
The four articles compiled in Countergeographies of Globalization represent a further development of some of the already classic themes in the work of this University of Chicago sociologist. They place us, in particular, before one of the Gordian knots in debates about globalization: the (paradoxical) relationship between the transnational impulse implicit in economic processes and the decline or, as Saskia Sassen suggests, the transformation of the role of nation-states. This problem is interwoven here with another field of reflection that has progressively captured the author's attention and that refers to the emergence of new territories, subjects, and political practices. The key issues of migration and the feminization of survival and their insertion into global circuits of work, law, or politics do not constitute, in this sense, mere effects or more or less problematic consequen...read more