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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
5 pages in length. The seemingly unrelated aspect of starvation upon the social and economic elements of small villages in lesser economically developed countries (LEDC) reflects a foremost reason why such global communities like Africa – particularly Zimbabwe – are wholly incapable of drawing themselves out of such overwhelming poverty and hunger. The extent to which Africa's small villages have been forced to succumb to the pressure of globalization is both grand and far-reaching; that the reality of starvation precludes any attempt whatsoever to meet such a tremendous challenge speaks to the lack of intestinal fortitude necessary for such an undertaking. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLC_LEDC.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
foremost reason why such global communities like Africa - particularly Zimbabwe - are wholly incapable of drawing themselves out of such overwhelming poverty and hunger. The extent to which
Africas small villages have been forced to succumb to the pressure of globalization is both grand and far-reaching; that the reality of starvation precludes any attempt whatsoever to meet such
a tremendous challenge speaks to the lack of intestinal fortitude necessary for such an undertaking. The challenges for Africas small villages inherent to
the concepts of globalization amid perpetual starvation are indicative of how African social and economic existence relies heavily upon farming and exports; the dawning of globalization threatens to make such
conventional practices obsolete in light of the fact that producing such commodities is difficult enough to do when starvation alone is constantly impeding progress; to add globalization to the mix
all but wipes out the ability of Africas small villages to socially or economically sustain themselves. 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, 2003). 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 or non-traditional environments" (IPS, 2003). While Africas small villagers grapple with the detrimental impact starvation has upon their ability to produce necessary commodities
for social and economic survival - such as physical limitations due to nutrient deficiencies - they must now also deal with the enormous task of incorporating technological advancements of globalization
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