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Cover image for Network power : the social dynamics of globalization
Title:
Network power : the social dynamics of globalization
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Publication Information:
London : Yale University Press, 2008
Physical Description:
x, 402 p. ; 25 cm.
ISBN:
9780300112405

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30000010181574 JZ1318 G73 2008 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

For all the attention globalization has received in recent years, little consensus has emerged concerning how best to understand it. For some, it is the happy product of free and rational choices; for others, it is the unfortunate outcome of impersonal forces beyond our control.  It is in turn celebrated for the opportunities it affords and criticized for the inequalities in wealth and power it generates.

 

David Singh Grewal's remarkable and ambitious book draws on several centuries of political and social thought to show how globalization is best understood in terms of a power inherent in social relations, which he calls network power . Using this framework, he demonstrates how our standards of social coordination both gain in value the more they are used and undermine the viability of alternative forms of cooperation. A wide range of examples are discussed, from the spread of English and the gold standard to the success of Microsoft and the operation of the World Trade Organization, to illustrate how global standards arise and falter. The idea of network power supplies a coherent set of terms and concepts--applicable to individuals, businesses, and countries alike--through which we can describe the processes of globalization as both free and forced.  The result is a sophisticated and novel account of how globalization, and politics, work.


Author Notes

David Singh Grewal is a member of the Harvard Society of Fellows and an affiliated fellow of the Information Society Project at Yale Law School.


Reviews 1

Choice Review

In this ambitious and broadly erudite work, which arrives with lavish advance praise from leaders in the field such as Stanley Hoffman, Grewal (doctoral student, Harvard Univ.) seeks "to avoid the bloodshed" that followed earlier eras of globalization by focusing on what he terms "network power." While diverse individuals may now indeed collaborate in global networks, they can do so only by adopting certain standards (e.g., a language, commercial regulation, technical protocol). The adoption of one standard eliminates alternatives and hence individuals must use it, even though they had nothing to say about its being adopted. This element of coercion, intended or not, presents issues of both distribution and identity. Today's key problem therefore is that "everything is being globalized except politics." Grewal provides interesting analyses of such examples of network power as the English language, the gold standard, Microsoft, ISO 9000, the WTO, the Washington Consensus, and cultural globalization. While the book doesn't definitively resolve any of the many issues it raises, it does deepen and enrich the globalization debate in important ways. Summing Up: Essential. General readers, upper-division undergraduate students and above. M. F. Farrell Ripon College


Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. ix
Introductionp. 1
1 Defining Network Powerp. 17
2 The Power of Sociabilityp. 44
3 English and Goldp. 70
4 Power and Choice in Networksp. 106
5 Evaluating Network Powerp. 141
6 Countering Network Powerp. 166
7 Network Power in Technologyp. 193
8 Global Trade and Network Powerp. 225
9 Global Neoliberalismp. 247
10 Network Power and Cultural Convergencep. 266
Conclusionp. 292
Notesp. 297
Bibliographyp. 377
Indexp. 395
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