Original language | English (US) |
---|---|
Article number | 11649 |
Journal | Global Perspectives |
Volume | 1 |
Issue number | 1 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Feb 20 2020 |
Keywords
- global
- methods
- theory
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Communication
- Sociology and Political Science
- Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
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In: Global Perspectives, Vol. 1, No. 1, 11649, 20.02.2020.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review
}
TY - JOUR
T1 - For a Global Social Science
AU - Centeno, Miguel A.
AU - Chase-Dunn, Christopher
AU - Chorev, Nitsan
AU - Grell-Brisk, Marilyn
AU - Inoue, Hiroko
AU - Larcey, Paul
AU - Reyes, Victoria
AU - Surak, Kristin
N1 - Funding Information: Victoria Reyes is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Riverside. She received her PhD from Princeton's Department of Sociology in January 2015 and was a 2016-2017 Postdoctoral Fellow at the National Center for Institutional Diversity at the University of Michigan. She previously taught in Bryn Mawr College's Growth and Structure of Cities Department. In 2019-2020 she is on leave as a Postdoctoral American Fellow, funded by the American Association of University Women (AAUW). Reyes studies culture, borders, and empire. Her work is driven by the question of how to understand territoriality in the 21stcentury. Her book, Global Borderlands: Fantasy, Violence, and Empire is published by Stanford University Press and her work has been published in Social Forces, Ethnography, Theory and Society, City & Community, Poetics, and International Journal of Comparative Sociology, among other outlets. She's also written for the Monkey Cage at the Washington Post, The Conversation, and Inside Higher Ed. She's received fellowships, awards, and/or grants from the Institute of International Education, the National Science Foundation, American Sociological Association, National Center for Institutional Diversity at the University of Michigan, National Women's Studies Association, Law and Society Association, Hellman Fellow Funds, and American Association of University Women, among others. Funding Information: Christopher Chase-Dunn is Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Director of the Institute for Research on World-Systems at the University of California-Riverside. He received his Ph.D in Sociology from Stanford University in 1975. Chase-Dunn has done crossnational quantitative studies of the effects of dependence on foreign investment, and he studies cities and settlement systems in order to explain human sociocultural evolution. His research focuses on interpolity systems, including both the modern global political economy and earlier regional world-systems. One project examines the causes of the expansion and collapse of cities and empires in several regional world-systems as well as the contemporary process of global state formation. His research has been supported by the National Science Foundation. Chase-Dunn is the founder and former editor of the Journal of World-Systems Research and the Series Editor of a book series published by The Johns Hopkins University Press. In 2001 he was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In 2002 he was elected President of the Research Committee on Economy and Society (RC02) of the International Sociological Association. And in 2008 he was elected Distinguished Senior Scholar of the International Political Economy (IPE) section of Funding Information: Kristin Surak is a Senior Lecturer in Japanese Politics at SOAS, University of London and a Fung Global Fellow at Princeton University. Her research on international migration, nationalism, and political sociologyhas appeared in leading academic and intellectual journals and has been translated into a half-dozen languages. She also publishes in popular outlets, including the London Review of Books, New Left Review, and the Washington Post. Her book Making Tea, Making Japan: Cultural Nationalism in Practice (Stanford University Press 2013) received the Book of the Year Award from the American Sociological Association's Asian Section. The American Academy of Political and Social Science has recognized her scholarship, which has been funded by the German Science Foundation, Japan Foundation, Fulbright-Hays Foundation, and Leverhulme Foundation, among others. She has been an invited fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; Clare Hall, Cambridge University; and the European University Institute. She comments regularly for the BBC, Deutsche Welle, Channel News Asia TV, and Sky TV News.Her current research investigates the origins and spread of investment migration programs and the global interdependencies that have advanced them.
PY - 2020/2/20
Y1 - 2020/2/20
KW - global
KW - methods
KW - theory
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096088184&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85096088184&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1525/001c.11649
DO - 10.1525/001c.11649
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85096088184
SN - 2575-7350
VL - 1
JO - Global Perspectives
JF - Global Perspectives
IS - 1
M1 - 11649
ER -