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3,635 result(s) for "Center and periphery"
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Understanding the growing contributions of China to leading international higher education journals
International publications in social sciences by scholars based in mainland China have been increasing in volume, but little is known about the characteristics of China’s contribution. This study examines the characteristics and patterns of international publications by Chinese scholars in higher education research. Data from three internationalized higher education journals were analyzed from 2000 to 2022. The results show a consistent pattern of continuous growth in the annual number of published articles with Chinese affiliations, with a marked increase since 2016. International collaborations are the most common type of publication, a pattern that contrasts with other articles in the same journal. In addition, returnee scholars have made significant contributions to international publications. Finally, the research of Chinese scholars is as influential as that of their international peers in terms of citation counts. These findings highlight the constrained agency of Chinese actors in the center-periphery structure of the global knowledge production networks.
China ‘goes out’ in a centre–periphery world
The current expansion of English language publishing by scholars from China is supported by national and university policies, including monetary and career incentives to publish in English. These incentives, which extend to work in the humanities and social sciences (HSS, the focus of this paper) as well as the sciences and technologies, are situated in evolving strategies of internationalization. China has moved from an internationalization strategy simply based on learning from the West, to a ‘going out’ strategy designed to both lift domestic research capacity and advance China’s influence in the world. However, the ‘going out’ strategy nonetheless embodies ambiguities and dilemmas. The world of academic knowledge is not a level playing field but more closely approximates the centre–periphery dynamic described in world systems theory. This study explores the influence of publication incentives in the context of a centre–periphery world. It draws on analysis of 172 institutional incentive documents and interviews with 75 HSS academics, university senior administrators, and journal editors. The study identifies practices within China’s HSS that reproduce centre–periphery relationships. By focusing on international publications, Chinese universities run the risk of downplaying Chinese-language publications and adopting standards and norms from global centres to assess domestic knowledge production. These could result in creating knowledge from and about China primarily in Western terms without adding a distinctive Chinese strand to the global conversation. Nonetheless, the study also identifies alternative dynamics that challenge the existing power hierarchies in global HSS, highlighting indigenous knowledge and the need to pluralize global knowledge production.
From dominance to autonomy: core-periphery dynamics in Tirana's municipality
The theory of territorial dependence and dominance has appeared since the development of world capitalism, referring to \"core countries\" and \"peripheral countries\". Initially, the countries were identified as “dominant” or “dependent” based on their economic and military development. A dominant state was characterized by a high level of economic and military development. These factors defined the country’s competitiveness and status compared to less developed ones. On the other hand, the territories that were distant from the “centre” area were considered as underdeveloped countries. Nowadays the concepts of dependence and dominance have broadened. A developed country could not compete solely based on the economic or military prowess. Other dimensions such as social, technological, innovative, etc. are taken into consideration. As for Albania, this dominant role is played by the capital, in relation to the other urban centres. Referring to a lower local level, until now, the urban area of Tirana has had a dominant role compared to its peripheries. However, this territory is facing new dynamics which are affecting the decentralization of the centre and the creation of new attractive poles. Some of the reasons why the municipality of Tirana is showing new features of the core–periphery model is related to the locally-oriented development, the need of territorial recomposing and planning, and the need for the expansion and management of the territory. The current trends are highlighting the potential of the peripheral territories to become autonomous from the centre, leading to a new configuration of the core–periphery model in the municipality of Tirana.
Is Management and Organizational Studies divided into (micro-)tribes?
Many claims have been made in the past that Management and Organization Studies (MOS) is becoming increasingly fragmented, and that this fragmentation is causing it to drift into self-reference and irrelevance. Despite the weight of this claim, it has not yet been subjected to a systematic empirical test. This paper addresses this research gap using the tribalization approach and diachronic co-citation analyses. Based on 22,430 papers published in 14 MOS journals between 1980 and 2019, we calculate local and global centrality measures and the flow of cited articles between co-citation communities over time. In addition, we use a node-removal strategy to test whether only ritualized citations ensure MOS cohesion. Rather than tribalization, our results suggest a center–periphery structure. Furthermore, more peripheral papers are integrated into the central co-citation communities, but the lion's share of the flow of cited papers occurs over time to only a small number of large clusters. An increase of fragmentation and crowding-out of smaller clusters in MOS in seen in the polycentrically organized core 2014–2019.
Ferry services and the community development of peripheral island areas in Hong Kong: Evidence from Cheung Chau
The history of Hong Kong ferry services began with the establishment of the colony of the British Empire after the Treaty of Nanking. The ferry system was the foundation of public transport in Hong Kong. This study adopts the concept of centre-periphery theory to explain how ferry services facilitate regional integration in Hong Kong, notably on Outlying Islands, and describe how better transportation influenced the course of development of the communities of the peripheral islands. Through an intensive documentary investigation and in-depth interviews with the islanders, this study undertakes a historical approach to study the evolution of the Hong Kong ferry services throughout the last two centuries, and to see the prospects of its development, particularly the services for the Outlying Islands, in the postcolonial Special Administrative Region. Our main concerns include the significance of ferry services in maintenance, and the economic development and social welfare in the Outlying Islands. The slow decline of Hong Kong ferry services since the 1970s notwithstanding, the study addressed how and why ferry services in Hong Kong are still important to keep the city intact, while giving the islanders some new choices of self-identity and of staying in their peripheral home.
