Cities and globalization: a theoretical approach

Authors

  • Gerardo del Cerro Santamaría New School for Social Research de Nueva York

Abstract

This article proposes a relational understanding of globalization and suggests an analytical approach for studying this process from an urban perspective. Rather than considering cities directly linked to the global economy in a similar, homogeneous way, the article strongly suggests that the mediation of regional and national domains of social action ought to be considered in order to provide a framework for including difference and variation in the treatment of cities in the world-system. The author proposes an approach of «levels of analysis» which helps to undermine the duality local-global. Unlike most analyses of globalization, which propose the end of the nation-state, it is here suggested that states and regions strongly influence the path to globalization of individual cities. Therefore, globalization cannot be explained as an economic or financial process exclusively, but as one in which politics and history matter in very significant ways.

Author Biography

Gerardo del Cerro Santamaría, New School for Social Research de Nueva York

Doctor en sociología por la New School for Social Research de Nueva York y por la Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Ha sido director de investigación y evaluación en la National Science Foundation del Gobierno Federal de los EE.UU. (1997-2002), y actualmente dirige el programa de investigación institucional en The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art (Nueva York), donde también es profesor de sociología urbana. Sus intereses de investigación se han centrado en la economía política de la globalización, la relación de las ciudades con la globalización, y las relaciones entre ciencia, tecnología y sociedad.

Published

2008-01-01

How to Cite

del Cerro Santamaría, G. (2008). Cities and globalization: a theoretical approach. Spanish Journal of Sociology, (4). Retrieved from https://recyt.fecyt.es/index.php/res/article/view/64970

Issue

Section

Articles