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CONTEMPORARY
WORLD
LISANDRO E. CLAUDIO
PATRICIO N. ABINALES
Ee
C & E Publishing, Inc.The Contempo
it © 2018 by C & E Publishing, Inc.,
Lisandro Claudio, and Patricio Abinales
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this publication m:
be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitte
in any form, or by any means—electronic, mechanic
photocopying, recording, or otherwise—without the pri
written permission of the publisher.
Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
IZ. Claudio, Lisandro E.
a ‘The contemporary world / Lisandro E. Claudio and
2018 Patricio N. Abinales.—Quezon City: C & E Publishing,
Inc., ©2018.
xii, 182 p.: ill. ; cm.
Includes bibliography and index.
ISBN: 978-971-98-0862-6
1. Globalization. 2. World Economics. I. Abinales,
Patricio N. II. Title.
Book and Cover Design: Lynzel S. NaguitUnit 1
1HON 1
sublication maj LESSON 2
or transmittes
ic, mechanical
thout the priol
E. Claudio and
& E Publishing,
LESSON 3
cs. I, Abinales,
Contents
An Introductory Note to the Student ix
The Relevance of this Course x
This Book's Approach xi
The Structures of Globalization 1
What is Globalization? 2
Global Experiences 5
Some Description 6
Globalization: A Working Definition 7
Conclusion: Globalization from the Ground Up 9
The Globalization of World
Economics 12
International Trading Systems 13
The Bretton Woods System 16
Neoliberalism and Its Discontents 17
The Global Financial Crisis and the Challenge
toNeoliberalism 19
Economic Globalization Today 22
Conclusion 24
A History of Global Politics:
Creating an International Order 26
The Attributes of Today's Global System = 27
The Interstate System 30
Internationalism 31
Conclusion 37LESSON 4
LESSON 5
Unit 2
LESSON 6
LESSON 7
LESSON 8
The United Nations and Contempor; Unit 3
Global Governance 39
What is an International Organization? 40
The United Nations 42
Challenges of the United Nations 45
Conclusion 46
LESSON 9
A World of Regions 50
Countries, Regions, and Globalization 51
Non-State Regionalism 53
Contemporary Challenges to Regionalism 56
Conclusion 58
LESSON 10
A World of Ideas:
Cultures of Globalization 61
The Globalization of Religion 62
Realities 65
Religion for and against Globalization 66
Conclusion 69
LESSON 11
Media and Globalization 72
Media and Its Functions 73
The Global Village and Cultural Imperialism 75
Critiques of Cultural Imperialism 77
Social Media and the Creation
of Cyber Ghettoes 78
Conclusion 81
Mov
and
Globz
The“Pe
It's the
Womer
The Fer
Popula
Conclu
Globs
What i:
Benefit
Cou
The Pre
Integre
Envi
and |
The W
Man-n
“Catch
Climat
Comb;
Conch
Conclusion: The
The Global City 83 Endnotes 135
Why Study Global Cities? 34
Defining the Global City 85
Bibliography 1
Indicators for Globality 86 Index 172
The Challenges of Global Cities 89
The Global City and the Poor 91
Conclusion 93
About the Authtemporal {jnit3 © Movement
Lg and Sustainability 95
iwsson9 Global Demography 96
The “Perils” of Overpopulation 98
It’s the Economy, Not the Babies! 101
Women and Reproductive Rights 102
The Feminist Perspective 104
Population Growth and Food Security 105
m 56 Conclusion 107
twason10 Global Migration 109
What is Migration? 109
Benefits and Detriments for the Sending
61 Countries 112
The Problem of Human Trafficking 114
62 Integration 115
\wsson11 Environmental Crisis
and Sustainable Development 119
The World's Leading Environmental Problems 120
Man-made Pollution 122
"Catching Up" 125
m 75 Climate Change 127
Combating Global Warming 128
Conclusion 130
56,
Conclusion: The Global Filipino 132
Endnotes 135
Bibliography 155
Index 172
About the AuthorsAn Introductory Note
to the Student
Why do you need to study the world? At first glance, the
world, as a concept, is abstract. After all, your daily experiences
uve considered interactions with your country. When you read
the news, you read about the Philippines. When you engage in an
official transaction like paying taxes, you deal with the Philippine
government. Almost all of your classmates and teachers are
Hilipino.
However, you only need to step back a little bit to see that the
World “out there” is already here. For example, you likely have
felatives who are overseas Filipino workers (OFWs). Every time
these relatives visit or send something home, they are bringing
part of the world with them. Even if you have not traveled outside
the Philippines, you have likely heard stories about foreign
countries from these family members. Some relatives might have
{old you about the wonders of Rome. Others may have shown you
pictures of San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge. Others may have
dlescribed the lights and towering buildings of Shinjuku.
Needless to say, the media and the internet are also your
windows to the contemporary world. You watch American movies
and can probably sing at least one K-pop song. If a major political
event occurs, you don’t even need to go to CNN.com to find out
more details; friends are already posting articles on Facebook.
Finally, your consumption habits are global. You have dined
in a McDonald’s, ridden in a Japanese car, maybe owned a Korean
mobile phone, and eaten Australian beef.
