Globalization
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Description: Social theory and philosophy issues in globalization; by William Scheuerman.
Globalization (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy) First published Fri Jun 21, 2002; substantive revision Fri Jun 4, 2010 Covering a wide range of distinct political, economic, and cultural trends, the term “globalization†has quickly become one of the most fashionable buzzwords of contemporary political and academic debate. In popular discourse, globalization often functions as little more than a synonym for one or more of the following phenomena: the pursuit of classical liberal (or “free marketâ€) policies in the world economy (“economic liberalizationâ€), the growing dominance of western (or even American) forms of political, economic, and cultural life (“westernization†or “Americanizationâ€), the proliferation of new information technologies (the “Internet Revolutionâ€), as well as the notion that humanity stands at the threshold of realizing one single unified community in which major sources of social conflict have vanished (“global integrationâ€). Fortunately, recent social theory has formulated a more precise concept of globalization than those typically offered by pundits. Although sharp differences continue to separate participants in the ongoing debate, most contemporary social theorists endorse the view that globalization refers to fundamental changes in the spatial and temporal contours of social existence, according to which the significance of space or territory undergoes shifts in the face of a no less dramatic acceleration in the temporal structure of crucial forms of human activity. Geographical distance is typically measured in time. As the time necessary to connect distinct geographical locations is reduced, distance or space undergoes compression or “annihilation.†The human experience of space is intimately connected to the temporal structure of those activities by means of which we experience space. Changes in the temporality of human activity inevitably generate altered experiences of space or territory. Theorists of globalization disagree about the precise so
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