Globalization as evolutionary process: modeling global change
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY [u.a.]
Routledge
2008
|
Ausgabe: | 1. publ. |
Schriftenreihe: | Rethinking globalizations
10 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Table of contents only Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XX, 444 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780415773614 9780415773607 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Globalization as evolutionary process |b modeling global change |c ed. by George Modelski ... |
250 | |a 1. publ. | ||
264 | 1 | |a New York, NY [u.a.] |b Routledge |c 2008 | |
300 | |a XX, 444 S. |b Ill., graph. Darst. | ||
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490 | 1 | |a Rethinking globalizations |v 10 | |
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 4 | |a Globalization | |
650 | 4 | |a Globalization - Forecasting | |
650 | 4 | |a Globalization - History | |
650 | 4 | |a Social change (sociology) | |
650 | 4 | |a Geschichte | |
650 | 4 | |a Globalisierung | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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---|---|
adam_text | Contents
List of figures viii
List of tables xii
List of contributors xiv
Acknowledgements xvi
Forewords xvii
1 Introduction: A new approach to globalization 1
GEORGE MODELSKI, TESSALENO DEVEZAS, AND
WILLIAM R. THOMPSON
PARTI
Evolutionary models 9
2 Globalization as evolutionary process 11
GEORGE MODELSKI
3 The Portuguese as system builders: Technological
innovation in early globalization 30
TESSALENO DEVEZAS AND GEORGE MODELSKI
4 Measuring long term processes of political globalization 58
WILLIAM R. THOMPSON
5 Is globalization self organizing? 87
JOACHIM KARL RENNSTICH
6 Theories of long term change and the future of
world political institutions 108
FULVIO ATTINA
vi Contents
PART II
Models of long term change 131
7 Compact mathematical models of world system
development: How they can help us to clarify our
understanding of globalization processes 133
ANDREY KOROTAYEV
8 Modeling periodic waves of integration in the
Afro Eurasian world system 161
PETER TURCHIN
9 Oscillatory dynamics of city size distributions in world
historical systems 190
douglas r. white, laurent tambayong, and
nataSa kej^ar
10 Nature, disease, and globalization: An evolutionary
perspective 226
DENNIS PIRAGES
11 Globalisation in history and the history of globalisation:
The application of a globalisation model to historical
research 242
CATIA ANTUNES
PART III
Global change and the information age 267
12 Three globalizing phases of the world system and
modernity 269
SHUMPEI KUMON AND YASUHIDE YAMANOUCHI
13 Accelerating socio technological evolution: From
ephemeralization and stigmergy to the Global Brain 284
FRANCIS HEYLIGHEN
14 The growth of the Internet, long waves, and
global change 310
TESSALENO C. DEVEZAS, HAROLD A. LINSTONE, AND
HUMBERTO JOAO S. SANTOS
Contents vii
15 The value to an evolutionary view to globalizing
Informatics research: One anthropologist s perspective 336
DAVID HAKKEN
PARTIV
Forecasting and simulating globalization 353
16 Forecasting globalization: The use of International
Futures (IFs) 355
BARRY B. HUGHES
17 On forecasting globalization using world models 380
RAFAEL REUVENY
18 Evolution, modernization, and globalization:
A theoretical and mathematical model 400
JURGEN KLUVER AND CHRISTINA KLUVER
PARTV
Assessment 415
19 Assessment: What have we learnt? 417
GEORGE MODELSKI, TESSALENO DEVEZAS, AND
WILLIAM R. THOMPSON
Index 431
Figures
3.1 Picture representing the balestilha (cross staff) 39
3.2 Discrete curve showing the number of Portuguese
expeditions/campaigns at five year intervals 42
3.3 Logistic fit of the cumulative count, also considered for
five year intervals 43
3.4 Logistic fit of data for the establishment of the global
network of Portuguese bases 44
3.5 Bi logistic fit in the form of Fisher—Pry straight lines of
the data for the Portuguese expeditions/campaigns 45
3.6 Logistic fit based on data in Modelski and Thompson
(1996, p. 78, Table 6.2) for Guinea Gold 46
3.7 Fisher—Pry fit based on data in Modelski and Thompson
(1996, p. 78, Table 6.2) for pepper imports 47
4.1 A baker s dozen processes related to political globalization 63
4.2 Kondratieff growth rates 65
4.3 System leader leading sector concentration 65
4.4 Global reach capabilities concentration 66
4.5 Systemic leadership share of gross foreign investment 66
4.6 Global and regional concentration 68
4.7 Global rivalry propensities 69
4.8 Normalized interstate warfare ongoing 70
4.9 Balancing behavior 71
4.10 World trade growth 72