You are already a citizen of the world whether you are aware of
\\ or not. Just by living your life, you automatically think about the
contemporary world. This course will be your guide.The Relevance of this Course
As the semester progresses, we expect you to realize the
relevance of the material gradually. The succeeding lessons will
introduce you to the major themes in the study of the world while
providing opportunities for you to connect this knowledge with
your experiences as a Filipino student. At the outset, though, why
study this course? Why is it required for all students in higher
education?
First, studying the outside world is a cure to parochialism
or an outlook that is limited to one’s immediate community. A
Person who is concerned only with his/her family, village, or even
country is parochial. The parochial person is, thus, close-minded.
By teaching you about the world, this course aims to stretch the
limits of your imagination and outlook. We will share with you
unfamiliar ideas and cultures that may spark new interests and
concerns. Not everything in this book will excite you, and that is
fine. However, we hope that, at the end of the semester, you would
have discovered new intellectual interests that you will continue to
pursue. We also wish for you to explore the places, peoples, ideas,
and cultures that you care about and value. This expansion of one’s
ethical horizons, as you will see, is the very core of what it means
to be a global citizen.
Second, it is important to study the world because it can
teach you more about yourself. Knowing about other countries
allows you to compare your society with others. The experiences
of communities outside the Philippines may provide solutions to
many of the country’s current problems. They may also provide
warnings about what not to do. Everyone, for example, desires
economic growth. Isn’t it beneficial if policymakers know what
economic models and policies have worked for other countries and
what have not? Philippine national hero Jose Rizal said that anyone
who has learned about the world will be haunted by the “ghost of
comparisons.” Once you know about other societies, he says, you
will not be able to look at your own in the same way: You will start
comparing and asking various questions. This drive to compare
will happen even when }
{hat suddenly appears.
Lastly, you need te
Jolt to become OFWS. |
More and more Filipino
af you who plan to we
this course can serve a
who choose to remait
phenomenon of globali
sompanies operating i
growth of call centers a
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jnterdependent. Filipin
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4 well study it.
This Book’s App
This book will not
the world. Such an app
any good world alma:
countries. Instead, thi
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hut also to expose you
that “out there.” Centr
jlobalization—the dee
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ying globalization
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Lustly, you need to study the world because you will be
Jnleracting with it. In 2009, an average of 4,018 Filipinos per day
Jeli to become OFWs. In 2015, that number increased to 6,092.
More and more Filipinos are living and working abroad. For those
of you who plan to work in another country after graduation,
{ils course can serve as an orientation. Nevertheless, even those
who choose to remain in the Philippines must confront the
jlenomenon of globalization. Many of you will work for foreign
tompanies operating in the country, especially because of the
jyow'th of call centers and the busines process outsourcing (BPO)
jndustry as a whole. Due to the internet, cheaper travel costs, and
larger trade of goods and services, the world has grown more
{nterdependent. Filipinos are increasingly becoming aware of this
interdependence. You cannot avoid globalization so you might at
a well study it.
This Book’s Approach
[his book will not take you on a country-per-country tour of
the world, Such an approach is impractical and tedious. Moreover,
Any good world almanac can give you quick overviews of these
countries, Instead, this book will focus on themes, problems, and
{sues. The goal is not simply to tell you about what is “out there,”
jnut also to expose you to the ideas that allow you to make sense of
that “out there.” Central to the study of the world is the concept of
ylobalization—the deepening global interconnectedness of places,
ideas, economies, cultures, and people. The first lesson will discuss
this concept further. However, for now, it is sufficient to say that
studying globalization allows one to step back and ask: “What is
yoing on in our world today?”
As the study of globalization progresses, we will take your
attention deliberately away from the Philippines. Most of the
core courses of the new general education (GE) curriculum ask
xiquestions about yourself in a national context, You study Rizal;
examine primary readings in Philippine history; and, in the course
Understanding the Self, a section leads you to reflect on national
identity. These courses are all necessary; you should reflect about
yourself and your country. This course, however, will challenge
you to think beyond your country and ask what it means to be a
citizen of the world. Thus, most of the examples and case studies
will be about peoples and places outside of the Philippines,
Nevertheless, we acknowledge the need to connect the study of
globalization to local experiences. For this reason, we will use
the boxed text with the label “Localizing the Material” to provide
examples that are relatable to the Filipino reader.
As for classroom activities, it will be up to your teacher to
integrate, conduct, and facilitate them. After each lesson, however,
we provide guide questions which you may wish to answer before
the class. As you answer these questions either on a notebook
or just in your own mind, please do not lose sight of the main
question of the course: What does it mean to be a citizen of the
world?
The course will be challenging. Much of the materials you
will find are new and unfamiliar. Despite this, we hope that you
will enjoy reading this book and taking this course. This may be
one of the few times in your life as a college student when you are
explicitly challenged to transcend the borders of your nation, your
countrymen, and ultimately, your imagination.
~ Lisandro E. Claudio
Patricio N. Abinalestudy Rizal;
1 the course
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Claudio
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The Structures
of Globalization
This unit will introduce you to the various
drivers of the globalization process, with
specific focus on economics and politics.
