Bilbao: Basque Pathways to Globalization: Current Research in Urban & Regional Studies
Autor Gerardo Del Cerro Santamariaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 noi 2006
A Volume in the Current Research in Urban and Regional Studies Series.
*Takes into consideration Bilbao's social history and the complex relationships between local and global entities (regionalism v. state)
*Provides a socioeconomic analysis of the "Bilbao Effect"
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780080453248
ISBN-10: 0080453244
Pagini: 226
Ilustrații: Illustrated
Dimensiuni: 171 x 241 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Seriile Current Research in Urban & Regional Studies, Current Research in Urban and Regional Studies
ISBN-10: 0080453244
Pagini: 226
Ilustrații: Illustrated
Dimensiuni: 171 x 241 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Editura: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Seriile Current Research in Urban & Regional Studies, Current Research in Urban and Regional Studies
Public țintă
Researchers and Graduate students of globalization and socioeconomic studiesCuprins
List of Tables and Graphs
Preface/Acknowledgments
Introduction
BILBAO – A CITY ON THE GLOBAL MAP
Chapter One
CITIES, GLOBALIZATION, BILBAO
Chapter Two
ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION IN THE PRE-INDUSTRIAL ERA
Chapter Three
INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM AND THE NATION-STATE
Chapter Four
GLOBAL PRESSURES AND THE CRISIS OF FORDISM
Chapter Five
THE MAKING OF AN URBAN MEGAPROJECT
Chapter Six
ARCHITECTURE, GLOBALIZATION, AND THE GUGGENHEIM PROJECT
Chapter Seven
THE ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION OF THE CITY-REGION
Chapter Eight
BASQUE PATHWAYS TO GLOBALIZATION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
On Cities and Globalization
On Bilbao and the Basque Country
INDEX
Preface/Acknowledgments
Introduction
BILBAO – A CITY ON THE GLOBAL MAP
Chapter One
CITIES, GLOBALIZATION, BILBAO
Chapter Two
ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION IN THE PRE-INDUSTRIAL ERA
Chapter Three
INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM AND THE NATION-STATE
Chapter Four
GLOBAL PRESSURES AND THE CRISIS OF FORDISM
Chapter Five
THE MAKING OF AN URBAN MEGAPROJECT
Chapter Six
ARCHITECTURE, GLOBALIZATION, AND THE GUGGENHEIM PROJECT
Chapter Seven
THE ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION OF THE CITY-REGION
Chapter Eight
BASQUE PATHWAYS TO GLOBALIZATION
BIBLIOGRAPHY
On Cities and Globalization
On Bilbao and the Basque Country
INDEX
Recenzii
Pre-publication quotes:
"Gehry's magnificent museum may have catapulted the Basque city of Bilbao to international consciousness, but it was merely the latest step in this globalizing city's seven-century-long path of reinventing itself to serve the changing needs of an evolving world system. In a remarkable achievement, Del Cerro has written a stunning history of the special semi-independent politics and enviable entrepreneurial talents that enabled the city to adapt from its initial trade, shipping, mining, and manufacturing functions to international banking, services, and culture. This well-documented case study makes a vital contribution to global city studies, now moving at last beyond premature generalizations to variations in contexts and agency."
--Janet L. Abu-Lughod, author of Before European Hegemony and New York, Chicago, Los Angeles: America's Global Cities
"Gerardo del Cerro raises the methodological and analytical bar in studies of globalization through this insightful and finely-crafted historical study of Bilbao. Far from confining his research to the relations between the local and the global, as does most scholarship on cities and globalization these days, del Cerro builds powerful claims around a nuanced analysis of the mediating role that Basque regionalism and the Spanish nation-state play in establishing Bilbao's global trajectories. Just as there is no end of history in this book, the nation-state is anything but gone -- despite the veritable power of the global and despite Basque efforts to use Bilbao as an anchor for a regional imagined community that could effectively compete with the Spanish nation-state. It is precisely the ongoing tension and conflict among these scales of sovereignty that drive Bilbao's flirtation with globalization, both historically and now. This book's appreciation for history and the complexities of scale make it one of the more sophisticated studies of globalization available today."
--Diane E. Davis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"Since its opening in late 1997, the Guggenheim Bilbao has attracted more than 8 million visitors and generated over 10,000 press articles, mostly from outside Spain. The singular achievement of Gerardo del Cerro's book is to provide a convincing explanation--based on a subtle and detailed historical sociology--of what has come to be known as the 'Bilbao effect'. He provides critical insights on the role of proactive globalizing politicians, bureaucrats and professionals in marketing their city, locating this in its proper historical context, and showing how in this aspect of capitalist globalization as in most others, there are winners and there are losers.
