Special Issue:
Globalizations from ‘Above’ and ‘Below’
The Future of World Society
Edited by:
Mark Herkenrath, Claudia König, Hanno Scholtz, & Thomas Volken |
View the entire issue as a single PDF file. (2.6 MB) Alternate Download Site |
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| Articles |
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Mark Herkenrath, Claudia König,
Hanno Scholtz, & Thomas Volken |
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| Christopher Chase-Dunn |
Social Evolution and the Future of World Society |
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| George Modelski |
Long-Term Trends in World Politics |
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| Joachim Karl Rennstich |
Chaos or ReOrder? The Future of Hegemony in a World-System in Upheaval |
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| Alberto Martinelli |
From World System to World Society? |
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| Jeffrey Kentor |
The Growth of Transnational Corporate Networks: 19621998 |
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| Michael Nollert |
Transnational Corporate Ties: A Synopsis of Theories and Empirical Findings |
Abstract
In general, corporations are not isolated actors in an economic "war of all against all" but members of corporate networks of global reach. Although the literature on globalization emphasizes the increasing economic power of these networks and postulates the formation of a transnational capitalist class, there is still a lack of empirical findings. The article starts with a review of theoretical perspectives (resource dependence, social capital, coordination of markets, financial hegemony, class hegemony, inner circle, and transnational capitalist class) which focuses on the functions and structures of corporate interlocks at the national and the transnational level. The subsequent section offers an outline of empirical studies concerning transnational corporate networks. These analyses of corporate ties (interlocking directorates, financial participations and policy group affiliations) suggest the emergence of transnational economic elites whose members, however, have not lost their national identity. In the final section, the theoretical perspectives will be assessed and some prospects are sketched out. Finally, it will be argued that the disintegration of the world society, which is considerably driven by rent-seeking corporate networks, can only be restrained if a potential global regulatory agency will be anchored in a post-Washington consensus.
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| Gordon Laxer |
Popular National Sovereignty and the U.S. Empire |
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| Neera Chandhoke |
How Global is Global Civil Society? |
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