ABSTRACT

The second edition of the Routledge International Handbook of Globalization Studies offers students clear and informed chapters on the history of globalization and key theories that have considered the causes and consequences of the globalization process. There are substantive sections looking at demographic, economic, technological, social and cultural changes in globalization. The handbook examines many negative aspects – new wars, slavery, illegal migration, pollution and inequality – but concludes with an examination of responses to these problems through human rights organizations, international labour law and the growth of cosmopolitanism. There is a strong emphasis on interdisciplinary approaches with essays covering sociology, demography, economics, politics, anthropology and history.

The second edition has been completely revised and features important new thinking on themes such as Islamophobia and the globalization of religious conflict, shifts in global energy production such as fracking, global inequalities, fiscal transformations of the state and problems of taxation, globalization and higher education, and an analysis of the general sense of catastrophe that surrounds contemporary understandings of the consequences of a global world.

part |2 pages

PART I Theories and definitions

chapter 1|21 pages

Theories of globalization: issues and origins

ByBryan S. Turner, Robert J. Holton

chapter 2|17 pages

Limiting theory: rethinking approaches to cultures of globalization

BySmitha Radhakrishnan

chapter 3|19 pages

Economic theories of globalization

ByPatrik Aspers, Sebastian Kohl

chapter 4|18 pages

Global inequality

ByRobert J. Holton

chapter 5|14 pages

Internet and globalization

ByLior Gelerntner, Motti Regev

chapter 6|19 pages

Anti-globalization movements: from critiques to alternatives

ByTom Mertes

chapter 7|17 pages

History and hegemony: the United States and twenty-first century globalization

ByJan Nederveen Pieterse

part |2 pages

PART II Substantive issues

chapter 9|23 pages

Transformations of the world’s population: the demographic revolution

ByJohn MacInnes, Julio Pérez Díaz

chapter 11|22 pages

Climate change, globalization, and carbonization

ByRonnie D. Lipshutz, Felicia Allegra Peck

chapter 12|21 pages

Infectious disease and globalization

BySusan Kippax, Niamh Stephenson

chapter 13|18 pages

Globalization and taxation

ByKen Smith

chapter 14|17 pages

Religion out of place? The globalization of fundamentalism

ByPeter Beyer

chapter 15|24 pages

Globalization and Indigenous peoples: new old patterns

ByCarlos Gigoux, Colin Samson

chapter 16|16 pages

Genocide in the global age

ByMartin Shaw

chapter 17|16 pages

Global elites

ByJan Pakulski

chapter 18|16 pages

Globalized higher education

ByXiaoying Qi

chapter 19|25 pages

The global drive to commodify pensions

ByRobin Blackburn

part |2 pages

PART III New institutions and cultures

chapter 20|17 pages

Popular culture, fans, and globalization

ByCornel Sandvoss

chapter 21|22 pages

Islam and globalization: Islamophobia, security and terrorism

ByJoshua Roose, Bryan S. Turner

chapter 22|17 pages

Global cities

ByChris Hudson

chapter 23|21 pages

Crossing divides: consumption and globalization in history

ByFrank Trentmann

chapter 25|22 pages

Globalization and food: the dialectics of globality and locality

ByDavid Inglis

chapter 26|16 pages

Borders, passports, and the global mobility

ByMark B. Salter

chapter 27|14 pages

Globalization and Americanization

ByStephen Mennell

part |2 pages

PART IV Critical solutions

chapter 29|14 pages

The globalization of human rights

ByThomas Cushman

chapter 30|17 pages

Global civil society and theWorld Social Forum

ByKadambari Anantram, Christopher Chase-Dunn, Ellen Reece

chapter 31|17 pages

New cosmopolitanism in the social sciences

ByUlrich Beck, Natan Sznaider

chapter 32|20 pages

Globalization and its possible futures

ByBryan S. Turner, Robert J. Holton