will produce global movements for a socialist world order

Chapter 19: Global Capitalism: Immanuel Wallerstein and Manuel Castells Castells emphasizes global capitalism as creating conditions that undermine the power of nation-states to variable extents Informational capitalism creates “network states” that are within the circuits of this informational economy Network states emphasize a telecommunications infrastructure, knowledge acquisition, computerization and technological development Network states are flexible and decentralized in organization and laborers who are “reprogrammable” become important “Reprogrammable labor” means the continuing development of new skills in fast paced changing workplaces based in technology and innovation

Chapter 19: Global Capitalism: Immanuel Wallerstein and Manuel Castells Informational capitalism benefits nations and regions where the state and capitalism are connected while also being flexible and decentralized; The network state has benefited economies like those of Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore as opposed to the US and Europe Informational capitalism is shift away from mass production, scientific management, and big corporations which historically drove and continues to drive the economies of the US and Europe as opposed to those of Asia Some states are left out of or marginalized from informational capitalism and these regions are called a “fourth world” or “the black hole of informational capitalism” They are open to black market economies of trafficking in drugs, sex, women, immigrants and labor and these regions are plagued by violence, crime, genocide and tyranny

Chapter 20: The Return of Empire? Hardt and Negri, Harvey, Mann In Empire (2000), Hardt and Negri argue that globalization can be seen as a new type of “sovereignty” or political and social order, which they call “empire” In place of the old form of imperialism that used the threat of war and conquests, the global order is now based on the free flow of goods, people, money, and ideas across national borders. Unlike global neoliberalism, they argue that the new global order is not driven only by economic forces but a new post-national network of many powers from nations to transnational corporations to media conglomerates, NGOs and organizations like the European Union and the World Bank “Empire” is decentered and deterritorializing in their conception It is based on managing hybrid identities, flexible hierarchies and plural exchanges through modulating networks of command The distinct national colors of past imperial maps of the world have merged and blended in the new global order of “empire.”

Chapter 20: The Return of Empire? Hardt and Negri, Harvey, Mann In The New Imperialism (2003), David Harvey underscores imperialism in the current period as involving a dual logic of political and economic dynamics He emphasizes “flexible modes of capital accumulation” as key to both the political and economic dynamics of this new form of imperialism. Harvey says that moving from a highly centralized, mass-production, factory-based economy to a post-Fordist one has meant decentralization, flexible production, enhanced worker autonomy, and a knowledge-driven economy Michael Mann, in Incoherent Empire (2003), argues that since World War II, the United States has exercised economic hegemony across the industrial manufacturing, financial and telecommunication sectors of the world economy However, the last two decades have witnessed the economic growth of Europe and Asia as increasingly economic equals to the US With the growing trade deficit, international debt, and vast military expenditures, Mann’s theory anticipates the decline of America’s international economic dominance.