Influences World-systems theory traces emerged in the 1970s. The
Annales School tradition, represented most notably by
Fernand Braudel, influenced Wallerstein to focus on
long-term processes and geo-ecological regions as
units of analysis.
Marxism added a stress on
social conflict, a focus on the
capital accumulation process and competitive
class struggles, a focus on a relevant totality, the transitory nature of social forms and a
dialectical sense of motion through conflict and contradiction. World-systems theory was also significantly influenced by
dependency theory, a
neo-Marxist explanation of development processes. Other influences on the world-systems theory come from scholars such as
Karl Polanyi,
Nikolai Kondratiev and
Joseph Schumpeter. These scholars researched
business cycles and developed concepts of three basic modes of economic organization: reciprocal, redistributive, and market modes. Wallerstein reframed these concepts into a discussion of mini systems, world empires, and world economies. Wallerstein sees the development of the capitalist world economy as detrimental to a large proportion of the world's population. Wallerstein views the period since the 1970s as an "age of transition" that will give way to a future world system (or world systems) whose configuration cannot be determined in advance. Other world-systems thinkers include
Oliver Cox,
Samir Amin,
Giovanni Arrighi, and
Andre Gunder Frank, with major contributions by
Christopher Chase-Dunn,
Beverly Silver,
Janet Abu Lughod,
Li Minqi,
Kunibert Raffer, and others. During the Industrial Revolution, for example, English capitalists exploited slaves (unfree workers) in the cotton zones of the American South, a peripheral region within a semiperipheral country, United States. From a largely Weberian perspective,
Fernando Henrique Cardoso described the main tenets of dependency theory as follows: • There is a financial and technological penetration of the
periphery and
semi-periphery countries by the developed capitalist
core countries. • That produces an unbalanced economic structure within the peripheral societies and between them and the central countries. • That leads to limitations upon self-sustained growth in the periphery. • That helps the appearance of specific patterns of class relations. • They require modifications in the role of the state to guarantee the functioning of the economy and the political articulation of a society, which contains, within itself, foci of inarticulateness and structural imbalance. Dependency and world system theory propose that the
poverty and backwardness of poor countries are caused by their peripheral position in the international
division of labor. Since the capitalist world system evolved, the distinction between the central and the peripheral states has grown and diverged. In recognizing a tripartite pattern in the division of labor, world-systems analysis criticized
dependency theory with its bimodal system of only cores and peripheries.
Immanuel Wallerstein The best-known version of the world-systems approach was developed by
Immanuel Wallerstein. Wallerstein notes that world-systems analysis calls for a unidisciplinary historical social science and contends that the modern disciplines, products of the 19th century, are deeply flawed because they are not separate logics, as is manifest for example in the
de facto overlap of analysis among scholars of the disciplines. Wallerstein offers several definitions of a
world-system, defining it in 1974 briefly: He also offered a longer definition: In 1987, Wallerstein again defined it: Wallerstein characterizes the world system as a set of mechanisms, which redistributes surplus value from the
periphery to the
core. In his terminology, the
core is the developed,
industrialized part of the world, and the
periphery is the "
underdeveloped", typically raw materials-exporting, poor part of the world; the
market being the means by which the
core exploits the
periphery. Apart from them, Wallerstein defines four temporal features of the world system.
Cyclical rhythms represent the short-term fluctuation of
economy, and
secular trends mean deeper long run tendencies, such as general
economic growth or decline. The term
contradiction means a general controversy in the system, usually concerning some short term versus long term tradeoffs. For example, the problem of
underconsumption, wherein the driving down of wages increases the profit for capitalists in the short term, but in the long term, the decreasing of wages may have a crucially harmful effect by reducing the demand for the product. The last temporal feature is the
crisis: a crisis occurs if a constellation of circumstances brings about the end of the system. In Wallerstein's view, there have been three kinds of historical systems across human history: "mini-systems" or what anthropologists call bands, tribes, and small chiefdoms, and two types of world-systems, one that is politically unified and the other is not (single state world
empires and multi-polity world economies). World-systems are larger, and are ethnically diverse. The modern world-system, a capitalist world-economy, is unique in being the first and only world-system, which emerged around 1450 to 1550, to have
geographically expanded across the entire planet, by about 1900. It is defined, as a world-economy, in having many political units tied together as an
interstate system and through its division of labor based on capitalist enterprises. == Importance ==