Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction Marina Della Giusta, Uma S. Kambhampati and Robert
Hunter Wade
PART I SYSTEMIC CRITIQUES OF GLOBALIZATION
A Critiques of the Neo-Liberal Ideology Underlying
Globalization
1. Samir Amin (1997), ‘The Future of Global Polarization’
2. Saskia Sassen (1996), ‘The State and the New Geography of
Power’
3. Branko Milanovic (2003), ‘The Two Faces of Globalization:
Against Globalization as We Know It’
4. Ha-Joon Chang and Ilene Grabel (2004), Introduction and Part I,
Chapters 1-4, in Reclaiming Development: An Alternative Economic
Policy Manual
5. Robert Hunter Wade (2004), ‘Is Globalization Reducing Poverty
and Inequality?’
6. Robert Hunter Wade (2004), ‘On the Causes of Increasing World
Poverty and Inequality, or Why the Matthew Effect Prevails’
7. Adrian Wood (1998), ‘Globalisation and the Rise in Labour Market
Inequalities’
8. Dani Rodrik (2005), ‘Feasible Globalizations’
9. Dani Rodrik (2002), ‘Globalization for Whom? Time to Change the
Rules – and Focus on Poor Workers’
10. Nancy Birdsall (2002), ‘Asymmetric Globalization: Global
Markets Require Good Global Politics’
11. Jane D’Arista (2000), ‘Reforming International Financial
Architecture’
B The Sustainability Critique
12. Susan George (2003), ‘Globalizing Rights?’
13. Vandana Shiva (2000), ‘War against Nature and the People of the
South’
14. Simon Retallack (2001), ‘The Environmental Cost of Economic
Globalization’
15. Jerry Mander (2001), ‘Technologies of Globalization’
16. Peter Newell (2002), ‘A World Environment Organisation: The
Wrong Solution to the Wrong Problem’ 17. Nicholas G. Faraclas
(2001), ‘Melanesia, the Banks, and the BINGOs: Real Alternatives
are Everywhere (Except in the Consultants’ Briefcases)’
18. Veronika Bennholdt-Thomsen (2001), ‘What Really Keeps Our
Cities Alive, Money or Subsistence?’
C Gender and Globalization
19. Christine M. Koggel (2003), ‘Globalization and Women’s Paid
Work: Expanding Freedom?’
20. Richa Nagar, Victoria Lawson, Linda McDowell and Susan Hanson
(2002), ‘Locating Globalization: Feminist (Re)readings of the
Subjects and Spaces of Globalization’
21. Ruth Pearson (2000), ‘Moving the Goalposts: Gender and
Globalisation in the Twenty-first Century’
22. Korkut Ertürk and William Darity, Jr. (2000), ‘Secular Changes
in the Gender Composition of Employment and Growth Dynamics in the
North and the South’
23. Dong-Sook S. Gills (2002), ‘Globalization of Production and
Women in Asia’
24. Rhacel Salazar Parreñas (2001), ‘The International Division of
Reproductive Labor’
25. Naila Kabeer (2004), ‘Globalization, Labor Standards, and
Women’s Rights: Dilemmas of Collective (In)action in an
Interdependent World’
PART II RISKS AND THREATS ASSOCIATED WITH GLOBALIZATION
26. Richard Barnet and John Cavanagh (2001), ‘Electronic Money and
the Casino Economy’
27. David L. Heymann (2003), ‘The Evolving Infectious Disease
Threat: Implications for National and Global Security’
28. Takis Fotopoulos (2002), ‘The Global “War” of the Transnational
Elite’
29. Christopher W. Hughes (2002), ‘Reflections on Globalisation,
Security and 9/11’
30. Lael Brainard (2002), ‘A Turning Point for Globalisation? The
Implications for the Global Economy of America’s Campaign against
Terrorism’
31. Arshin Adib-Moghaddam (2002), ‘Global Intifadah? September 11th
and the Struggle within Islam’
32. John Tomlinson (1999), ‘Globalised Culture: The Triumph of the
West?’
33. Desmond King and Amrita Narlikar (2003), ‘The New Risk
Regulators? International Organisations and Globalisation’
Name Index
Edited by Marina Della Giusta, Lecturer, Uma S. Kambhampati, Senior Lecturer, University of Reading Business School, UK and Robert Hunter Wade, Professor of Political Economy, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK
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