4.11 European colonies 73
4.12 The decline of imperial warfare 73
4.13 New states and internal warfare 74
4.14 United Nations regular budget 75
4.15 Regular and total spending of the United Nations 75
4.16 The growth of IGOs and NGOs 76
4.17 Proportion of democratic states 76
4.18 Waves of modern terrorism 77
4.19 Portuguese ship cumulation/five year intervals 80
4.20 Cumulative British dreadnoughts/year 80
Figures ix
5.1 Complex global system process 93
5.2 The Buddenbrook cycle as part of a leadership long cycle 99
5.3 Distribution of length of generational waves, kernel
density estimation distribution of actual long
wavelengths (thin line) v. random wavelengths 102
7.1 Hyperbolic curve produced by equation y = 5/x 134
7.2 Hyperbolic curve produced by equation y — 5/2 — x 135
7.3 Correlations between empirical estimates of world
population (in millions, 1000—1970) and the curve
generated by von Foerster s equation 136
7.4 World population dynamics, 40,000 bce to ce 1970
(in millions): the fit between predictions of a hyperbolic
model and the observed data 137
7.5 Graph resulting from plotting the mid points of the
above mentioned estimate ranges and connecting the
respective points 139
7.6 World Population dynamics, 40,000 bce ce I960,
according to Biraben (1980) 140
7.7 World GDP dynamics, CE 1 1973 (in billions of 1990
international dollars, PPP): the fit between predictions of
a quadratic hyperbolic model and the observed data 142
7.8 Block scheme of the nonlinear second order positive
feedback between technological development and
demographic growth (version 1) 146
7.9 (a) Block scheme of the nonlinear second order positive
feedback between technological development and
demographic growth (version 2). (b) Block scheme of the
nonlinear second order positive feedback between
technological development and demographic growth
(version 3) 147
8.1 (a) Population numbers in England and Wales between
1100 and 1870, plotted together with the estimated
carrying capacity, (b) Detrended population population
numbers divided by the carrying capacity, plotted
together with the misery index the inverse real wage 165
8.2 (a) Population dynamics of Spain, 1100—1800.
(b) Population dynamics of northern Vietnam.
(c) Proportion of archaeological sites occupied during any
given period within the western Roman Empire 167
8.3 Average height of Europeans during the two millennia CE 170
8.4 Population change in three regions of Afro Eurasia 171
8.5 Examples of trade cycles reflected in archaeological data.
(a) Importation of red African slipware into Central Italy.
(b) Import of amber beads into Novgorod 177
8.6 Cycles of urbanization in France, 1200—1850 178
x Figures
8.7 (a) Plague incidence in Europe, the Mediterranean, and
the Middle East, measured by the number of mentions in
chronicles per decade, (b) Epidemic incidence in China,
measured by the number of provinces reporting disease
per decade 179
8.8 Total length of the network of long distance trade 182
8.9 The number of epidemic years (per decade)
mentioned by Livy 184
8.10 The connectivity index of Silk Routes 185
8.11 Recurrent waves of global pandemics 187
9.1 Number of centers in the top 75 world cities in each
region when they fall below 21 194
9.2 The Chandler rank size city data (semi log) for Eurasia
(Europe, China, and Mid Asia) 196
93 The Chandler top 20 rank size city data (log log) for
Eurasia (Europe, China, and Mid Asia) 197
9 4 Probability distributions of Chandler rank size city data
(log log) for China 200
9.5 Values of q, beta, and their normalized minima 204
9.6 Fitted q parameters for Europe, Mid Asia, and China,
CE 900 1970, with 50 year lags 206
9.7 Cross correlations for the temporal effects of one region
on another 210
98 Time lagged cross correlation effects of the Silk Road
trade on Europe 211
9.9 One time lagged effect of regional q on a primate city
population 211
9.10 A crude long term correlation between Chinese credit and
liquidity, and Chinese (European, Mid Asian) data and q 212
9.11 China s interactive dynamics of socio political instability
and population 213
9.12 Cross correlations of q and /? and sociopolitical instability
(SPI) 216
11.1 Globalisation as a historical process in the longue duree 251
11.2 Visualising expansive globalisation 257
12.1 Balance of power, world market, and global episteme 270
12.2 Three phases of modernization 270
12.3 Micro—macro feedback between actors and
the common place 273
14.1 The Generational Learning model of long waves 316
14.2 The unfolding of the fourth K wave and the succession of
main events marking the evolution of the Internet 322
Figures xi
