1. ON THE COMMUNICATIVE GEOGRAPHY OF GLOBAL SOCIOLOGY.
- Author
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JACOBS, RONALD N. and TOWNSLEY, ELEANOR
- Subjects
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PHILOSOPHY of sociology , *SOCIOLOGICAL research , *TRANSNATIONAL education , *CULTURAL geography , *GLOBALIZATION , *SCHOLARLY communication - Abstract
This article analyzes the two distinct communicative logics that inform the institutional geography and normative understanding of global sociology. The globalizing logic imagines a unitary global space that organizes sociological debate; the transnational logic envisions a series of overlapping sociological debates, often organized within a national context that is in the process of cosmopolitan, global, and transnational transformation. We argue that both logics shape communication in the sociological tradition, even if neither project is fully realized. The main challenge to global sociology, particularly in its globalizing form, is the existence of extremely influential spaces of sociological debate in North America and Europe, which reproduce the privileges of the larger and more powerful national associations. At the same time, these large, powerful national associations are becoming increasingly transnationalized, putting centre and periphery into dialogue, if in limited and uneven ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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