Review
Binghamton, Fernand Braudel Center for the Study of Economies, Historical Systems, and Civilizations
Trimestrale.
ISSN: 0147-9032
Conservata in: Prato, Fondazione Istituto Internazionale di Storia Economica “F. Datini”, Coll: Riv. 40
Consistenza: a. I/1 (1977) -a. XXVIII, 2005, 4
Lacune: a. XXIII, 2000, 1, 2, 3, 4; a. XXVII, 2004, 1, 2;
Conservata in: Università degli Studi di Firenze, Biblioteca di Scienze Sociali – RIV STR 304
Consistenza: XII, 1989, 1-a. XXXV, 2012, 3-4
[ 2020-2011 ] [ 2010-2001 ] [ 2000-1996 ] [ 1995-1991 ] [ 1990-1986 ] [ 1985-1981 ] [ 1980-1977 ]
DEVELOPMENT REVISITED
Prabirjit Sarkar, North-South Uneven Development: What the Data Show, p. 439
Hannes Hofbauer, Andrea Komlosy, Capital Accumulation and Catching-up Development in Eastern Europe, p. 459
Marcus Faro de Castro, Latin America and the Future of International Development Assistance, p. 503
Manfred Bienefeld, Structural Adjustment: Debt Collection Device or Development Policy?, p. 533
Abstracts, p. 584
Christopher A. McAuley, Oliver C. Cox’s World-System: Insights, Omissions, and Speculations, p. 313
Jason W. Moore, Sugar and the Expansion of the Early Modern World-Economy: Commodity Frontiers, Economical Transformation, and Industrialization, p. 409
Abstracts, p. 436
Marjolein ‘t Hart, Warfare and Capitalism: The Impact of the Economy on State Making in Northwestern Europe, Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, p. 209
Eric Mielants, Perspectives on the Origins of Merchant Capitalism in Europe, p. 229
Duccio Sacchi, Gathering, Organization, and Production of Information in Sixteenth-Century Surveys in Hispanic America, p. 293
Abstracts, p. 310
COMMODITY CHAINS IN THE WORLD-ECONOMY, 1590-1790
Immanuel Wallerstein, Introduction, p. 1
Y. Eyüp Özveren, Shipbuilding, 1590-1790, p. 15
Sheila Pelizzon, Grain Flour, 1590-1790, p. 87
Immanuel Wallerstein, Next Steps, p. 197
Abstracts, p. 202
S. Amin, Post-Maoist China: A Comparison with Post-Communist
Russia, p. 375
P. Sarkar, Are Poor Countries Coming Closer to the Rich? Caribbean
Migrants to Core Zones, p. 387
CARIBBEAN MIGRANTS TO CORE ZONES
R. Grosfoguel, Introduction: “Cultural Racism” and
Colonial Caribbean Migrants in Core Zones of the Capitalist World-Economy,
pag. 409
M. Giraud, Les migrations guadaloupéenne et martiniquaise
en France métropolitaine, p. 435
Ph. Nanton, Migration Dynamics: Great Britain and the Caribbean,
pag. 449
L. Sansone, Small Places, Large Migrations: Notes on the Specificity
of the Population of Surinamese and Antillean Origin in the Netherlands,
pag. 471
R. Grosfoguel, Puerto Ricans in the United States: A Comparative
Approach, p. 503
Notes on Authors, p. 523
Abstracts, p. 525
E. Rata, The Theory of Neotribal Capitalism, p. 231
REORIENTALISM?
S. Amin, History Conceived as an Eternal Cycle, p. 291
G. Arrighi, The World According to Andre Gunder Frank, p. 327
I. Wallerstein, Frank Proves the European Miracle, p. 355
Notes on Authors, p. 373
Abstracts, p. 374
J. de Vries, Great Expectations: Early Modern History and
the Social Sciences, p. 121
A. Dirlik, Place-based Imagination: Globalism and the Politics
of Place, p. 151
M. González Arencibia, Alternativas de Desarollo, Frente
a la Globalización Capitalista y al Derrumbe del “Socialismo
Reale”: Opciones para Cuba, p. 189
Notes on Authors, p. 227
Abstracts, p. 228
M. Ceruti, Narrative Elements: A New Common Feature Between
the Sciences of Nature and the Sciences of Societies, pag.