14.3 The cumulative growth of the 26 most representative
events related to the software and protocols necessary for
the communication and/or traffic of information between
computers, servers, and nodes worldwide 323
14.4 The growth in the number of Internet hosts on the
Internet fits very well to a natural logistic growth curve 324
14.5 In this graph, both growth phenomena
(software/protocols and hosts) are depicted for comparison
as straight lines on a Fisher—Pry plot 326
14.6 This graph shows the superlogistic curve embracing the
two logistics of Figures 14.3 and 14.4 327
14.7 The evolution of complex systems 329
16.1 Positive feedback processes that drive globalization
dynamics 360
16.2 Negative feedback processes that limit or stop
globalization dynamics 361
16.3 Globalization (as measured in IFs) as a function of GDP
per capita 366
16.4 An overview of International Futures (IFs) 367
16.5 Globalization forecast in IFs base case 370
16.6 Component indices forecast in IFs base case 371
16.7 Trade openness forecast in IFs base case 371
16.8 Global FDI stocks over GDP forecast in IFs base case 372
16.9 Global FDI flows over GDP forecast in IFs base case 372
16.10 Global percent networked forecast in IFs base case 373
16.11 Alternative scenarios of globalization for IFs 374
16.12 Global power transition forecast in IFs base case 375
16.13 Global democratization forecast in IFs base case 376
18.1 A Toynbee development 405
18.2 Development that is characteristic of the
European Modernity 406
18.3 Transition of a cellular automaton into a Boolean net 407
18.4 The inner state of an artificial actor 408
191 The overlap between the processes of continentalization
and globalization 420
Tables
2.1 Global institutional processes (globalization)
(930 to 2300 ad) 21
2.2 Agent level global processes (1850 2080) 21
3.1 Leading sectors and technical—technological innovations of
the Portuguese cycle (LC5) 37
4.1 Types of interconnection processes 59
4.2 The timing of K wave growth spurts and global war 67
4.3 Globalization and global political evolution 79
5.1 Drivers of evolutionary system development and
network structures 92
6.1 Synopsis of four scientific approaches to the study of
world political institutions 124
8.1 A summary of the chronological sequence of secular cycles
in Western Europe 169
8.2 Unifying dynasties in the history of China (after Mair 2005) 172
8.3 Secular cycles in Europe and China during the last
millennium, compared with global economy processes as
identified by Modelski and Thompson (1996, Table 8.3) 172
8.4 How the phase of the secular cycle affects interaction
networks 181
9 1 Descriptive statistics 204
9.2 Runs tests at medians across all three regions 205
9.3 Runs test for temporal variations of q in the three regions 205
9.4 Temporal breaks and urban crashes of fi/q in the
three regions 205
9.5 Principal component single factor analysis of
contemporaneous regional values of q communalities 209
11.1 Historical forms of globalisation—an analytical framework 247
11.2 The spatio temporal dimension: types of historical
globalisation 248
12.1 Interpretations of evolving globalisation 280
14.1 Cyclical patterns 314
14.2 The Internet s history the Invention Phase 1960 1984 319
Tables xiii
14.3 The Internet s history the Innovation Phase 1984 1995 320
14.4 The Internet s history the Diffusion Phase 1995 2010 321
14.5 Chronology for the events involving the development of
software and protocols used on the Internet 325
14.6 Information, technology, and organizational change some
examples of glocalization 331
16.1 The dimensions of sustainable human development in IFs 358
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of figures viii
List of tables xii
List of contributors xiv
Acknowledgements xvi
Forewords xvii
1 Introduction: A new approach to globalization 1
GEORGE MODELSKI, TESSALENO DEVEZAS, AND
WILLIAM R. THOMPSON
PARTI
Evolutionary models 9
2 Globalization as evolutionary process 11
GEORGE MODELSKI
3 The Portuguese as system builders: Technological
innovation in early globalization 30
TESSALENO DEVEZAS AND GEORGE MODELSKI
4 Measuring long term processes of political globalization 58
WILLIAM R. THOMPSON
5 Is globalization self organizing? 87
JOACHIM KARL RENNSTICH
6 Theories of long term change and the future of
world political institutions 108
FULVIO ATTINA
vi Contents
PART II
Models of long term change 131
7 Compact mathematical models of world system
development: How they can help us to clarify our
understanding of globalization processes 133
ANDREY KOROTAYEV
8 Modeling periodic waves of integration in the
Afro Eurasian world system 161
PETER TURCHIN
