Globalization, the State, and Violence
By (Author) Jonathan Friedman
Contributions by Terence Turner
Contributions by Saskia Sassen
Contributions by Simone Ghezzi
Contributions by Enzo Mingione
Contributions by Michel Wieviorka
Contributions by Paris)
Contributions by Unni Wikan
Contributions by Donald M. Nonini
Contributions by Nina Glick Schiller
AltaMira Press
AltaMira Press
2nd April 2003
United States
General
Non Fiction
Violence and abuse in society
Globalization
303.6
Paperback
408
Width 145mm, Height 230mm, Spine 26mm
644g
Friedman and a distinguished group of contributors offer a compelling analysis of globalization and the lethal explosiveness that characterizes the current world order. In particular, they investigate global processes and political forces that determine networks of crime, commerce and terror, and reveal the economic, social and cultural fragmentation of transnational networks. The authors analyze the increasing criminalization of ethnic populations, the massively destabililizing effect of migration processes, and new forms of transnational criminal networks that represents disintegration of larger homogeneous territories. This book will be a valuable reference in anthropology, social theory, international politics and economics, ethnic and immigration studies, and economic history. Visit our website for sample chapters!
Jonathan Friedman's Globalization, the State, and Violence is one of the most recent attempts to make sense of the disparate global conditions that are the subject of globalization discourse. . . . [It] stands on its own as a respectable and well-argued piece of research that makes a valid empirical contribution to globalization literature. -- Eric A. Heinze, University of Nebraska * Perspectives on Political Science *
Jonathan Friedman is Directeur d'Ytudes, Ycole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris, and professor of social anthropology at the University of Lund, Sweden.