I. Introduction to Globalization
Teachers may want to have the students read this
introduction before they read the essays on "Globalization"
to provide a basic understanding of the concepts included
therein.
"Globalization" is a term that came into popular usage in the
1980's to describe the increased movement of people,
knowledge and ideas, and goods and money across national
borders that has led to increased interconnectedness
among the world's populations, economically, politically,
socially and culturally. Although globalization is often
thought of in economic terms (i.e., "the global
marketplace"), this process has many social and political
implications as well. Many in local communities associate
globalization with modernization (i.e., the
transformation of "traditional" societies into "Western"
industrialized ones). At the global level, globalization is
thought of in terms of the challenges it poses to the role of
governments in international affairs and the global economy.
There are heated debates about globalization and its positive
and negative effects. While globalization is thought of by
many as having the potential to make societies richer through
trade and to bring knowledge and information to people around
the world, there are many others who perceive globalization
as contributing to the exploitation of the poor by the rich,
and as a threat to traditional cultures as the process of
modernization changes societies. There are some who link the
negative aspects of globalization to terrorism. To put a
complicated discussion in simple terms, they argue that
exploitative or declining conditions contribute to the lure
of informal "extremist" networks that commit criminal or
terrorist acts internationally. And thanks to today's
technology and integrated societies, these networks span
throughout the world. It is in this sense that terrorism,
too, is "globalized." The essays in this section address
some of the complex questions associated with globalization
in light of September 11. Before moving to these essays,
consider the discussion below about some of the economic,
political, social and cultural manifestations of
globalization.
Economic manifestations of globalization
Increasingly over the past two centuries, economic
activity has become more globally oriented and integrated.
Some economists argue that it is no longer meaningful to
think in terms of national economies; international trade
has become central to most local and domestic economies
around the world.
Among the major industrial economies, sometimes referred to
as the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) countries, 65 percent of the total economic
production, or GDP, is associated with international trade.
Economists project that, in the U.S., more than 50 percent
of the new jobs created in this decade will be directly
linked to the global economy.
The recent focus on the international integration of
economies is based on the desirability of a free global
market with as few trade barriers as possible, allowing
for true competition across borders.
International economic institutions, such as the World
Trade Organization (WTO) and the International Monetary
Fund (IMF), facilitate this increasingly barrier-free flow
of goods, services, and money (capital) internationally.
Regionally, too, organizations like the North America
Free Trade Association (NAFTA), the European Union (EU),
and the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN)
work towards economic integration within their respective
geographical regions.
Many economists assess economic globalization as having a
positive impact, linking increased economic transactions
across national borders to increased world GDP, and
opportunities for economic development. Still, the process is
not without its critics, who consider that many of the
economies of the industrial North (i.e., North America,
Europe, East Asia) have benefited from globalization, while
in the past two decades many semi- and non-industrial
countries of the geo-political South (i.e., Africa, parts of
Asia, and Central and South America) have faced economic
downturns rather than the growth promised by economic
integration. Critics assert that these conditions are to a
significant extent the consequence of global restructuring
which has benefited Northern economies while disadvantaging
Southern economies. Others voice concern that globalization
adversely affects workers and the environment in many
countries around the world.
Discontent with the perceived disastrous economic and social
manifestations of globalization has led to large and growing
demonstrations at recent intergovernmental meetings,
including meetings of the World Trade Organization (WTO), the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the
Group of Eight (G8) leading industrial countries.
Political manifestations of globalization
Globalization has impacts in the political arena, but there
is not a consensus among social scientists about the nature
and degree of its impact on national and international
politics. Some political scientists argue that globalization
is weakening nation-states and that global institutions
gradually will take over the functions and power of
nation-states. Other social scientists believe that while
increased global inter-connectivity will result in dramatic
changes in world politics, particularly in international
relations (i.e., the way states relate to each other), the
nation-state will remain at the center of international
political activity.
Political theorists and historians often link the rise of the
modern nation-state (in Europe and North America in the
nineteenth century and in Asia and Africa in the twentieth
century) with industrialization and the development of modern
capitalist and socialist economies. These scholars also
assert that the administrative structures and institutions of
the modern nation-state were in part responsible for the
conditions that led to industrial expansion. Moreover,
industrial development brought with it social dislocations
that necessitated state intervention in the form of public
education and social "safety nets" for health care, housing,
and other social services. Consequently, the development of
the contemporary nation-state, nationalism, inter-state
alliances, colonization, and the great wars of the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries were in part political manifestations
of changes in the structure of economic production.