9 Oscillatory dynamics of city size distributions in world
historical systems 190
douglas r. white, laurent tambayong, and
nataSa kej^ar
10 Nature, disease, and globalization: An evolutionary
perspective 226
DENNIS PIRAGES
11 Globalisation in history and the history of globalisation:
The application of a globalisation model to historical
research 242
CATIA ANTUNES
PART III
Global change and the information age 267
12 Three globalizing phases of the world system and
modernity 269
SHUMPEI KUMON AND YASUHIDE YAMANOUCHI
13 Accelerating socio technological evolution: From
ephemeralization and stigmergy to the Global Brain 284
FRANCIS HEYLIGHEN
14 The growth of the Internet, long waves, and
global change 310
TESSALENO C. DEVEZAS, HAROLD A. LINSTONE, AND
HUMBERTO JOAO S. SANTOS
Contents vii
15 The value to an evolutionary view to globalizing
Informatics research: One anthropologist's perspective 336
DAVID HAKKEN
PARTIV
Forecasting and simulating globalization 353
16 Forecasting globalization: The use of International
Futures (IFs) 355
BARRY B. HUGHES
17 On forecasting globalization using world models 380
RAFAEL REUVENY
18 Evolution, modernization, and globalization:
A theoretical and mathematical model 400
JURGEN KLUVER AND CHRISTINA KLUVER
PARTV
Assessment 415
19 Assessment: What have we learnt? 417
GEORGE MODELSKI, TESSALENO DEVEZAS, AND
WILLIAM R. THOMPSON
Index 431
Figures
3.1 Picture representing the balestilha (cross staff) 39
3.2 Discrete curve showing the number of Portuguese
expeditions/campaigns at five year intervals 42
3.3 Logistic fit of the cumulative count, also considered for
five year intervals 43
3.4 Logistic fit of data for the establishment of the global
network of Portuguese bases 44
3.5 Bi logistic fit in the form of Fisher—Pry straight lines of
the data for the Portuguese expeditions/campaigns 45
3.6 Logistic fit based on data in Modelski and Thompson
(1996, p. 78, Table 6.2) for Guinea Gold 46
3.7 Fisher—Pry fit based on data in Modelski and Thompson
(1996, p. 78, Table 6.2) for pepper imports 47
4.1 A baker's dozen processes related to political globalization 63
4.2 Kondratieff growth rates 65
4.3 System leader leading sector concentration 65
4.4 Global reach capabilities concentration 66
4.5 Systemic leadership share of gross foreign investment 66
4.6 Global and regional concentration 68
4.7 Global rivalry propensities 69
4.8 Normalized interstate warfare ongoing 70
4.9 Balancing behavior 71
4.10 World trade growth 72
4.11 European colonies 73
4.12 The decline of imperial warfare 73
4.13 New states and internal warfare 74
4.14 United Nations'regular budget 75
4.15 Regular and total spending of the United Nations 75
4.16 The growth of IGOs and NGOs 76
4.17 Proportion of democratic states 76
4.18 Waves of modern terrorism 77
4.19 Portuguese ship cumulation/five year intervals 80
4.20 Cumulative British dreadnoughts/year 80
Figures ix
5.1 Complex global system process 93
5.2 The Buddenbrook cycle as part of a leadership long cycle 99
5.3 Distribution of length of generational waves, kernel
density estimation distribution of actual long
wavelengths (thin line) v. random wavelengths 102
7.1 Hyperbolic curve produced by equation y = 5/x 134
7.2 Hyperbolic curve produced by equation y — 5/2 — x 135
7.3 Correlations between empirical estimates of world
population (in millions, 1000—1970) and the curve
generated by von Foerster's equation 136
7.4 World population dynamics, 40,000 bce to ce 1970
(in millions): the fit between predictions of a hyperbolic
model and the observed data 137
7.5 Graph resulting from plotting the mid points of the
above mentioned estimate ranges and connecting the
respective points 139
7.6 World Population dynamics, 40,000 bce ce I960,
according to Biraben (1980) 140
7.7 World GDP dynamics, CE 1 1973 (in billions of 1990
international dollars, PPP): the fit between predictions of
a quadratic hyperbolic model and the observed data 142
7.8 Block scheme of the nonlinear second order positive
feedback between technological development and
demographic growth (version 1) 146
7.9 (a) Block scheme of the nonlinear second order positive
feedback between technological development and
demographic growth (version 2). (b) Block scheme of the
nonlinear second order positive feedback between
technological development and demographic growth
(version 3) 147
8.1 (a) Population numbers in England and Wales between
1100 and 1870, plotted together with the estimated
carrying capacity, (b) Detrended population population
numbers divided by the carrying capacity, plotted
together with the "misery index" the inverse real wage 165
8.2 (a) Population dynamics of Spain, 1100—1800.