1
L. Birken, Chaos Theory and “Western Civilization”,
pag. 17
J. Mac Laughlin, European Gypsies and the Historical Geography
of Loathing, p. 31
C.A. Aguirre Rojas, La vision braudelienne sur le capitalisme
antérieur à la Révolution Industrielle,
pag. 61
S. Sherman, Hegemonic Transitions and the Dynamics of Cultural
Change, p. 87
Notes on Authors, p. 118
Abstracts, p. 119
THE STATES, THE MARKETS AND THE SOCIETIES: SEPARATE LOGICS
OR A SINGLE DOMAIN? – part two
I. Wallerstein, Introduction, p. 387
W. Czajkowski, Marx’s Paradigm – A Paradigm to Be (Re) discovered?,
or How Marx Could Help Us to Construct Unitarian Theories of
History, p. 389
Y. Eyüp Özveren, An Institutionalist Alternative
to Neoclassical Economics?, pag.469
Notes on Authors, p. 531
Abstracts, p. 532
THE STATES, THE MARKETS AND THE SOCIETIES: SEPARATE LOGICS
OR A SINGLE DOMAIN? – part one
I. Wallerstein, Introduction, p. 251
P. Banerjee, The Disciplinary Triplet of “Social Sciences”:
An Indian Response, p. 253
W. Zhengyi, Inherit or Transfer? A Dilemma in Reconstructing
Chinese Social Reality, p. 327
Erratum XX, 3/4, p. 383
Notes on Authors, p. 384
Abstracts, p. 385
I. Ekeland, What is Chaos Theory?, p. 137
P. Vilar, Reflections on the Notion of “Peasant Economy”,
pag.151
ON RUSSIA: REACTIONS TO FOURSOV
W. H. McNeill, Crossing Barriers of Language, pag.193
S. Brucan, Communism versus Capitalism: A False Issue,
pag.201
S. Amin, La Russie dans le système mondial: Géographie
ou histoire?, p. 207
M. Fuchs, H.-H. Nolte, Russia and the West: The New Debate
on the Uniqueness of Cultures, p. 221
Notes on Authors, p. 246
Abstracts, p. 247
D. Straussfogel, How Many World-Systems? A Contribution
to the Continuationist/Transformationist Debate, p. 1
M. C. Forte, Globalization and World-Systems Analysis: Toward
New Paradigms of a Geo-Historical Social Anthropology (A Research
Review), pag. 29
WORLD-SYSTEM ANALYSIS
I. Wallerstein, The Rise and Future Demise of World-Systems
Analysis, p. 103
G. Arrighi, Capitalism and the Modern World-System: Rethinking
the Non-Debates of the 1970’s, pag.113
Notes on Authors, p. 130
Abstracts, p. 131
NOMOTHETIC VS. IDIOGRAPHIC DISCIPLINES: A FALSE DILEMMA?
