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"\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \n \ \n \ \n \ \n \n \ \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n S1090-9516(10)00042-8\n \ sciversesciencedirect_elsevier\n \ TN_sciversesciencedirect_elsevierS1090-9516(10)00042-8\n \ Other\n \n \ \n article\n \ Multilingual organizations as ‘linguascapes’: Negotiating the position of English through discursive practices\n \ Steyaert, Chris ; Ostendorp, Anja ; Gaibrois, Claudine\n Journal of World Business, 2011, Vol.46(3), pp.270-278\n <b>ISSN: </b>1090-9516 ; <b>DOI: </b>10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003\n \ Globalization from below]]>\n \ To address the complexity of multilingual communication, this paper applies a discursive approach to analyze how people account for the ways that specific languages are used in multilingual companies. Through our discourse analysis, we identify six different ways of accounting for language use. Further, we map the various tensions between these accounts through which we can understand how the rise of English alters the discursive negotiation in two different organizational contexts. Inspired by Appadurai's understanding of “<span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span> <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> <span class=\"searchword\">below</span>”, we suggest the term linguascape to conceptualize how the flow of languages that cross a specific organizational space is discursively mediated.\n \ eng\n SciVerse ScienceDirect Journals\n peer_reviewed\n \ 3\n description\n \ globalization from below”, we suggest the term linguascape]]>\n \ \n \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003$$EView_record_in_SciVerse_ScienceDirect _Journals_(Elsevier)\n $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Steyaert, Chris\n Ostendorp, Anja\n Gaibrois, Claudine\n Multilingual organizations as ‘linguascapes’: Negotiating the position of English through discursive practices\n To address the complexity of multilingual communication, this paper applies a discursive approach to analyze how people account for the ways that specific languages are used in multilingual companies. Through our discourse analysis, we identify six different ways of accounting for language use. Further, we map the various tensions between these accounts through which we can understand how the rise of English alters the discursive negotiation in two different organizational contexts. Inspired by Appadurai's understanding of “globalization from below”, we suggest the term linguascape to conceptualize how the flow of languages that cross a specific organizational space is discursively mediated.\n \ Negotiated Multilingualism\n \ Discourse Analysis\n Linguascape\n \ Englishization\n Globalization From Below\n English\n \ 10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003\n SciVerse ScienceDirect Journals\n sciversesciencedirect_elsevier\n \ sciversesciencedirect_elsevierS1090-9516(10)00042-8\n \ 10909516\n 1090-9516\n \ article\n 2011\n \ Journal of World Business\n \ sciversesciencedirect_elsevier\n \ elsevier_sciencedirect\n \ sciversesciencedirect_elsevier\n \ elsevier_sciencedirect\n \n \ \n Multilingual organizations as ‘linguascapes’: Negotiating the position of English through discursive practices\n Steyaert, Chris ; Ostendorp, Anja ; Gaibrois, Claudine\n 20110000\n \ \n \n eng\n \ 2011\n Negotiated Multilingualism\n Discourse Analysis\n \ Linguascape\n Englishization\n \ Globalization From Below\n ScienceDirect (Elsevier)\n SciVerse ScienceDirect (Elsevier)\n articles\n \ articles\n Steyaert, Chris\n Ostendorp, Anja\n Gaibrois, Claudine\n Journal Of World Business\n peer_reviewed\n \ 8038343634252234115\n \ 5\n \n \ \n 2\n 2011\n \ 10909516\n 10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003\n \ 46\n 3\n \ 270\n journal of world business\n multilingual organizations as ‘linguascapes’ negotiating the position of english through discursive practices\n \ multilingualorganizatices\n multilingualorganizations\n \ chrissteyaert\n steyaertchris\n \ \n \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n publisher\n \ \n \n Steyaert\n \ Chris\n Steyaert, Chris\n Ostendorp, Anja\n Gaibrois, Claudine\n Multilingual organizations as ‘linguascapes’: Negotiating the position of English through discursive practices\n Journal of World Business\n \ 2011\n 2011\n \ 46\n 3\n \ 270\n 278\n \ 270-278\n 1090-9516\n \ article\n JOUR\n \ To address the complexity of multilingual communication, this paper applies a discursive approach to analyze how people account for the ways that specific languages are used in multilingual companies. Through our discourse analysis, we identify six different ways of accounting for language use. Further, we map the various tensions between these accounts through which we can understand how the rise of English alters the discursive negotiation in two different organizational contexts. Inspired by Appadurai's understanding of “globalization from below”, we suggest the term linguascape to conceptualize how the flow of languages that cross a specific organizational space is discursively mediated.\n 10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003\n \ \n \n \n \ S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n S1090-9516(10)00042-8&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003\n \ \n S1090-9516(10)00042-8&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \ \n \n 581Annals48\n \ lexisnexis_lawreviews\n TN_lexisnexis_lawreviews581Annals48\n \ Other\n \n \ \n article\n \ Globalization from Below: Toward a Collectively Rational and Democratic Global Commonwealth]]>\n \ Christopher Chase-Dunn\n 581 Annals 48 (2002)\n <b>ISSN: </b>0002-7162 ; <b>EISSN: </b>1552-3349\n Sociopolitical; \ Opportunities; Institutional; Transnational; International; Semiperiphery; \ Institutions; Intermediate; Economically; Hierarchical; Governments\n \ THE world-systems perspective is a historical and structural theoretical framework that analyzes national societies as parts of a larger stratified sociopolitical and economic system (Shannon 1996). The focus is on the structural features of the larger system itself. It is a world economy with a hierarchical division of labor for the production of different kinds of goods. There are economically and militarily powerful countries in the core, dependent, and dominated