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Saskia Sassen

Saskia Sassen is professor of sociology at Columbia University, New York,  and at the London School of Economics. Her books include Losing Control? Sovereignty in the Age of Globalization (Columbia University Press, 1996) and The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo (Princeton University Press, 2001). Her latest book is Territory, Authority, and Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages (Princeton University Press, 2006), based on a five-year project on governance and accountability in a global economy.

Recent articles


Cities and new wars: after Mumbai

The attacks on India's commercial capital belong to a global frontline of asymmetric urban warfare, says Saskia Sassen.

 

The new wars and cities: after Mumbai

The attacks on India's commercial capital are a harbinger of a new type of urban warfare, says Saskia Sassen

The new new deal

In the wake of the Wall Street meltdown, the United States government plans to dedicate at least $700 billion to underwriting the country's financial system. The money should instead be used to rebuild the real economy and break the boom-bust cycle, says Saskia Sassen.

Fear and strange arithmetics: when powerful states confront powerless immigrants

It is surprising to see the high price in terms of ethical and economic costs that powerful ‘liberal democracies' seem willing to pay in order to control extremely powerless people who only want a chance to work. Immigrants and refugees have to be understood as a historical vanguard that signals major ‘unsettlements' in both sending and receiving countries.