Although it emphasizes that you experience
globalization on an “everyday” level, you must
also realize that there are big institutions
that create large-scale changes. This unit will
first trace the emergence of these institutions
historically. It will then move on to explain how
they affect the countries and people today.
The major learning outcomes of this unit
are to:
+ analyze the various contemporary
drivers of globalization; and
+ describe the emergence of global
economic and political systems.©) Learning Outcomes
‘At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
|. agree on a working definition of globalization for the course;
2. differentiate the competing conceptions of globalization; and
3. _ narrate a personal experience of globalization,
A Story: Gio, Latif, and the Laksa
When Gio was a second-year internation:
a university in Cebu City, he obtained fu
team participating in an internati
in Sydney,
plenty of n
the Malaysi
al affairs student in
nding to join the school
ional Model UN competition
Australia. At the height of the competition, Gio made
ew friends and became Particularly close to Latif from
ian team. The two first started talking when Latif asked
Gio where he was from, Upon discovering that the Gio was from
the Philippines, Latif lit up and declared that he was a big fan of
Filipino actors Jericho Rosales and Kristine Hermosa. Gio was
pleasantly surprised to learn that Latif had seen every episode of
the ABS-CBN telenovela Pangako sa ‘Yo ("The Promise”). The show
had aired on Malaysian TV a few years back, and its two stars had
developed a modest following,
Ashamed that he did not know as much about Malaysia as
Latif knew about the Philippines, Gio asked Latif what his country
was like. Latif, he discovered, was from a Muslim university in Kuala
Lumpur. Gio asked him what he liked best about living in *KL,"
and Latif immediately mentioned the food. Latif explained that in
Kuala Lumpur, one can find Chinese, Indian, and Malay cuisines.
He told Gio that this assortment of foodways was the result of
How the British reo
fives, The British d
who were the orig
te work in the rub
help manage the k
core of a potential
groups were identi
According to |
these cuisines whic
‘acioss the nation’s
in outdoor food p
Malaysia, from nasi
Gio interrupte
ashamed at his lac
is and how itis pre
The next day,
blocks away from:
Malaysian food w
this, Latif explaine
more and more
Malaysian restaura
fot only to these
as well, whose ct
diverse.
Gio finally ha
@ spicy coconut ¢
ike most Filipino
deference to his f
enjoying the hot ¢
After the me
ordered “flat whi
Usually served in
what flat whites v
both Kuala Lump:What is Globalization? | 3
a oe ee
jiow the British reorganized Malaysian society during the colonial
Jinves. The British did little to change the way of life of the Malays
who were the original residents, but brought in Chinese laborers
fo work in the rubber plantations and tin mines, and Indians to
Hielp manage the bureaucracy and serve as the initial professional
‘ore of a potential middle class. One of the ways that these ethnic
«groups were identified was through their foodways.
According to Latif, Malaysia eventually became famous for
{hese cuisines which can be found in the various “hawker centers”
‘acioas the nation’s cities and towns. These food stands are located
in outdoor food parks where locals and tourists taste the best of
Malaysia, from nasi lemak to laksa.
Glo interrupted Latif and asked, “What is laksa?” He felt more
amed at his lack of knowledge. “Ahh. ..let me show you what it
“
Js and how it is prepared!” replied Latif.
ue The next day, Latif 100k Gio to @ Malaysian restaurant a few
eitont blocks away from the university Gio was surprised to discover that
pee. Malaysian food was readily available in Sydney. Having noticed
if from this, Latif explained to lis Filipino friend that, over the years, as
‘ashe more and more Malaysian students moved to Sydney to study,
to
art
ay,
nd
Id
ler
What is Globalization? | 5
Ahawker center in Singepore
One Saturday, while Gio was checking his Facebook feed
along the very busy Orchard Road—Singapore’s main commercial
foad—he noticed that Latif had just posted something 5 minutes
earlier, It was a picture from Orchard Road. Surprised but also
excited, Gio sent Latif a private message. Latif replied immediately
| aying that he too had moved to Singapore and was, at that
moment, standing in front a department store just a few blocks
\way from where Gio was. The two friends met up, and after a
long hug and quick questions as to what each was up to, they
ducked into a café and renewed their international friendship...by
| ordering a pair of flat whites.
Global Experiences
Gio and Latif’s story is fictional but very plausible since it is,
in fact, based on the real-life experience of one of the authors. It
was through such friendships that one was able to appreciate the
meaning and impact of globalization.
We begin our definition of globalization with this narrative
to illustrate how concrete the phenomenon is. The story shows
how globalization operates at multiple, intersecting levels.
The spread of Filipino TV into Malaysia suggests how fast this
popular culture has proliferated and criss-crossed all over Asia.6 | The Structures of Globalization
The Model UN activity that Gio and Latif Participated in ig
an international competition about international politics. Gio
met Latif (a Malaysian involved in the model UN) in Sydney, a
global city that derives its wealth and influence from the global
capital that flows through it. Sydney is also a metropolis of
families of international immigrants or foreigners working in the
industries that also sell their Products abroad. After the two had
gone back to their home countries, Gio and Latif kept in touch
through Facebook, a global social networking site that provides
instantaneous communication across countries and continents,
They preserved their friendship online and then rekindled this
face-to-face in Singapore, another hub for global commerce, with
40 percent of the population being classified as “foreign talents.”
What other hints of globalization did you find in the story?
Some Description
Our discussion should begin with this intuitive sense that
something is happening, and it is not affecting everyone in the
same way. Gio’s story is a very privileged way of experiencing
global flows, but for other people, the shrinking of the world may
not be as exciting and edifying. For example, it is very common
for young women in developing countries to be recruited in the
internet as “mail-order brides” for foreign men living in other
countries. After being promised a good life once married to a kind
husband in a rich city, they end up becoming sexual and domestic
servants in foreign lands. Some were even sold off by their
“husbands” to gangs which run Prostitute rings in these cities. Like
Gio, they too have experienced the shrinking of the world, albeit
negatively.
Governments that decide to welcome the foreign investments
on the belief that they provide jobs and capital for the country
offer public lands as factory or industrial sites. In the Process, poor
People living in these lands, also called “urban poor communities,”
are being evicted by the government. The irony is that these people
{yyeibly removed fi
ly foreign compar
and then told tha
{vom their relocat
jninimum-wage w
Because differ
af ways, it is dec
lobalization goo
dliscussion begins
complex phenome
4n uneven process
Globalizatio
Most accoun
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"ylobalization,” i
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What is Globalization? | 7
forcibly removed from their “slums” are also the labor force sought
by foreign companies. They had to be kicked out of their homes,
and then told that they could take an hour or two of bus travel
from their relocated communities back to the “old home” for
minimum-wage work.
Because different people encounter globalization in a variety
of ways, it is deemed useful to ask simple questions like: “Is
globalization good or bad? Is it beneficial or detrimental?” The
discussion begins with two premises. First, globalization is a
complex phenomenon that occurs at multiple levels. Second, it is
an uneven process that affects people differently.
Globalization: A Working Definition
Most accounts view globalization as primarily an economic
process. When a newspaper reports that nationalists are resisting
“globalization,” it usually refers to the integration of the national
markets to a wider global market signified by the increased free
trade. When activists refer to the “anti-globalization” movement
of the 1990s, they mean resisting th trade deals among countries
facilitated and promoted by global organizations like the World
Trade Organization.
Globalization scholars do not necessarily disagree with people
who criticize unfair international trade deals or global economic
organizations. In fact, many are sympathetic to the critique of
economic globalization. Academics differ from journalists and
political activists, however, because they see globalization in much
broader terms. They view the process through various lenses that
consider multiple theories and perspectives. Academics call this
an interdisciplinary approach, and it is this approach used by the
general education (GE) courses thet you will be taking alongside
this one.
The best scholarly description of globalization is provided
by Manfred Steger who described the process as “the expansion
and intensification of social relations and consciousness across8 | The Structures of Globalization
world-time and across world-space.”! Expansion refers to “both
the creation of new social networks and the multiplication of
existing connections that cut across traditional political, economic,
cultural, and geographic boundaries.”® These various connections
occur at different levels. Social media, for example, establish new
global connections between people, while international groups
of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) are networks that
connect a more specific group—social workers and activists—
from different corners of the globe. In the story, Gio was able to
join a Model UN competition because his university was part of an
international network.
Intensification refers to the expansion, stretching, and
acceleration of these networks.’ Not only are global connections
multiplying, but they are also becoming more closely-knit and
expanding their reach. For example, there has always been a
strong financial market connecting London and New York. With
the advent of electronic trading, however, the volume of that
trade increases exponentially, since traders can now trade more
at higher speeds. The connection is thus accelerating. Apart from
this acceleration, however, as the world becomes more financially
integrated, the intensified trading network between London and
New York may expand and stretch to cover more and more cities.
After China committed itself to the global economy in the 1980s,
for example, Shanghai steadily returned to its old role as a major
trading post.
It is not only in financial matters that you can find these
connections. In 2012, when the monsoon rains flooded much of
Bangkok, the Honda plant making some of the critical car parts
temporarily ceased production. This had a strong negative effect
on Honda-USA which relied heavily on the parts being imported
from Thailand. Not only was it unable to reach the sales targets
it laid out, but the ability of the service centers nationwide to
assist Honda owners also suffered. As a result, the Japanese car
company’s global profits also fell.
The final attribute of this definition relates to the way people
perceive time and space. Steger notes that “globalization processes
do not occur mer
involve the subjec
words, people beg
place and distance
mouse-click away.
and get a reply ins
their distance as le
also exposed one t
this greater sense «
Steger posits
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For now, wh
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“globalization” a
cannot simply be
been integrated.
Conclusion:
the Ground
All this talk
Indeed, it may b
because it is so:
therefore, found
a whole. Instead
instead of just orWhat is Globalization? | 9
do not occur merely at an objective, material level but they also
involve the subjective plane of human. consciousness.”* In other
words, people begin to feel that the world has become a smaller
place and distance has collapsed from thousands of miles to just a
mouse-click away. One can now e-mail a friend in another country
and get a reply instantaneously, and as a result, begins to perceive
their distance as less consequential. Cable TV and the internet has
also exposed one to news from across the globe, so now, he/she has
this greater sense of what is happening in other places.
