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Re: "rise of china" and wst
by George Rislov
01 March 2001 00:21 UTC
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Perhaps more valuable as an indicator of the future is the work of Manuel
Castells, especially his book The Rise of the Network Society.

George Rislov
UT Dallas
----- Original Message -----
From: <wwagar@binghamton.edu>
To: "Richard N Hutchinson" <rhutchin@U.Arizona.EDU>
Cc: "world system network" <wsn@csf.colorado.edu>
Sent: Wednesday, February 28, 2001 5:04 PM
Subject: Re: "rise of china" and wst


>
> World-system theory, like all others, is applicable only to the
> past.  Anyone who sees it as more than a vague, fuzzy, and exceedingly
> general guide to future events is, like the undersigned, foolhardy.
>
> Warren
>
>
> On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Richard N Hutchinson wrote:
>
> > Today in my Contemporary Sociological Theory course I led a discussion
of
> > world-system theory.  I/we did not do justice to the topic, of course,
as
> > part of a whirlwind tour of theories.
> >
> > But an issue came up that made me wonder about the theory, and that is
the
> > so-called "rise of China."  Perhaps I'm a bit slow and this is what
Gunder
> > has been trying to say for the past few years, but I found myself
> > wondering if it doesn't challenge the theory at a basic level.
> >
> > Here are some possibilities:
> >
> > A) Is a peripheral country actually set to become a contender for
> > hegemonic power?  If so, doesn't that knock a big hole in the theory?
> >
> > B) Is it actually the case that China, being a peripheral country, is
> > not really going to be a contender for hegemon/core power any time
> > soon?  (Perhaps, like the old USSR, it's really just moving up to
> > semi-peripheral status?)
> >
> > C) Perhaps the truth is some combination of the two (as in Kantor's
recent
> > study) and China can become quite powerful without becoming part of the
> > "core" in terms of GDPPC?  What are the implications of that for the
> > theory?
> >
> > Are there other positions I've missed?  What is the evidence for each?
> >
> > Hoping to trigger a productive debate,
> >
> > Richard Hutchinson
> > Weber State University
> > remote Ogden, Utah
> >
> >
> >
>
>

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