Summary of globalisation of 2 political science
Answers
“Globalization” can mean many things. To some, it means equal integration of individual societies into worldwide political, economic and cultural processes. To others it means accentuated uneven economic development, accompanied by cultural imperialism, which merely exaggerates the political dependence of “peripheral” on “core” societies. For still others, globalization is shorthand for the social and cultural changes that follow when societies become linked with and, in an escalating way, dependent upon the world capitalist market. The idea that underlies these multiple meanings of globalization is the radical intensification of worldwide social relations and the lifting of social activities out of local and national conditions. The course will examine the major theoretical discourses raised by this idea, such as
(1) the effect of globalizing material production on the formation of post-liberal democracy
(2) the nexus between globalizing cultural production and the politics of cosmopolitanism and “otherness,”
(3) the impact of globalizing communication technologies and mass consumerism on the formation of transnational “gated class communities,” and
(4) the relationship between the globalization of transnational class conflicts/interests/identities and transnational governance. We will also explore the connection between “late global capitalism” and liberal arts education in legitimizing the current global class dynamics.
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globalisation fundamentally deals with flows.
These flows can be ideas moving from one part of the world to another, commodities being traded across borders and so on.
The crucial element is the worldwide inter connected which is created and sustained as a consequence of these constant flows.