From: Terry Boswell Mon, 13 Feb 1995 00:04:25 -0500 To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Despite the current lull, my guess is that we will see a rise in grad students in the world-system field for two reasons. One is the marked increase in "globalization" and the recognition of the same. However fadish that may be, the reality is that international trade and organization is rising geometrically. The second reason is demographic. World-system research saw its biggest gains in the last 10-15 years. Given that few assistant professors chair dissertation committees, and that PhDs take 6-8 years, there is maybe a 10-15 year lag in new PhDs training future PhDs in an area. So it is conceivable that the "boom" of the 1970s and 80s will produce a "boomlet" in the 90s and beyond. This does not, of course, take attrition into account. We also lose students to "migration" as we probably train a disproportionate number of international students. If gaged in terms of the ISA (where Wallerstein now presides) rather than the ASA, we may not be losing membership at all. As for graduate programs that offer world-system study, let me briefly plug my own at Emory University in Atlanta. Rick Rubinson, John Boli (formerly Boli-Bennett) and myself in world-systems, and Alex Hicks and Tien-Lung Liu in comparative politics make up our concentration in Comparative Political Economy. We offer relatively generous funding, but only have 6-7 slots per year. Other places that come to mind are SUNY-Binghamton, Johns-Hopkins, Arizona, Stanford, Cornell, Wisconsin, Kansas St., and Duke. Apologies to any I forgot. Terry Boswell Prof. Chris Chase-Dunn Department of Sociology Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD. 21218 USA tel 410 516 7633 fax 410 516 7590 email chriscd@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu