ABSTRACT
In recent decades, the rise of world markets and the technological revolutions in transportation and communication have brought what was once distant and inaccessible within easy reach of the individual. The territorial and social closure that characterized nation-states is fading, and this is reflected not only in new forms of governance and economic globalization, but also in individual mobility and transnational transactions, affiliations and networks. Social Transnationalism explores new forms of cross-border interactions and mobility which have expanded across physical space by looking at the individual level. It asks whether we are dealing with unbridled movements and cross-border interactions which transform the lifeworlds of individuals fundamentally. Furthermore, it investigates whether, and to what degree, increases in the volume of transnational interactions weaken the individual citizen's bond to the nation-state as such, and to what extent citizens' national identities are being replaced or complemented by cosmopolitan ones
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |4 pages
Introduction
part |2 pages
Part 1 From national containers to transnational social spaces
chapter |4 pages
The nation-state as container?
chapter |6 pages
Globalization, de-nationalization, and world society
chapter |7 pages
Transnationalism and transmigration
chapter |9 pages
Transnationalization from below
chapter |6 pages
From presence to absence
chapter |6 pages
Spaces and networks of border-crossing
part |4 pages
Part 2 The cartography of transnational social relations
chapter |7 pages
The geographic range of German transnational social networks
chapter |7 pages
Family networks: Closeness with distance
chapter |8 pages
Mobility across borders
chapter |7 pages
Student mobility on the global campus
chapter |5 pages
International tourism: People on the move
chapter |8 pages
Transnationalization of the immobile
part |2 pages
Part 3 Transnationalism and the new cosmopolitanism
chapter |5 pages
The cosmopolitan perspective
chapter |5 pages
Attribution of responsibility
chapter |6 pages
Attitudes toward foreigners
chapter |6 pages
Transnational trust
chapter |5 pages
Identity: From national to supranational?
chapter |5 pages
Globalization: Threat or promise?
part |2 pages
Part 4 Unequal transnationalism
chapter |2 pages
Fragmentation through transnationalism?
chapter |8 pages
Transnationalism of the masses or of the elites?
chapter |5 pages
Divided transnationalism: West versus East?
chapter |5 pages
Global city and provincial province?
chapter |6 pages
Younger generations as movers of social transnationalism
chapter |4 pages
Gender and transnational involvement
part |2 pages
Part 5 Conclusion