What is Globalization? The increasing interdependence and interconnectedness of places globally. Implications of Globalization • The stretching of global connections, relations and networks • Making them faster and more.
Download ReportTranscript What is Globalization? The increasing interdependence and interconnectedness of places globally. Implications of Globalization • The stretching of global connections, relations and networks • Making them faster and more.
What is Globalization? The increasing interdependence and interconnectedness of places globally. Implications of Globalization • The stretching of global connections, relations and networks • Making them faster and more intense. • Increasing awareness about the world. Interdependence of Places • Place have become increasingly interdependent. • Caused by a set of interrelated forces or processes that we call globalization. • Globalization helps to extend and deepen linkages between sets of places (and peoples) Why Geography Still Matters • Questions of POWER: Global flows are managed in particular place(s) • Global flows generate uneven spatial impacts. • Human Geography has become more rather than less important. World-system • CORE - Industrialized, market-oriented countries – Western Europe, North America, Japan, Australia. • PERIPHERY - Poor, ex-colonial nations – Kenya, Bolivia, Pakistan, etc. • SEMI-PERIPHERY - Partially industrialized ex-colonial nations (both exploited and exploiter) —South Africa, Brazil, Mexico, South Korea, etc. Not regional geography approach • Country-by-country, or region-by-region • Examines internal geography of each world region. • Does not adequately show connections between regions (basis of globalization) Systematic geography approach Through human geographic lenses: • Population geography • Cultural geography • Economic geography • Urban geography • Political geography • Some environmental geography Population geography • Growth in Periphery • “Graying” in Core • Resulting changes in migration patterns • Causes and consequences of forced migration. Cultural geography • Relationship between place & cultural identity. • Cultural homogenization (Americanization) from globalization? • Yet cultural differences across places are becoming significant? Economic geography • Rising economic interdependence among places. • Local responses in turn affect globalization. • “Glocalization” a better term than globalization? Political geography • Economics supposedly eroding significance of borders. • Ethnic minorities feel they deserve states of their own. • States under attack from above (global economics) and from below (ethnic communities). • Yet states are still powerful, and can respond. Urban geography • Different types of cities in core and periphery. • How globalization affects cities. Are they still needed in the information age ? • Strong reasons for cities to still exist. Watershed moment in human history Dramatic changes in social, cultural, political, economic relations at the… • Global scale • State (national) scale • Regional scale • Local scale • Scales interrelate, affect each other Changes since 1990 • Collapse of Soviet Union, end of Cold War. • Rise of local ethnic/religious nationalism. • New forms and locations of warfare. • Communications revolution (Internet). • Massive increase in economic globalization. Collapse of Soviet bloc • Changes in former Soviet Union and allies. • Changes in the developing world. • Changes in the U.S., now without a powerful enemy. Rise of ethnic nationalism • Soviet, Yugoslav breakups. • Minority ethnic groups looking to end majority “oppression.” • Increased local/ethnic identity as reaction to impersonal globalization. • Increased ability to survive as smaller country. Communications revolution • Only 50 websites in 1992; 2.5 billion + today. • Internet makes world more connected, yet in more specialized niches. • Can be used for globalization from above, or from below. New forms and locations of warfare • Smaller, more brutal wars. • Military technologies more efficient, usually not made by combatants. • Freelancers can wage war • Physical distance or borders no longer protect Economic Globalization From above (elites) From below Country 1 Country 2 Globalization from above • Globalization from the top down • Increasing power of corporations through internationalizing of production and marketing. • Financial markets transcend national boundaries. • Telecommunications spreads ideas, cultures Players in globalization from above • Governments and elites in every country • Multinational corporations • International agencies (UN) • Global trade/finance agencies – World Bank,IMF, WTO Globalization from below • Globalization from the bottom up. • Greater economic interdependence eroding governments? • Increasing influence of local scale to affect global policies: “Think Globally, Act Locally.” • Easier communications among those at the bottom? Players in globalization from below • Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) — Greenpeace, Amnesty Int’l, etc. • Alliances of communities with a common concern, linked through Internet. – Seattle WTO protests, 1999 • Some international agencies Mental map of the world • “Cognitive maps” show our perception of a place, from memory only. • Be as accurate as you can about the size, shape, and location of world regions. Don’t need grids. • Show as much as you possibly can. Be detailed about features, place names, political borders, etc. • Don’t worry about geographic knowledge or artistic skills! No grade will be given, put your section number, but not name.