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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Jerry HarrisPublisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing Imprint: Cambridge Scholars Publishing Edition: Unabridged edition Dimensions: Width: 14.80cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 21.20cm Weight: 0.363kg ISBN: 9781847189288ISBN 10: 1847189288 Pages: 285 Publication Date: 05 September 2008 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock ![]() The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book is a timely and welcome contribution to our understanding of the nature and direction of change in world capitalism in the age of the microchip. Focusing on the cybernetic revolution and the sweeping changes it has brought about, Harris address' such topics as the transformation of work, the conflict between new and old centers of capital, the rise of a transnational capitalist, the military-industrial complex, and terrorism. He identifies new theories, practices and strategies needed in this age of cyber-capitalism to achieve a renovation of participatory democracy and sustainable economics. These essays should be widely read and studied. -William I. Robinson, Associate Professor of Sociology, Global and International Studies at the University of California Santa Barbara, author of A Theory of Global Capitalism, Production, Class and State in a Transnational World The Dialectics of Globalization is a fresh approach to the question of globalization and the technological transformations that underpin it. Whereas the Left has usually ignored the computer revolution, or been dazzled by it Harris systematically identifies the contradictions and crises below the surface of the shiny world of IT and traces its impact on ordinary people's lives. The last section on the state, markets and civil society is an incisive, clear and brilliant piece of writing. -A. Sivanandan, Director of the Institute of Race Relations, Editor Race & Class, author of When Memory Dies.A. Sivanandan, Director of the Institute of Race Relations, Editor Race & Class, author of When Memory Dies. On the solid materialist foundations of his experience as an apprentice machinist with US Steel in Chicago, Jerry Harris has produced a valuable re-interpretation of the political economy of globalization, focusing on the complex inter-relations of capital, labor and technology. His subtle critical analysis of US Hegemony or US Globalization? , complemented with detailed case studies of class struggle and globalization in Germany and the Third World, fruitfully locate the often confused rhetoric of nationalism and globalization within a more productive class perspective. -Leslie Sklair, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science, author of The Transnational Capitalist Class.'If you wanted to read just one primer to get a handle on all the important debates around global political economy, Jerry Harris's 'The Dialectics of Globalization' would be a good candidate. Harris's book is no simple survey - he takes partisan stances on a number of issues, some of them quite controversial. But he is fair with his opponents and rigorous in his argument ... What Harris does in this book is to raise this experience to the level of cutting-edge theory. readers should be fore-warned: this is not entirely and easy read. But it is not obscure gobbledygook either. In a few spots it's a tought climb, but once you get there, the view is terrific ... The Dialectics of Globalization does more than describe current realities in the world. It also points to a way out, to a 'successor system' that takes advantage of regulated markets in goods and services while severly restricting markets in labor and capital ... This book unfortunately has a steep price tag - thought it's not atypical for academic presses. Still, if a study circle purchased a copy to pass around, it would be a bargain, and a well-justified expense. -Carl Davidson, Executive Director of networking for Democracy and formerly national leader of SDS and writer for The Guardian (in Wasafiri, May/June 2008 issue) This book is a timely and welcome contribution to our understanding of the nature and direction of change in world capitalism in the age of the microchip. Focusing on the cybernetic revolution and the sweeping changes it has brought about, Harris address' such topics as the transformation of work, the conflict between new and old centers of capital, the rise of a transnational capitalist, the military-industrial complex, and terrorism. He identifies new theories, practices and strategies needed in this age of cyber-capitalism to achieve a renovation of participatory democracy and sustainable economics. These essays should be widely read and studied. William I. Robinson, associate professor of sociology, global and international studies at the University of California Santa Barbara, author of A Theory of Global Capitalism, Production, Class and State in a Transnational World. The Dialectics of Globalization is a fresh approach to the question of globalization and the technological transformations that underpin it. Whereas the Left has usually ignored the computer revolution, or been dazzled by it Harris systematically identifies the contradictions and crises below the surface of the shiny world of IT and traces its impact on ordinary people's lives. The last section on the state, markets and civil society is an incisive, clear and brilliant piece of writing. A. Sivanandan, Director of the Institute of Race Relations, Editor Race & Class, author of When Memory Dies. A. Sivanandan, Director of the Institute of Race Relations, Editor Race & Class, author of When Memory Dies. On the solid materialist foundations of his experience as an apprentice machinist with US Steel in Chicago, Jerry Harris has produced a valuable re-interpretation of the political economy of globalization, focusing on the complex inter-relations of capital, labor and technology. His subtle critical analysis of US Hegemony or US Globalization? , complemented with detailed case studies of class struggle and globalization in Germany and the Third World, fruitfully locate the often confused rhetoric of nationalism and globalization within a more productive class perspective. Leslie Sklair, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science, author of The Transnational Capitalist Class. 'If you wanted to read just one primer to get a handle on all the important debates around global political economy, Jerry Harris's ' The Dialectics of Globalization would be a good candidate. Harris's book is no simple survey - he takes partisan stances on a number of issues, some of them quite controversial. But he is fair with his opponents and rigorous in his argument.' Carl Davidson for In Review, May/June 2008 Author InformationJerry Harris is a founding member and organizational secretary of the North American Global Studies Association and a member of the International Executive Committee of the Global Studies Association UK. His frequent articles on globalization can be found in “Race and Class” (London), “Science and Society” (New York) and “Das Argument” (Berlin). He is co-author with Carl Davidson of Cyber Radicalism: A New Left for a Global Age. Mr. Harris is professor of History at DeVry University, Chicago. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |