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Theory of Global Capitalism, A: Production, Class, and State in a Transnational World


Theory of Global Capitalism, A: Production, Class, and State in a Transnational World

Paperback by Robinson, William I. (Professor of Sociology, Global and International Studies, and Latin America and Iberian Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara)

Theory of Global Capitalism, A: Production, Class, and State in a Transnational World

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ISBN:
9780801879272
Publication Date:
7 May 2004
Language:
English
Publisher:
Johns Hopkins University Press
Pages:
224 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 7 - 9 May 2024
Theory of Global Capitalism, A: Production, Class, and State in a Transnational World

Description

In this book, sociologist William I. Robinson offers a theory of globalization that follows the rise of a new capitalist class and a transnational state. Growing beyond national boundaries, this new class comprises a global system in which Japanese capitalists are just as comfortable investing in Latin America as North Americans are in Southeast Asia. Their development of global, interconnected industries and businesses make them drivers of world capitalism. Robinson explains how global capital mobility has allowed capital to reorganize production worldwide in accordance with a whole range of considerations that allow for maximizing profit making opportunities. As a result, production systems that were once located in a single country have been fragmented and integrated externally into new globalized circuits of accumulation. What this means, however, is not simply that factories are located overseas where labor might be cheaper, but rather that the whole production process is broken down into smaller parts and each of those parts moved to a different country, depending on where investment might be highest. Yet at the same time, this worldwide decentralization and fragmentation of the production process has taken place alongside the centralization of command and control of the global economy in transnational capital. In turn, this economic organization finds a political counterpart in the rise of a transnational state. The leaders of global businesses and industries think about themselves and how they live in new ways. Hegemony in the twenty-first century, Robinson argues, will be exercised not by a particular nation-state but by this new global ruling class through the machinery of this transnational state. Robinson observes, for example, that global elites, regardless of their nationality, increasingly tend to share similar lifestyles and interact through expanding networks of the transnational state. Globalization is in this way unifying the world into a single mode of production and a single global system and bringing about the integration of different countries and regions into a new global economy and society. But the new global capitalism is rife with contradictions, such as the growing rift between the global rich and the global poor, concludes Robinson. The twenty-first century is likely to harbor ongoing conflicts and disputes for control between the new transnational ruling group and the expanding ranks of the poor and the marginalized. Sure to stir controversy and debate, A Theory of Global Capitalism will be of interest to sociologists and economists alike.

Contents

List of Figures and Tables List of Abbreviations Preface Chapter 1. Globalization as Epochal Change in World Capitalism Chapter 2. Global Class Formation and the Rise of a Transnational Capital Class Chapter 3. The Transnational State Chapter 4. The Contradiction of Global Capitalism and the Future of Global Society References Index

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