绘制跨国世界地图:我们如何跨国界行动和沟通以及为什么它很重要

IF 0.3 4区 社会学 Q4 SOCIOLOGY
M. Lorek
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引用次数: 0

摘要

Emmanuel Deutschmann的《绘制跨国世界地图:我们如何跨国界行动和沟通,以及为什么它很重要》挑战了社会生活的各个方面已经并将继续变得越来越全球化的假设。Deutschmann认为,克服巨大地理距离的人类流动和交流通常是一个例外,而不是一种常见或新兴的模式。相反,绘制跨国世界地图提出了强有力的论据,说明为什么世界实际上更具区域性而非全球性。通过这样做,Deutschmann挑战了著名的社会科学理论,如McLuhan的“地球村”概念、Luhmann的“完全实现的世界社会”概念,或受马克思“时间消灭空间”概念启发的理论为了证实这一论点,这本书引用了大量关于难民、移民、寻求庇护者、旅游业、国际学生、通过Facebook建立的在线友谊、跨境汇款和国际电话的数据。对Deutschmann来说,跨国主义并不意味着边界之间的互动会像一些学者所理解的那样持续下去,比如Peggy Levitt或Alejandro Portes。相反,作者将跨民族主义的概念定义为跨越国界,无论是身体上(作为难民、寻求庇护者、移民、学生或游客)还是通过交流(如在线友谊、电话或汇款)。本书除引言和结语外,还包括四个内容章节。第二章借鉴了全球化的主流理论,如沃勒斯坦的世界体系、迈耶的世界政治和鲁曼的世界社会,对Deutschmann所说的区域一体化的比较社会学进行了理论论证。Deutschmann在欧洲知识生产的背景下写作,区域主义通常被理论化为一种独特的欧洲现象,他认为这种观点对理解区域主义是一种普遍现象并没有特别的帮助。相反,跨民族主义应该跨时间、跨地区地进行研究。第三章充实了全球活动和区域活动之间的区别。本章调查了在本书中审查的关于国家跨境活动的数据是全球性的还是区域性的问题。这也是这本书的优势所在,也是它对大量测距数据的使用大放异彩的地方。根据1960年的跨国流动数据,Deutschmann显示了这种跨国流动在很大程度上仍然是区域性的。本章的核心是探讨区域主义的不同概念——从亨廷顿文明冲突提出的区域类别到政府间组织确定的区域,以及Deutschmann提出的检测区域的数据挖掘方法——以及为本书收集的数据如何达到这些类别。作为一名研究后社会主义社会的学者,根据书中提供的可以追溯到20世纪60年代的数据,我本想了解更多关于Deutschmann如何应对这些国家自那时以来在政治和文化上的转变。例如,根据432 Reviews提出的区域
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mapping the Transnational World: How We Move and Communicate across Borders and Why It Matters
Emmanuel Deutschmann’s Mapping the Transnational World: How We Move and Communicate across Borders, and Why It Matters challenges the assumption that all aspects of societal life have become and continue to become more and more global. Deutschmann argues that human mobility and communication that overcomes large geographical distances are generally an exception rather than a common or emerging pattern. Mapping the Transnational World instead puts forward strong arguments for why the world is in fact much more regional than it is global. By doing so, Deutschmann challenges prominent social scientific theories, such as McLuhan’s concept of the ‘‘global village,’’ Luhmann’s idea of a ‘‘fully actualized world society,’’ or theories inspired by Marx’s notion of the ‘‘annihilation of space by time.’’ To substantiate this argument, the book draws on an expansive amount of data on refugees, migration, asylum seekers, tourism, international students, online friendships via Facebook, monetary remittances sent across national borders, and international phone calls. For Deutschmann, transnationalism does not imply that interaction between borders will be sustained as understood by some scholars, such as Peggy Levitt or Alejandro Portes. Instead, the author defines the concept of transnationalism as the crossing of a national border either physically (as a refugee, asylum seeker, migrant, student, or tourist) or through communication (such as online friendships, phone calls, or remittances). The book contains four content chapters in addition to an introduction and one concluding chapter. Drawing on dominant theories of globalization, such as Wallerstein’s worldsystem, Meyer’s world polity, and Luhmann’s world society, Chapter Two develops a theoretical argument toward what Deutschmann calls comparative sociology of regional integration. Writing from a European context of knowledge production, where regionalism is often theorized as a uniquely European phenomenon, Deutschmann argues that such a perspective is not particularly helpful in understanding it as a universal phenomenon. Instead, transnationalism should be studied across time and comparatively across regions. Chapter Three fleshes out the distinction between global and regional activity. The chapter investigates the question of whether the data examined, in the context of this book, on national cross-border activity is global or regional. This is also where the strength of the book lies and where its use of vast-ranging data shines. Drawing on data on transnational mobility reaching back to 1960, Deutschmann shows how much of this transnational mobility remains in fact regional. At its center, this chapter grapples with different concepts of regionalism—from the regional categories proposed by Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations to those regions identified by Intergovernmental Organizations (IGOs) as well as a data mining approach proposed by Deutschmann that detects regions—and how the data collected for the book measure up to these categories. As a scholar of postsocialist societies, and with the data presented in the book going back to the 1960s, I would have liked to learn more about how Deutschmann dealt with how those countries shifted ground since then both politically and culturally. For instance, according to the regions proposed by 432 Reviews
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