GLOBALIZATION

Series Editors

Manfred B. Steger

Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology

and University of Hawai‘i–Ma¯noa

and

Terrell Carver

University of Bristol

“Globalization” has become the buzzword of our time. But what does it mean? Rather than forcing a complicated social phenomenon into a single analytical framework, this series seeks to present globalization as a multidimensional process constituted by complex, often contradictory interactions of global, regional, and local aspects of social life. Since conventional disciplinary borders and lines of demarcation are losing their old rationales in a globalizing world, authors in this series apply an interdisciplinary framework to the study of globalization. In short, the main purpose and objective of this series is to support subject-specific inquiries into the dynamics and effects of contemporary globalization and its varying impacts across, between, and within societies.

Globalization and Sovereignty

John Agnew

Globalization and War

Tarak Barkawi

Globalization and Human Security

Paul Battersby and Joseph M. Siracusa

Globalization and the Environment

Peter Christoff and Robyn Eckersley

Globalization and American Popular Culture, 3rd ed.

Lane Crothers

Globalization and Militarism

Cynthia Enloe

Globalization and Law

Adam Gearey

Globalization and Feminist Activism

Mary E. Hawkesworth

Globalization and Postcolonialism

Sankaran Krishna

Globalization and Media

Jack Lule

Globalization and Social Movements, 2nd ed.

Valentine Moghadam

Globalization and Terrorism, 2nd ed.

Jamal R. Nassar

Globalization and Culture, 2nd ed.

Jan Nederveen Pieterse

Globalization and Democracy

Stephen J. Rosow and Jim George

Globalization and International Political Economy

Mark Rupert and M. Scott Solomon

Globalization and Citizenship

Hans Schattle

Globalization and Money

Supriya Singh

Globalization and Islamism

Nevzat Soguk

Globalization and Urbanization

James H. Spencer

Globalisms, 3rd ed.

Manfred B. Steger

Rethinking Globalism

Edited by Manfred B. Steger

Globalization and Labor

Dimitris Stevis and Terry Boswell

Globaloney 2.0

Michael Veseth

Supported by the Globalization Research Center at the University of Hawai‘i, Ma¯noa