(b) Population dynamics of northern Vietnam.
(c) Proportion of archaeological sites occupied during any
given period within the western Roman Empire 167
8.3 Average height of Europeans during the two millennia CE 170
8.4 Population change in three regions of Afro Eurasia 171
8.5 Examples of trade cycles reflected in archaeological data.
(a) Importation of red African slipware into Central Italy.
(b) Import of amber beads into Novgorod 177
8.6 Cycles of urbanization in France, 1200—1850 178
x Figures
8.7 (a) Plague incidence in Europe, the Mediterranean, and
the Middle East, measured by the number of mentions in
chronicles per decade, (b) Epidemic incidence in China,
measured by the number of provinces reporting disease
per decade 179
8.8 Total length of the network of long distance trade 182
8.9 The number of epidemic years (per decade)
mentioned by Livy 184
8.10 The connectivity index of Silk Routes 185
8.11 Recurrent waves of global pandemics 187
9.1 Number of centers in the top 75 world cities in each
region when they fall below 21 194
9.2 The Chandler rank size city data (semi log) for Eurasia
(Europe, China, and Mid Asia) 196
93 The Chandler top 20 rank size city data (log log) for
Eurasia (Europe, China, and Mid Asia) 197
9 4 Probability distributions of Chandler rank size city data
(log log) for China 200
9.5 Values of q, beta, and their normalized minima 204
9.6 Fitted q parameters for Europe, Mid Asia, and China,
CE 900 1970, with 50 year lags 206
9.7 Cross correlations for the temporal effects of one region
on another 210
98 Time lagged cross correlation effects of the Silk Road
trade on Europe 211
9.9 One time lagged effect of regional q on a primate city
population 211
9.10 A crude long term correlation between Chinese credit and
liquidity, and Chinese (European, Mid Asian) data and q 212
9.11 China's interactive dynamics of socio political instability
and population 213
9.12 Cross correlations of q and /? and sociopolitical instability
(SPI) 216
11.1 Globalisation as a historical process in the longue duree 251
11.2 Visualising expansive globalisation 257
12.1 Balance of power, world market, and global episteme 270
12.2 Three phases of modernization 270
12.3 Micro—macro feedback between actors and
the common place 273
14.1 The Generational Learning model of long waves 316
14.2 The unfolding of the fourth K wave and the succession of
main events marking the evolution of the Internet 322
Figures xi
14.3 The cumulative growth of the 26 most representative
events related to the software and protocols necessary for
the communication and/or traffic of information between
computers, servers, and nodes worldwide 323
14.4 The growth in the number of Internet hosts on the
Internet fits very well to a natural logistic growth curve 324
14.5 In this graph, both growth phenomena
(software/protocols and hosts) are depicted for comparison
as straight lines on a Fisher—Pry plot 326
14.6 This graph shows the superlogistic curve embracing the
two logistics of Figures 14.3 and 14.4 327
14.7 The evolution of complex systems 329
16.1 Positive feedback processes that drive globalization
dynamics 360
16.2 Negative feedback processes that limit or stop
globalization dynamics 361
16.3 Globalization (as measured in IFs) as a function of GDP
per capita 366
16.4 An overview of International Futures (IFs) 367
16.5 Globalization forecast in IFs base case 370
16.6 Component indices forecast in IFs base case 371
16.7 Trade openness forecast in IFs base case 371
16.8 Global FDI stocks over GDP forecast in IFs base case 372
16.9 Global FDI flows over GDP forecast in IFs base case 372
16.10 Global percent networked forecast in IFs base case 373
16.11 Alternative scenarios of globalization for IFs 374
16.12 Global power transition forecast in IFs base case 375
16.13 Global democratization forecast in IFs base case 376
18.1 A Toynbee development 405
18.2 Development that is characteristic of the
European Modernity 406
18.3 Transition of a cellular automaton into a Boolean net 407
18.4 The "inner state" of an artificial actor 408
191 The overlap between the processes of continentalization
and globalization 420
Tables
2.1 Global institutional processes (globalization)
(930 to 2300 ad) 21
2.2 Agent level global processes (1850 2080) 21
3.1 Leading sectors and technical—technological innovations of
the Portuguese cycle (LC5) 37
4.1 Types of interconnection processes 59
4.2 The timing of K wave growth spurts and global war 67
4.3 Globalization and global political evolution 79
5.1 Drivers of evolutionary system development and
network structures 92
6.1 Synopsis of four scientific approaches to the study of
world political institutions 124
8.1 A summary of the chronological sequence of secular cycles
in Western Europe 169
8.2 Unifying dynasties in the history of China (after Mair 2005) 172
8.3 Secular cycles in Europe and China during the last
millennium, compared with global economy processes as
