Saskia Sassen

Saskia Sassen's research and writing focuses on globalization
(including social, economic and political dimensions), immigration,
global cities (including cities and terrorism), the new networked
technologies, and changes within the liberal state that result from
current transnational conditions. In her research she has focused on
the unexpected and the counterintuitive as a way to cut through
established 'truths.'
Her three major books have each sought to demolish a key established 'truth.' Thus in her first book, The Mobility of Labor and Capital (Cambridge
University Press 1988), she showed how foreign investment in less
developed countries can actually raise the likelihood of emigration;
this went against established notions that such investment would retain
potential emigrants. In her second book The Global City
(Princeton University Press 1991; 2nd ed 2002) she showed how the
global economy far from being placeless, has and needs very specific
territorial insertions, and that this need is sharpest in the case of
highly globalized and electronic sectors such as finance; this went
against established notions at the time that the global economy
transcended territory and its associated regulatory umbrellas. In her
most recent book, Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages
( Princeton University Press 2006), she shows that the foundational
transformations afoot today take place largely inside core and thick
national environments; this allows her to explain that some of the
changes inside liberal states, most evident in the USA but also
increasingly in other countries, are not distortions or anomalies, but
are the result of these foundational transformations inside the state
apparatus. She shows how this foundational transformation hence
consists not only of globalizing dynamics but also of denationalizing
dynamics: we are seeing the formation of multiple often highly
specialized assemblages of bits of territory, authority and rights that
were once ensconced in national framings. Today these assemblages
traverse global and national settings, thereby denationalizing what was
historically constructed as national.
Her new books are Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages (Princeton University Press 2006), and A Sociology of Globalization
(Norton 2007). She has just completed for UNESCO a five-year project on
sustainable human settlement for which she set up a network of
researchers and activists in over 30 countries; it is published as one
of the volumes of the Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (Oxford, UK: EOLSS Publishers) [http://www.eolss.net ]. She edited Deciphering the Global: Its Spaces, Scales, and Subjects (Routledge 2006) a collection of her doctoral students? work. She co-edited Digital Formations: New Architectures for Global Order
(Princeton University Press 2005), based on a multi-year project
sponsored by the SSRC through its Information Technology and
International Cooperation Committee which she chaired. Among other
projects, she was involved with the 2006 Venice Biennale of
Architecture, which for the first time in its history focused on
cities; she wrote a lead essay for the Catalogue. There are new fully
updated editions of two of her older books, Cities in a World Economy (3rd.ed. Sage/Pine Forge 2006), and The Global City (2nd.ed. Princeton University Press 2001). Her books are translated into sixteen languages.
She serves on several editorial boards and is an advisor to several
international bodies. She is a Member of the Council on Foreign
Relations, and a member of the National Academy of Sciences Panel on
Cities. She has received a variety of awards and prizes, most recently,
a Doctor honoris causa from Delft University (Netherlands), the first
Distinguished Graduate School Alumnus Award of the University of Notre
Dame, and was one of the four winners of the first University of
Chicago Future Mentor Award covering all doctoral programs. She has
written for The Guardian, The New York Times, Le Monde Diplomatique,
the International Herald Tribune, Newsweek International,Vanguardia,
Clarin, the Financial Times, among others.
She is also a Centennial Visiting Professor at the London School of Economics.