Globalization

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Humanities and Social Sciences

Kinds of Globalization

  • contemporary globalization
  • economic globalization
  • financial globalization
  • neoliberal globalization

  • Terms modified by Globalization

  • globalization process
  • globalization theory

  • Selected Abstracts


    GLOBALIZATION AND HIGHER EDUCATION POLICY

    EDUCATIONAL THEORY, Issue 4 2000
    Paige Porter
    First page of article [source]


    GLOBALIZATION AND EXTERRITORIALITY IN METROPOLITAN CAIRO

    GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, Issue 3 2005
    PETRA KUPPINGER
    ABSTRACT. Rapid construction of new spaces like hotels, malls, private clubs, and gated communities in Greater Cairo, Egypt produces structures disconnected spatially and conceptually from most of the existing urban fabric. Their spatial concepts and practices, as well as architectural forms and expertise, are based largely on globally available models. Planning and construction are guided by the search for security in the face of real or imagined fear of the urban masses and political upheaval. Concrete walls, guarded entrances, and high-tech security technology bear witness to these fears. Analysis of the Mena House Hotel, the Grand Egyptian Museum project, and the First Mall in Giza shows how these projects globalize Cairo and localize the global. Often these globalized spaces are remade by creating local and regional ties and design features that were not anticipated by the planners. Such changes shed light on underlying dynamics and contribute to a better understanding of in situ globalization. Whereas their physical features tend to accentuate their globalized nature, these spaces do not exist in isolation from their geographical and cultural contexts. Their everyday realities tell tales of reterritorialization that are frequently overlooked in scholarly debates. [source]


    "SCENOGRAPHIC" AND "COSMETIC" PLANNING: GLOBALIZATION AND TERRITORIAL RESTRUCTURING IN BUENOS AIRES

    JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS, Issue 3 2006
    LAURENCE CROT
    ABSTRACT:,The aim of the present article is to provide an account of the ways in which the impact exerted by globalizing forces on the territorial structure of the city of Buenos Aires has been mediated by local planning processes. After a brief review of the main trends and critiques found in the academic literature, the author examines how the territorial transformations that have taken place in Buenos Aires over the past fifteen years may not be simplistically related to,or blamed on,global pressures. It is argued that the determinacy imposed by long-term historical tendencies, together with specific territorial planning arrangements characteristic of the Argentine planning system, have played a major role in the production of Buenos Aires' territorial structuring over the past fifteen years. [source]


    HOW THE GLOBALIZATION OF R&D COMPETITION AFFECTS TRADE AND GROWTH

    THE JAPANESE ECONOMIC REVIEW, Issue 3 2004
    GWANGHOON LEE
    The implications of international R&D competition on trade and growth are investigated. The model is one in which a separate R&D sector competes with the manufacturing sector to secure human capital, and technology is licensed to manufacturers by the winner of a pre-emptive R&D competition. The results show that globalization of R&D competition leads to trade between countries (even identical countries), because the result of competition leads to a reallocation of human capital between sectors. The winning country exports technology and traditional goods, while the loser exports manufactured goods. Globalization with indiscriminate technology licensing increases the world's economic growth rate. [source]


    REMEDIATION AND LOCAL GLOBALIZATIONS: How Taiwan's "Digital Video Knights-Errant Puppetry" Writes the History of the New Media in Chinese

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 2 2007
    TERI SILVIO
    This article analyzes the Pili International Multimedia Company's "digital video knights-errant puppetry" serials, a popular culture genre unique to Taiwan, to answer two questions. First, how do digital technologies, originally developed to meet the needs of the American military and entertainment industries, become embedded in a different cultural context? Second, how does this embedding allow media technologies to become something through which distinctly local models of globalization itself may be imagined? Analyzing both the style of the serials and the discourse of producers and fans, I argue that new media technologies, despite their foreign origins, may not only be adapted or resisted, but may also come to be imagined as emerging from local aesthetics and local needs. Through the specific ways they utilize both digital and traditional technologies, the Pili producers and fans construct a utopian vision of what globalization might look like if Taiwan were at the center. [source]


    Globalization, Cosmopolitanism, and Democracy: An Interview with David Held

    CONSTELLATIONS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CRITICAL AND DEMOCRATIC THEORY, Issue 4 2001
    Montserrat Guibernau
    First page of article [source]


    Globalization, Sovereignty, and the Rule of Law: From Political to Economic Constitutionalism?

