The End of the World as We Know it: Social Science for the Twenty-first CenturyU of Minnesota Press, 1999 - 277 pages This book is nothing short of a state-of-the-world address, delivered by a scholar uniquely suited to the task. Immanuel Wallerstein, one of the most prominent social scientists of our time, documents the profound transformations our world is undergoing. With these transformations, he argues, come equally profound changes in how we understand the world. Wallerstein begins his work with an appraisal of significant recent events -- the collapse of the Leninist states, the exhaustion of national liberation movements, the rise of East Asia, challenges to national sovereignty, dangers to the environment, debates about national identity, and the marginalization of migrant populations. Wallerstein places these events and trends in the context of the changing modern world-system as a whole and identifies the historic choices they put before us. The End of the World As We Know It concludes with a crucial analysis of the momentous intellectual challenges to social science as we know it today and suggests possible responses to them. |
Table des matières
or Interpretations of Contemporary History | 7 |
The Past and Future | 19 |
The Rise of East Asia or The WorldSystem | 34 |
Geopolitics in the Longue Durée | 49 |
States? Sovereignty? | 57 |
No Exit | 76 |
Frères Ennemis? | 87 |
Integration to What? Marginalization from What? | 104 |
Differentiation and Reconstruction in the Social Sciences | 157 |
The Structures of Knowledge | 185 |
The Rise and Future Demise of WorldSystems Analysis | 192 |
Social Science and the Quest for a Just Society | 202 |
The Heritage of Sociology | 220 |
Notes | 253 |
Permissions | 269 |
Social Change? | 118 |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
The End of the World as We Know it: Social Science for the Twenty-first Century Immanuel Maurice Wallerstein Aucun aperçu disponible - 1999 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
accumulation of capital achieve antisystemic movements argued argument asserted basic become believe Bolsheviks called capitalist world-economy challenge cial civilization claim complexity concept conservatism constructed course crisis culture of sociology dangerous classes debate defined democrats discipline discussion dominant Durkheim East Asia economic entrepreneurs Eurocentrism Europe European existing fact Fernand Braudel forces French Revolution Freud fundamental geoculture global groups historical system human ical ideology idiographic Ilya Prigogine Immanuel Wallerstein integration intellectual internal interstate system issue Japan kind least major Marx means ments Methodenstreit modern world modern world-system natural sciences Neil Smelser neoliberal nineteenth century nomothetic nonetheless Old Left period persons political possible premises Prigogine problem production profits question role scholars scientific seemed sense so-called social change social reality social science social scientists society sociologists sovereignty structures substantive rationality sure surplus-value theory thing tion transformation universal Weber world-systems analysis zones