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Title: Symposium Global Studies Graduate Education


1
The Spatial Turn in Global Studies
  • Symposium Global Studies Graduate Education
  • Sophia University, May 2008

Matthias Middell Global and European Studies
Institute (University of Leipzig) MA-Consortium
Global Studies A European Perspective
(Leipzig, London, Vienna, Wroclaw)
2
Global Studies as an emerging postdisciplinary
field
3
Global Studies and the study of globalization(s)
  • long established phenomena (? historicity)
  • dialectic processes of deterritorialization and
    reterritorialization (? new spatial orders)
  • in all geographic arenas (? regional
    perspectives importance of Areas Studies)
  • including social and cultural dimensions (?
    trans-meta- or post-disciplinary perspective)

4
Leipzig focus of Global Studies
  • Dialectic of
  • flows (e.g. migration, capital, goods, ideas )
  • and attempts to control these flows by various
    forms of territorialization (state, regions,
    cities as portals of globalizations,
    supra-national structures, identity politics,
    transnational networks )

5
Methodological tool-kit
  • Process analysis (historical approach
    globalization)
  • Study of entanglements (criticism towards a naïve
    reproduction of (national) containers by
    comparative analysis
  • Privileging an actor perspective (interactions,
    agency to manage different spatial framings)
  • Confrontation of different perspectives on
    globalization (globalization not as a given but
    as a project depending upon situations in a world
    undergoing globalizing processes)

6
Disciplinary origins of Global Studies
  • History ? Global History
  • Geography ? New political geography
  • Sociology ? Urban Studies, new migration studies
  • Cultural Studies ? Jeux déchelles
  • Area Studies ? beyond the understanding of world
    regions as containers
  • part of the spatial turn in the humanities and
    social sciences that leads to a postdisciplinary
    situation

7
Spatial turn in the humanities
8
Key tenets of the spatial turn
  • space is not a given category (ditto. time)
  • but the result of social practice and
    conventions (which, in turn, are constructed
    through symbolic and discursive acts)
  • while space is structured through social
    practice, representations of space also structure
    human action
  • Cf. Henri Lefebvre 1991 1974. The Production
    of Space. London Blackwell Publishers.

9
Rethinking space
  • The recognition that social relations are
    becoming increasingly interconnected on a global
    scale necessarily problematizes the spatial
    parameters of those relations, and therefore, the
    geographical context in which they occur. Under
    these circumstances, space no longer appears as a
    static platform of social relations, but rather
    as one of their constitutive dimensions, itself
    historically produced, reconfigured, and
    transformed.
  • Neil Brenner 1999. Beyond state-centrism? Space,
    territoriality, and geographical scale in
    globalization studies, Theory and Society 28,
    39-78.

10
Social space
  • Territories are not frozen frameworks where
    social life occurs. Rather, they are made, given
    meanings, and destroyed in social and individual
    action. Hence, they are typically contested and
    actively negotiated. .. Spatial organizations,
    meanings of space, and the territorial use of
    space are historically contingent and their
    histories are closely interrelated.
  • Anssi Paasi 2003. Territory. In J. Agnew et al.
    (eds.) A Companion to Political Geography. Malden
    MA etc. Blackwell Publishing, 109-122 (110).

11
Representations of space
  • Social space, symbolic space, imagined space
  • Common denominator regulatory power

12
Critical junctures of globalization
  • Critical junctures of globalization are
    historical spaces, moments and arenas of
    globalization in which spatial orders are
    contested and reshaped. The critical junctures of
    globalization are characterised by distinctive
    new segmentations of the world, by fragmentations
    and reconfigurations, i.e. the destabilisation of
    old and the development of new spatial order. The
    critical junctures of globalization produce
    specific resources for social and cultural
    action.
  • Ulf Engel Matthias Middell 2005. Bruchzonen der
    Globalisierung, globale Krisen und
    Territorialitätsregimes Kategorien einer
    Globalgeschichtsschreibung, Comparativ 15 (2)
    5-38.

13
Some examples of current research
14
The historicity of critical junctures
  • From Empire to Nation? A global history of the
    18th century
  • The French Revolution and the Haitian Revolution
  • Lisbon 1808 The Portuguese capital between
    Atlantization and Europeanization
  • Colonialism and spatial order in Togo 1884-1960
  • Colonial capitals as contested spaces Hanoi and
    Dakar 1880-1970

15
Research on current processes of globalization
  • Cultural identities and theatre in Tbilisi
    situating Georgia between East and West, between
    Asia and Europe
  • Santería as a transnational religion between
    Africa and Cuba
  • Offshore camps for migrants Australian and EU
    migration regimes
  • Transnational political activism of African
    diaspora DK UK
  • Conflict prevention in Africa the new formation
    of a Pan-African approach by the African Union
  • The transformation from coerced to free labour
    is there a strong connection between territorial
    regimes and the forms of labour they privilege?
  • Competition between North African and East
    European farm workers in Spain global value
    chains

16
Institutionalization and challenges of
multidisciplinarity
17
Transnational teaching programmes at the
University of Leipzig
18
Modularization in the Global Studies program
  • EU (Bologna process) homogenize European higher
    education by standards of 120 ECTS (credit
    points) for a two years MA 60 ECTS per year
  • Three modules per term à 10 ECTS
  • First term - introduction to Global History,
    Theories of globalization in the Social Sciences,
    Methods in globalization research
  • Second and third term research seminars with
    regional focus
  • Fourth term seminars on economic and cultural
    dimensions of globalization plus Master thesis
    and colloquium
  • Summer school with all students from 4 places of
    study and with international guest scholars

19
Challenges of multidisciplinarity
  • Integration of faculty from 12 disciplines
  • Organizational patterns From voluntary
    cooperation in a center to more coordinated
    research in a Global and European Studies
    Institute
  • Transnational integration of complementary
    approaches and academic cultures
  • Evaluation against the standards of traditional
    disciplines often misleading if not confronted to
    open competition
  • High emphasis as store-sign for universities
    focusing on problems of globalization against
    non-consideration for rankings based on classical
    disciplines

20
Conclusions
  • Seeing globalization through the lenses of the
    spatial turn is one approach among others, but it
    has a high potential to solve the problem of
    theoretical and methodological integration
  • A global consortium representing approaches with
    the ambition to integrate global studies from a
    post-disciplinary perspective can help to
    overcome the challenges raised by the necessary
    multi-disciplinarity of the field
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