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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
3 pages in length. Attempting to escape the unending progression of the global community is akin to digging in sand: The more one tries to fight the sand's natural tendency to fall back into the hole, the more challenging it becomes to create the hole. This article illustrates how globalization has turned into a double-edged sword whereby its intent to improve global interface on a fundamental social, political and economic level has transformed into a viable and beneficial concept for only some of the global communities. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCGlobEval.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
more challenging it becomes to create the hole. This article illustrates how globalization has turned into a double-edged sword whereby its intent to improve global interface on a fundamental
social, political and economic level has transformed into a viable and beneficial concept for only some of the global communities. "Globalization is a process of relativization...Societies relate to a
single system of societies, which individuals relate to a single sense of humanity...Globalization compresses the world into a single entity, and people necessarily become more and more aware of their
new global existence" (Lechner et al, 2004, p. 57). The articles primary focus is how the issue of globalization is a hot
potato amidst underdeveloped nations where conventional labor and methods are readily - and sometimes exclusively - employed; the extinction of such practices for the supposed improvement of the global community
has rendered these societies a victim of technological progress. This article illustrates how there are myriad ethical considerations with regard to the persistence of globalization: Should the decision be
made for global or local gain? How many will reap the benefit of individualized attention at the expense of all others? Is there a time when an individuals
interests supersede those of the masses? These are ethical questions posed each and everyday throughout the world; whether or not the right answers are acted upon is another matter
entirely. One can readily surmise how the challenges for such Third World countries as Africa inherent to the concept of globalization are quite
significant. Inasmuch as African economic existence relies heavily upon farming and exports, the dawning of globalization threatens to make such conventional practices obsolete. Africas economic dependency upon locally
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