|
|
|
Rise And Demise: Comparing World-systems (New Perspectives in Sociology)
by Christopher Chase-dunn, Thomas D Hall
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Westview Press (1997-03-13)
ISBN: 0813310059
EAN: 9780813310053
Dewy Decimal #: 303.409
Hardcover: 336 pages
SKU: 07110418
Condition: Very Good Very Good
Comments: Hardback in very good condition with a few underlines in text. Dust jacket in very good condition with minor shelf wear. Tight binding and clear crisp text. Very nice book.
|
Editorial Reviews
|
Product Description
Spanning ten thousand years of social change, this book examines the ways in which world-systems evolve. A comparative study of stateless societies, state-based regional empires, and the modern global capitalist political economy, it reveals the underlying processes at work in the reproduction and transformation of social, economic, and political structures.Christopher Chase-Dunn and Thomas Hall show that stateless societies developed in the context of regional intersocietal networks that differed significantly from larger and more hierarchical world-systems. The processes by which chiefdoms rose and fell are similar to the ways in which states, empires, and modern hegemonic core states have experienced uneven development. Most world-systems exhibit a pattern of political centralization and decentralization, but the mechanisms and processes of change can vary greatly.Looking at the systematic similarities and differences among small scale, middle-sized, and global world-systems, the authors address such questions as: Do all world-systems have core/periphery hierarchies in which the development of one area necessitates the underdevelopment of another? How were kin-based logics of social integration transformed into state-based tributary logics, and how did capitalism emerge within the interstices of tributary states and empires to eventually become the predominant logic of accumulation? How did the rise of commodity production and the eventual dominance of capitalist accumulation modify the processes by which political centers rise and fall?Rise and Demise offers far-reaching explanations of social change, showing how the comparative study of world-systems increases our understanding of early history, the contemporary global system, and future possibilities for world society.
|
Customer Reviews
|
Don not buy this junk
Rating (1)
Date: 2007-10-09
0 out of 14 customers found this reveiw helpful
Total waste of money.This guy may write a lot but it doesn't mean he ever got out of the hamster wheel. However, the idiot professor's teaching world-systems, and they are all idiots, because the whole topic should be trashed, as the theory was destroyed by Brenner and Skocpol in 1977, yet they go on. So the institutions that teach this manure and the many "scholars" who try to make sense of it, wing it. So stay away from world-systems. You will be sorry, especially if you follow Chase-Dunn who probably foams at the mouth. He would have made a good politician.
|
|
|
|
|