Global Networks, Linked Cities
Editat de Saskia Sassenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 mar 2002
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780415931632
ISBN-10: 0415931630
Pagini: 378
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0415931630
Pagini: 378
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.7 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Notă biografică
Saskia Sassen, Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago, is a leading expert on cities and globalizaiton. She has published numerous books, including The Global City (1991, 2000) Cities in a World Economy (1994), Globalization and its Discontents (1998), Losing Control? (1996), Guests and Aliens (1999), and The Mobility of Labor and Capital (1988).
Recenzii
"Saskia Sassen's collection is a unique contribution to the emerging literature on global cities and networks: first, because it assembles state-of-the-art presentations by leading researchers in the field, and second, because it gives due attention to key cities in the developing world, which perform vital roles in the new global networks but have hitherto been neglected. No one interested in this central topic of hte new urban geography can afford to miss this book." -- Sir Peter Hall, Bartlett Professor of Planning at University College London, Director of hte Institute of Community Development, and author of Cities in Civilization
"In Global Networks, Linked Cities, Saskia Sassen extends her path-breaking work on the first tier global cities to focus on the architecture of the networks in which they are embedded. Networking among major cities is generally taken as a key indicator of involvement in globalization, yet few studies examine what those networks actually consist of. This volume plunges into that examination, and the result is a provocative and rewarding foray into the real content of several central concepts in the contemporary discussion of globalization and urban development." -- Peter Marcuse, Professor of Urban Planning, Columbia University and co-editor of Globalizing Cities: A New Urban Spatial Order? and Of States and Cities: The Partitioning of Urban Space
"In Global Networks, Linked Cities, Saskia Sassen extends her path-breaking work on the first tier global cities to focus on the architecture of hte networks in which they are embedded. Networking among major cities is generally taken as a key indicator of involvement in globalization, yet few studies examine what those networks actually consist of. This volume plunges into that examination, and the result is a provocative and rewarding foray into the real content of several central concepts in the contemporary discussion of globalization and urban development." -- Peter Marcuse, Professor of Urban Planning, Columbia University and co-editor of Globalizing Cities: A New Urban Spatial Order? and Of States and Cities: The Partitioning of Urban Space
"Saskia Sassen's collection is a unique contribution to the emerging literature on global cities and networks: first, because it assembles state-of-the-art presentations by leading researchers in the field, and second, because it gives due attention to key cities in the developing world, which perform vital roles in the new global networks but have hitherto been neglected. No one interested in the central topic of the new urban geography can afford to miss this book." -- Sir Peter Hall, Bartlett Professor of Planning at University College London, Director of the Institute of Community Development, and author of Cities in Civilization
"This edited volume contains United Nations U/Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU/IAS) research projects on contemporary global forces underpinnning urban development. The individual essays study the empirical and theoretical specifications on the organizational architecture of an increasing number of transnational cities, particularly cities of the global South that are mid-range on the global hierarchy... Issues specific to Mexico, the Hormuz Corridor, Sao Paulo, Beirut, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Buenos Aires, and Amsterdam are discussed in the twelve chapters." -- Social Change and Economic Development
"...explores the key issue of telematics infrastructure and hints at the important policy question of whether infrastructure must lead clustering of coordination functions or vice versa." -- American Journal of Sociology
"This collection is an important contribution to the literature on global cities... And yet the roles these cities play in the global economy are sufficently varied to show that historical development and local cultures also shape the impact of globalization. While this may not have been the intended message of these essays, for those interested... it is a welcome message indeed." -- H-Net
"Overall this volume provides a wealth of detail on the various interconnections within and between cities in the global hierarchy.
." -- Journal of Planning Education and Research
"In Global Networks, Linked Cities, Saskia Sassen extends her path-breaking work on the first tier global cities to focus on the architecture of the networks in which they are embedded. Networking among major cities is generally taken as a key indicator of involvement in globalization, yet few studies examine what those networks actually consist of. This volume plunges into that examination, and the result is a provocative and rewarding foray into the real content of several central concepts in the contemporary discussion of globalization and urban development." -- Peter Marcuse, Professor of Urban Planning, Columbia University and co-editor of Globalizing Cities: A New Urban Spatial Order? and Of States and Cities: The Partitioning of Urban Space
"In Global Networks, Linked Cities, Saskia Sassen extends her path-breaking work on the first tier global cities to focus on the architecture of hte networks in which they are embedded. Networking among major cities is generally taken as a key indicator of involvement in globalization, yet few studies examine what those networks actually consist of. This volume plunges into that examination, and the result is a provocative and rewarding foray into the real content of several central concepts in the contemporary discussion of globalization and urban development." -- Peter Marcuse, Professor of Urban Planning, Columbia University and co-editor of Globalizing Cities: A New Urban Spatial Order? and Of States and Cities: The Partitioning of Urban Space
"Saskia Sassen's collection is a unique contribution to the emerging literature on global cities and networks: first, because it assembles state-of-the-art presentations by leading researchers in the field, and second, because it gives due attention to key cities in the developing world, which perform vital roles in the new global networks but have hitherto been neglected. No one interested in the central topic of the new urban geography can afford to miss this book." -- Sir Peter Hall, Bartlett Professor of Planning at University College London, Director of the Institute of Community Development, and author of Cities in Civilization
"This edited volume contains United Nations U/Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU/IAS) research projects on contemporary global forces underpinnning urban development. The individual essays study the empirical and theoretical specifications on the organizational architecture of an increasing number of transnational cities, particularly cities of the global South that are mid-range on the global hierarchy... Issues specific to Mexico, the Hormuz Corridor, Sao Paulo, Beirut, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Buenos Aires, and Amsterdam are discussed in the twelve chapters." -- Social Change and Economic Development
"...explores the key issue of telematics infrastructure and hints at the important policy question of whether infrastructure must lead clustering of coordination functions or vice versa." -- American Journal of Sociology
"This collection is an important contribution to the literature on global cities... And yet the roles these cities play in the global economy are sufficently varied to show that historical development and local cultures also shape the impact of globalization. While this may not have been the intended message of these essays, for those interested... it is a welcome message indeed." -- H-Net
"Overall this volume provides a wealth of detail on the various interconnections within and between cities in the global hierarchy.
." -- Journal of Planning Education and Research
Cuprins
Introduction: Locating Cities on Global Circuits, Saskia Sassen Part I: The Urban Architecture of Global Networks 1. The Architecture of Global Networking Technologies, D. Linda García 2. Communication Grids: Cities and Infrastructure, Stephen Graham 3. Firms and Their Global Service Networks, Peter J. Taylor, D. R. F. Walker, and J. V. Beaverstock 4. Hierarchies of Dominance among World Cities: A Network Approach, David Smith and Michael Timberlake Part II: Cross-Border Regions 5. Mexico: The Making of a Global City, Christof Parnreiter 6. The Hormuz Corridor: Building a Cross-Border Region between Iran and the United Arab Emirates, Ali Parsa and Ramin Keivani 7. São Paulo: Articulating a Cross-Border Region, Sueli Ramos Schiffer 8. Beirut: Rebuilding Regional Circuits, Eric Huybrechts Part III. Network Nodes 9. Hong Kong: Global Capital Exchange, David R. Meyer 10. Shanghai: Reconnecting to the Global Economy, Felicity Rose Gu and Zilai Tang 11. Buenos Aires: Sociospatial Impacts of the Development of Global City Functions, Pablo Ciccolella and Iliana Mignaqui 12. Local Networks: Digital City Amsterdam, Patrick Riemens and Geert Lovink