Chinese universities’ special programs supporting talents to seek a United Nations career: a center-periphery-model analysis
In recent years, China’s higher education sector has started to establish special programs to train and support talents to seek career opportunities in the United Nations (UN). To explore these special programs and understand their relationship with China’s internationalization strategies and its higher education, we used the center-periphery model as the theoretical framework. We analyzed 53 institutional documents and conducted semi-structured interviews among 5 university staff members and 21 students/recent graduates who were involved in these special programs. The analysis on the special programs implied Chinese higher education’s peripheral position in supporting talents to work in the UN. This was reflected by the conforming practice, including accepting current UN recruitment regulations and English’s dominance in the UN recruitment practice. However, we also identified alternative dynamics that China and its higher education do not simply obey the center-periphery model and accept their peripheral status. Instead, special programs were established to achieve China’s global strategy of moving to the center of international arena via multilateralism and international organizations such as the UN. This study sheds light on further explorations of the state-university relationship in China in the globalization era, especially from the perspective of cultural diplomacy and soft power.
Structure, Strategy and Self in Cultural Peripheries: Theorizing the Periphery in the Polish and Dutch Fashion Fields
This article analyzes the creation of value in (semi-)peripheral fields, using interview (N=94) and ethnographic data of creatives, models and cultural intermediaries in Polish and Dutch fashion. Drawing on field theory and center-periphery theories we show that these peripheral fields have a distinct structure—peripheral worlds—marked by the dependence on foreign centers for goods, standards and consecration, in which actors employ field-specific peripheral strategies for pursuing value and success. Workers in the (semi-)periphery develop peripheral selves, marked by a “double consciousness”, simultaneously seeing themselves from a local perspective and through the eyes of “central” others. We theorize “peripheralness” as a dimension of social inequality, a continuum ranging from “most central” to “most peripheral”, that spring from transnational interdependencies; and offer building blocks for a theory of the periphery that connects structural conditions and personal experiences. This theory explains, among others, why peripheries are not the reverse of centers, why centers also need peripheries (though not as much as peripheries need centers), and why peripheral and semi-peripheral actors don’t leave for cultural hubs to “make it there”.
Sustainable development: Theory and some simple simulations
This paper develops a unified framework to analyze the environmental, social, and economic dimensions of sustainable development within the context of a centerperiphery international system. It introduces a three-gap model to address the challenges posed by the discrepancies among three key growth rates: the maximum growth rate compatible with external equilibrium, the minimum growth rate required for social inclusion, and the maximum growth rate consistent with environmental sustainability. Using updated theoretical and empirical insights, the paper applies the model to Latin American economies, highlighting the structural constraints and opportunities for achieving sustainable development in peripheral regions. By quantifying the interactions between technological capabilities, green investments, and social inclusion policies, the study offers policy recommendations to foster balanced and inclusive growth paths aligned with global sustainability commitments.
Guano and the Rise of the American Empire
Ecological imperialism refers to the center’s robbery of nature from the periphery, emphasizing the ecological dimension of trade, often overshadowed by monetary concerns. Examining historical cases like the nineteenth-century guano trade between Peru and Europe reveals this dynamic, wherein the involvement of the United States has been often overlooked. Utilizing archival data from British, French, Peruvian, and U.S. sources, I demonstrate how guano served as an ecological foundation for U.S. expansion overseas starting in the 1850s. This includes the significance of guano islands as the first U.S. overseas territories, considerations of annexing South American islands for guano, and the role of guano in partly inspiring the construction of the Panama Canal. Overall, the guano trade exemplifies an imperial-ecological process that reshaped global legal, geopolitical, and trade systems. Additionally, I discuss the contemporary relevance of this history, particularly concerning lithium, emphasizing the importance of prioritizing ecology in center-periphery analyses.
Exchange rate dynamics in a peripheral monetary economy
This paper discusses exchange rate behavior in what we call a peripheral monetary economy. First, it analyzes the essential properties of an open monetary economy, stressing the notions of assets' own rates of interest, liquidity preference, uncertainty, and conventions. The paper also approaches the historical and institutional peculiarities associated with the way in which peripheral economies are integrated into the existing international monetary and financial system (so-called financial globalization in the post-Bretton Woods era), and reappraises the idea of \"peripheral condition.\" Against this background, it examines the characteristics of exchange rate behavior in these economies.