regions in the periphery, and a middle sector of countries (the semiperiphery) in which states have intermediate levels of economic and political/military power. The world market includes both international trade and all the national economies, so the world-system is the whole system, not just international relations. Local, regional, national, international, transnational, and global networks of interaction constitute the world-system. This set of nested and overlapping networks of human interaction is itself located in the biosphere and the physical regimes of the planet Earth, the solar system, our galaxy, and the larger processes and structures of the physical universe. The world-systems perspective is both materialist and institutional. It analyzes the evolution of human institutions while taking account of the constraints and opportunities posed by physics, biology, and the natural environment (Chase-Dunn and Hall 1997). WORLD-SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE The modern world-system is a global set of interaction networks that include all the national societies. But world-systems have not always been global. The modern world-system originated out of an expanding multicore Afro-Eurasian world-system in which the Europeans rose ...\n Academic Law Reviews (LexisNexis®)\n peer_reviewed\n \ title\n Globalization from Below: Toward a Collectively Rational and Democratic Global Commonwealth]]>\n \n \ \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Uhttp://www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/lnacademic/?verb=sr&csi=7327&sr=cite(581+Annals+48)$$EView_record_in_LexisNexis&#174;(subscribers_only)\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Christopher Chase-Dunn\n Globalization from Below: Toward a Collectively Rational and Democratic Global Commonwealth]]>\n THE world-systems perspective is a historical and structural theoretical framework that analyzes national societies as parts of a larger stratified sociopolitical and economic system (Shannon 1996). The focus is on the structural features of the larger system itself. It is a world economy with a hierarchical division of labor for the production of different kinds of goods. There are economically and militarily powerful countries in the core, dependent, and dominated regions in the periphery, and a middle sector of countries (the semiperiphery) in which states have intermediate levels of economic and political/military power. The world market includes both international trade and all the national economies, so the world-system is the whole system, not just international relations. Local, regional, national, international, transnational, and global networks of interaction constitute the world-system. This set of nested and overlapping networks of human interaction is itself located in the biosphere and the physical regimes of the planet Earth, the solar system, our galaxy, and the larger processes and structures of the physical universe. The world-systems perspective is both materialist and institutional. It analyzes the evolution of human institutions while taking account of the constraints and opportunities posed by physics, biology, and the natural environment (Chase-Dunn and Hall 1997). WORLD-SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE The modern world-system is a global set of interaction networks that include all the national societies. But world-systems have not always been global. The modern world-system originated out of an expanding multicore Afro-Eurasian world-system in which the Europeans rose ...\n \ Sociopolitical\n Opportunities\n \ Institutional\n Transnational\n \ International\n Semiperiphery\n \ Institutions\n Intermediate\n \ Economically\n Hierarchical\n \ Governments\n lexisnexis_lawreviews\n \ lexisnexis_lawreviews581Annals48\n \ 0002-7162\n 00027162\n \ 1552-3349\n 15523349\n \ article\n 2002\n \ Annals\n Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science\n \ lexisnexis_lawreviews\n \ lexisnexis_alawr\n lexisnexis_lawreviews\n \ lexisnexis_alawr\n \n \ \n Globalization from Below: Toward a Collectively Rational and Democratic Global Commonwealth\n \ Christopher Chase-Dunn\n 20020501\n \ \n \n 2002\n \ Sociopolitical\n Opportunities\n \ Institutional\n Transnational\n \ International\n Semiperiphery\n \ Institutions\n Intermediate\n \ Economically\n Hierarchical\n \ Governments\n Academic Law Reviews (LexisNexis)\n articles\n \ articles\n By Christopher Chase-Dunn\n Annals Of The American Academy Of Political And Social Science\n peer_reviewed\n \ 558362689\n 6\n \ \n \n 2\n \ 2002\n 00027162\n \ 15523349\n 581\n \ 48\n annals of the american academy of political social science\n globalization from below toward collectively rational democratic global commonwealth\n \ globalizationfrombelealth\n globalizationfrombelowtow\n \ bychristopherchasedunn\n bychristopherchasedunn\n \ \n \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n aggregator\n \ \n \n By Christopher Chase-Dunn\n Globalization from Below: Toward a Collectively Rational and Democratic Global Commonwealth\n \ Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science\n 20020501\n \ 20020501\n 581\n \ 48\n 172\n \ 0002-7162\n 1552-3349\n \ article\n JOUR\n \ THE world-systems perspective is a historical and structural theoretical framework that analyzes national societies as parts of a larger stratified sociopolitical and economic system (Shannon 1996). The focus is on the structural features of the larger system itself. It is a world economy with a hierarchical division of labor for the production of different kinds of goods. There are economically and militarily powerful countries in the core, dependent, and dominated regions in the periphery, and a middle sector of countries (the semiperiphery) in which states have intermediate levels of economic and political/military power. The world market includes both international trade and all the national economies, so the world-system is the whole system, not just international relations. Local, regional, national, international, transnational, and global networks of interaction constitute the world-system. This set of nested and overlapping networks of human interaction is itself located in the biosphere and the physical regimes of the planet Earth, the solar system, our galaxy, and the larger processes and structures of the physical universe. The world-systems perspective is both materialist and institutional. It analyzes the evolution of human institutions while taking account of the constraints and opportunities posed by physics, biology, and the natural environment (Chase-Dunn and Hall 1997). WORLD-SYSTEMS PERSPECTIVE The modern world-system is a global set of interaction networks that include all the national societies. But world-systems have not always been global. The modern world-system originated out of an expanding multicore Afro-Eurasian world-system in which the Europeans rose ...