Globalization
in sentence
2352 examples of Globalization in a sentence
We live in a time right now where in spite of
globalization
or perhaps because of globalization, all citizenship is ever more resonantly, powerfully local.
It has more to do with changing supply and demand for skill, the race between education and technology, globalization, probably more unequal access to skills in the U.S., where you have very good, very top universities but where the bottom part of the educational system is not as good, so very unequal access to skills, and also an unprecedented rise of top managerial compensation of the United States, which is difficult to account for just on the basis of education.
But between
globalization
and pervasive information technology, the way that we work has really changed dramatically over the last few years.
Because it seems to me that finding this uniqueness has to do with dealing with the whole force of globalization; that the particular is central to finding the uniqueness of place and the uniqueness of a program in a building.
We live now in a world of interdependence and
globalization.
The economic historians tell us that in fact, the time which we reached the greatest point of economic integration and
globalization
was in 1914, just before that happened, World War I, a sobering reflection from history.
In the world of globalization, the continents are drifting closer to each other.
All four ways have one thing in common: they're all ways in which we take the opportunities of globalization, mobility and markets, and update the way we think about the refugee issue.
Number one:
globalization.
Fellow globalists, if you are like me, you may be attached to
globalization
for humanistic reasons.
But studies also show that
globalization
has a dark side.
If anything, our collective energy would be better used finding ways to fix this aspect of globalization, instead of fighting this polarizing battle against nationalism.
So these are good reminders that a lot of what we love in our national traditions actually come from previous waves of
globalization.
And beyond individual symbols, there are whole national traditions that could not have existed without
globalization.
And in many ways,
globalization
is a chance for our national traditions to be questioned, regenerated, reinterpreted, to attract new converts to stay vibrant and relevant over time.
It's about
globalization.
The fault line of contemporary politics is between those that embrace
globalization
and those that fear
globalization.
And the challenge that comes from that is we need to find a new way to narrate
globalization
to those people, to recognize that for those people who have not necessarily been to university, who haven't necessarily grown up with the Internet, that don't get opportunities to travel, they may be unpersuaded by the narrative that we find persuasive in our often liberal bubbles.
For all of us who care about creating liberal, open, tolerant societies, we urgently need a new vision, a vision of a more tolerant, inclusive globalization, one that brings people with us rather than leaving them behind.
That vision of
globalization
is one that has to start by a recognition of the positive benefits of
globalization.
The consensus amongst international relations scholars is that
globalization
brings interdependence, which brings cooperation and peace.
But
globalization
also has redistributive effects.
In 2002, the former Secretary-General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, gave a speech at Yale University, and that speech was on the topic of inclusive
globalization.
And he said, and I paraphrase, "The glass house of
globalization
has to be open to all if it is to remain secure.
Bigotry and ignorance are the ugly face of exclusionary and antagonistic globalization."
That idea of inclusive
globalization
was briefly revived in 2008 in a conference on progressive governance involving many of the leaders of European countries.
So we have to address this misinformation, the gap between perception and reality on key aspects of
globalization.
The third thing that I think is crucial, though, and this is really fundamental, is we have to ensure that everybody shares in the benefits of
globalization.
Furthermore, if we're going to really take seriously the need to ensure people share in the economic benefits, our businesses and corporations need a model of
globalization
that recognizes that they, too, have to take people with them.
There's very little social science evidence that compares attitudes on
globalization.
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