Paradigm Regained? The Rules Of Wallerstein?s World-System Method

Autores

  • Walter L. Goldfrank University of California, Santa Cruz

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2000.223

Resumo

The last third of the twentieth century was ushered in by a set ofevents?wars, rebellions, ?nally economic crisis?that dealt a crushing blow to the previously dominant paradigm in U.S. social science, the structural-functionalist modernizationism elaborated by Talcott Parsons and his students. Within sociology, the site of much social science innovation in the post-war period, a notable splintering occurred. Already under-way in the early nineteen-sixties, this splintering was accelerated by the tumultuous events later in that decade. One of the splinters which has grown and developed most rapidly and fruitfully over the past decade has been the world-systems perspective, a formidable synthesis of continental historicism, ?Third World? radicalism, and Marxism. The principal exponent of this perspective has been Immanuel Wallerstein (b. 1930). whose work has built upon and in turn has stimulated advances in both historical sociology and the study of contemporary ?development.?

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Publicado

2000-08-26

Como Citar

Goldfrank, W. L. (2000). Paradigm Regained? The Rules Of Wallerstein?s World-System Method. Journal of World-Systems Research, 6(2), 150–195. https://doi.org/10.5195/jwsr.2000.223

Edição

Secção

Festschrift for Wallerstein