Globalization
In: Global governance: a review of multilateralism and international organizations, Band 5, Heft 4, S. 483-496
ISSN: 2468-0958, 1075-2846
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In: Global governance: a review of multilateralism and international organizations, Band 5, Heft 4, S. 483-496
ISSN: 2468-0958, 1075-2846
In: A millennial quartet book
In: Radical philosophy: a journal of socialist and feminist philosophy, Heft 80, S. 2-5
ISSN: 0300-211X
In: Studies in political economy: SPE ; a socialist review, Heft 58, S. 11-140
ISSN: 0707-8552
Discusses economic and political dimensions, including decline in industrial employment and accompanying wage-labor crisis, and impact on state sovereignty and democracy; some focus on Canada and Canadian foreign policy; 5 articles; Marxist perspective.
In: Theory, culture & society: explorations in critical social science, Band 23, Heft 2-3, S. 393-399
ISSN: 1460-3616
What is generally called globalization is a vast social field in which hegemonic or dominant social groups, states, interests and ideologies collide with counter-hegemonic or subordinate social groups, states, interests and ideologies on a world scale. Even the hegemonic camp is fraught with conflicts, but over and above them, there is a basic consensus among its most influential members (in political terms, the G-7). It is this consensus that confers on globalization its dominant characteristics. The counter-hegemonic or subordinate production of globalization is what is called insurgent cosmopolitanism. It consists of the transnationally organized resistance against the unequal exchanges produced or intensified by globalized localisms and localized globalisms.
In: International feminist journal of politics, Band 7, Heft 1, S. 151-155
ISSN: 1468-4470
In: Oxford review of economic policy, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 1-156
ISSN: 0266-903X
In: Greenwood guides to business and economics
In: New global studies, Band 6, Heft 2
ISSN: 1940-0004
In: Challenges to the Global Trading System, S. 15-20