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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 12 page paper. This essay begins with a historical account of the meaning of global citizenship and the emergence of this ideal in modern times. This background leads into the different definitions of the terms. The essay also discusses the fact that it has been NGOs that have pushed and promoted global citizenship. They have been especially effective with businesses operating more like global citizens. At the end, the writer asks whether or not it is even possible to be a 'global citizen. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
12 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGglbct.RTF
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
that our Ancient philosophers talked about being citizens of the world and of the need for all people to co-exist in a cooperative way. The terms emerge naturally from the
concept of citizenship itself. This essay begins with a historical account of the meaning of global citizenship and the emergence of this ideal in modern times. This background leads into
the different definitions of the terms. The essay also discusses the fact that it has been NGOs that have pushed and promoted global citizenship. They have been especially effective with
businesses operating more like global citizens. At the end, the writer asks whether or not it is even possible to be a global citizen. History and Emergence of Global
Citizen/Citizenship Many people think the concept of a global citizen or global citizenship is a new idea, one that has emerged from the most recent global economy. That is
not true. In 300 B.C., Diogenes said that he was "a citizen of the world" (McGill, 2002). Six years later, Zeno initiated the Stoic school of thought, which includes numerous
principles including the notion of being in harmony with nature and cosmopolitanism, or "a cultural outlook that transcends narrower loyalties" (McGill, 2002). These beliefs were carried forward by Cleanthes, Cicero
and Seneca all promoting universal laws and in 90 A.D., Epictetus said "Consider who you are: to begin with, you are a human being" (McGill, 2002). In 170 A.D., Aurelius
promoted the same universal concepts, the cosmopolitan nature of culture saying that if one person hurt another, they hurt everyone (McGill, 2002). By 1580, De Montaigne was urging people to
stop thinking about people in faraway lands as barbarians but rather to gain knowledge about them and in 1598, Hakluyt wrote about people being cosmopolites and about being citizens in
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