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E-book
Author Kitching, Gavin.

Title Seeking social justice through globalization : escaping a nationalist perspective / Gavin Kitching
Published University Park, Pa. : Pennsylvania State University Press, 2001

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Description 1 online resource (xv, 339 pages)
Contents PART ONE: GLOBALIZATION, SOME CONCEPTUAL ISSUES: Globalization: buzzword or new phenomenon? -- Defining the term: a useful way to start? -- PART TWO: GLOBALIZATION AS A CONTEMPORARY PHENOMENON: The end of the postwar long boom -- The role of transnational corporation -- Globalization as a monetary phenomenon -- Global direct investment since the 1970s -- Globalization as a communications phenomenon -- PART THREE: GLOBALIZATION AND WORLD POVERTY: Globalization and the world's poor -- Industrialization and the alleviation of poverty -- Poverty and peasant agriculture -- PART FOUR: GLOBALIZATION AND THE NATION-STATE: Nationalism and capitalism -- Globalization and modern economic nationalism -- The Ricardian game -- Neo-nationalism economic policies for a globalizing world -- Globalization and imagination: beyond economics -- Conclusion: Globalization and the Left -- Appendix: Ricardo and unimaginable realities: a dialogue,
Summary As demonstrations at meetings of world economic leaders have dramatically shown, the "globalization" of the world economy is now a subject of heated political debate. Generally supported for its positive benefits by neoliberals and attacked for its negative repercussions by the left, it is a multifaceted phenomenon, and even the term is much in dispute as both academic experts and political activists tend to define it in ways that best support their own biases. In this book, Gavin Kitching is not interested so much in providing new information about globalization as an economic and social process as he is in clarifying how globalization is to be understood and evaluated as a "good" or "bad" thing. Central to his argument is that a proper evaluation requires historical self-awareness, both of the historical background of globalization itself and of the historical origins of the very norms by which such evaluations are made. Unusual for a book written from a leftist perspective, Seeking Social Justice Through Globalization argues that those who care for social justice should seek more globalization, not try to prevent its development or roll it back. In his "modified Ricardian" analysis, Kitching warns especially about the constraints that the inherited discourse of economic and cultural nationalism places on the full potential of globalization to improve the welfare of poor people, which is his principal concern
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 323-333) and index
Notes English
Print version record
Subject Social justice.
Globalization.
Social Justice
globalism.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- General.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Globalization.
Globalization
Social justice
Globalisierung
Soziale Gerechtigkeit
Internationalisatie.
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2001021563
ISBN 0271023775
9780271023779