\n \n \ \n \n S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 581Annals48&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ http://www.lexisnexis.com/hottopics/lnacademic/?verb=sr&csi=7327&sr=cite(581+Annals+48)\n \ \n 581Annals48&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 67161994\n \ gale_ofa\n TN_gale_ofa67161994\n \ XML\n Other\n \ \n \n article\n \ Globalization From Below : INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY IS THE KEY TO CONSOLIDATING THE LEGACY OF SEATTLE.(grassroots social movements)]]>\n Brecher, Jeremy ; Costello, Tim ; Smith, Brendan\n The Nation, Dec 4, 2000, Vol.271(18), p.19\n <b>ISSN: </b>0027-8378\n International Economic Relations -- Social Aspects ; Activists -- Behavior ; Environmentalism -- Political Aspects ; Social Movements -- Political Aspects ; Feminism -- Political Aspects ; Labor Movement -- Political Aspects\n Cengage Learning, Inc.\n 1\n \ title\n Globalization From Below : INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY IS THE KEY TO CONSOLIDATING THE LEGACY OF SEATTLE.(grassroots social movements)]]>\n \ \n \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Brecher, Jeremy\n Costello, Tim\n Smith, Brendan\n \ Globalization From Below : INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY IS THE KEY TO CONSOLIDATING THE LEGACY OF SEATTLE.(grassroots social movements)]]>\n International economic relations--Social aspects\n Activists--Behavior\n \ Environmentalism--Political aspects\n \ Social movements--Political aspects\n \ Feminism--Political aspects\n \ Labor movement--Political aspects\n \ 00WOR\n World\n \ Demonstrations and protests\n \ International Monetary Fund\n \ World Trade Organization\n The Nation Company L.P.\n Cengage Learning, Inc.\n gale_ofa\n \ gale_ofa67161994\n 0027-8378\n \ 00278378\n article\n \ 2000\n article\n \ The Nation\n OneFile\n \ OneFile\n \n \ \n Globalization From Below : INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY IS THE KEY TO CONSOLIDATING THE LEGACY OF SEATTLE.(grassroots social movements)\n Brecher, Jeremy ; Costello, Tim ; Smith, Brendan\n 20001204\n \ \n \n 2000\n \ International Economic Relations–Social Aspects\n \ Activists–Behavior\n Environmentalism–Political Aspects\n Social Movements–Political Aspects\n Feminism–Political Aspects\n \ Labor Movement–Political Aspects\n \ OneFile (GALE)\n articles\n \ articles\n Brecher, Jeremy\n Costello, Tim\n Smith, Brendan\n \ The Nation\n 6516380186211662130\n \ 5\n \n \ \n 2\n 2000\n \ 00278378\n 271\n \ 18\n 19\n \ nation\n globalization from below international solidarity is the key to consolidating the legacy of seattle\n globalizationfrombelattle\n \ globalizationfrombelowint\n jeremybrecher\n \ brecherjeremy\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n aggregator\n \ \n \n Brecher, Jeremy\n Costello, Tim\n Smith, Brendan\n Globalization From Below : INTERNATIONAL SOLIDARITY IS THE KEY TO CONSOLIDATING THE LEGACY OF SEATTLE.(grassroots social movements)\n The Nation\n \ 20001204\n 20001204\n \ 271\n 18\n \ 19\n 0027-8378\n \ article\n JOUR\n \ The Nation Company L.P.\n gale_ofa\n \ \n \n \n \ S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 67161994&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 67161994&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 10.1086/518061\n \ ucp\n TN_ucp10.1086/518061\n \ XML\n Other\n \ \n \n article\n \ Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks (Book-Review)]]>\n \ Myers, DanielJ\n American Journal of Sociology, Vol.112(5), p.1572-1573\n ISSN: 0002-9602 ; E-ISSN: 1537-5390 ; DOI: 10.1086/518061]]>\n \ University of Chicago Press Journals\n \ peer_reviewed\n title\n \ Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks (Book-Review)]]>\n \ \n \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Myers, DanielJ\n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks (Book-Review)]]>\n 10.1086/518061\n \ ucp\n ucp10.1086/518061\n \ 0002-9602\n 1537-5390\n \ article\n 2007\n \ American Journal of Sociology\n \ ucp\n University of Chicago Press Journals\n ucp\n \ University of Chicago Press Journals\n \ \n \n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks (Book-Review)\n \ Myers, DanielJ\n 20070300\n \ \n \n 2007\n \ University of Chicago Press Journals\n \ articles\n articles\n \ Myers, DanielJ.\n \ American Journal of Sociology\n \ peer_reviewed\n 266517745\n \ 6\n \n \ \n 2\n 2007\n \ 00029602\n 15375390\n \ 10.1086/518061\n 112\n \ 5\n 1572\n \ american journal of sociology\n danieljmyers\n \ myersdanielj\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n no_fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n publisher\n \ \n \n Myers\n \ DanielJ.\n Myers, DanielJ.\n American Journal of Sociology\n \ 200703\n 112\n \ 5\n 1572\n \ 1573\n 0002-9602\n \ 1537-5390\n journal\n \ article\n JOUR\n \ The University of Chicago Press\n 10.1086/518061\n \ \n \n \n \ S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 10.1086/518061&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 10.1086/518061&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 10.1177/009430610603600252\n \ crossref\n TN_crossref10.1177/009430610603600252\n \ XML\n Other\n \ \n \n article\n \ Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks]]>\n Smith, J.\n Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 2007, Vol.36(2), pp.191-192\n <b>ISSN:</b> 0094-3061 ; <b>DOI:</b> http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009430610603600252\n \ eng\n Sage Publications (via CrossRef)\n peer_reviewed\n \ title\n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks]]>\n \n \n \ $$Topenurl_article\n $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ $$Uhttp://fe.p.prod.primo.saas.exlibrisgroup.com:1701/primo_library/libweb/aboutCrossref.html$$DView CrossRef copyright notice\n \n \n \ Smith, J.