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Saskia Sassen Information

Saskia Sassen (born in The Hague, January 5, 1949) is a Dutch sociologist noted for her analyses of globalization and international human migration. She is currently Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology at Columbia University and Centennial visiting Professor at the London School of Economics. Sassen coined the term global city. She is married to the sociologist Richard Sennett.

Contents

Family and early life

Sassen grew up in Buenos Aires, Argentina, where her parents Willem Sassen and Miep van der Voort moved in 1950. She also spent a part of her youth in Italy and says she was "brought up in five languages."[1]

Education

From 1966, Sassen spent a year each at the Université de Poitiers, France, the Università degli Studi di Roma, and the Universidad de Buenos Aires, for studies in philosophy and political science. From 1969, Sassen studied sociology and economics at the University of Notre Dame, Indiana, where she obtained M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in 1971 and 1974, respectively. In addition, she obtained a French master's degree in philosophy in Poitiers in 1974.

Thought

In The Mobility of Labor and Capital, Sassen explores recent human migrations and attempts to elaborate a theoretical framework that will clarify the causes of human migration. Central to her argument is the concept that the need for capital re-composition during a crisis of accumulation entails a corresponding re-composition of labor. In other words, when capitalist corporations are unable to sustain a sufficient level of surplus extraction, they are forced to re-organize the productive process in order to maintain levels of profitability and necessarily causing great spatial shift in the arrangement of labor (human migration). This could include disciplining labor by breaking the strength of industrial unions, producing technological innovations that cut the costs of production (by lowering the dependence on labor, deskilling labor, or increasing the speed of production), or finding alternative sources of labor. This final strategy includes both the attraction of immigrant labor from the global periphery to the industrialized world to serve as workers as well as the physical decentralization of industrial production to Export Processing Zones (EPZs) in the periphery. The strategy of these EPZs is that they tend to employ young women who were previously unwaged workers because they are the most docile form of labor. The social result of this productive arrangement is higher unemployment for men as well as a disruption of "traditional" ways of social reproduction, leading to an increasing pool of potential workers who are "rootless" and oriented ideologically to Western consumer culture.

Academic posts

After being a post-doctoral fellow at the Center for International Affairs at Harvard University, Sassen held various academic positions both in and outside the USA, such as the Ralph Lewis Professor of Sociology at the University of Chicago. She is currently Robert S. Lynd Professor of Sociology at Columbia University and Centennial Visiting Professor of Political Economy in the Department of Sociology at the London School of Economics.

During the 1980s and 1990s, Sassen emerged as a prolific author in urban sociology. She studied the impacts of globalisation such as economic restructuring, and how the movements of labour and capital influence urban life. She also studied the influence of communication technology on governance. Sassen observed how nation states begin to lose power to control these developments, and she studied increasing general transnationalism, including transnational human migration. She identified and described the phenomenon of the global city. Her 1991 book bearing this title quickly made her a frequently quoted author on globalisation worldwide. A revised and updated edition of her book was published in 2001. She currently (2006) is pursuing her research and writing on immigration and globalization, with her "denationalization" and "transnationalism" projects (see Bibliography and External Links, below). Sassen's books have been translated into 21 languages.

Authored books

Edited books

Book chapters

Articles

"What happens when we look at the history of immigration for clues about what is a constraint and what is a possibility? Historical demography shows us that all European societies have incorporated foreign immigrant groups and that it has often taken no more than a few generations to turn them into a community that can experience solidarity..."

"Yesterday's attack brings home the fact that we cannot hide behind our peace and prosperity. The evidence has been growing but our leaders did not want to see it. The horrors of wars and deaths far away in the global south do not register. But missile shields cannot protect us. Powerful states cannot fully escape bricolage terrorism, nail bombs, elementary nuclear devices, and homemade biological weapons.
"The attacks are a language of last resort: the oppressed and persecuted have used many languages to reach us so far, but we seem unable to translate the meaning. So a few have taken the personal responsibility to speak in a language that needs no translation.
"The growth of debt and unemployment, and the decline of traditional economic sectors, has fed an illegal trade in people..."
"...the debate about whether or not to allow the entry of foreign hi-tech workers is but one element of a far broader and more fundamental reconfiguring of specialised labour markets under the impact of economic globalisation."

Dissertations

Interviews

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ Wroeten in de mondiale stad (Dutch)
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Name Sassen, Saskia
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Date of birth 1949
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Categories: 1949 births | Academics of the London School of Economics | American sociologists | Living people | University of Notre Dame alumni | Columbia University faculty | People from The Hague

 

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April 2009 - e-South Hic et Nunc - Blog Le Monde.
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April 2009 - e-South Hic et Nunc - Blog Le Monde.
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