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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 24 page paper which examines the positive and negative effects of globalization, and also considers how it specifically affects health, the environment, and human rights throughout the world.  Bibliography lists 9 sources.  TGglobalfx.rtf
                                                
Page Count: 
                                                24 pages (~225 words per page)
                                            
 
                                            
                                                File: TG15_TGglobalfx.rtf
                                            
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                                                    24).  What it means lately has grown to depend upon the political ideology of the person using it.  For example, for the liberal it might mean that all  
                                                
                                                    the divisive barriers of nationalism have come crumbling down and the world if finally united as one.  However, a more conservative thinker might have a completely different perspective on  
                                                
                                                    globalization, and consider it synonymous with "capitalism and injustice" (Taylor, 2002, p. 24).  Those who describe it in primarily economic terms place the emphasis squarely upon the requirement of  
                                                
                                                    capital exchange, which is certainly a major component (Lagon, 2003).  Others may maintain that labor is the distinguishing factor, claiming globalization is the result of market saturation of goods  
                                                
                                                    and services provided through cheap labor (Lagon, 2003).  But globalization has become such a popular and often ambiguous way of labeling the twenty-first century world, that its true definition  
                                                
                                                    seems to have gotten obscured in a haze of political propaganda and rabblerousing rhetoric.  According to Alan Greenspan, Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve Board (2004), globalization is "the  
                                                
                                                    extension of the division of labor and specialization beyond national borders" (p. 450).  It is a trend that is able to effortlessly leap once imposing territorial and cultural borders  
                                                
                                                    which can have major consequences on state "sovereignty, prosperity, jobs, wages, and social legislation" (Taylor, 2002, p. 24).  Since the 1960s, products and financial capital have flowed with dramatic  
                                                
                                                    frequency, as noted by statistics released in 2002.  While exports comprised only 4.9 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) in 1965, it had grown to nearly 10.8  
                                                
                                                    percent in 2000, which is more than 10 percent of all goods and services produced by the United States (Taylor, 2002, p. 24).  In addition, total exports increased globally  
                                                
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