world-systems theory
[[Immanuel Wallerstein]]. He actually called it world-systems analysis.
World-systems analysis crystallized in the aftermath of [[1968]]. People across the globe took to the streets, fighting against US military aggression and for a renewal and reconfiguration of the founding principles of the [[Russian Revolution]]. The worldwide upsurge was short-lived, but its legacy was unexpectedly powerful, particularly in the academy
– [[The Brilliant Immanuel Wallerstein Was an Anticapitalist Until the End]]
By the end of the sixties, widespread dissatisfaction with dominant modes of thinking had spread among radical scholars. Indeed, world-systems analysis was just one of a number of dissident frameworks (dependency theory, international political economy, historical sociology) that emerged around that time
– [[The Brilliant Immanuel Wallerstein Was an Anticapitalist Until the End]]
- public document at doc.anagora.org/world-systems-theory
- video call at meet.jit.si/world-systems-theory
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