\n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks]]>\n English\n \ 10.1177/009430610603600252\n \ crossref\n crossref10.1177/009430610603600252\n \ 0094-3061\n 00943061\n \ article\n 2007\n \ Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews\n \ crossref_sp\n CrossRef\n \ Crossref\n crossref\n \ crossref_sp\n CrossRef\n \ Crossref\n crossref\n \ \n \n Product Review: Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks\n \ Smith, J.\n 20070301\n \ \n \n eng\n \ 2007\n Sage Publications (CrossRef)\n articles\n \ articles\n Smith, J.\n Contemporary Sociology: A Journal Of Reviews\n peer_reviewed\n \ 330710846\n 6\n \ \n \n 2\n \ 2007\n 00943061\n \ 10.1177/009430610603600252\n 36\n \ 2\n 191\n \ contemporary sociology journal of reviews\n \ product review globalization from below transnational activists protest networks\n productreviewglobaliworks\n \ productreviewglobalizatio\n jsmith\n \ smithj\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n aggregator_crossref\n \ \n \n Smith\n \ J.\n Smith, J.\n Product Review: Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks\n Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews\n 20070301\n \ 20070301\n 36\n \ 2\n 191\n \ 192\n 0094-3061\n \ 0094-3061\n article\n \ JOUR\n 10.1177/009430610603600252\n \ \n \n \n \ S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 10.1177/009430610603600252&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 10.1177/009430610603600252&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ http://fe.p.prod.primo.saas.exlibrisgroup.com:1701/primo_library/libweb/aboutCrossref.html\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ crossref\n TN_crossref10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ XML\n Other\n \ \n \n article\n \ Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks]]>\n Smith, J.\n Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 2007, Vol.36(2), pp.191-192\n <b>ISSN:</b> 0094-3061 ; <b>DOI:</b> http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ eng\n Sage Publications (via CrossRef)\n peer_reviewed\n \ 2\n title\n \ Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks]]>\n \n \ \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ $$Uhttp://fe.p.prod.primo.saas.exlibrisgroup.com:1701/primo_library/libweb/aboutCrossref.html$$DView CrossRef copyright notice\n \n \n \ Smith, J.\n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks]]>\n English\n \ 10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ crossref\n crossref10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ 0094-3061\n 00943061\n \ article\n 2007\n \ Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews\n \ crossref_sp\n CrossRef\n \ Crossref\n crossref\n \ crossref_sp\n CrossRef\n \ Crossref\n crossref\n \ \n \n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks\n Smith, J.\n 20070301\n \ \n \n eng\n \ 2007\n Sage Publications (CrossRef)\n articles\n \ articles\n Smith, J.\n Contemporary Sociology: A Journal Of Reviews\n peer_reviewed\n \ 8392744814617276471\n \ 5\n \n \ \n 2\n 2007\n \ 00943061\n 10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ 36\n 2\n \ 191\n contemporary sociology journal of reviews\n globalization from below transnational activists protest networks\n globalizationfrombelworks\n \ globalizationfrombelowtra\n jsmith\n \ smithj\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n aggregator_crossref\n \ \n \n Smith\n \ J.\n Smith, J.\n Globalization from Below: Transnational Activists and Protest Networks\n Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews\n 20070301\n \ 20070301\n 36\n \ 2\n 191\n \ 192\n 0094-3061\n \ 0094-3061\n article\n \ JOUR\n 10.1177/009430610703600252\n \ \n \n \n \ S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 10.1177/009430610703600252&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 10.1177/009430610703600252&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ http://fe.p.prod.primo.saas.exlibrisgroup.com:1701/primo_library/libweb/aboutCrossref.html\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 10.1093/rsq/hdq006\n \ oxford\n TN_oxford10.1093/rsq/hdq006\n \ XML\n Other\n \ \n \n article\n \ Globalization from Below]]>\n \ Guilfoyle, Douglas\n Refugee Survey Quarterly, 2010, Vol. 29(1), pp.185-205\n ISSN: 1020-4067 ; E-ISSN: 1471-695X ; DOI: 10.1093/rsq/hdq006]]>\n \ This article examines the consequence of treating irregular labour migration as a criminal law issue, rather than one of trade or development. If States are increasingly committed to the free movement of goods and skilled workers, why is the movement of unskilled workers a crime? Adopting an economic analysis, it is clear that irregular migrants provide labour-receiving States with a pool of workers who are cheap to employ, easy to fire, and who are effectively unable or unwilling to invoke employment rights. That is, migrant workers can be a significant source of cheap and rightless labour. Furthermore, this may be viewed not as a market distortion but a highly regulated part of the ordinary functioning of destination economies. The economic benefits of irregular migrants result <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> their status: a status regulated and perpetuated by law. High- and medium-income States may become structurally dependent upon this externalized “ghetto” of low-cost foreign labour, thus profiting <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> irregular migration while denouncing it. This article argues that, if irregular migration economically benefits destination States and is driven both by lack of development in labour-sending States and migrants’ opportunity to remit money home, then the answer must lie in expanded systems of “regular” labour migration closely linked to development policy. Policy approaches must consider not only a trade/migrant–labour nexus but a trade/migrant–labour/development nexus. The article concludes by advocating that a set of principles of sustainable return is in the self-interest of labour-receiving States and outlining the content and utility of such principles. While the article aims to provide a theoretical account in an outline form that is adaptable to a variety of situations, it uses the example of African irregular migration into Spain and Spanish/EU responses to illustrate the argument.