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The concept of globalization has become ubiquitous in social
science and in the public consciousness and is often invoked as an
explanation for a diverse range of changes to economies, societies,
politics and cultures - both as a positive liberating force and as
a wholly negative one. Whilst our understanding of the politics,
economics, and social resonance of the phenomenon has become
increasingly sophisticated at the macro-level, this book argues
that globalization too often continues to be depicted as a set of
extra-terrestrial forces with no real physical manifestation,
except as effects. The essays challenge this dominant understanding
of 'globalization from above' through explorations of the mundane
means by which globalization has been achieved. Instead of a focus
on the meta-political economy of global capitalism, the book
concentrates on the everyday life of capitalism, the
not-so-'little' things that keep the 'large' forces of
globalization ticking over. With its eye on the mundane, the book
demonstrates that a series of everyday and, consequently, all but
invisible formations critically facilitate and create the
conditions under which globalization has flourished. The emphasis
is on concrete moments in the history of capitalism when these new
means of regular reproduction were invented and deployed. Only by
understanding these infrastructures can we understand the dynamics
of globalization. In short, punchy essays by distinguished
researchers from across a range of disciplines, this book provides
a new way of understanding globalization, moving away from the
standard accounts of global forces, economic flows, and capitalist
dynamics, to show how ordinary practices and artefacts are crucial
elements and symbols of globalization.
The concept of globalization has become ubiquitous in social
science and in the public consciousness and is often invoked as an
explanation for a diverse range of changes to economies, societies,
politics and cultures - both as a positive liberating force and as
a wholly negative one. Whilst our understanding of the politics,
economics, and social resonance of the phenomenon has become
increasingly sophisticated at the macro-level, this book argues
that globalization too often continues to be depicted as a set of
extra-terrestrial forces with no real physical manifestation,
except as effects. The essays challenge this dominant understanding
of 'globalization from above' through explorations of the mundane
means by which globalization has been achieved. Instead of a focus
on the meta-political economy of global capitalism, the book
concentrates on the everyday life of capitalism, the
not-so-'little' things that keep the 'large' forces of
globalization ticking over. With its eye on the mundane, the book
demonstrates that a series of everyday and, consequently, all but
invisible formations critically facilitate and create the
conditions under which globalization has flourished. The emphasis
is on concrete moments in the history of capitalism when these new
means of regular reproduction were invented and deployed. Only by
understanding these infrastructures can we understand the dynamics
of globalization. In short, punchy essays by distinguished
researchers from across a range of disciplines, this book provides
a new way of understanding globalization, moving away from the
standard accounts of global forces, economic flows, and capitalist
dynamics, to show how ordinary practices and artefacts are crucial
elements and symbols of globalization.
"The biggest strength of the book is its pedagogic design, which
will appeal to new entrants in the field but also leaves space for
methodological debates... It is well suited for use on general
courses but it also involves far more than an introduction and is
full of theoretical insights for a more theoretically advanced
audience." - Economic Geography Research Group In the last fifteen
years economic geography has experienced a number of fundamental
theoretical and methodological shifts. Politics and Practice in
Economic Geography explains and interrogates these fundamental
issues of research practice in the discipline. Concerned with
examining the methodological challenges associated with that
'cultural turn', the text explains and discusses: qualitative and
ethnographic methodologies the role and significance of
quantitative and numerical methods the methodological implications
of both post-structural and feminist theories the use of case-study
approaches the methodological relation between the economic
geography and neoclassical economics, economic sociology, and
economic anthropology. Leading contributors examine substantive
methodological issues in economic geography and make a distinctive
contribution to economic-geographical debate and practice.
The recent, devastating and ongoing economic crisis has exposed the
faultlines in the dominant neoliberal economic order, opening
debate for the first time in years on alternative visions that do
not subscribe to a 'free' market ethic. In particular, the core
contradiction at the heart of neoliberalism -- that states are
necessary for the functioning of free markets -- provides us with
the opportunity to think again about how we want to organise our
economies and societies. "The Rise and Fall of Neloberalism"
presents critical perspectives of neoliberal policies, questions
the ideas underpinning neoliberalism, and explores diverse response
to it from around the world. In bringing together the work of
distinguished scholars and dedicated activists to question
neoliberal hegemony, the book exposes the often fractured and
multifarious manifestations of neoliberalism which will have to be
challenged to bring about meaningful social change.
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