Title: Globalization and its impacts
1Globalization and its impacts
- Nuclear Issue
- Terrorism
- Religious Fundamentalism
2What is globalization? How has this affected the
global politics, nuclear proliferation, and the
world economy?
- Globalization is a building trend where all parts
of the world in greater political, economic, and
cultural integration and interaction. - In the Post Cold War era, nation states have a
great deal of freedom however, there is a need
for the international community to protect small
or weak states from aggression without completely
violating state autonomy. - The efforts of major powers to police the world
become complex while still respecting national
autonomy. Intervention occurred through
negotiation through the United Nations as well as
military intervention. - An example of this was NATOs intervention in the
Balkans in 1991 where warring states and
separatism led to ethnic cleansing and other
atrocities. - Free trade in the Post Cold War era of
globalization brought problems as well as
economic growth. - Cycles of boom and bust are endemic to free
market capitalism carries. - The economic expansion of the 1990s led to the
global recession after 2000. - Many countries joined with their neighbors to
create regional trade associations such as
European Union to promote free trade and reduce
tariffs. - NAFTA, Mercosur, and the World Trade Organization
are other such examples. - Countries such as China, India, and Pakistan all
tested nuclear weapons and North Korea continued
to develop them as well. - It is feared that Israel and Iran have nuclear
programs as well.
3What were the basis for and the contents of the
Declaration of Human Rights of December 1948?
Could all nations agree to it?
- The basis for the United Nations Resolution
called the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
lay in American and European history. - Religious tolerance emerged from Europes
experience with religious wars of the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries. - The concept of inalienable rights came from the
United States Constitution and the French
Revolution. - Slavery, womens suffrage, and racial tolerance
were concepts the West had been wrestling with
for years. - The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human
Rights in December 1948 included thirty articles
and called for an end to slavery, torture, and
exile and demanded freedom of movement and
thought, as well as the rights to life, liberty,
and security of person. However, being a product
of Western ideology, the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights ignores many of the worlds
non-Western cultures and religions. - For example, did the assertion of total equality
mean that traditional Hindu social distinctions
were unacceptable?
4What is the theory behind terrorism? Who is Usama
bin Laden? Has it worked?
- Terrorism is a method of deploying violence to
achieve a political end. - The success of violent terrorist attacks was
based on the belief that an act of horrendous
violence would provoke a harsh reprisal or
demonstrate government incompetence. - These responses would then cause the existing
regimes to lose legitimacy and the terrorists
would appear to be strong, organized, and
determined. - This would legitimize the terrorists as a
potential replacement for the existing regime. - Terrorism is hard to combat and well adapted to
television news coverage. - Although terrorism is not a new historical
phenomenon, the new networks, especially the one
led by Usama bin Laden, have attracted followers
throughout the Islamic world. - The United States has responded harshly to the
attacks of bin Ladens followers, announcing a
war on terrorism that led to the Second Persian
Gulf War in Iraq the spring of 2003. - The U.S. decision to invade Iraq was heavily
criticized around the world and cost the United
States the sympathy of the world. U.S. actions in
Iraq and throughout the Muslim world reflect an
anti-American point of view
5What is Islamic militancy and why has it emerged
at the turn of the millennium?
- The Muslim world has undergone enormous changes
in the PostWorld War I era. - The decline of the Ottoman Empire led to the
partition of the Middle East by the Western
powers and the discovery of oil in the region led
to economic as well as political and cultural
imperialism of the region. - Although many states became independent states in
the 1950s, the wealth derived from oil sales has
not been shared with the general population.
Students should also understand that
globalization, particularly mass marketing and
mass media, has exposed the Muslim world to the
consumer culture of the developed world while
they are aware of their inability to attain
access to these goods. - Modernization has is struggling in the Muslim
world and has led many Muslims to turn to their
faith and their sacred past. - Islam was a dominant civilization in the medieval
period and fought the West. - The sacred past of Islam reminds them of past
struggles against the west and that they were
able to prevail. - Some Muslims blame their corrupt leaders and
others focus on external enemies such as Israel
and those who support Israel, the United States. - The United States also has financially and
politically supported corrupt and repressive
governments in the Muslim world like Egypt and
Saudi Arabia, a fact that is unpopular with
Muslims as well. - In the Persian Gulf War of 19901991, the United
States stationed troops in Saudi Arabia, which is
sacred territory for Muslims also was
inflammatory.
6Technology has not only helped spread Western
culture around the world, but has also changed
perceptions of culture. How has the perception of
popular culture changed in the twentieth century
as a result of new technologies?
