![]() ![]() The sceptics contend that the world has not been irreversibly altered by globalization, and that the power of national governments, nationalism and geo-politics remain the determining features of our age. On the other hand, there are the 'sceptics', who think that the globalists' claims are exaggerated and poorly substantiated. The fate of national communities is, they hold, increasingly shaped by regional and global forces. At the centre of this debate lie conflicting claims about the forces and processes of contemporary globalization.On the one hand, there are the 'globalists', who argue that the world is being fundamentally and irreversibly transformed by globalization. The world appears to be changing dramatically and a very public debate is taking place about the form, extent and significance of these changes. 42 The Idea of World Community: Chris Brown. Global Governance: Prospects and Problems: Fred Halliday. Democracy beyond Borders?: Anthony McGrew. Part VI World Orders, Normative Futures: Introduction. Order, Globalization and Inequality in World Politics: Ngaire Woods. Environmental Issues and the Compression of the Globe: Steven Yearley. Globalization and the Postcolonial World: Ankie Hoogvelt. The Rise of the Fourth World: Manuel Castells. Globalization with a Human Face: UNDP Report Welfare State Limits to Globalization: Elmar Rieger and Stephan Leibfried. The Passing of Social Democracy: John Gray. Has Globalization Gone Too Far?: Dani Rodrik. Global Markets and National Politics: Geoffrey Garrett. Economic Activity in a Globalizing World: Jonathan Perraton, David Goldblatt, David Held and Anthony McGrew. Globalization and the History of the International Economy: Paul Hirst and Grahame Thompson. Part IV: A Global Economy?: Introduction. Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy: Arjun Appadurai. ![]() The Global Media: Edward Herman and Robert McChesney. The Globalization of Communication: John B. Encountering Globalization: Kevin Robins. Part III The Fate of National Culture: Introduction. Governance in a Globalizing World: James N. Globalization and Legal Certainty: Volkmar Gessner. Global Market versus Regionalism: Bjorn Hettne. The Declining Authority of States: Susan Strange. Has Globalization Ended the Rise and Rise of the Nation-State?: Michael Mann. Sovereignty in International Society: Robert O. Part II The Reconfiguration of Political Power?: Introduction. The Globalizing of Modernity: Anthony Giddens. Time-Space Compression and the Postmodern Condition: David Harvey. Globalization - a Necessary Myth?: Paul Hirst and Grahame Thompson. World History in a Global Age: Michael Geyer and Charles Bright. Rethinking Globalization: David Held and Anthony McGrew, David Goldblatt and Jonathan Perraton. Part I: Conceptualizing Globalization: Introduction. The Great Globalization Debate: An Introduction: David Held and Anthony McGrew. Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index. ![]()
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