JOURNAL ENTRY 2
GLOBALISATION IS IT GOOD OR BAD ?
Julies analysis : The globalisation debate is so complex: ...Apex want a pro development strategy....Universities debate that globalisation must be balanced against poverty levels.... Oxfam Australia warn that global warming (result of economic globalisation Marxism: exploitation and class struggle ) will affect the poorest countries most.
How do we measure if globalisation is benefitting the poorest countries ??
APEC Report August 2007 : Building a Pro-Development Global Strategy on Climate Change by Alan Oxley Available http://www.apec.org.au/docs/07_WGR.pdf
The challenge is to forge a climate change strategy that is pro-development. The strategy is divided broadly between those who favor global regulation versus those supporting global cooperation.
Globalization for Whom? - Globalization Good for Whom?
Available http://hbswk.hbs.edu/archive/3029.html
Does Globalisation work for the world's poor? That is the central question around which the debate over globalization—in essence, free trade and free flows of capital—revolves......Poverty is now the defining issue for both sides.
Oxfam Australia Available http://www.oxfam.org.au/campaigns/
Climate change will affect everyone, but it will affect poor people in developing countries the most. Poor communities already live on the front lines of pollution, disaster, and the degradation of resources and land.
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GLOBALISATION IS MY TOPIC. I struggle to understand Globalisation agendas/ethics . My primary question: Is globalisation good or bad??
Michael Bond's summary of Globalisation is exponential growth.
"Truth be told, there are not a lot of natural cases in which exponential growth is exhibited. An exponential growth model assumes that there is an infinite amount of resources from which to draw."
(Quote: no byline from Members.Optusnet exponential link)
Michael Bond's summary of Globalisation is exponential growth.
"Truth be told, there are not a lot of natural cases in which exponential growth is exhibited. An exponential growth model assumes that there is an infinite amount of resources from which to draw."
(Quote: no byline from Members.Optusnet exponential link)
Thursday, February 28, 2008
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