Steger posits that his definition of globalization must be
differentiated with an ideology he calls globalism. If globalization
represents the many processes that allow for the expansion and
intensification of global connections, globalism is a widespread
belief among powerful people that the global integration of
economic markets is beneficial for everyone, since it spreads
freedom and democracy across the world.‘ It is a common belief
forwarded in media and policy circles. In the next lesson, you will
realize why it is problematic.
For now, what is crucial to note is that when activists and
journalists criticize “globalization,” they are, more often than
not, criticizing some manifestations of globalism. Often, these
criticisms are warranted. Nevertheless, it is crucial to insist that
“globalization” as a process refers to a larger phenomenon that
cannot simply be reduced to the ways in which global markets have
been integrated.
Conclusion: Globalization from
the Ground Up
All this talk of large, intersecting processes may be confusing.
Indeed, it may be hard to assess globalization or comment on it
because it is so diffuse and almost fleeting. Some scholars have,
therefore, found it simpler to avoid talking about globalization as
a whole. Instead, they want to discuss “multiple globalizations,”
instead of just one process.0 | The Structures of Globalization
For anthropologist Arjun Appadurai, different kinds of
globalization occur on multiple and intersecting dimensions of
integration that he calls “scapes.” An “ethnoscape,” for example,
refers to the global movement of people, while a “mediascape” is
about the flow of culture. A “technoscape” refers to the circulation
of mechanical goods and software; a “financescape” denotes
the global circulation of money; and an “ideoscape” is the realm
where political ideas move around. Although they intersect,
these various scapes have differing logics, They are thus distinct
windows into the broader phenomenon of globalization,
Appadurai’s argument is simple: there are multiple
globalizations. Hence, even if one does not agree that globalization
can be divided into the five “scapes,” it is hard to deny Appadurai’s
central thrust of viewing globalization through various lenses,
Depending on what is being globalized, a different dynamic
(or dynamics) may emerge. So while it is important to ask “What
is globalization?” it is likewise important to ask “What is/are being
globalized?” Depending on what is being globalized, the vista and
conclusions change,
The structure of the lessons that follow will reflect this
multidimensional understanding of globalization, Each of the
lessons will focus on a particular kind of globalization, Every one
of them will be about different networks and connections that are
expanding and intensifying in the contemporary world.
‘Treat each lesson not as an end in itself but as window to the
broader phenomenon of globalization,
é
(P) Guide «
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What is Globalization? | 11
(P} Guide Questions
1. How have you experienced globalization?
2. Whyisit crucial to emphasize that globalization is uneven?
3. Whats the difference between globalization and globalism?
aw Learning Activity:
© How Globalized is Your Home?
Go to your room and do an inventory of everything you have
in your possession. You will find out that the most essential among
the “things” in your room are footwear, clothes, computers (if any),
cell phones, television (if possible), and maybe a radio. If you are a
student, you may also notice books, newspapers, news magazines,
not to mention school supplies and equipment.
Organize your inventory into two types: first, “things” that
are made in the Philippines and second, those that are of foreign
brands. List the countries of origin of your foreign-brand items.
Do the same thing for the kitchen and the living room. These
should include appliances.
In class, compare your lists with those of your classmates
to determine which countries make the most household and
personal needs you and your families have. Make a similar list
for Philippine-made stuff. In the process, discuss why certain
products are made in the Philippines while others are produced
abroad.© Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. define economic globalization;
2. _ identify the actors that facilitate economic globalization;
3. _Narrate a short history of global market integration in the twentieth
century; and
4. “articulate your stance on global économie integration,
Tea
ARTE DAE APO TEP ETSY PST
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) regards “economic
globalization” as a historical process representing the result of
human innovation and technological progress. It is characterized
by the increasing integration of economies around the world
through the movement of goods, services, and capital across
borders. These changes are the products of People, organizations,
institutions, and technologies.’ As with all other Processes of
globalization, there is a qualitative and subjective element to this
definition. How does one define “increasing integration”? When
is it considered that trade has increased? Is there a particular
threshold?
Even while the IMF and ordinary people grapple with the
difficulty of arriving at precise definitions of globalization,
they usually agree that a drastic economic change is occurring
throughout the world. According to the IMF, the value of trade
(goods and services) as a percentage of world GDP increased
from 42.1 percent in 1980 to 62.1 percent in 2007 Increased
trade also means that investments are moving all over the world
at faster speeds. According to the United Nations Conference on
‘Trade and Developme
investments flowing :
By 2015, that number
dramatic increase in §
It has happened not e
Apart from the
also note the increa:
days, supercomputer
and sales between di
a process called high-
and traded are chang
or music indicates a
“book” can be digite
and a music “album”
purchase and downlo
This lesson aim:
about. It will also as
who benefits from it
International 1
International tra
international trade
pathways in the anci
now the Middle Eas‘
one of the most pro:
was silk, which was !
the Middle East as '
used the Silk Road
Han dynasty opene:
Ottoman Empire clo
However, while
truly “global” becau
American continenThe Globalization of World Economics | 13
‘Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the amount of foreign direct
investments flowing across the world was US$ 57 billion in 1982.