\n \ Oxford University Press\n peer_reviewed\n \ description\n description\n \ title\n . Furthermore, this may be viewed not as a market distortion but a highly regulated part of the ordinary functioning of destination economies. The economic benefits of irregular migrants result <span class=\"searchword\">from</span>... \ their status: a status regulated and perpetuated by law. High- and medium-income States may become structurally dependent upon this externalized “ghetto” of low-cost foreign labour, thus profiting <span class=\"searchword\">from</span>... Transnational Criminal Law as a Governance Strategy in the Global Labour Market: Criminalizing <span class=\"searchword\">Globalization</span> <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> <span class=\"searchword\">Below</span>\n \ \n \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Guilfoyle, Douglas\n Globalization from Below]]>\n This article examines the consequence of treating irregular labour migration as a criminal law issue, rather than one of trade or development. If States are increasingly committed to the free movement of goods and skilled workers, why is the movement of unskilled workers a crime? Adopting an economic analysis, it is clear that irregular migrants provide labour-receiving States with a pool of workers who are cheap to employ, easy to fire, and who are effectively unable or unwilling to invoke employment rights. That is, migrant workers can be a significant source of cheap and rightless labour. Furthermore, this may be viewed not as a market distortion but a highly regulated part of the ordinary functioning of destination economies. The economic benefits of irregular migrants result from their status: a status regulated and perpetuated by law. High- and medium-income States may become structurally dependent upon this externalized “ghetto” of low-cost foreign labour, thus profiting from irregular migration while denouncing it. This article argues that, if irregular migration economically benefits destination States and is driven both by lack of development in labour-sending States and migrants’ opportunity to remit money home, then the answer must lie in expanded systems of “regular” labour migration closely linked to development policy. Policy approaches must consider not only a trade/migrant–labour nexus but a trade/migrant–labour/development nexus. The article concludes by advocating that a set of principles of sustainable return is in the self-interest of labour-receiving States and outlining the content and utility of such principles. While the article aims to provide a theoretical account in an outline form that is adaptable to a variety of situations, it uses the example of African irregular migration into Spain and Spanish/EU responses to illustrate the argument.\n hdq006\n \ 10.1093/rsq/hdq006\n Oxford Journals\n oxford\n \ oxford10.1093/rsq/hdq006\n \ 1020-4067\n 10204067\n \ 1471-695X\n 1471695X\n \ article\n 2010\n \ Refugee Survey Quarterly\n \ oxford\n oxford\n \ \n \n Transnational Criminal Law as a Governance Strategy in the Global Labour Market: Criminalizing Globalization from Below\n Guilfoyle, Douglas\n 20100800\n \ \n \n 2010\n \ Oxford Journals (Oxford University Press)\n \ articles\n articles\n \ Guilfoyle, Douglas\n \ Refugee Survey Quarterly\n peer_reviewed\n \ 513970567\n 6\n \ \n \n 2\n \ 2010\n 10204067\n \ 1471695X\n 10.1093/rsq/hdq006\n \ 29\n 1\n \ 185\n refugee survey quarterly\n transnational criminal law as governance strategy in the global labour market criminalizing globalization from below\n transnationalcriminabelow\n \ transnationalcriminallawa\n douglasguilfoyle\n \ guilfoyledouglas\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n publisher\n \ \n \n Guilfoyle\n \ Douglas\n Guilfoyle, Douglas\n Transnational Criminal Law as a Governance Strategy in the Global Labour Market: Criminalizing Globalization from Below\n Refugee Survey Quarterly\n \ 201008\n 201008\n \ 29\n 1\n \ 185\n 205\n \ 185-205\n 1020-4067\n \ 1471-695X\n journal\n \ article\n JOUR\n \ This article examines the consequence of treating irregular labour migration as a criminal law issue, rather than one of trade or development. If States are increasingly committed to the free movement of goods and skilled workers, why is the movement of unskilled workers a crime? Adopting an economic analysis, it is clear that irregular migrants provide labour-receiving States with a pool of workers who are cheap to employ, easy to fire, and who are effectively unable or unwilling to invoke employment rights. That is, migrant workers can be a significant source of cheap and rightless labour. Furthermore, this may be viewed not as a market distortion but a highly regulated part of the ordinary functioning of destination economies. The economic benefits of irregular migrants result from their status: a status regulated and perpetuated by law. High- and medium-income States may become structurally dependent upon this externalized “ghetto” of low-cost foreign labour, thus profiting from irregular migration while denouncing it. This article argues that, if irregular migration economically benefits destination States and is driven both by lack of development in labour-sending States and migrants’ opportunity to remit money home, then the answer must lie in expanded systems of “regular” labour migration closely linked to development policy. Policy approaches must consider not only a trade/migrant–labour nexus but a trade/migrant–labour/development nexus. The article concludes by advocating that a set of principles of sustainable return is in the self-interest of labour-receiving States and outlining the content and utility of such principles. While the article aims to provide a theoretical account in an outline form that is adaptable to a variety of situations, it uses the example of African irregular migration into Spain and Spanish/EU responses to illustrate the argument.