The Dictionary of Human Geography

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chemicals) favour geographical concentration.
Progress in automation has reduced the
importance of labour costs in many sectors,
making it feasible to remain in high labour
cost countries. Meanwhile, poorer countries,
besides having very restricted markets, also
have poor physical and institutional infra-
structures, which makes operations both
more costly and riskier. Although usually
seen to be in the vanguard ofglobalization,
there are reasons to suppose that TNCs are
hedging their bets. Their operations are cer-
tainly international, but they are not quite
global as yet.
TNCs are the permanent object of heated
political debate. Some believe that they will
fostereconomic growthandmodernization
in the developing world by importing capital,
technology and managerial techniques that
will then filter out into the host economy.
stages of growththeorists see TNCs as the
perfect vehicle for overcoming barriers tode-
velopmentand promotingregional conver-
gence. Others believe they are responsible for
‘underdeveloping’ the Third World by domin-
ating local markets and draining capital in the
form of profits fromsouthto North – in short,
that they are the modern form ofimperialism
and a major factor promotingdependency
anduneven development. Many see them as
responsible for the deindustrialization of
formerly prosperous regions (Tabb, 2002;
Cuyvers and DeBeule, 2005). TNCs have
been charged with collaborating with oppres-
sive governments in order to ensure access to
resources and therefore being implicated in the
violation ofhuman rightsand ofviolence
against local populations (Peluso and Watts,
2001; Frynas and Pegg, 2003). Their presence
raises questions of sovereignty and the integ-
rity of thenation-state even in the most
developed countries (Dicken, 2003). esch

Suggested reading
Dicken (2003); Harvey (1999 [1982]); Peck and
Yeung (2003).

transnationalism A concept that describes a
movement or set of linkages that occuracross
nationalborders. Transnationalism is a rela-
tively new term, and its growing popularity
indicates the heightened interconnectivity of
people and things that now flow across bor-
ders andboundariesin greater volume and
with greater speed than ever before. While
closely linked to the processes of economic
globalization, which are often conceptual-
ized in abstract global terms and decentred

spaces, transnationalism is generally invoked
to express transcendence of the specific work-
ings of the nation-state (Kearney, 1995).
It is thus used most widely in the social
sciences to describe phenomena in which
the cultural or territorial boundaries of the
nationand/or the regulatory apparatuses of
the stateare crossed or contested in new
kinds of ways.
While this notion of crossing boundaries is
pertinent to many cross-border articulations,
including the circulation ofcommoditiesand
the flows of culture and ideas (e.g. Jackson,
Crang and Dwyer, 2004), the contemporary
movement of migrants is most frequently as-
sociated with the term. Unlike earlier theories
ofmigration, which generally characterized
movement across borders as either perman-
ent rupture followed by assimilation in a new
society, or as temporary sojourning followed
by a return home, transnationalism describes
a migration pattern of simultaneous connec-
tion to two or more nations (Basch, Glick
Schiller and Blanc, 1995). In numerous case
studies, migrants have been shown to con-
struct an intricate, multi-webbed network
of ongoing social relations that span their
country of origin and their country (or coun-
tries) of settlement. While a pattern of trans-
national life has been present in past
migrations to varying degrees, the new trans-
portation, communication and computing
technologies of the past few decades have
greatly facilitated such arrangements in the
contemporary era.
In addition to technological advances, many
scholars have associated the growth of this
type of migration pattern with changes in
the nature of globalcapitalism(Ong, 1999).
The organization of production on a world-
wide scale has affected the volume and flow
of migrants across national borders, and led
to a transformed culture and experience of
migration and of the nation. These dynamics
are implicated in the wider boundary-crossing
conceptualization of transnationalism, in
which the significance of national cultural
narratives and the meanings and practices of
state regulations are reconsidered and often
reworked. One of the key signifiers of both
cultural belonging and state control that is
reworked under conditions of contemporary
transnationality is citizenship. The impli-
cations of transnationalism for citizenship
formation are enormous, ranging from ques-
tions of state jurisdiction over borders to
sociocultural considerations ofidentityand
belonging. km

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_T Final Proof page 772 31.3.2009 9:40pm Compositor Name: ARaju

TRANSNATIONALISM
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