- Popular culture was perceived as localized and
vulgar entertainment for the masses. - Peoples who were politically and economically
dominated by the Westparticularly in overseas
coloniessubordinated their own cultures and
imitated Europes high culture. European
theater, music, and art were seen as the epitome
of high culture. - Interest in popular culture revived with the
advent of new technologies. - Folk music and dance began to affect European
culture, and the phonograph in particular became
the instrument that brought popular culture to a
world audience. - The advertising industry, which has spread
cultural imperialism, has also been responsible
for disseminating popular culture. - Ever on the lookout for new products and markets,
advertising has brought local culture to national
and international attention.
7How did people of different faiths view the
events at the turn of the millennium?
- The millennium meant different things to the
different faiths - Some Christians viewed the end of the millennium
through the writing of the Prophets in the last
book of the New Testament where Christ would
return to Earth and the world would come to an
end. - Christians also converted more enthusiastically.
- Other groups such as the Branch Davidians and
Heavens Gate and the Members of the Solar Temple
in France were inspired in part by the
millennium. - A Buddhist sect in Japan also believed in the end
of the world in 1999 and attempted terrorist
attacks in Japan. - Some Jews view the struggle for the survival of
Israel as part of their God-given right to rule
all the land of the ancient state of Israel.
Although Muslims are mostly moderate in their
views, some have become frustrated with global
events. - The dominance of their resources and economy by
the West in addition to corrupt repressive
governments in the Muslim World has fostered
Islam militancy
8What is the impact of the expansion of democracy?
Why does it spread and where?
- There has been a general spread of democracy.
- Democratic governments have survived where they
previously existed in the Americas and new ones
have emerged in Asia and Eastern Europe. - Democratic governments tend to encourage
political moderation. - In Africa there has been mixed results but there
is hope of more democratic rule with the election
of Nelson Mandela in South Africa in 1994 and the
election of Olusegun Obasanjo in Nigeria. - The Middle East also has had a mixture of
democratic governments as well as autocratic rule
and the rise Islamic parties.
9What events took place on September 11, 2001? How
did these events reflect a rejection of American
domination at the end of the millennium? Why was
terrorism the chosen method for this rejection?
- The events of September 11, 2001, include the
hi-jacking of the planes and the mission to crash
into American landmarks. - These landmarks were chosen as they represent the
economic invasion and the military used to
protect these interests. - al Qaeda, as all terrorist, desired to hit strong
points to provide maximum terror value the more
horrific and unexpected the greater the terror - Usama bin Laden, a rich Saudi, was angry with the
United States for its interference in the
political, economic, and cultural affairs of the
Middle East. - By using terrorism as a method to attack the
United States, al Qaeda hoped to bring a violent
retaliation that would draw the worlds
attention, sympathy, and the overthrow of
repressive Middle Eastern governments.
10Since the end of the Cold War, cultural
imperialism has replaced overt political
imperialism as a worldwide issue. Briefly explain
cultural imperialism and how it has spread.
- Cultural imperialism is the spread of Western
styles and tastes in areas such as food, music,
clothing, movies, and television. Critics view
cultural imperialism as an attempt to dominate
the world with a Western capitalist ideology,
while suppressing local cultures. - Technology has been primarily responsible for the
spread of Western culture. - Audio recordings on vinyl records, magnetic tape,
and digitized discs have help spread Western
music. - Motion pictures and television have allowed
global audiences to glimpse cultures almost
entirely Western, and predominantly American. - The advertising industry has used sight and sound
to promote Western food and clothing styles to
new world markets. - Some nations have acted to protect their
indigenous cultures from cultural imperialism. - However, as the people of other countries
continued to criticize America and its policies,
it is clear that the effect of cultural
imperialism is certainly more ambiguous than the
traditional European imperialism. - Cultural hegemony
- MacDonalization of the World
- MacWorld vs. Jihad
11Thomas Friedmans assessment of the millennium
found in analysis of his The Lexus and the Olive
Tree
- Thomas Friedman presents an optimistic view of
the new age at the turn of the millennium. - He views the changes, including the collapse of
the Soviet Union and the expansion of technology
as an opportunity for increased global
prosperity, peace, and democracy as symbolized by
the Japanese car, the Lexus, and the Middle
Eastern symbol, the olive tree. - But there is also apessimistic view of
globalization as well. - This view is reflected in the writings of Samuel
P. Huntington, who states that the world has
become more divided along regional, religious,
and cultural lines, not more integrated as
Friedman suggests. - Convergence vs. Divergence
- Culture wars?