\n Oxford University Press\n \ 10.1093/rsq/hdq006\n \n \ \n \n S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 10.1093/rsq/hdq006&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 10.1093/rsq/hdq006&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x\n \ wj\n TN_wj10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x\n \ Other\n \n \ \n article\n \ Globalization from Below: The Ranking of Global Immigrant Cities]]>\n Benton‐short, Lisa ; Price, Marie D. ; Friedman, Samantha\n International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 2005, Vol.29(4), pp.945-959\n \ ISSN: 0309-1317 ; E-ISSN: 1468-2427 ; DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x]]>\n \ Immigration to major cities is an important dimension of cultural <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span>, one that has been largely ignored in the global cities literature. Rates of immigration to major world cities are an important indicator of global city status and should be included in determining urban hierarchy indexes. Our study considers immigration in more than 100 metropolitan areas, using data <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> national censuses <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> more than 50 countries. We rank major cities of immigration and compare them to well‐known global city hierarchies. Using immigration data, we create an urban immigrant index. The index considers four factors of immigration: (1) the percentage of foreign‐born, (2) the total number of foreign‐born, (3) the diversity of the foreign‐born stock, and (4) whether immigrants are <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> neighboring countries or non‐neighboring countries. This is the first time that an international urban immigrant data set and index have been created. The study explains the empirical challenge of acquiring comparable international metropolitan data and the limits of this research. Some of the cities that rank highly in the index are commonly cited as world cities (London, New York and Frankfurt); others such as Toronto, Amsterdam and Dubai seldom appear so highly ranked. L’Immigration vers les grandes villes est une dimension importante de la mondialisation culturelle, dimension largement ignorée dans la littérature sur les villes planétaires. Les taux d’immigration vers les grandes villes mondiales sont un indicateur significatif du statut de ville planétaire et devraient être pris en compte pour établir des répertoires de hiérarchie urbaine. Cette étude, qui couvre l’immigration dans plus de cent zones métropolitaines, utilise les données de recensements nationaux provenant de plus de 50 pays. Elle classe les principales villes d’immigration et les compare aux hiérarchies de villes planétaires reconnues. A partir des données sur l’immigration, est créé un répertoire des immigrants urbains, lequel se réfère à quatre facteurs d’immigration: (1) le pourcentage néà l’étranger, (2) l’effectif total néà l’étranger, (3) la diversité de la population née à l’étranger et (4) si les migrants viennent de pays voisins ou non. C’est la première fois qu’un fichier de données et un répertoire d’immigrants urbains internationaux sont créés. L’étude expose le défi empirique pour récupérer des données métropolitaines internationales comparables, ainsi que les limites de cette recherche. Certaines des villes placées en tête du répertoire sont fréquemment citées comme villes mondiales (Londres, New York et Frankfort), d’autres comme Toronto, Amsterdam et Dubaï apparaissent rarement à ce niveau de classement.\n John Wiley & Sons, Inc.\n peer_reviewed\n \ 3\n description\n \ description\n description\n \ description\n title\n \ considers four factors of immigration: (1) the percentage of foreign‐born, (2) the total number of foreign‐born, (3) the diversity of the foreign‐born stock, and (4) whether immigrants are <span class=\"searchword\">from</span>... censuses <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> more than 50 countries. We rank major cities of immigration and compare them to well‐known global city hierarchies. Using immigration data, we create an urban immigrant index. The index... are an important indicator of global city status and should be included in determining urban hierarchy indexes. Our study considers immigration in more than 100 metropolitan areas, using data <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> national... Immigration to major cities is an important dimension of cultural <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span>, one that has been largely ignored in the global cities literature. Rates of immigration to major world cities... <span class=\"searchword\">Globalization</span> <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> <span class=\"searchword\">Below</span>: The Ranking of Global Immigrant Cities\n \n \ \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Benton‐short, Lisa\n Price, Marie D.\n Friedman, Samantha\n \ Globalization from Below: The Ranking of Global Immigrant Cities]]>\n Immigration to major cities is an important dimension of cultural globalization, one that has been largely ignored in the global cities literature. Rates of immigration to major world cities are an important indicator of global city status and should be included in determining urban hierarchy indexes. Our study considers immigration in more than 100 metropolitan areas, using data from national censuses from more than 50 countries. We rank major cities of immigration and compare them to well‐known global city hierarchies. Using immigration data, we create an urban immigrant index. The index considers four factors of immigration: (1) the percentage of foreign‐born, (2) the total number of foreign‐born, (3) the diversity of the foreign‐born stock, and (4) whether immigrants are from neighboring countries or non‐neighboring countries. This is the first time that an international urban immigrant data set and index have been created. The study explains the empirical challenge of acquiring comparable international metropolitan data and the limits of this research. Some of the cities that rank highly in the index are commonly cited as world cities (London, New York and Frankfurt); others such as Toronto, Amsterdam and Dubai seldom appear so highly ranked. L’Immigration vers les grandes villes est une dimension importante de la mondialisation culturelle, dimension largement ignorée dans la littérature sur les villes planétaires. Les taux d’immigration vers les grandes villes mondiales sont un indicateur significatif du statut de ville planétaire et devraient être pris en compte pour établir des répertoires de hiérarchie urbaine. Cette étude, qui couvre l’immigration dans plus de cent zones métropolitaines, utilise les données de recensements nationaux provenant de plus de 50 pays. Elle classe les principales villes d’immigration et les compare aux hiérarchies de villes planétaires reconnues. A partir des données sur l’immigration, est créé un répertoire des immigrants urbains, lequel se réfère à quatre facteurs d’immigration: (1) le pourcentage néà l’étranger, (2) l’effectif total néà l’étranger, (3) la diversité de la population née à l’étranger et (4) si les migrants viennent de pays voisins ou non. C’est la première fois qu’un fichier de données et un répertoire d’immigrants urbains internationaux sont créés. L’étude expose le défi empirique pour récupérer des données métropolitaines internationales comparables, ainsi que les limites de cette recherche. Certaines des villes placées en tête du répertoire sont fréquemment citées comme villes mondiales (Londres, New York et Frankfort), d’autres comme Toronto, Amsterdam et Dubaï apparaissent rarement à ce niveau de classement.