    CONSTELLATIONS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CRITICAL AND DEMOCRATIC THEORY, Issue 4 2001
    Kanishka Jayasuriya
    First page of article [source]


    Globalization and Disciplinary Neoliberal Governance

    CONSTELLATIONS: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CRITICAL AND DEMOCRATIC THEORY, Issue 4 2001
    Jarrod Weiner
    First page of article [source]


    Empty Citizenship: Protesting Politics in the Era of Globalization

    CULTURAL ANTHROPOLOGY, Issue 4 2005
    Ritty Lukose
    Globalization is often indexed by the rise of a consumerist ethos and the expansion of the market economy at the expense of state-centric formulations of politics and citizenship. This article explores the politics and practices of gendered democratic citizenship in an educational setting when that setting is newly reconfigured as a commodity under neoliberal privatization efforts. This entails an attention to discourses of consumption as they intersect postcolonial cultural-ideological political fields. Focusing on the contemporary trajectory among politicized male college students of a historically important masculinist "political public" in Kerala, India, the article tracks an explicit discourse of "politics"(rashtriyam). This enables an exploration of a struggle over the meaning of democratic citizenship that opposes a political public rooted in a tradition of anticolonial struggle and postcolonial nationalist politics to that of a "civic public," rooted in ideas about the freedom to consume through the logic of privatization. [source]


    How NGOs React: Globalization and Education Reform in the Caucasus, Central Asia and Mongolia (Iveta Silova & Gita Steiner-Khamsi, eds., 2008)

    CURRICULUM INQUIRY, Issue 4 2008
    SARFAROZ NIYOZOV
    First page of article [source]


    Globalization and Health: Challenges for Health Law and Bioethics , By Belinda Bennett & George Tomossy

    DEVELOPING WORLD BIOETHICS, Issue 3 2007
    BERNARD DICKENS
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Globalization from Below: Free Software and Alternatives to Neoliberalism

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 6 2007
    Sara Schoonmaker
    ABSTRACT This article explores one of the central struggles over the politics of globalization: forging alternatives to neoliberalism by developing new forms of globalization from below. It focuses on a unique facet of this struggle, rooted in the centrality of information technologies for global trade and production, as well as new forms of media and digital culture. The analysis has four main parts: examining the key role of software as a technological infrastructure for diverse forms of globalization; conceptualizing the contradictory implications of three software business models for realizing the utopian potential of digital technology to develop forms of globalization from below; exploring how three free and open source software business models were put into practice by Red Hat, IBM and the Free Software Foundation; and analysing Brazilian software policy as a form of globalization from below that challenges the historical dominance of the global North and seeks to develop new forms of digital inclusion and digital culture. [source]


    Globalization, Neo-Conservative Policies and Democratic Alternatives: Essays in Honour of John Loxley edited by A. Haroon Akram-Lodhi, Robert Chernomas and Ardeshir Sepehri

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 3 2007
    Anis Chowdhury
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Questioning Globalization edited by Kavaljit Singh

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 5 2006
    Erin Pratley
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Science and Citizens: Globalization and the Challenge of Engagement edited by Melissa Leach, Ian Scoones and Brian Wynne

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 5 2006
    Marléne Buchy
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Globalization and Global Governance: A Reply to the Debate

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 5 2004
    Keith Griffin
    First page of article [source]


    Vulnerability, Control and Oil Palm in Sarawak: Globalization and a New Era?

    DEVELOPMENT AND CHANGE, Issue 2 2002
    Fadzilah Majid Cooke
    In the post logging era, Sarawak is being restructured to make way for large-scale oil palm plantations. In this restructuring, the vulnerabilities of particular areas are being used in a wider battle to control production, particularly for export. Native customary lands, considered ,unproductive' or ,idle' by officials, are the target of oil palm plantation development under a new land development programme called Konsep Baru (New Concept). This article looks at the contradictions generated by the complex process of laying claims to ,idle' native customary land and focuses on Dayak organizing initiatives in northern Sarawak, Malaysia. [source]