--Leslie Sklair, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science and author of Globalization: Capitalism and its Alternatives
"Bilbao. Basque Pathways to Globalization gives a clear and comprehensive explanation of the role of cities in a globalized world. Social scientists will welcome the author's novel approach to the mediated and scaled relationships between the local level and global phenomena. For sociologists there is much to learn about globalization and the modern foundations of urban theory. This book is remarkable for the display of criticism that combines historical knowledge and socio-economic analysis to produce a coherent whole, thus opening new venues for social-scientific studies in the future. In developing his innovative approach, the author has built upon some of the best insights that have been proposed during the last years in this rapidly-changing field."
--Miguel Beltrán, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
“Gerardo del Cerro’s rigorous methodological approach as well as his theoretical framework contribute a vision of Bilbao’s evolution which is necessary in order to understand the city’s insertion and peculiarities within the process of accelerated globalization we witness today”.
--Román Basurto Larrañaga, University of the Basque Country, Bilbao
'Gehry's magnificent museum may have catapulted the Basque city of Bilbao to international consciousness, but it was merely the latest step in this globalizing city's seven-century-long path of reinventing itself to serve the changing needs of an evolving world system. In a remarkable achievement, Del Cerro has written a stunning history of the special semi-independent politics and enviable entrepreneurial talents that enabled the city to adapt from its initial trade, shipping, mining, and manufacturing functions to international banking, services, and culture. This well-documented case study makes a vital contribution to global city studies, now moving at last beyond premature generalizations to variations in contexts and agency.' Janet L. Abu-Lughod, author of Before European Hegemony and New York, Chicago, Los Angeles: America's Global Cities. 'Gerardo del Cerro raises the methodological and analytical bar in studies of globalization through this insightful and finely-crafted historical study of Bilbao. Far from confining his research to the relations between the local and the global, as does most scholarship on cities and globalization these days, del Cerro builds powerful claims around a nuanced analysis of the mediating role that Basque regionalism and the Spanish nation-state play in establishing Bilbao's global trajectories. Just as there is no end of history in this book, the nation-state is anything but gone -- despite the veritable power of the global and despite Basque efforts to use Bilbao as an anchor for a regional imagined community that could effectively compete with the Spanish nation-state. It is precisely the ongoing tension and conflict among these scales of sovereignty that drive Bilbao's flirtation with globalization, both historically and now. This book's appreciation for history and the complexities of scale make it one of the more sophisticated studies of globalization available today.' Diane E. Davis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'Since its opening in late 1997, the Guggenheim Bilbao has attracted more than 8 million visitors and generated over 10,000 press articles, mostly from outside Spain. The singular achievement of Gerardo del Cerro's book is to provide a convincing explanation--based on a subtle and detailed historical sociology--of what has come to be known as the 'Bilbao effect'. He provides critical insights on the role of proactive globalizing politicians, bureaucrats and professionals in marketing their city, locating this in its proper historical context, and showing how in this aspect of capitalist globalization as in most others, there are winners and there are losers.'Leslie Sklair, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science and author of Globalization: Capitalism and its Alternatives 'Bilbao: Basque Pathways to Globalization gives a clear and comprehensive explanation of the role of cities in a globalized world. Social scientists will welcome the author's novel approach to the mediated and scaled relationships between the local level and global phenomena. For sociologists there is much to learn about globalization and the modern foundations of urban theory. This book is remarkable for the display of criticism that combines historical knowledge and socio-economic analysis to produce a coherent whole, thus opening new venues for social-scientific studies in the future. In developing his innovative approach, the author has built upon some of the best insights that have been proposed during the last years in this rapidly-changing field.' Miguel Beltran, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid 'Gerardo del Cerro's rigorous methodological approach as well as his theoretical framework contribute a vision of Bilbao's evolution which is necessary in order to understand the city's insertion and peculiarities within the process of accelerated globalization we witness today.' Roman Basurto Larranaga, University of the Basque Country, Bilbao
"Gehry's magnificent museum may have catapulted the Basque city of Bilbao to international consciousness, but it was merely the latest step in this globalizing city's seven-century-long path of reinventing itself to serve the changing needs of an evolving world system. In a remarkable achievement, Del Cerro has written a stunning history of the special semi-independent politics and enviable entrepreneurial talents that enabled the city to adapt from its initial trade, shipping, mining, and manufacturing functions to international banking, services, and culture. This well-documented case study makes a vital contribution to global city studies, now moving at last beyond premature generalizations to variations in contexts and agency."
--Janet L. Abu-Lughod, author of Before European Hegemony and New York, Chicago, Los Angeles: America's Global Cities
"Gerardo del Cerro raises the methodological and analytical bar in studies of globalization through this insightful and finely-crafted historical study of Bilbao. Far from confining his research to the relations between the local and the global, as does most scholarship on cities and globalization these days, del Cerro builds powerful claims around a nuanced analysis of the mediating role that Basque regionalism and the Spanish nation-state play in establishing Bilbao's global trajectories. Just as there is no end of history in this book, the nation-state is anything but gone -- despite the veritable power of the global and despite Basque efforts to use Bilbao as an anchor for a regional imagined community that could effectively compete with the Spanish nation-state. It is precisely the ongoing tension and conflict among these scales of sovereignty that drive Bilbao's flirtation with globalization, both historically and now. This book's appreciation for history and the complexities of scale make it one of the more sophisticated studies of globalization available today."