\n Blackwell Publishing Ltd.\n 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x\n \ Wiley Online Library\n wj\n \ wj10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x\n \ 0309-1317\n 03091317\n \ 1468-2427\n 14682427\n \ article\n 2005\n \ International Journal of Urban and Regional Research\n wj\n \ wiley\n wj\n \ wiley\n \n \ \n Globalization from Below: The Ranking of Global Immigrant Cities\n Benton‐short, Lisa ; Price, Marie D. ; Friedman, Samantha\n 20051200\n \ \n \n 2005\n \ Wiley Online Library\n \ articles\n articles\n \ Benton‐short, Lisa\n \ Price, Marie D.\n \ Friedman, Samantha\n \ International Journal of Urban and Regional Research\n \ peer_reviewed\n 5601034458896755094\n \ 5\n \n \ \n 2\n 2005\n \ 03091317\n 14682427\n \ 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x\n 29\n \ 4\n 945\n \ international journal of urban regional research\n \ globalization from below the ranking of global immigrant cities\n globalizationfrombelities\n \ globalizationfrombelowthe\n lisabenton‐short\n \ benton‐shortlisa\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n publisher\n \ \n \n BENTON‐SHORT\n \ PRICE\n FRIEDMAN\n \ LISA\n MARIE D.\n SAMANTHA\n \ Benton‐short, Lisa\n Price, Marie D.\n Friedman, Samantha\n \ Globalization from Below: The Ranking of Global Immigrant Cities\n International Journal of Urban and Regional Research\n 200512\n \ 200512\n 29\n \ 4\n 945\n \ 959\n 0309-1317\n \ 1468-2427\n article\n \ JOUR\n Immigration to major cities is an important dimension of cultural globalization, one that has been largely ignored in the global cities literature. Rates of immigration to major world cities are an important indicator of global city status and should be included in determining urban hierarchy indexes. Our study considers immigration in more than 100 metropolitan areas, using data from national censuses from more than 50 countries. We rank major cities of immigration and compare them to well‐known global city hierarchies. Using immigration data, we create an urban immigrant index. The index considers four factors of immigration: (1) the percentage of foreign‐born, (2) the total number of foreign‐born, (3) the diversity of the foreign‐born stock, and (4) whether immigrants are from neighboring countries or non‐neighboring countries. This is the first time that an international urban immigrant data set and index have been created. The study explains the empirical challenge of acquiring comparable international metropolitan data and the limits of this research. Some of the cities that rank highly in the index are commonly cited as world cities (London, New York and Frankfurt); others such as Toronto, Amsterdam and Dubai seldom appear so highly ranked. L’Immigration vers les grandes villes est une dimension importante de la mondialisation culturelle, dimension largement ignorée dans la littérature sur les villes planétaires. Les taux d’immigration vers les grandes villes mondiales sont un indicateur significatif du statut de ville planétaire et devraient être pris en compte pour établir des répertoires de hiérarchie urbaine. Cette étude, qui couvre l’immigration dans plus de cent zones métropolitaines, utilise les données de recensements nationaux provenant de plus de 50 pays. Elle classe les principales villes d’immigration et les compare aux hiérarchies de villes planétaires reconnues. A partir des données sur l’immigration, est créé un répertoire des immigrants urbains, lequel se réfère à quatre facteurs d’immigration: (1) le pourcentage néà l’étranger, (2) l’effectif total néà l’étranger, (3) la diversité de la population née à l’étranger et (4) si les migrants viennent de pays voisins ou non. C’est la première fois qu’un fichier de données et un répertoire d’immigrants urbains internationaux sont créés. L’étude expose le défi empirique pour récupérer des données métropolitaines internationales comparables, ainsi que les limites de cette recherche. Certaines des villes placées en tête du répertoire sont fréquemment citées comme villes mondiales (Londres, New York et Frankfort), d’autres comme Toronto, Amsterdam et Dubaï apparaissent rarement à ce niveau de classement.\n Oxford, UK and Malden, USA\n Blackwell Publishing Ltd.\n \ 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x\n \n \ \n \n S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 10.1111/j.1468-2427.2005.00630.x&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \n \ \n 134458487\n \ gale_ofa\n TN_gale_ofa134458487\n \ XML\n Other\n \ \n \n article\n \ globalization from below.(Author Abstract)]]>\n Ganesh, Shiv ; Zoller, Heather ; Cheney, George\n Communication Monographs, June, 2005, Vol.72(2), p.169(23)\n <b>ISSN: </b>0363-7751\n <span class=\"searchword\">Globalization</span> -- Social Aspects\n \ This essay addresses the need for organizational communication scholarship to come to terms with the contested nature of <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span> through analyses of collective resistance. We argue that organizational communication has largely situated the study of resistance at the level of the individual, and characterized it as an element of micro-politics located within organizational boundaries. Thus, resistance has been considered in localized, interpersonal terms, without full appreciation of its political and ideological significance. This essay builds a case for reconsidering resistance in order to study \"<span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span> <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> <span class=\"searchword\">below</span>\" and highlights protest movements as exemplars of transformative resistance. Finally, the essay advances a study of organizational communication with expanded disciplinary engagement with respect to <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span>. Keywords: Critical Studies; <span class=\"searchword\">Globalization</span>; Organizational Communication; Resistance; Social Movements\n \ English\n Cengage Learning, Inc.