Globalization
in sentence
2352 examples of Globalization in a sentence
But one hypothesis that I think emerges from a cursory look at that data is the idea that polarized societies are far less tolerant of
globalization.
It's the societies like Sweden in the past, like Canada today, where there is a centrist politics, where right and left work together, that we encourage supportive attitudes towards
globalization.
For those of us who believe that our identities are not mutually exclusive, we have to all work together to ensure that
globalization
takes everyone with us and doesn't leave people behind.
Only then will we truly reconcile democracy and
globalization.
One reason is that I became entranced by the gurus of change, became a worshiper of the religion of the new for novelty's sake, and of
globalization
and open borders and kaleidoscopic diversity.
It will get us out of our growth slump and it will change radically the way
globalization
has been shaped over the last decade.
And due to changes in globalization, changes due to advances in technology and other factors, the reality is our organizations are constantly having to adapt.
Americanization and
globalization
for the last several generations have basically been the same thing.
So
globalization
is continuing.
We have large numbers of middle and working classes that feel like they've not benefited from promises of globalization, so they don't want to see it particularly.
I'm from Ghana, West Africa, and my question is: I'm wondering how do you present and justify the idea of global governance to countries that have been historically disenfranchised by the effects of globalization, and also, if we're talking about global governance, it sounds to me like it will definitely come from a very Westernized idea of what the "global" is supposed to look like.
Many of the countries that suffered most from the last 200 years of
globalization
and imperialism and industrialization are exactly the countries which are also most likely to suffer most from the next wave.
If you're like me and you believe in forwards and outwards, and you believe that the best thing about humanity is its diversity, and the best thing about
globalization
is the way that it stirs up that diversity, that cultural mixture to make something more creative, more exciting, more productive than there's ever been before in human history, then, my friends, we've got a job on our hands, because the inwards and backwards brigade are uniting as never before, and that creed of inwards and backwards, that fear, that anxiety, playing on the simplest instincts, is sweeping across the world.
On one side are those who have the tailwinds of
globalization
and the meritocracy blowing at their back, and they tend to favor open trade, open borders, open social mores, because there are so many opportunities.
On the other side are those who feel the headwinds of
globalization
and the meritocracy just blasting in their faces, and they favor closed trade, closed borders, closed social mores, because they just want some security.
And this global economy, this globalization, it does have downsides.
When Pope Francis went to Lampedusa, off the coast of Italy, in 2014, he accused all of us and the global population of what he called "the
globalization
of indifference."
Today the world of
globalization
is on speed.
PH: One of the great things that's going on here is the
globalization
of content really is happening.
And I had a bit of a wake-up call in Amsterdam: I was there going into the design stores, and mixing with our crowd of designers, and I recognized that a whole lot of stuff pretty much looked the same, and the effect of
globalization
has had that in our community also.
And yet, as middle class families struggle to get by on wages that have not budged in about 40 years, neoliberal economists continue to warn that the only reasonable response to the painful dislocations of austerity and
globalization
is even more austerity and
globalization.
So for people from the vast majority of cultures,
globalization
remains profoundly alienating.
This provides a reason why trade and
globalization
are even more important, more powerful than ever before, and are going to increase growth more than ever before.
But if you look at
globalization
and the rapid acceleration of that, if you look at the strategy of "move fast and break things" and what happened with that, and then you look at the potential for synthetic biology, I don't know that we should move forward rapidly or without any kind of restriction to a world where you could have a DNA printer in every home and high school lab.
While
globalization
has increased travel, it's made it necessary that everybody be everywhere, all the time, all over the world.
This is my version of
globalization.
But today, with globalization, with outsourcing, English has become a language of aspiration.
And then I think the other point is that Indians today are far more comfortable with
globalization.
Again, after having lived for more than 200 years under the East India Company and under imperial rule, Indians had a very natural reaction towards
globalization
believing it was a form of imperialism.
But today, as Indian companies go abroad, as Indians come and work all over the world, Indians have gained a lot more confidence and have realized that
globalization
is something they can participate in.
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