By 2015, that number was $1.76 trillion.’ These figures represent a
dramatic increase in global trade in the span of just a few decades.
It has happened not even after one human lifespan!
Apart from the sheer magnitude of commerce, we should
also note the increased speed and frequency of trading. These
days, supercomputers can execute millions of stock purchases
and sales between different cities in a matter of seconds through
a process called high-frequency trading. Even the items being sold
and traded are changing drastically. Ten years ago, buying books
or music indicates acquiring physical items. Today, however, a
“book” can be digitally downloaded to be read with an e-reader,
and a music “album” refers to the 15 songs on mp3 format you can
purchase and download from iTunes.
This lesson aims to trace how economic globalization came
about. It will also assess this globalization system, and examine
who benefits from it and who is left out.
International Trading Systems
International trading systems are not new. The oldest known
international trade route was the Silk Road—a network of
pathways in the ancient world that spanned from China to what is
now the Middle East and to Europe. It was called as such because
one of the most profitable products traded through this network
was silk, which was highly prized especially in the area that is now
the Middle East as well as in the West (today’s Europe). Traders
used the Silk Road regularly from 130 BCE when the Chinese
Han dynasty opened trade to the West until 1453 BCE when the
Ottoman Empire closed it.
However, while the Silk Road was international, it was not
truly “global” because it had no ocean routes that could reach the
American continent. So when did full economic globalizationt | The Structures of Globalization
begin? According to historians Dennis O. Flynn and Arturo
Giraldez, the age of globalization began when “all important
Populated continents began to exchange products continuously—
both with each other directly and indirectly via other continents—
and in values sufficient to generate crucial impacts on all trading
partners.” Flynn and Giraldez trace this back to 1571 with the
establishment of the galleon trade that connected Manila in the
Philippines and Acapulco in Mexico."' This was the first time that
the Americas were directly connected to Asian trading routes. For
Filipinos, it is crucial to note that economic globalization began on
the country’s shores.
The galleon trade was part of the age of mercantilism. From
the 16th century to the 18th century, countries, primarily in
Europe, competed with one another to sell more goods as a means
to boost their country’s income (called monetary reserves later on).
To defend their products from competitors who sold goods more
cheaply, these regimes (mainly monarchies) imposed high tariffs,
forbade colonies to trade with other nations, restricted trade
routes, and subsidized its exports. Mercantilism was thus also a
system of global trade with multiple restrictions.
A more open trade system emerged in 1867 when, following
the lead of the United Kingdom, the United States and other
European nations adopted the gold standard at an international
monetary conference in Paris. Broadly, its goal was to create a
common system that would allow for more efficient trade and
prevent the isolationism of the mercantilist era. The countries
thus established a common basis for currency prices and a fixed
exchange rate system—all based on the value of gold.
Despite facilitating simpler trade, the gold standard was
still a very restrictive system, as it compelled countries to back
their currencies with fixed gold reserves. During World War I,
when countries depleted their gold reserves to fund their armies,
many were forced to abandon the gold standard. Since European
countries had low gold reserves, they adopted floating currencies
that were no longer redeemable in gold.
ye gold standard, though
Returning to a
the global economi
during the 1920s an
government coffers
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The Globalization of Worl
3
joven to be a very restrictive form 0
ye gold standard, though once common, has
globalizing tra
Returning to a pure standard became more difficult as
the global economic crisis called the Great Depression started
during the 1920s and extended up to the 1930s, further emptying
government coffers. This depression was the worst and longest
recession ever experienced by the Western world. Some economists
argued that it was largely caused by the gold standard, since it
limited the amount of circulating money and, therefore, reduced
demand and consumption. If governments could only spend
money that was equivalent to gold, its capacity to print money and
increase the money supply was severely curtailed.
conomic historian Barry Eichengreen argues that the
recovery of the United States really began when, having abandoned
the gold standard, the US government was able to free up money to
spend on reviving the economy.” At the height of World War Il,
other major industrialized countries followed suit.
Though more indirect versions of the gold standard were used
until as late as the 1970s, the world never returned to the gold
standard of the early 20th century. Today, the world economy
operates based on what are called fiat currencies—currencies that
are not backed by precious metals and whose value is determined
by their cost relative to other currencies. This system allows
governments to freely and actively manage their economies by
increasing or decreasing the amount of money in circulation as
they see fit.18 | The Structures of Globalization
affected the Western economies that were reliant on oil."
To make matters worse, the stock markets crashed in 1973-
1974 after the United States stopped linking the dollar to gold,
effectively ending the Bretton Woods system." The result
was a phenomenon that Keynesian economics could not have
predicted—a phenomenon called stagflation, in which a decline
in economic growth and employment (stagnation) takes place
alongside a sharp increase in prices (inflation).
Around this time, a new form of economic thinking was
beginning to challenge the Keynesian orthodoxy. Economists
such as Friedrich Hayek and Milton Friedman argued that the
governments’ practice of pouring money into their economies
had caused inflation by increasing demand for goods without
necessarily increasing supply. More profoundly, they argued
that government intervention in economies distort the proper
functioning of the market.
