GlobalizationIn this extensively revised and restructured new edition of Globalization, Malcolm Waters provides a user-friendly introduction to the main arguments about the globalization process. |
Contents
V | 1 |
VI | 7 |
VII | 10 |
VIII | 14 |
IX | 17 |
X | 21 |
XI | 26 |
XII | 28 |
XXXV | 110 |
XXXVI | 116 |
XXXVII | 119 |
XXXVIII | 123 |
XXXIX | 127 |
XL | 130 |
XLI | 146 |
XLII | 152 |
XIII | 31 |
XIV | 34 |
XV | 40 |
XVI | 44 |
XVII | 46 |
XVIII | 49 |
XIX | 50 |
XX | 52 |
XXI | 54 |
XXII | 56 |
XXIII | 60 |
XXIV | 61 |
XXV | 68 |
XXVI | 71 |
XXVII | 76 |
XXVIII | 78 |
XXIX | 85 |
XXX | 88 |
XXXI | 94 |
XXXII | 96 |
XXXIII | 98 |
XXXIV | 106 |
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Common terms and phrases
accelerated Africa alliances American arena argues argument Asia become capital capitalist cent central Chapter citizenship commitment consumption context corporations countries currency differentiation division of labour dominated economic effect electronic emergence established ethnic Europe European example exchanges expansion exported extent firms flows Fordism Gastarbeiter Giddens global cities Global Culture global economy globalization process globe governments hegemon human rights ideology implies increased individual industrial international relations internationalization involves Islamic issues ization Japan Japanese LDCs liberal democracy locality markets mass media material McDonaldization McWorld means migration military MNEs modernization nation-state nation-state-society nineteenth century organization pattern phase planet planetary political populations possible post-Fordism postmodernization production reflexive relationships relativization religion religious risk Robertson Second World War social society sovereignty Soviet Union space structure superpowers symbolic territory TNCs tourism trans-national twentieth century universal values Wallerstein Western workers world-system world-system theory