It follows from this argument that in the era of
globalization, with its significant changes in global
economic relations, the nineteenth and twentieth century
model of the nation-state may become obsolete. The economic
orientation of the modern nation-state has been centered on
national economic interests, which may often conflict with
the global trend towards the free and rapid movement of
goods, services, finance, and labor. These processes give
rise to the question of whether the modern nation-state can
survive in its present form in the new global age. Is it
adaptable, or will it gradually be replaced by emerging
multinational or regional political entities?
Changes in political structure and practices resulting from
economic globalization are only a partial explanation of
changes in world politics in the late twentieth and early
twenty-first centuries. International relations and world
politics in the second half of the twentieth century were
strongly informed by another global factor - the Cold War
(i.e., the ideological struggle between the Western nations,
the United States and its allies, and the Eastern Bloc, the
Soviet Union and China and their allies). The early and most
intense years of the Cold War in the 1950s and 1960s
coincided with the de-colonization of Asia and Africa and the
creation of more than 70 new nation-states. Many of the new
nation-states of Africa and Asia had based their struggle for
independence on the principles of freedom, justice and
liberty - principles espoused by both the Eastern and Western
blocks. The economic, political, and ideological competition
between East and West had fertile ground in these newly
independent nation-states. Although the "cold war" never
developed into a "hot war" of actual military conflict in
Europe or North America, civil wars within and wars between
new nation-states in Africa and Asia were fueled and
supported by Cold War tensions. Major conflicts in Korea,
Vietnam, Congo, Angola, Mozambique, and Somalia are examples
of regional conflicts that were fueled by the Cold War.
To some experts, the demise of the Soviet Union and the
Eastern bloc a decade ago promised a new era of world peace
and increased openness. The processes of globalization
accelerated as goods, ideas and people flowed more freely
across borders in the post-Cold War political environment. In
place of policies of containment, the international community
fostered policies of openness to trade and based on the
principles of democracy and rights.
With such increased openness, multilateral organizations, and
in particular the United Nations (UN), have changed their
focus from maintaining the balance of power between the East
and West to a more global approach to
peacekeeping/peace-building, development, environmental
protection, protection of human rights, and the maintenance
of the rule of law internationally. The creation of legal
institutions like the international criminal tribunals that
have sprung up in the past decade, as well as the
proliferation of major international conferences aiming to
address global problems through international cooperation,
have been referred to as proof of political globalization.
Still, since all of these institutions rely on the
participation of nation-states and respect the fundamental
principle of national sovereignty, the extent to which these
institutions exhibit true political globalization continues
to be debated.
Social and cultural manifestations of globalization
Though there are many social and cultural manifestations of
globalization, here are some of the major ones:
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Informational services: The past two decades have
seen an internationalization of information services
involving the exponential expansion of computer-based
communication through the Internet and electronic mail. On
the one hand, the electronic revolution has promoted the
diversification and democratization of information as people
in nearly every country are able to communicate their
opinions and perspectives on issues, local and global, that
impact their lives. Political groups from Chiapas to
Pakistan have effectively used information technology to
promote their perspectives and movements. On the other hand,
this expansion of information technology has been highly
uneven, creating an international "digital divide" (i.e.,
differences in access to and skills to use Internet and other
information technologies due predominantly to geography and
economic status). Often, access to information technology
and to telephone lines in many developing countries is
controlled by the state or is available only to a small
minority who can afford them..
-
News services: In recent years there has been a
significant shift in the transmission and reporting of world
news with the rise of a small number of global news services.
This process has been referred to as the "CNN-ization of
news," reflecting the power of a few news agencies to
construct and disseminate news. Thanks to satellite
technology, CNN and its few competitors extend their reach to
even the most geographically remote areas of the world. This
raises some important questions of globalization: Who
determines what news What is "newsworthy?" Who frames the
news and determines the perspectives articulated? Whose
voice(s) are and are not represented? What are the potential
political consequences of the silencing of alternative voices
and perspectives?
-
Popular culture: The contemporary revolution in
communication technology has had a dramatic impact in the
arena of popular culture. Information technology enables a
wide diversity of locally-based popular culture to develop
and reach a larger audience. For example, "world music" has
developed a major international audience. Old and new
musical traditions that a few years ago were limited to a
small local audience are now playing on the world stage.
On the other hand, globalization has increased transmission
of popular culture easily and inexpensively from the
developed countries of the North throughout the world.
Consequently, despite efforts of nationally-based media to
develop local television, movie, and video programs, many
media markets in countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America
are saturated with productions from the U.S., Europe and a
few countries in Asia (especially Japan and India). Local
critics of this trend lament not only the resulting silencing
of domestic cultural expression, but also the hegemonic reach
of Western, "alien" culture and the potential global
homogenization of values and cultural taste.