Economists like Fricdman used the economic turmoil to
challenge the consensus around Keynes's ideas. What emerged was
a new form of economic thinking that critics labeled neoliberalism.
From the 1980s onward, neoliberalism became the codified
strategy of the United States Treasury Department, the World
Bank, the IMF, and eventually the World Trade Organization
(WTO)—a new organization founded in 1995 to continue the tariff
reduction under the GATT. The policies they forwarded came to
be called the Washington Consensus.
The Washington Consensus dominated global economic
policies from the 1980s until the early 2000s. Its advocates pushed
for minimal government spending to reduce government debt.
They also called for the privatization of government-controlled
services like water, power, communications, and ‘transport,
believing that the free market can produce the best results, Finally,
they pressured governments, particularly in the developing world,
to reduce tariffs and open up their economies, arguing that it is the
quickest way to progress. Advocates of the Washington Consensus
conceded that, along the way, certain industries would be affected
and die, but they considered this “shock therapy” necessary for
long-term economic growth.
The appeal of neo
like US President Re
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The Globalization of World Economics | 19
‘The appeal of neoliberalism was in its simplicity. Its advocates
like US President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher justified their reduction in government
spending by comparing national economies to households.
‘Thatcher, in particular, promoted an image of herself as a mother,
who reined in overspending to reduce the national debt.
‘The problem with the household analogy is that governments
are not households. For one, governments can print money, while
households cannot. Moreover, the constant taxation systems of
governments provide them a steady flow of income that allows
them to pay and refinance debts steadily.
Despite the initial success of neoliberal politicians like
‘Thatcher and Reagan, the defects of the Washington Consensus
became immediately palpable. A good early example is that of.
post-communist Russia. After Communism had collapsed in
the 1990s, the IME called for the immediate privatization of all
government industries. The IMF assumed that such a move would.
free these industries from corrupt bureaucrats and pass them on
to the more dynamic and independent private investors. What
happened, however, was that only individuals and groups who had
accumulated wealth under the previous communist order had the
money to purchase these industries. In some cases, the economic
clites relied on easy access to government funds to take over the
industries. This practice has entrenched an oligarchy that still
dominates the Russian economy to this very day.
The Global Financial Crisis and the Challenge
to Neoliberalism
Russia's case was just one example of how the “shock therapy”
‘of neoliberalism did not lead to the ideal outcomes predicted by
economists who believed in perfectly free markets. The greatest
fecent repudiation of this thinking was the recent global financial
crisis of 2008-2009.) | The Structures of Globalization
Neoliberalism came under significant strain during the
global financial crisis of 2007-2008 when the world experienced
the greatest economic downturn since the Great Depression.
The crisis can be traced back to the 1980s when the United
States systematically removed various banking and investment
restrictions.
The scaling back of regulations continued until the 2000s,
paving the way for a brewing crisis. In their attempt to promote
the free market, government authorities failed to regulate
bad investments occurring in the US housing market. Taking
advantage of “cheap housing loans,” Americans began building
houses that were beyond their financial capacities.
To mitigate the risk of these loans, banks that were lending
houseowners’ money pooled these mortgage payments and sold
them as “mortgage-backed securities” (MBSs). One MBS would be
a combination of multiple mortgages that they assumed would pay
a steady rate.
Since there was so much surplus money circulating, the
demand for MBSs increased as investors clamored for more
investment opportunities. In their haste to issue these loans,
however, the banks became less discriminating. They began
extending loans to families and individuals with dubious credit
records—people who were unlikely to pay their loans back. These
high-risk mortgages became known as sub-prime mortgages.
Financial experts wrongly assumed that, even if many of the
borrowers were individuals and families who would struggle to
Pay, a majority would not default. Moreover, banks thought that
since there were so many mortgages in just one MBS, a few failures
would not ruin the entirety of the investment.
Banks also assumed that housing prices would continue to
increase. Therefore, even if homeowners defaulted on their loans,
these banks could simply reacquire the homes and sell them at a
higher price, turning a profit.
Sometime in 2007, however, home prices stopped increasing
as supply caught up with demand. Moreover, it slowly became
apparent that families
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The Globalization of World Economics | 21
apparent that families could not pay off their loans. This
realization triggered the rapid reselling of MBSs, as banks and
investors tried to get rid of their bad investments. This dangerous
cycle reached a tipping point in September 2008, when major
investment banks like Lehman Brothers collapsed, thereby
depleting major investments.
‘The crisis spread beyond the United States since many
investors were foreign governments, corporations, and individuals.
The loss of their money spread like wildfire back to their countries.
‘These series of interconnections allowed for a global multiplier
effect that sent ripples across the world. For example, Iceland’s
banks heavily depended on foreign capital, so when the crisis hit
them, they failed to refinance their loans. As a result of this credit
crunch, three of Iceland’s top commercial banks defaulted. From
2007 to 2008, Iceland’s debt increased more than seven-fold.
Until now, countries like Spain and Greece are heavily
indebted (almost like Third World countries), and debt relief
has come at a high price. Greece, in particular, has been forced
by Germany and the IMF to cut back on its social and public
spending. Affecting services like pensions, health care, and various
forms of social security, these cuts have been felt most acutely by
the poor. Moreover, the reduction in government spending has
slowed down growth and ensured high levels of unemployment.