identified by Modelski and Thompson (1996, Table 8.3) 172
8.4 How the phase of the secular cycle affects interaction
networks 181
9 1 Descriptive statistics 204
9.2 Runs tests at medians across all three regions 205
9.3 Runs test for temporal variations of q in the three regions 205
9.4 Temporal breaks and urban crashes of fi/q in the
three regions 205
9.5 Principal component single factor analysis of
contemporaneous regional values of q communalities 209
11.1 Historical forms of globalisation—an analytical framework 247
11.2 The spatio temporal dimension: types of historical
globalisation 248
12.1 Interpretations of evolving globalisation 280
14.1 Cyclical patterns 314
14.2 The Internet's history the Invention Phase 1960 1984 319
Tables xiii
14.3 The Internet's history the Innovation Phase 1984 1995 320
14.4 The Internet's history the Diffusion Phase 1995 2010 321
14.5 Chronology for the events involving the development of
software and protocols used on the Internet 325
14.6 Information, technology, and organizational change some
examples of "glocalization" 331
16.1 The dimensions of sustainable human development in IFs 358 |
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genre | (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content |
genre_facet | Aufsatzsammlung |
id | DE-604.BV022878915 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T18:49:52Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:07:35Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780415773614 9780415773607 |
language | English |
lccn | 2007025390 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016083923 |
oclc_num | 480446883 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-12 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-12 DE-188 |
physical | XX, 444 S. Ill., graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2008 |
publishDateSearch | 2008 |
publishDateSort | 2008 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
series | Rethinking globalizations |
series2 | Rethinking globalizations |
spelling | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change ed. by George Modelski ... 1. publ. New York, NY [u.a.] Routledge 2008 XX, 444 S. Ill., graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Rethinking globalizations 10 Includes bibliographical references and index Globalization Globalization - Forecasting Globalization - History Social change (sociology) Geschichte Globalisierung Globalization History Globalization Forecasting Globalisierung (DE-588)4557997-0 gnd rswk-swf Entwicklungssoziologie (DE-588)4247893-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Globalisierung (DE-588)4557997-0 s DE-604 Entwicklungssoziologie (DE-588)4247893-5 s DE-188 Modelski, George 1926-2014 Sonstige (DE-588)170339947 oth Rethinking globalizations 10 (DE-604)BV021650857 10 http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0720/2007025390.html Table of contents only HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016083923&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change Rethinking globalizations Globalization Globalization - Forecasting Globalization - History Social change (sociology) Geschichte Globalisierung Globalization History Globalization Forecasting Globalisierung (DE-588)4557997-0 gnd Entwicklungssoziologie (DE-588)4247893-5 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4557997-0 (DE-588)4247893-5 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change |
title_auth | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change |
title_exact_search | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change |
title_exact_search_txtP | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change |
title_full | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change ed. by George Modelski ... |
title_fullStr | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change ed. by George Modelski ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change ed. by George Modelski ... |
title_short | Globalization as evolutionary process |
title_sort | globalization as evolutionary process modeling global change |
title_sub | modeling global change |
topic | Globalization Globalization - Forecasting Globalization - History Social change (sociology) Geschichte Globalisierung Globalization History Globalization Forecasting Globalisierung (DE-588)4557997-0 gnd Entwicklungssoziologie (DE-588)4247893-5 gnd |
topic_facet | Globalization Globalization - Forecasting Globalization - History Social change (sociology) Geschichte Globalisierung Globalization History Globalization Forecasting Entwicklungssoziologie Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip0720/2007025390.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016083923&sequence=000004&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV021650857 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT modelskigeorge globalizationasevolutionaryprocessmodelingglobalchange |