Globalization is the big story of our era. It is shaping not just economies, but societies, polities, and international relations. Many assume it is also, for good or ill, an unstoppable force.
1. Globalization, roughly defined as the global integration of economies and societies, a affects many aspects of young peoples’ lives. Youth have an ambiguous relationship with the globalizing ...
Globalization continues—the widespread predictions of its death were wildly premature. But this is nothing to celebrate. The current round of globalization is in fact largely the product of ...
This program is no longer accepting new student applications. The immersion in globalization theory analyzes how linkages and interconnections across and beyond conventional borders and boundaries are ...
During the past two decades, financial markets around the world have become increasingly interconnected. Financial globalization has brought considerable benefits to national economies and to ...
Human language has changed in the age of globalization: no longer tied to stable and resident communities, it moves across the globe, and it changes in the process. The world has become a complex 'web ...
Globalization may seem like a different kettle of fish, but there are major parallels. The era of rapid and largely unfettered globalization that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union is over.
As the world becomes more connected, globalization has become a daily reality for people in every corner of Earth. But while globalization — described by Peterson Institute for International ...
September 2013, No. 3 Vol. L, Migration The globalization of the modern world has stimulated a steep rise in migration to locations both near and far, supported by many factors. The development of ...
The purpose of this theme was to generate new research designed to better understand the dynamic process of trade and globalization in developing countries, to learn what works and what doesn’t, and ...
Ian Goldin, professor of globalisation and development at Oxford University, and author of "The Butterfly Defect, How Globalization Creates Systemic Risks, And What To Do About It", says that ...
Certain groups, particularly Black and Hispanic workers, have faced disproportionate impacts from globalization and manufacturing declines, a report from the Economic Policy Institute revealed.