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- W1583145126 abstract "Mapping Global Inequality with World Society Theory and Social Structural Analysis – Can Worlds Meet? Mathias Albert and Martin Diewald, Bielefeld University (mathias.albert@uni-bielefeld.de, martin.diewald@uni-bielefeld.de) Paper prepared for the Mapping Global Inequality-Conference, UC Santa Cruz, 13-14 December 2007 Very much exploratory work in progress: Please do not cite or quote without permission Inequality, on both local and national levels as well as globally, cannot be reduced to income inequality. While this insight is less and less disputed in scientific and policy debates, and probably best exemplified in the comprehensive approach on inequality taken by the World Bank in its 2006 World Development Report (World Bank 2005), a wide and multi-faceted understanding particularly of global inequality creates a vast array of analytical problems. These problems can roughly be divided into problems of empirical analysis related to the issue of data availability on the one, and theoretical issues regarding the proper unit of analysis on the global level on the other hand. While for practical purposes these two sets of problems can and indeed need to be addressed separately, they are of course nonetheless intrinsically related to each other as expressions of what Ulrich Beck has appropriately termed ‘methodological nationalism’ (see, for example, Beck 2002). This term refers to the close link between, and indeed the constitutive role of, the modern nation-state as the prime unit of analysis both regarding the collection of relevant social data on the one, as well as in relation to the formulation of conceptual accounts of global inequality on the other hand. Regarding the issue of data collection and availability, both data on income and other aspects of global inequality rely primarily on aggregates of national aggregate data. Very little or no data is available if the prime units of reference are ‘transnational’ social spaces which cross-cut national boundaries or even are characterized by being embedded in different localities spread around the globe (e.g. transnational migrant communities). The problem is aggravated if the relevant data sought for transnational or global contexts extends beyond standardized national data into more complex panel data used for analyzing the formation of inequality in social structure analysis. Here, even standardized panel data extending beyond a few countries remain more the exception than the rule. Representative data sets pertaining to a larger number of countries, let alone to all countries, do not exist or arguably are troubled by conceptual and methodological problems." @default.
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- W1583145126 date "2007-12-04" @default.
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- W1583145126 title "Mapping Global Inequality with World Society Theory and Social Structural Analysis - Can Worlds Meet?" @default.
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