    Effects of dietary fatty acids on insulin sensitivity and secretion

    DIABETES OBESITY & METABOLISM, Issue 6 2004
    Melania Manco
    Globalization and global market have contributed to increased consumption of high-fat, energy-dense diets, particularly rich in saturated fatty acids( SFAs). Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) regulate fuel partitioning within the cells by inducing their own oxidation through the reduction of lipogenic gene expression and the enhancement of the expression of those genes controlling lipid oxidation and thermogenesis. Moreover, PUFAs prevent insulin resistance by increasing membrane fluidity and GLUT4 transport. In contrast, SFAs are stored in non-adipocyte cells as triglycerides (TG) leading to cellular damage as a sequence of their lipotoxicity. Triglyceride accumulation in skeletal muscle cells (IMTG) derives from increased FA uptake coupled with deficient FA oxidation. High levels of circulating FAs enhance the expression of FA translocase the FA transport proteins within the myocites. The biochemical mechanisms responsible for lower fatty acid oxidation involve reduced carnitine palmitoyl transferase (CPT) activity, as a likely consequence of increased intracellular concentrations of malonyl-CoA; reduced glycogen synthase activity; and impairment of insulin signalling and glucose transport. The depletion of IMTG depots is strictly associated with an improvement of insulin sensitivity, via a reduced acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC) mRNA expression and an increased GLUT4 expression and pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity. In pancreatic islets, TG accumulation causes impairment of insulin secretion. In rat models, ,-cell dysfunction is related to increased triacylglycerol content in islets, increased production of nitric oxide, ceramide synthesis and ,-cell apoptosis. The decreased insulin gene promoter activity and binding of the pancreas-duodenum homeobox-1 (PDX-1) transcription factor to the insulin gene seem to mediate TG effect in islets. In humans, acute and prolonged effects of FAs on glucose-stimulated insulin secretion have been widely investigated as well as the effect of high-fat diets on insulin sensitivity and secretion and on the development of type 2 diabetes. [source]


    Tales from Two Deltas: Catfish Fillets, High-Value Foods, and Globalization

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2005
    Dominique M. Duval-Diop
    Abstract: This article examines two places of catfish production, the Mekong River Delta of Vietnam and the Mississippi River Delta of the United States, and uses the concept of globalization to illustrate how these distant places have been brought into competition and how this competition is mediated. Bringing these deltas together is a similar commitment to an economic development strategy that is based on catfish production, a desire to gain access to wealthy consumers who are willing to purchase this high-value food item, and processing and transportation technologies that allow this perishable product to be made more "durable" and to be shipped great distances. Mediating this relationship are consumers' preferences, product labeling, and the U.S. state. This case study illustrates the heterogeneous outcomes of globalization as these deltas are brought into a relationship that, in some ways, is closer than their absolute distance may indicate. The "backlash" forces, such as nontariff trade barriers, nationalism, and a still-powerful state (as both a regulator and consumer), characterize these globalizations. [source]


    Politics of Scale and the Globalization of the South Korean Automobile Industry

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 2 2003
    Bae-Gyoon Park
    Abstract: This article explains the liberalization and globalization of the South Korean automobile industry, with an emphasis on the multiscalar processes of globalization. In particular, it explores the processes by which the South Korean government shifted its policy for the automobile industry, from a nationalist and protectionist orientation toward liberalization in the late 1990s, which, in turn, attracted inward investments from foreign automakers and facilitated the globalization of the nation's automobile market. While exploring the roles of diverse actors and forces,operating at various geographic scales,in these processes, I placed more analytical weight on examining the ways in which contestation between national and local forces contributed to the government's liberalization policy. I argue that the globalization of the South Korean automobile industry in recent years was not only an outcome of the globalizing strategies of foreign automakers, but also was facilitated by an institutional fix by the nation-state (particularly the liberalization of policy) to a regulatory deficit, which stemmed from the national-local tension with respect to a state-led economic restructuring project. [source]


    Jungle Law in the Orchard: Comparing Globalization in the New Zealand and Chilean Apple Industries

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 4 2002
    Megan K. L. McKenna
    Abstract: Restructuring in the global apple market is leading to a pronounced tightening in the competitive spaces occupied by Southern Hemisphere producers. For New Zealand and Chile, the world's two most successful apple-exporting countries, significant challenges are presented by projected industry trends, such as declining profitability in the global industry, increased world production, and the continued static demand in key markets. In particular, falling prices in Europe and North America for many key varieties and concomitant lower returns to growers are threatening serious and pervasive impacts. This article explores some of these challenges in the context of the significantly different positions occupied by New Zealand and Chile within the global fresh fruit and vegetable complex. An analysis of the two countries' industries, particularly comparing issues of regulation and innovative varietal development, shows that global food complexes have highly variable spatial expressions, given their process-based nature and underlying dynamics of contestation. Focusing on the increased competition between the New Zealand and Chilean apple industries, the discussion sheds light on wider emerging competitive dynamics within the global fruit industry. The example of the recent Pacific Rose crisis, which involved Chilean "theft" of an exclusive New Zealand apple variety, is used to illustrate the emergence of "jungle law" in the Southern Hemisphere apple industries. [source]


    The Spaces and Times of Globalization: Place, Scale, Networks, and Positionality,

    ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, Issue 3 2002
    Eric Sheppard
    Abstract: Discussions of the spatiality of globalization have largely focused on place-based attributes that fix globalization locally, on globalization as the construction of scale, and on networks as a distinctive feature of contemporary globalization. By contrast, position within the global economy is frequently regarded as anachronistic in a shrinking, networked world. A critical review of how place, scale, and networks are used as metaphors for the spatiality of globalization suggests that space/time still matters. Positionality (position in relational space/time within the global economy) is conceptualized as both shaping and shaped by the trajectories of globalization and as influencing the conditions of possibility of places in a globalizing world. The wormhole is invoked as a way of describing the concrete geographies of positionality and their non-Euclidean relationship to the Earth's surface. The inclusion of positionality challenges the simplicity of pro- and antiglobalization narratives and can change how we think about globalization and devise strategies to alter its trajectory. [source]


    Globalization and the poor periphery before 1950 , By Jeffrey G. Williamson

    ECONOMIC HISTORY REVIEW, Issue 3 2007
    Edward Anderson
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Solving the Riddle of Globalization and Development.

    ECONOMICA, Issue 298 2008
    DAVID E. BLOOM, Edited by MANUEL R. AGOSIN, GEORGES CHAPELIER, JAGDISH SAIGAL
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Moral Education in an Age of Globalization

    EDUCATIONAL PHILOSOPHY AND THEORY, Issue 4 2010
    Nel Noddings
    Abstract Care theory is used to describe an approach to global ethics and moral education. After a brief introduction to care ethics, the theory is applied to global ethics. The paper concludes with a discussion of moral education for personal, political, and global domains. [source]


    Never Leave Yourself: Ethnopsychology As Mediator of Psychological Globalization among Belizean Schoolgirls

    ETHOS, Issue 1 2003
    Eileen P. Andepson-Fye
    How do transnational ideas and images become psychologically salient to youth in local communities? Based on five years of fieldwork among high school girls in a rapidly changing Belizean community, this article investigates how some transcultural symbolic material (e.g., gender-based maltreatment) becomes psychologically salient in a given society and yet other constructs (e.g., thin body image) can pass by with relatively few consequences in an increasingly transnational world. The ethnopsychological practice of self-protection among young Belizean women, which girls describe as "Never Leave Yourself, " mediates how girls make sense of and incorporate transnational concepts into their lived experience. The current material realities and particular historic moment in Belize also influence variations in how transnational concepts are incorporated. [source]


    Globalizing Disaster Trauma: Psychiatry, Science, and Culture after the Kobe Earthquake

    ETHOS, Issue 2 2000
    Joshua Breslau
    In January of 1995 a massive earthquake struck the city of Kobe, Japan. This article examines how this event became an opportunity for extending global networks of the science and medicine of trauma. The article is based on ethnographic research in Kobe and Los Angeles with psychiatrists who responded to the earthquake in its immediate aftermath. Three aspects of the process are examined: 1) changes in psychiatric institutions that were ongoing at the time of the earthquake, 2) the place of psychiatry in Japanese cultural self-criticism, and 3) the particular technologies for identifying and treating trauma. Globalization in this case cannot be seen as an imposition of Western cultural forms, but rather an ongoing process that reproduces differences between cultures as particular elements travel between them. [source]


    Globalization and the transformation of the national political space: Six European countries compared

    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL RESEARCH, Issue 6 2006
    HANSPETER KRIESI
    The structural opposition between globalization ,winners' and ,losers' is expected to constitute potentials for political mobilization within national political contexts, the mobilization of which is expected to give rise to two intimately related dynamics: the transformation of the basic structure of the national political space and the strategic repositioning of the political parties within the transforming space. The article presents several hypotheses with regard to these two dynamics and tests them empirically on the basis of new data concerning the supply side of electoral politics from six Western European countries (Austria, Britain, France, Germany, the Netherlands and Switzerland). The results indicate that in all the countries, the new cleavage has become embedded into existing two-dimensional national political spaces, that the meaning of the original dimensions has been transformed, and that the configuration of the main parties has become triangular even in a country like France. [source]


    THE BANANA: Empires, Trade Wars, and Globalization.

    GEOGRAPHICAL REVIEW, Issue 1 2010
    By James Wiley.
    No abstract is available for this article. [source]


    Globalization of the HR function: The next step in HR's transformation?

    GLOBAL BUSINESS AND ORGANIZATIONAL EXCELLENCE, Issue 2 2008
    Karen Piercy
    A study confirms HR's progress in moving from a transactional function to a strategic partner. The function now faces pressures to globalize by adopting service delivery models that better rationalize costs, leverage common technology and processes, and focus resources on global HR processes that can create competitive differentiation for the enterprise. The authors discuss five service delivery models along a continuum of commonality of business needs, and present four cases of global companies that found the best fit for their needs. Key determinants include financial considerations, HR service requirements, and cultural readiness. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [source]