Introduction-to-Globalization
Introduction-to-Globalization
the Study of
Globalization
Chris Jezrel B. Barleta
Part-time Instructor, LSPU-SPCC
Intended Learning Outcomes
01 02 03
Discuss the
Identify and
importance of
explain the
studying the
different drivers
concept of
of globalization;
globalization;
Learning Guide Questions
What do you think are the
advantages and
What do you think is the
disadvantages of
importance of defining
homogenization of culture?
globalization?
How about
heterogenization?
First, the perspective of the person who defines globalization shapes its
definition.
• "globalization is a 'world of things' that have 'different speeds, axes,
points of origin and termination, and varied relationships to
institutional structures in different regions, nations, or societies’”
(Appadurai, 1996).
• definitions suggest the perspective of the author on the origins and
the geopolitical implications of globalization. (Al-Rhodan, 2006)
• For example, seeing globalization as positive or negative
The Task of Defining Globalization
Second, to paraphrase the sociologist Cesare Poppi: Globalization is the
debate and the debate is globalization.
Examples:
• Natural solids
• man-made barriers
Peaks of the
Pyrenees
mountains:
Boundary of Spain
and France
Natural solids
Alps: French-Italian
Border
Natural solids
Mekong River:
Boundary Between
Laos and Thailand
Natural solids
Great Lakes:
Boundaries US and
Canada
Man-made Barriers
Hadrian’s Wall in
England
Man-made Barriers
Berlin Wall
Man-made Barriers
Nine-dash Line
Metaphors of Globalization
Liquid
• the increasing ease of movement of people, things, information, and places
in the contemporary world.
• today's liquid phenomena change quickly and their aspects, spatial and
temporal, are in continuous fluctuation.
Examples:
• In global finance, changes in the stock market are a matter of seconds.
• Videos uploaded on YouTube or Facebook are unstoppable once they
become viral.
Liquids made political boundaries more permeable to the flow of people and
things (Cartier, 2001). It "tends to melt whatever stands 'in its path (especially
solids)."
Metaphors of Globalization
Flows
• the movement of people, things, places, and information brought by the
growing "porosity" of global limitations (Ritzer, 2015).
Examples:
• foreign cuisines
• global financial crises (effects of American financial crisis on Europe in 2008)
• poor illegal migrants flooding many parts of the world
• the virtual flow of legal and illegal information
• immigrants recreating ethnic enclaves in host countries
• Filipino communities abroad and the Chinese communities in the
Philippines
Dimensions of
Globalization
Dimensions of Globalization
Economic Globalization
Political Globalization
Cultural Globalization
Ethnoscapes
• shifting populations made up of tourists, immigrants, refugees,
and exiles
Technoscapes
• development of technologies that facilitate the rise of TNCs
Dimensions of Globalization
Financescapes
• flows of global capital
Mediascapes
• electronic capabilities to produce and disseminate information
Ideoscapes
• ideologies of states and social movements
Drivers of
Globalization
Thomas
Friedman,
described
contemporary
globalization as
“farther,
faster,
cheaper, and
deeper.”
Drivers of globalization
Marginal Revolution University (2019). Avengers: The Story of Globalization (episode 1).
https://youtu.be/PPZZQ0fmI2Y?si=g_sfqq83YW4iHXUH
Drivers of Globalization
First Wave
• from 1870 to the start of World War I
• stimulated by advances in transport and reductions in trade barriers
Second Wave
• started after World War II and lasted until 1980
• removal of barriers to the flow of goods, people, and investment
between countries
• adoption of free-market capitalism
Third wave
• started in 1980
• spurred by a combination of advances in transport and
communications technologies
Drivers of Globalization
1. Technological drivers
• transportation technology
• microprocessors and telecommunications
• Internet
2. Political drivers
• Liberalized trading rules and deregulated markets
Drivers of Globalization
3. Market drivers
• global expansion
4. Cost drivers
• sourcing efficiency and costs vary from country to
country
5. Competitive drivers
• global inter-firm competition increases
Three
Perspectives on
Globalization
Three Perspectives on Globalization
The Hyper Globalist View
• globalization is a positive process of economic growth
and increasing prosperity for the majority and the spread
of democracy.
• adoption of neoliberal economic policies
Hans Rosling's
200 Countries,
200 Years, 4
Minutes - The
Joy of Stats -
BBC Four
• https://youtu.be/jb
kSRLYSojo?si=FGF
MqE9fp9deLv45
Three Perspectives on Globalization
Three Perspectives on Globalization
/DxjMqrZ6psw?s
i=ks3mT25qZMy
T9IRZ
McDonaldization
Theory of George
Ritzer
• https://youtu.b
e/Fdy1AgO6Fp
4?si=GaaJ0Je2
WxT4-lkj
Three Perspectives on Globalization
Glocalization
• people in developing countries select aspects of western
culture and adapt them to their particular needs
Three Perspectives on Globalization