Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
15. Globalization
2
Defining Globalization
Globalization is the integration of world's societies into one single society. ‘Globalization as a concept refers both to the compression of the world and the intensification of consciousness about the world as a whole’
3
Globalization today Various parts of the world were interconnected, and there was considerable awareness of this, long before the recent coinage of the term globalization. Three factors, roughly coinciding in time, may be mentioned here: The end of the Cold War, The Internet, and Identity politics >
4
Three dimensions of globalization: increased trade and transnational economic activity; faster and denser communication networks; and increased tensions between (and within) cultural groups due to intensified mutual exposure.
5
Issues could be associated with globalization, either simplistically or wrongly:
• Globalization is really recent, and began only in the 1980s. • Globalization is just a new word for economic imperialism or cultural Westernization. • Globalization means homogenization. • Globalization is a threat to local identities.
6
Characteristics of globalization:
It is a set of processes of social change. Deterritorialization. Stretching or extension of human activities, relations and networks across the globe. Speeding up, or increasing velocity, of human activities and relations. It involves specific impacts on different societies. It produces winners and losers. It involves a process of reflexivity, that is, the growing awareness of living in a single global space.
7
Dimensions of globalization • Movement
Dimensions of globalization • Movement. Migration, business travel, international conferences and not least tourism have been growing steadily for decades, with various important implications for local communities, politics and economies. • Mixing. Although ‘cultural crossroads’ where people of different origins met are as ancient as urban life, their number, size and diversity is growing every day. • Vulnerability. Globalization entails the weakening, and sometimes obliteration, of boundaries. Flows of anything from money to refugees are intensified in this era. • Reembedding. A very widespread family of responses to the disembedding tendencies of globalization
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.