World-Systems Analysis: Theory and MethodologyThe first volume in a new series from SAGE presenting work in the world-systems perspective, a school of social science thought that views the world economy as a single system across time and space. This first volume is a sourcebook reader of the most fundamental work in the field, drawn from Review, the journal most concerned with the work of this perspective, and from volumes in SAGE's Political Economy of the World-System Annuals. |
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Page 21
... exchange " and operate ( at a more abstract level ) as forms of the process of unequal exchange . As process , then , unequal exchange works through an extraordinarily wide array of historical forms and arrangements to reproduce ...
... exchange " and operate ( at a more abstract level ) as forms of the process of unequal exchange . As process , then , unequal exchange works through an extraordinarily wide array of historical forms and arrangements to reproduce ...
Page 92
... exchange . Now , unequal exchange is a very contentious topic . The term was formu- lated by Emmanuel ( 1972 ) , who was attempting to refute the notion that the process of international trade was beneficial to both sides , in the ...
... exchange . Now , unequal exchange is a very contentious topic . The term was formu- lated by Emmanuel ( 1972 ) , who was attempting to refute the notion that the process of international trade was beneficial to both sides , in the ...
Page 94
... exchange , is there also equal exchange ? And what would equal exchange mean ? If unequal exchange means , ultimately , the transfer of some of the surplus of one area to a receiver of surplus in another , this is the consequence of the ...
... exchange , is there also equal exchange ? And what would equal exchange mean ? If unequal exchange means , ultimately , the transfer of some of the surplus of one area to a receiver of surplus in another , this is the consequence of the ...
Contents
Preface | 7 |
Patterns of Development of the Modern WorldSystem | 41 |
Notes on Class Analysis and the WorldSystem | 83 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abstract accumulation of capital accumulation process activities axial division basic boundaries capital accumulation capitalist development capitalist world-economy centers central century commodities competition concept continually contradictions core countries core powers core-area core-periphery course cycles cyclical rhythms defined distribution division of labor economic effect expansion forces formation formulation fundamental growth hegemonic hegemonic power historical Hopkins Immanuel Wallerstein income increasing increasingly inquiry integral interrelated interstate system Kenneth Barr kinds Kondratieffs labor power logistics means of production mechanism methodological modern social change modern world-system movement observations operation organization overall particular patterns period peripheral areas political production processes question relational networks relations of production relative reproduce result secular trends semiperipheral specific stratification stratifying processes structural transformation subsistence surplus surplus-value theoretical theory tion trade unequal exchange unit of analysis wage wage-levels Wallerstein whole workers world-scale world-system perspective world-system studies zones
References to this book
Post-colonial Studies: The Key Concepts Bill Ashcroft,Gareth Griffiths,Helen Tiffin No preview available - 2007 |