A view of history advocated by American sociologist Immanuel Wallerstein and others since the mid-1970s. It argues that the modern world is governed economically by a single, global division of labor system, and that the economies of individual countries can only function as components of this global system. This view is based on the concept of the "economic world" of French historian Franck Braudel, and the ideas of the "dependency" school (dependency theory) of Third World history, such as A.G. Frank and S. Amin. Source: Heibonsha World Encyclopedia, 2nd Edition Information |
アメリカの社会学者ウォラーステインImmanuel Wallersteinらが1970年代半ば以降に唱えた歴史観。近代世界が経済的には単一の,グローバルな分業体制に覆われており,諸国の経済は,この世界システムの構成要素としてしか機能しえないとする。このような見方は,フランスの歴史家F.ブローデルの〈経済世界〉という概念や,第三世界史におけるA.G.フランクやS.アミンら〈従属〉派(従属論)の発想が前提になっている。
出典 株式会社平凡社世界大百科事典 第2版について 情報 |
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