I N A P U B L I C
A T I O N S
The following is a list of publications
by the Archive's staff:
MAPPING
GLOBALIZATION
by Eszter Hargittai
and Miguel
Angel Centeno
2001. Edited a special issue of
the American Behavioral Scientist (44:10) dedicated
to the analysis of international networks.
Table of Contents of the Special
Issue:
Introduction: The Structure
of Global Networks
- Eszter Hargittai (Princeton) and
Miguel A. Centeno (Princeton), "Defining a Global Geography"
- Edward Kick (Utah) and Byron Davis
(Utah), "World-System Structure and Change: An Analysis
of Global Networks and Mobility across Two Time Periods"
- David Smith (UC Irvine) and Michael Timberlake
(Kansas State), TBA
Economic Networks
- Brian Uzzi (Northwestern) Mike
Sacks (Northwestern), and Marc Ventresca (Northwestern),
"Global Institutions and Networks: Continent Change in The
Structure of World Trade Advantage, 1965-1980"
- Albert Bergesen (Arizona) and John
Sonnett (Arizona), "The Global 500: Mapping the World Economy
at Century's End"
- Gary Gereffi (Duke), "Mapping A
Commodity Chains Framework for Analyzing Global Industries"
Communication Networks
- Matthew Zook (UC Berkeley), "Old
Hierarchies Or New Networks Of Centrality? The Global Geography
of The Internet Content Market"
- Anthony Townsend (MIT) "Networked
Cities and the Global Structure of the Internet"
- Stanley D. Brunn (Univ. Kentucky)
and Martin Dodge (London), "Mapping The 'Worlds' of The
World Wide Web: (Re)Structuring Global Commerce Through
Hyperlinks"
- George Barnett (SUNY Buffalo),
"A Longitudinal Analysis of the International Telecommunications
Network: 1978-1996"
- Thomas Schott (Pittsburgh), "Global
Webs of Knowledge: Education, Science and Technology"
- Barry Wellman (Toronto), Emmanuel Koku,
(Toronto) and Nancy Nazer (Toronto), "International Scholarly
Networks"
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DEFINING A GLOBAL GEOGRAPHY
by Eszter Hargittai
and Miguel
Angel Centeno
2001. American Behavioral Scientist 44(10)
Globalization involves a variety of links
expanding and tightening a web of political, economic and
cultural inter-connections. Individual data indicate that
we are undergoing a process of compression of international
time and space and an intensification of international relations.
Yet, individual data sources tell us little more than that.
This article offers an alternative approach to studying globalization
by highlighting the possible contributions of network methods
to the field. We argue that using relational data helps in
uncovering the intertwined nature of the emerging global order.
A
shorter version of this paper was reprinted in the
Australian Online Opinion
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PHONE
CALLS AND FAX MACHINES: The Limits to Globalization
(html)
by Hugh
Louch, Eszter Hargittai,
and Miguel
Angel Centeno
1999. The Washington Quarterly. 22:2 83-100
This paper uses network analysis
to explore what changes in international telecommunications
reveal about the process of globalization.
This paper was previously published as Migration
and Development Working Paper #98-07, Princeton University.
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R E L A T E D
P A P E R S
A list of links to previously published
related works.
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The Archive will periodically publish edited
volumes featuring the work of Associates.
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C
O N F E R E N C E P R E S E N T A T I O N S
Working papers of the Archive and descriptions
of the Archive's activities have been presented at the following
professional meetings:
- Thomas J. Watson Institute for International
Studies, Brown University, October, 1999
- Workshop on Cities in the Information
Age, Urban Research Initiative, Robert F. Wagner School
of Public Service, New York University, June, 1999
- Centre National de Recherche Scientifique,
Paris, May, 1999
- Princeton-Rutgers Conference on the Sociology
of Culture, Princeton, NJ, April, 1999
- XIX International Sunbelt Social Network
Conference, Charleston, SC, February, 1999
- First Annual Conference on Economic and
Organizational Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, December,
1998
- American Sociological Association Annual
Meetings, San Francisco, August 1998
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O
N G O I N G P R O J E C T S
- The Atlas of Globalization
- Latin America: Regionalization or Globalization?
- Weaving the Western Web: Explaining Differences
in Internet Connectivity Among OECD Countries
- Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment
in Central and East European Countries
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