Globalization
in sentence
2352 examples of Globalization in a sentence
And what's happening is that there's a
globalization
of illness occurring, that people are starting to eat like us, and live like us, and die like us.
And eventually President Clinton, in 1996, convened a meeting at the White House, invited industry, human rights NGOs, trade unions, the Department of Labor, got them all in a room and said, "Look, I don't want
globalization
to be a race to the bottom.
And I want to talk to you today about language loss and the
globalization
of English.
Secondly, in the past two decades, thanks to globalization, thanks to the market economy, thanks to the rise of a middle class, we in Turkey see what I define as a rebirth of Islamic modernism.
In the age of globalization, we moved on.
Again with the example of the far right: that we find, ironically, xenophobic nationalists are utilizing the benefits of
globalization.
And that communication, that connectivity around the world, that
globalization
now raises a burden.
And if it is therefore the case, as I believe it is, that one of the phenomenon of our time is the
globalization
of power, then it follows that one of the challenges of our time is to bring governance to the global space.
It's crucial to understand, I believe, because of technology and because of globalization, societies from bottom-up.
We, the beneficiaries of globalization, seem to exploit these victims with every purchase we make, and the injustice feels embedded in the products themselves.
In the ongoing debate about globalization, what's been missing is the voices of the workers themselves.
Together, they make up the largest migration in history, and it is globalization, this chain that begins in a Chinese farming village and ends with iPhones in our pockets and Nikes on our feet and Coach handbags on our arms that has changed the way these millions of people work and marry and live and think.
And what's interesting about this view is, again, it's a view that's held by pro-globalizers like Tom Friedman, from whose book this quote is obviously excerpted, but it's also held by anti-globalizers, who see this giant
globalization
tsunami that's about to wreck all our lives if it hasn't already done so.
So being accurate about how limited
globalization
levels are is critical to even being able to notice that there might be room for something more, something that would contribute further to global welfare.
Avoiding overstatement is also very helpful because it reduces and in some cases even reverses some of the fears that people have about
globalization.
So I actually spend most of my "World 3.0" book working through a litany of market failures and fears that people have that they worry
globalization
is going to exacerbate.
Well, one of the largest causes, after globalization, is actually this fourth asteroid, rising non-marital births.
How do we democratize
globalization?
It's easiest to see how the technology revolution and
globalization
are creating this sort of superstar effect in highly visible fields, like sports and entertainment.
But while it's pretty easy to see how
globalization
and the technology revolution are creating this global plutocracy, what's a lot harder is figuring out what to think about it.
And that's because, in contrast with crony capitalism, so much of what
globalization
and the technology revolution have done is highly positive.
I'm even more of a fan of
globalization.
The same is true of
globalization.
That is the real world, and unless we find a way to globalize democracy or democratize globalization, we will increasingly not only risk the failure to address all of these transnational problems, but we will risk losing democracy itself, locked up in the old nation-state box, unable to address global problems democratically.
So, I guess it is a result of
globalization
that you can find Coca-Cola tins on top of Everest and a Buddhist monk in Monterey.
This is
globalization.
But if I had to put it in a nutshell these days, I sort of feel that
globalization
has taken us by surprise, and we've been slow to respond to it.
If you look at the downside of globalization, it really does seem to be sometimes overwhelming.
We've somehow got to get our act together and we've got to figure out how to globalize the solutions better so that we don't simply become a species which is the victim of the
globalization
of problems.
I cite the definition given by the Algerian sociologist Marieme Helie Lucas, and she says that fundamentalisms, note the "s," so within all of the world's great religious traditions, "fundamentalisms are political movements of the extreme right which in a context of
globalization
manipulate religion in order to achieve their political aims."
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