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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
8 pages in length. Understanding the reason for and impact of globalization is as easy as surfing the Internet; because of its expansive supply of information, the Web has myriad sites that explain, support and condemn what has come to be the world's new way to interact. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCAfrGlb.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
has come to be the worlds new way to interact. The very essence of globalization is that of change, to relearn stable and familiar ways in order to make
room for ever-growing progress. While this concept would appear to reflect beneficial movement for all global societies, certain Web sites illustrate how the relevance to many actually represents advancement
at the detrimental social, political and economic expense of myriad unsophisticated societies like Africa. As such, this dichotomy of progression has rendered globalization a much-contested concept. II. AFRICAS
LOVE/HATE RELATIONSHIP WITH GLOBALIZATION The vast majority of global communities look upon globalization as a positive and forward moving progression; however, there are those whose entire lives have been upturned
by this ongoing quest for worldwide connectivity. The Web site http://www.oneworld.org/ips2/oct99/04_15_002.html explains the detrimental impact globalization has had upon the traditional lifestyle of many African communities that have been
given two choices for survival: continue cultivating a life without the infusion of technology or succumb to the pressures of progress and abandon their cultural roots.
The Web site explains how the challenges for Africa inherent to the concept of globalization are both grand and far-reaching. Inasmuch as African economic existence relies
heavily upon farming and exports, the dawning of globalization threatens to make such conventional practices obsolete. According to economists, "globalization and the movement toward an information economy heavily dependent
on knowledge-based products threatens to see Africas already tenuous position in the global economy deteriorate further" (IPS, 1999). That Africas economy depends upon locally produced commodities, such as vanilla,
sugar, cocoa and palm oil, speaks to the aspect of modernized techniques that are being developed as a means by which to create such commodities faster, cheaper and within "laboratories
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