
Última actualización: 2 de octubre de 2008
Saltar al contenidoEconomista formado básicamente en Francia, Samir Amin (El Cairo, 1931) es uno de los intelectuales más brillantes que ha dado la izquierda contemporánea. Autor de numerosas obras, su trayectoria ha estado fuertemente [...]
En el número 7 de la calle Grenelle, un inmueble burgués de París, nada es lo que parece. Dos de sus habitantes esconden un secreto. Renée, la portera, lleva mucho tiempo fingiendo [...]
Reseña:
Moving beyond a narrow definition of economics, this volume advances our knowledge of global political economy and how we might critically respond to it. Two features of the global economy increasingly determine everyday lives worldwide. The first is explosive growth in financial markets that shapes business decision-making and public policy-making, and the second is dramatic growth in informal and flexible work arrangements that shapes income-generation and family well-being. These developments, though widely recognized, are rarely analyzed as inextricable and interacting dimensions of globalization. Using a new theoretical model, Peterson demonstrates the interdependence of reproductive, productive, and virtual economies, and analyses inequalities of race, gender, class, and nation as structural features of neoliberal globalization. Presenting a methodologically plural, transdisciplinary, and well-documented account of globalization, the author integrates marginalized and disparate features of globalization to provide an accessible narrative from a postcolonial feminist vantage point.