The fate of globalization in the 21st century hangs in the balance. Although recent data show that most global integration has been on the rebound after the 2008-9 global financial meltdown and the COVID-19 pandemic, public sentiments about globalization have soured. The neoliberal glorification of globalization as beneficial market integration is running out of steam, while national-populist visions of “deglobalization” exert significant mass appeal. Today’s ostensible globalization backlash scenario seems to be confirmed by soaring inflation rates, global supply chain disruptions, accelerating climate change and ecological deterioration, lagging transitions to greener forms of energy, escalating economic inequality, and rising geopolitical competition among the Great Powers, especially the United States-China rivalry and the protracted Russian-Ukrainian war. On the flipside, however, such grim scenarios reinforce the fact that most of today’s problems are global in nature. This book provides an accessible assessment of 21st-century globalization that draws on global theory and history to engage pressing issues such as digitization, ideological polarization, higher education, demographics, human development, and the environment. Assembling such a big picture of globalization in this young century supports the practical efforts of setting the globe on a more equitable and sustainable path.

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Preface & Acknowledgements

List of Figures and Tables

PART I: HISTORIES & THEORIES

  1. A Genealogy of “Globalization”

The Four Meaning Branches of the Family Tree Called “Globalization”

The Neoliberal Revolution and the “Globalization of Markets”

Concluding Reflections on the Meaning of “Globalization” in this Book

  1. Four Ages of Globalization

Periodizing Globalization: Perilous Pitfalls

Periodizing Globalization: Alternative Models

The Age of the Embodied Globalization (10000BCE–3000BCE)

The Age of Institutional Globalization (3000BCE – 1600CE)

The Age of Objectified Globalization (1600–1914)

The Age of Disembodied Globalization (1914–2000)

Concluding Reflections

  1. A Critical Appraisal of Globalization Theory

Globalization Theory: The Basics

The Dominant Framework of Globalization Theory

An Alternative Framework of Globalization Theory

The Generalizing Mode

The Domain Mode

The Complexity Mode

Concluding Remarks

PART II: IDEOLOGIES & MOVEMENTS

  1. Contending Globalisms

Political Ideologies and Social Imaginaries

Ideological Struggles of the 21st Century

Concluding Reflections

  1. The Challenge of Antiglobalist Populism

The Significance of Global Crises

What Is National-Populism?

Mapping Trump’s Antiglobalist Populism

The Populist Paradox

Concluding Reflections of the Future of Antiglobalist Populism

PART III: ISSUES & PROBLEMS

  1. The Rise of Global Studies in Higher Education

The Institutional Evolution of Global Studies

The Global Studies Story at the University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB)

The First Pillar of Global Studies: Globalization

The Second Pillar of Global Studies: Transdisciplinarity

The Third Pillar of Global Studies: Space & Time

The Fourth Pillar of Global Studies: Critical Thinking

Concluding Remarks: Critiques of Global Studies

  1. Digital Globalization in the COVID-19 Era

Four Social Formations of Globalization

Digitization and Disjunctive Globalization

The Production of the Unhappy Consciousness

Concluding Reflections on the Impact of COVID-19

  1. Globalization in 2040: Environment, Population, Development

Environment

Population

Development

Concluding Reflections

Notes

Index

About the Author

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A comprehensive assessment of the shifting processes of globalization in the 21st century from a leading thinker in the field.

  • Reappraises globalization in a systematic and comprehensive way
  • Conveys globalization in accessible and engaging manner for students, instructors, and general readers
  • Addresses significant global issues such as the higher education, digitization, population & demographics, human development, and the environment/climate change
  • Continues the globalization debates of the last three decades by evaluating major arguments and presenting new insights and frameworks
  • The final chapter offers an engaging and informed discussion on where globalization might be going in the next two decades
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781538179734
Publisert
2024-01-12
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc; Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
304 gr
Høyde
227 mm
Bredde
151 mm
Dybde
17 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
230

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Manfred B. Steger is Professor of Sociology at the University of Hawai’i at Mānoa. He has served as an academic consultant on globalization for the U.S. State Department and as an advisor to the PBS television series, Heaven on Earth: The Rise and Fall of Socialism. He is the author of over 30 books and numerous articles on globalization, and social and political theory, including The Rise of the Global Imaginary: Political Ideologies from the French Revolution to the Global War on Terror (Oxford University Press, 2008); the award-winning Globalisms: Facing the Populist Challenge, 4th ed. (Rowman & Littlefield, 2020); and the bestselling Globalization: A Very Short Introduction, 6th ed. (Oxford UP 2023).