Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global
Assemblages. By Saskia Sassen. Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2006. 502p. $35.00.
The globalization literature has now reached a level of maturity that
allows one to distinguish between different schools of thought.
Whereas the first two stages broadly dealt with the process at large
(its development and manifestation), the latest generation of
scholarship seems mostly concerned with its current and future
governance. Saskia Sassen's latest contribution to this dialogue is
similar to Andrew Drainville's recent volume (Contesting
Globalization, 2004) for which she wrote the
introduction. Both defend the need to situate the globalization
discourse in concrete locations to gain a fuller understanding of
it. More specifically, in Territory, Authority, Rights: From
Medieval to Global Assemblages, Sassen presents an
extensively developed criticism of the globalization literature.
Sassen argues that both critics and proponents of the globalization
concept in its latest iteration miss crucial developments of the
transformative processes captured by the term “globalization” in
their focus on established actors and institutional forms. She
argues for the need to situate globalization more concretely and
broadly, in terms of both space and place (i.e.,
territory), and for the establishment of new
organizing logics, which manifest themselves in new combinations of
authority and rights. Even
though Sassen builds on her previous scholarship, this is a novel
work—and a most welcome and important contribution to this field, as
she not only points out the shortcomings of existing approaches, but
provides a well-theorized proposition on how to remedy them.