
Selected sociohistorical aspects relevant to the development of Jewish immigration, settlement, and community formation are analyzed. Conceptual formulations include globalization, diaspora studies, and transnationalism, aiming to highlight their achievements and drawbacks. After outlining several fundamental characteristics of the general continental societal environment and its internal differentiation, we critically discuss several theoretical approaches to a comparative assessment of the Jewish experience. O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.This paper analyzes the structures and trends of the establishment, growth, and transformation of the Jewish presence in the Americas. Get The Globalization and Development Reader: Perspectives on Development and Global Change, 2nd Edition now with the O’Reilly learning platform. And yet it seems reasonable to assume that there are significant links between globalization. Migrant women are just individuals making a go of it, after all, and the migration of workers from poor countries to wealthier ones long predates the current phase of economic globalization. The migration of maids, nannies, nurses, sex workers, and contract brides has little to do with globalization by these lights. In brief, the dominant narrative of globalization concerns itself with the upper circuits of global capital, not the lower ones, and with the hypermobility of capital rather than with capital that is bound to place. Globalization thus conceived privileges global transmission over the material infrastructure that makes it possible information over the workers who produce it, whether these be specialists or secretaries and the new transnational corporate culture over the other jobs upon which it rests, including many of those held by immigrants. Central to it are the global information economy, instant communication, and electronic markets – all realms within which place no longer makes a difference, and where the only type of worker who matters is the highly educated professional. This account of globalization is by far the dominant one. When today’s media, policy, and economic analysts define globalization, they emphasize hypermobility, international communication, and the neutralization of distance and place. 23 Global Cities and Survival Circuits (2002)
