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Gusts of ChangeThe Consequences of the 1989 Revolutions for the Study of GlobalizationUNIVERSITY OF CYPRUS, roudomet{at}ucy.ac.cy Since the 1960s, the concepts of the global and the transnational have challenged the state-centred orientation of several disciplines. By 1989, the global contained sufficient ambiguity and conceptual promise to emerge as a potentially new central concept to replace the conventional notion of modernity. The consequences of the 1989 revolutions for this emerging concept were extensive. As a result of the post-communist New World Order, a new vision of a single triumphant political and economic system was put forward. With the globalizing of modernity as a description of the post-1989 reality, globalization became the policy mantra of the Clinton and Blair administrations up until the late 1990s when anti-globalization activists were able to question the salience of this dominant theory of globalization. In scholarly discussion, globalization became a floating signifier to be filled with a variety of disciplinary and political meanings. In the post-9/11 era, this Western-centred globalization has been conceptually linked to cosmopolitanism while it has played a minor role in the multiple modernities agenda. The article concludes with an assessment of the current status of the global in theory and research.
Key Words: culture global globalization localization modernity transnational
European Journal of Social Theory, Vol. 12, No. 3,
409-424 (2009) |
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