04698oam 2200505 450 991063989550332120230921164359.09783031220678(electronic bk.)9783031220661(MiAaPQ)EBC7165961(Au-PeEL)EBL7165961(CKB)25913960400041(EXLCZ)992591396040004120230429d2023 uy 0engurcz#---auuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierCapitalism and Migration The Rise of Hegemony in the World-System /Nestor RodriguezCham, Switzerland :Springer,[2023]©20231 online resource (220 pages)World-Systems Evolution and Global Futures SeriesPrint version: Rodriguez, Nestor Capitalism and Migration Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2023 9783031220661 Includes bibliographical references.Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- 1 Migration and Hegemony in the World-System -- 1.1 Medieval Migrations -- 1.2 Development of the Capitalist World-Economy -- 1.3 Capital and Labor Migration and Capitalist Expansion -- 1.4 Hegemony and Migration -- 1.5 Analytical Perspectives -- References -- 2 Capital Migration and Florentine Dominance in the European Medieval Wool Industry -- 2.1 Business Migration, Papal Revenue Collection, and Capital Accumulation -- 2.2 Three Major European Areas of Woolen Production -- 2.3 Capitalist Production and Class Structure in the Woolen Industry -- 2.3.1 Emergence of Merchant-Capitalists -- 2.3.2 Expropriation of Artisan Production -- 2.3.3 Development of Propertyless Wage Workforces -- 2.3.4 Women in Woolen Work -- 2.4 Fleeing Harsh Economic Conditions -- 2.5 Migration and the Development of Medieval Capitalist Production -- 2.6 Conclusion -- References -- 3 Migration and Dutch Capitalist Development -- 3.1 Dutch Hegemony -- 3.1.1 Industrial Development -- 3.1.2 Commercial Expansion -- 3.2 Migration in the Northern Netherlands -- 3.2.1 Capital Migration in the Northern Netherlands -- 3.2.2 Labor Migration in the Northern Netherlands -- 3.3 Migration in the Periphery -- 3.3.1 East Indies -- 3.3.2 Atlantic Peripheral Zone -- 3.3.3 Colonizing Northeastern Brazil -- 3.3.4 Settlement in New Netherlands -- 3.3.5 Migration to the Caribbean -- 3.4 Indigenous Migration in the Periphery -- 3.5 Class Struggle -- 3.6 Technological Development -- 3.7 The Economic Cycle -- 3.8 The State -- 3.9 Conclusion-Interrelation of Migration -- References -- 4 British Hegemony and Migration -- 4.1 British Hegemony, 1815-1873 -- 4.1.1 "Workshop of the World" -- 4.2 Capital Migration -- 4.3 Labor Migration and Industrial Development -- 4.3.1 British Labor Migration -- 4.3.2 Irish Migration to Britain -- 4.3.3 Indentured-Labor Migration.4.4 Class Struggle and Migration -- 4.5 Technological Development -- 4.6 Economic Cycles -- 4.7 The State -- 4.8 Conclusion -- References -- 5 Monopoly Capital, US Hegemony, and Migration -- 5.1 Nineteenth-Century Prelude -- 5.2 Monopoly Development and US Hegemony -- 5.2.1 Restructuring in the United States -- 5.3 Circulation of US Capital to the Periphery -- 5.4 US Capital Expansion into Mexican Agriculture -- 5.5 Labor Migration and US Hegemony -- 5.5.1 Internal Migration -- 5.5.2 Racial Minority Migration -- 5.5.3 Mexican Bracero and Immigrant Labor -- 5.5.4 Jamaican Temporary Workers -- 5.6 Analysis -- 5.7 Class Relations -- 5.8 Technological Development -- 5.9 The Economic Cycle -- 5.10 The State -- 5.11 Conclusion -- References -- 6 Migration and Hegemonic Development -- 6.1 Discussion of Findings -- 6.1.1 Class Relations -- 6.1.2 Technological Development -- 6.1.3 The Economic Cycle -- 6.1.4 The State -- 6.2 Labor Migration and Work Segmentation -- 6.3 After US Hegemony -- 6.4 Future Migration in the World-System -- References.World-systems evolution and global futures.CapitalismHistoryEmigration and immigrationEconomic aspectsEmigration and immigrationPolitical aspectsHegemonyHistoryCapitalismHistory.Emigration and immigrationEconomic aspects.Emigration and immigrationPolitical aspects.HegemonyHistory.330.122Rodriguez Néstor1120971MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910639895503321Capitalism and Migration3003958UNINA