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Different Aspects of Globalization

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Title: Different Aspects of Globalization


1
Different Aspects of Globalization
  • Industrial - emergence of worldwide production
    markets and broader access to a range of foreign
    products for consumers and companies
  • Financial - emergence of worldwide financial
    markets and better access to external financing
    for corporate, national and subnational borrowers
  • Economic - realization of a global common market,
    based on the freedom of exchange of goods and
    capital.
  • Political struggles towards coordination of
    world government which regulates the
    relationships among nations and guarantees the
    rights arising from social and economic
    globalization.

2
  • Informational - increase in information flows
    between geographically remote locations
  • Cultural - growth of cross-cultural contacts
    advent of new categories of consciousness and
    identities such as Globalism - which embodies
    cultural diffusion, the desire to consume and
    enjoy foreign products and ideas, adopt new
    technology and practices, and participate in a
    "world culture"

3
Environmental Globalization
  • Ecological- the advent of global environmental
    challenges that can not be solved without
    international cooperation, such as
  • climate change
  • cross-boundary water and air pollution,
    over-fishing of the ocean
  • the spread of invasive species.

4
  • Environment and Globalization Some Examples of
    Interaction

5
5 propositions about globalization and the
environment
  • PROPOSITION 1
  • The rapid acceleration in global economic
    activity and our dramatically increased demands
    for critical, finite natural resources undermine
    our pursuit of continued economic prosperity.

6
  • PROPOSITION 2
  • The linked processes of globalization and
    environmental degradation pose new security
    threats to an already insecure world. They impact
    the vulnerability of ecosystems and societies,
    and the least resilient ecosystems. The
    livelihoods of the poorest communities are most
    at risk.

7
  • PROPOSITION 3
  • The newly prosperous and the established wealthy
    will have to come to terms with the limitations
    of the ecological space in which both must
    operate, and also with the needs and rights of
    those who have not been as lucky.

8
  • PROPOSITION 4
  • Consumptionin both North and Southwill define
    the future of globalization as well as the global
    environment.
  • (For example, while global population doubled
    between 1950 and 2004, global wood use more than
    doubled, global water use roughly tripled, and
    consumption of coal, oil, and natural gas
    increased nearly five times).

9
  • PROPOSITION 5
  • Concerns about the global market and global
    environment will become even more intertwined and
    each will become increasingly dependent on the
    other.
  • (significant part of international trade is in
    environment-related goodsranging from trade in
    resources such as timber or fish to flowers and
    species, and much more. Moreover, trade in just
    about all goods has environmental relevance in
    the manufacture, transport, disposal and use of
    those goods).

10
Environment and Global Inequality
11
  • http//www.gapminder.org/downloads/presentations/h
    uman-development-trends-2005.html

12
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13
Affluence or Poverty Which is the Most Damaging?
  • Poverty- Poor people are frequently the leading
    edge in cutting down tropical rain forests? But
    is the cause of destruction agriculture shifting
    agriculture or shifted agriculture. Land
    inequality where the farmers came from?
  • Environmental degradation leads to more poverty.
  • But on the other hand, very poor people consume
    virtually nothing. They live in involuntary
    simplicity

14
Affluence the IPAT model
  • Impact (Environmental) Population X Affluence
    (Level of) X Technology.
  • Environmental impact a function of number of
    people, amount of goods they consume and
    technologies used to produce those goods.
  • One finding increasing population increased CO2
    emission.
  • But At highest levels of affluence, C02
    emissions begin to decline. But only in top 25
    of 111 nations. Shifting from manufacturing to
    service.

15
Consumption of the Affluent
  • In 1997, the worlds 225 richest people had a
    combined wealth of over 1 trillion, equal to the
    wealth of 47 of the worlds population.
  • Average MDC person consumes six times as much
    grain fish and fresh water, ten times as much
    energy and timber, 13 times as much iron and
    steel, 18 times as many chemicals

16
Environmental Impacts of Inequality
  • Affluent are best able to afford higher prices
    and or energy taxes or to purchase energy
    efficient cars, homes etc.
  • Environmental justice poor and minorities are
    disproportionately impacted by toxic waste sites.

17
Sustainable Development or a Sustainable Society
  • meets the needs of the present without
    compromising the ability of future generations to
    meet their own needs (World Commission on
    Environment and Development, 1987)

18
The Future Limits to Growth
  • 1972- Club of Rome research group argued that on
    a global basis, the whole of humanity will
    replicate the more limited ecological crash
    experience of the Mayans and the Mesopotamians.
  • Argued that the combination of population growth,
    exponentially growing per capita economic
    productivity and consumption, and pollution would
    eventually overburden the subsistence base for
    human societies.
  • Early 1970s was also a period of many current
    environmental laws and agencies Environmental
    Protection Agency, Endangered Species Act, Clean
    Air Act, Clean Water Act

19
Your ecological footprint
  • ecological footprint-biologically productive land
    and water required to produce the resources
    consumed and to assimilate the wastes generated
    by a given human population.
  • Calculation that humans need 2.1 hectares (around
    5 acres) on average.
  • US-12.2 hectares, 6.3 for Germany, 1.8 for china,
    .6 for Bangladesh

20
Does Affluence Buy Happiness?
  • Is there a relationship between affluence and
    happiness? Very small overall differences in the
    reported happiness found in very rich and very
    poor countries.although the upper classes in
    every society tend to be happier than the poor.
  • Since the 1950s Americans have nearly doubled
    their consumption, both in terms of GNP and
    personal consumption expenses per capita. Yet
    the percentage of Americans who report themselves
    to be very happy peaked in 1957 and ha slowly
    declined since that timeexcept for the poor,
    link between increasing wealth and happiness is
    not all clear.
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