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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. Mankind's progress as a species is weighed too many times in quantity rather than quality; it is the quest for the common good that overshadows the needs of the minority. However, when speaking in terms of global populations, it is clear to see how the minority has suddenly come to represent multiple millions of people who struggle - and often lose - against stronger, more influential societies whose concern for the "common man" is about as nonexistent as the self-importance displayed by the majority. A pertinent example of this is found in the inextricable connection between globalization and denationalization. Bibliography lists 17 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCdenatl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
minority. However, when speaking in terms of global populations, it is clear to see how the minority has suddenly come to represent multiple millions of people who struggle -
and often lose - against stronger, more influential societies whose concern for the "common man" is about as nonexistent as the self-importance displayed by the majority. A pertinent example
of this is found in the inextricable connection between globalization and denationalization. The declining significance of national borders constitutes a challenge to the capacity of the nation-state to reach
unilaterally its governance targets. Effective governance depends upon the spatial congruence of political regulations with socially integrated areas and the absence of significant externalities...Although globalization is thus neither identical
with, nor does it necessarily lead to, the rise of international institutions and governance beyond the nation-state, this article will show to what extent societal denationalization is accompanied by the
rise of international institutions and how the myriad of international institutions existing today interact to produce global governance (Zuhn, 2003, pp. 341-364). II. NATION-STATE
Globalization may have originally intended to draw people together, but many believe it has accomplished just the opposite, proving to pull people apart as they undergo denationalization.
Wrapped up together with the ongoing fight to sustain nationalism, the masses are often forced to observe beliefs they do not support so as to maintain some semblance of unity.
Some contend that despite all its past and present global eruptions, nationalism has not been a significant source of strife to the world order or international system; instead, where
it poses the greatest threat is in its desire to dominate powerful states and people. Geller (1997) notes in his book entitled Nationalism that cultural differences are at the
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