## Abstract As global interconnections have increased in our current era, many social scientists are placing added emphasis on immigration studies and rethinking migration processes. This paper offers a preliminary response to the call for more empirical, but theoretically grounded, work on โtransn
Toward a transnational history of the social sciences
โ Scribed by Johan Heilbron; Nicolas Guilhot; Laurent Jeanpierre
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 122 KB
- Volume
- 44
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5061
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Historical accounts of the social sciences have too often accepted local or national instituโtions as a selfโevident framework of analysis, instead of considering them as being embedโded in transnational relations of various kinds. Evolving patterns of transnational mobility and exchange cut through the neat distinction between the local, the national, and the interโnational, and thus represent an essential component in the dynamics of the social sciences, as well as a fruitful perspective for rethinking their historical development. In this proโgrammatic outline, it is argued that a transnational history of the social sciences may be fruitfully understood on the basis of three general mechanisms, which have structured the transnational flows of people and ideas in decisive ways: (a) the functioning of international scholarly institutions, (b) the transnational mobility of scholars, and (c) the politics of transโnational exchange of nonacademic institutions. The article subsequently examines and illustrates each of these mechanisms. ยฉ 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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