\n peer_reviewed\n \ 3\n description\n \ description\n description\n \ title\n disciplinary engagement with respect to <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span>. Keywords: Critical Studies; <span class=\"searchword\">Globalization</span>; Organizational Communication; Resistance; Social Movements... This essay addresses the need for organizational communication scholarship to come to terms with the contested nature of <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span> through analyses of collective resistance. We argue... in order to study \"<span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span> <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> <span class=\"searchword\">below</span>\" and highlights protest movements as exemplars of transformative resistance. Finally, the essay advances a study of organizational communication with expanded... Transforming resistance, broadening our boundaries: critical organizational communication meets <span class=\"searchword\">globalization</span> <span class=\"searchword\">from</span> <span class=\"searchword\">below</span>.(Author Abstract)\n \ \n \n $$Topenurl_article\n \ $$Topenurlfull_article\n \ \n \n Ganesh, Shiv\n Ganesh\n \ Zoller, Heather\n \ Cheney, George\n \ globalization from below.(Author Abstract)]]>\n This essay addresses the need for organizational communication scholarship to come to terms with the contested nature of globalization through analyses of collective resistance. We argue that organizational communication has largely situated the study of resistance at the level of the individual, and characterized it as an element of micro-politics located within organizational boundaries. Thus, resistance has been considered in localized, interpersonal terms, without full appreciation of its political and ideological significance. This essay builds a case for reconsidering resistance in order to study \"globalization from below\" and highlights protest movements as exemplars of transformative resistance. Finally, the essay advances a study of organizational communication with expanded disciplinary engagement with respect to globalization. Keywords: Critical Studies; Globalization; Organizational Communication; Resistance; Social Movements\n \ Globalization--Social aspects\n \ English\n Speech Communication Association\n Cengage Learning, Inc.\n gale_ofa\n \ gale_ofa134458487\n 0363-7751\n \ 03637751\n article\n \ 2005\n article\n \ Communication Monographs\n \ OneFile\n OneFile\n \ \n \n Transforming resistance, broadening our boundaries: critical organizational communication meets globalization from below.(Author Abstract)\n Ganesh, Shiv ; Zoller, Heather ; Cheney, George\n 20050601\n \ \n \n eng\n \ 2005\n Globalization–Social Aspects\n OneFile (GALE)\n \ articles\n articles\n \ Ganesh, Shiv\n \ Zoller, Heather\n \ Cheney, George\n \ Communication Monographs\n peer_reviewed\n \ 4308494945219945461\n \ 5\n \n \ \n 2\n 2005\n \ 03637751\n 72\n \ 2\n 169\n \ communication monographs\n transforming resistance broadening our boundaries critical organizational communication meets globalization from below\n transformingresistanbelow\n \ transformingresistancebro\n shivganesh\n \ ganeshshiv\n \n \ \n Remote Search Resource\n fulltext\n \ \n \n 1\n \ 1\n aggregator\n \ \n \n Ganesh, Shiv\n Zoller, Heather\n Cheney, George\n Transforming resistance, broadening our boundaries: critical organizational communication meets globalization from below.(Author Abstract)\n Communication Monographs\n 20050601\n \ 20050601\n 72\n \ 2\n 169\n \ 0363-7751\n article\n \ JOUR\n This essay addresses the need for organizational communication scholarship to come to terms with the contested nature of globalization through analyses of collective resistance. We argue that organizational communication has largely situated the study of resistance at the level of the individual, and characterized it as an element of micro-politics located within organizational boundaries. Thus, resistance has been considered in localized, interpersonal terms, without full appreciation of its political and ideological significance. This essay builds a case for reconsidering resistance in order to study \"globalization from below\" and highlights protest movements as exemplars of transformative resistance. Finally, the essay advances a study of organizational communication with expanded disciplinary engagement with respect to globalization. Keywords: Critical Studies; Globalization; Organizational Communication; Resistance; Social Movements\n Speech Communication Association\n gale_ofa\n \ \n \n \n \ S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" GetIt1=\"http://sfx-demo.exlibrisgroup.com:3210/primo_demo?ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info:ofi/enc:UTF-8&ctx_tim=2012-08-20T15%3A54%3A45IST&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&url_ctx_fmt=infofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rfr_id=info:sid/primo.exlibrisgroup.com:primo3-Article-sciversesciencedirect_elsevier&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Multilingual%20organizations%20as%20‘linguascapes’:%20Negotiating%20the%20position%20of%20English%20through%20discursive%20practices&rft.jtitle=Journal%20of%20World%20Business&rft.btitle=&rft.aulast=Steyaert&rft.auinit=&rft.auinit1=&rft.auinitm=&rft.ausuffix=&rft.au=Steyaert%2C%20Chris&rft.aucorp=&rft.date=2011&rft.volume=46&rft.issue=3&rft.part=&rft.quarter=&rft.ssn=&rft.spage=270&rft.epage=278&rft.pages=270-278&rft.artnum=&rft.issn=1090-9516&rft.eissn=&rft.isbn=&rft.sici=&rft.coden=&rft_id=info:doi/10.1016/j.jwb.2010.07.003&svc_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:sch_svc&svc.fulltext=yes&rft.eisbn=&rft_dat=<sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>S1090-9516(10)00042-8</sciversesciencedirect_elsevier>&rft_id=info:oai/>\" deliveryCategory=\"Remote Search Resource\"/>\n \n 134458487&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n 134458487&rft_id=info:oai/>]]>\n \ \n \n \n \n \ 0\n \n\n" http_version: recorded_at: Mon, 20 Aug 2012 20:54:45 GMT recorded_with: VCR 2.2.4