I. Wallerstein, Introduction, p. 277
U. Strohmayer, The Displaced, Deferred or was it Abandoned
Middle: Another Look at the Idiographic-Nomothetic Distinction
in the German Social Sciences, p. 279
A. Foursov, Social Times, Social Spaces, and Their Dilemmas:
Ideology “In One Country”, pag. 345
Keong-il Kim, Genealogy of the Idiographic vs. the Nomothetic
Disciplines: The Case of History and Sociology in the United
States, p. 465
R. Grosfoguel, A TimeSpace Perspective on Development: Recasting
Latin American Debates, p. 465
Notes on Authors, p. 541
Abstracts, p. 543
F. Moretti, Narrative Markets, ca. 1850, p. 151
R. Sosa Elizaga, Social Sciences in Latin America: From the
Neoliberal Deluge to the End of the Century Merchant Capitalism,
pag. 175
MERCHANT CAPITALISM
J. Luiten van Zanden, Synopsis of Book: The Rise and Decline
of Holland’s Economy: Merchant Capitalism and the Labour Market,
pag. 189
A. Knotter, A New Theory of Merchant Capitalism?, pag.
193
C. Lis, H. Soly, Different Paths of Development: Capitalism
in the Northern and Southern Netherlands during the Late Middle
Ages and Early Modern Period, p. 211
I. Wallerstein, Merchant, Dutch, or Historical Capitalism?,
pag. 243
J. Luiten van Zanden, Do We Need a Theory of Merchant Capitalism?,
pag.255
A. Knotter, Afterword: Parasitory and Dynamic Elements in
Merchant Capitalism, p. 269
Notes on Authors, p. 271
Abstracts, p. 272
P. J. Taylor, Modernities and Movements: Antisystemic Reactions
to World Hegemony, p. 1
A. Kumar Bagchi, Contested Hegemonies and Laissez-Faire: Controversies
over the Monetary Standard in India at the High Noon of the British
Empire, p. 19
Y. Eyüp Özveren, A Framework for the Study of the
Black Sea World, 1789-1915, p. 77
R. Grosfoguel, Migration and Geopolitics in the Greater Antilles:
From the Cold War to the Post-Cold War, p. 115
Notes on Authors, p. 146
Abstracts, p. 147
W. A. Dunaway, The Incorporation of Mountain Ecosystems
into the Capitalist World-System, pag.355
R. F. Bulman, Discerning Major Shifts in the World-System
— Some Help From Theology?, p. 383
S. P. Thakur, Note on International Trade and the Political
Economy of State Formation in South Asia: A Long Wave?, pag.
401
J. Arn, Third World Urbanization and the Creation of A Relative
Surplus Population: A History of Accra, Ghana to 1980, pag.
413
J.-M. Berthelot, La dynamique pluriculturelle dans la construction
de la sociologie et l’aporie du relativisme, p. 445
Notes on Authors, p. 464
Abstracts, p. 467
SOCIAL SCIENCE CONCEPTS
A. Dirlik, Social Formations in Representations of the Past:
The Case of “Feudalism” in Twentieth-Century Chinese
Historiography, p. 227
R. Arvind Palat, Fragmented Visions: Excavating the Future
of Area Studies in a Post-American World, p. 269
THE WORLD WE ARE ENTERING
W. Warren Wagar, Socialism, Nationalism, and Ecocide,
pag. 319
G. Arrighi, Workers of the World at Century’s End, pag.
335
Notes on Authors, p. 352
Abstracts, p. 353
A. Foursov, Communism, Capitalism, and the Bells of History,
pag.103
R. Grosfoguel, From Cepalismo to Neoliberalism: A World-Systems
Approach to Conceptual Shifts in Latin America, p. 131
R. Tardanico, From Crisis to Restructuring: The Nexus of Global
and National Change in the Costa Rican Labor Market, pag.
155
K. Tsokhas, War, Industrialization, and State Intervention
in the Semiperiphery: The Australian Case, p. 197
Notes on Authors, p. 224
Abstracts, p. 225
I. Prigogine, The Laws of Chaos, p. 1
I. Wallerstein, History in Search of Science, p. 11
F. Tabak, Ars Longa, Vita Brevis? A Geohistorical Perspective
on Pax Mongolica, p. 23
S. Ikeda, The History of the Capitalist World-System vs. the
History of East-Southeast Asia, p. 49
M. Murteira, The Transition from Central Planning to Market
Economy: An International Comparison, p. 79
Notes on Authors, p. 99
Abstracts, p. 100