--Diane E. Davis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"Since its opening in late 1997, the Guggenheim Bilbao has attracted more than 8 million visitors and generated over 10,000 press articles, mostly from outside Spain. The singular achievement of Gerardo del Cerro's book is to provide a convincing explanation--based on a subtle and detailed historical sociology--of what has come to be known as the 'Bilbao effect'. He provides critical insights on the role of proactive globalizing politicians, bureaucrats and professionals in marketing their city, locating this in its proper historical context, and showing how in this aspect of capitalist globalization as in most others, there are winners and there are losers.
--Leslie Sklair, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science and author of Globalization: Capitalism and its Alternatives
"Bilbao. Basque Pathways to Globalization gives a clear and comprehensive explanation of the role of cities in a globalized world. Social scientists will welcome the author's novel approach to the mediated and scaled relationships between the local level and global phenomena. For sociologists there is much to learn about globalization and the modern foundations of urban theory. This book is remarkable for the display of criticism that combines historical knowledge and socio-economic analysis to produce a coherent whole, thus opening new venues for social-scientific studies in the future. In developing his innovative approach, the author has built upon some of the best insights that have been proposed during the last years in this rapidly-changing field."
--Miguel Beltrán, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid
“Gerardo del Cerro’s rigorous methodological approach as well as his theoretical framework contribute a vision of Bilbao’s evolution which is necessary in order to understand the city’s insertion and peculiarities within the process of accelerated globalization we witness today”.
--Román Basurto Larrañaga, University of the Basque Country, Bilbao
'Gehry's magnificent museum may have catapulted the Basque city of Bilbao to international consciousness, but it was merely the latest step in this globalizing city's seven-century-long path of reinventing itself to serve the changing needs of an evolving world system. In a remarkable achievement, Del Cerro has written a stunning history of the special semi-independent politics and enviable entrepreneurial talents that enabled the city to adapt from its initial trade, shipping, mining, and manufacturing functions to international banking, services, and culture. This well-documented case study makes a vital contribution to global city studies, now moving at last beyond premature generalizations to variations in contexts and agency.' Janet L. Abu-Lughod, author of Before European Hegemony and New York, Chicago, Los Angeles: America's Global Cities. 'Gerardo del Cerro raises the methodological and analytical bar in studies of globalization through this insightful and finely-crafted historical study of Bilbao. Far from confining his research to the relations between the local and the global, as does most scholarship on cities and globalization these days, del Cerro builds powerful claims around a nuanced analysis of the mediating role that Basque regionalism and the Spanish nation-state play in establishing Bilbao's global trajectories. Just as there is no end of history in this book, the nation-state is anything but gone -- despite the veritable power of the global and despite Basque efforts to use Bilbao as an anchor for a regional imagined community that could effectively compete with the Spanish nation-state. It is precisely the ongoing tension and conflict among these scales of sovereignty that drive Bilbao's flirtation with globalization, both historically and now. This book's appreciation for history and the complexities of scale make it one of the more sophisticated studies of globalization available today.' Diane E. Davis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'Since its opening in late 1997, the Guggenheim Bilbao has attracted more than 8 million visitors and generated over 10,000 press articles, mostly from outside Spain. The singular achievement of Gerardo del Cerro's book is to provide a convincing explanation--based on a subtle and detailed historical sociology--of what has come to be known as the 'Bilbao effect'. He provides critical insights on the role of proactive globalizing politicians, bureaucrats and professionals in marketing their city, locating this in its proper historical context, and showing how in this aspect of capitalist globalization as in most others, there are winners and there are losers.'Leslie Sklair, Professor Emeritus of Sociology, London School of Economics and Political Science and author of Globalization: Capitalism and its Alternatives 'Bilbao: Basque Pathways to Globalization gives a clear and comprehensive explanation of the role of cities in a globalized world. Social scientists will welcome the author's novel approach to the mediated and scaled relationships between the local level and global phenomena. For sociologists there is much to learn about globalization and the modern foundations of urban theory. This book is remarkable for the display of criticism that combines historical knowledge and socio-economic analysis to produce a coherent whole, thus opening new venues for social-scientific studies in the future. In developing his innovative approach, the author has built upon some of the best insights that have been proposed during the last years in this rapidly-changing field.' Miguel Beltran, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid 'Gerardo del Cerro's rigorous methodological approach as well as his theoretical framework contribute a vision of Bilbao's evolution which is necessary in order to understand the city's insertion and peculiarities within the process of accelerated globalization we witness today.' Roman Basurto Larranaga, University of the Basque Country, Bilbao