The United States recovered relatively quickly thanks to a
large Keynesian-style stimulus package that President Barack
Obama pushed for in his first months in office. The same cannot
be said for many other countries. In Europe, the continuing
economic crisis has sparked a political upheaval. Recently, far-
right parties like Marine Le Pen’s Front National in France have
risen to prominence by unfairly blaming immigrants for their
woes, claiming that they steal jobs and leech off welfare. ‘These
movements blend popular resentment with utter hatred and
racism. We will discuss their rise further in the final lesson.22 | The Structures of Globalization
Economic Globalization Today
The global financial crisis will take decades to resolve. The
solutions proposed by certain nationalist and leftist groups of
closing national economies to world trade, however, will no longer
work. The world has become too integrated. Whatever one’s
opinion about the Washington Consensus is, it is undeniable that
some form of international trade remains essential for countries to
develop in the contemporary world.
Exports, not just the local selling of goods and services,
make national economies grow at present. In the past, those that
benefited the most from free trade were the advanced nations
that were producing and selling industrial and agricultural
goods. The United States, Japan, and the member-countries of
the European Union were responsible for 65 percent of global
exports, while the developing countries only accounted for
29 percent. When more countries opened up their economies
to take advantage of increased free trade, the shares of the
percentage began to change. By 2011, developing countries like the
Philippines, India, China, Argentina, and Brazil accounted for 51
percent of global exports while the share of advanced nations—
including the United States—had gone down to 45 percent."
The WTO-Ied reduction of trade barriers, known as trade
liberalization, has profoundly altered the dynamics of the global
economy.
In the recent decades, partly as a result of these increased
exports, economic globalization has ushered in an unprecedented
spike in global growth rates. According to the IMF, the global
Per capita GDP rose over five-fold in the second half of the 20th
century. It was this growth that created the large Asian economies
like Japan, China, Korea, Hong Kong, and Singapore.'*
And yet, economic globalization remains an uneven process,
with some countries, corporations, and individuals benefiting a lot
more than others. The series of trade talks under the WTO have
led to unprecedent
but these processes
First, develop
repeatedly refuse
products that coul
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The Globalization of World Economics | 23
\ed to unprecedented reductions in tariffs and other trade barriers,
but these processes have often been unfair.
First, developed countries are often protectionists, as they
repeatedly refuse to lift policies that safeguard their primary
products that could otherwise be overwhelmed by imports from
the developing world. The best example of this double standard is
Japan’s determined refusal to allow rice imports into the country
to protect its farming sector. Japan's justification is that rice is
sacred.” Ultimately, it is its economic muscle as the third largest
economy that allows it to resist pressures to open its agricultural
sector.
‘The United States likewise fiercely protects its sugar industry,
forcing consumers and sugar-dependent businesses to pay higher
prices instead of getting cheaper sugar from plantations of Central
America.
Faced with these blatantly protectionist measures from
powerful countries and blocs, poorer countries can do very little
to make economic globalization more just. Trade imbalances,
therefore, characterize economic relations between developed and
developing countries.
The beneficiaries of global commerce have been mainly
transnational corporations (TNCs) and not governments.
And like any other business, these TNCs are concerned more
with profits than with assisting the social programs of the
governments hosting them. Host countries, in turn, loosen tax
laws, which prevents wages from rising, while sacrificing social
and environmental programs that protect the underprivileged
members of their societies. The term “race to the bottom” refers
to countries’ lowering their labor standards, including the
protection of workers’ interests, to lure in foreign investors seeking
high profit margins at the lowest cost possible. Governments
weaken environmental laws to attract investors, creating fatal
consequences on their ecological balance and depleting them of
their finite resources (like oil, coal, and minerals).24 | The Structures of Globalization
Localizing the Material
Many Philippine industries were devastated by unfair trade
deals under the GATT and eventually the WTO. One sector that
was particularly affected was Philippine agriculture. According to
Walden Bello and a team of researchers at Focus on the Global
South, the US used its power under the GATT system to prevent
Philippine importers from purchasing Philippine poultry and
pork—even as it sold meat to the Philippines.
Although the Philippines expected to make up losses in
sectors like meat with gains in areas such as coconut products,
no significant change was realized. In 1993, coconut exports
amounted to $1.9 billion, and after a slight increase to $2.3 billion
in 1997, it returned to $1.9 billion in 2000,
Most strikingly, Bello and company noted that the Philippines
became a net food importer under the GATT. In 1993, the country
had an agricultural trade surplus of $292 million. It had a deficit of
$764 million in 1997 and $794 million in 2002,
« Bello, Walden, Herbert Docena, Marissa de Guzman, and Mary Lou Malig,
The Anti-Development State: The Political Economy of Permanent Crisis in the
Philippines. London and New York: Zed Books, 2006, 140-142.
See pene eee emer SOIOISV:
Conclusion
International economic integration is a central tenet of
globalization. In fact, it is so crucial to the process that many
writers and commentators confuse this integration for the entirety
of globalization. As a reminder, economics is just one window into
the phenomenon of globalization; it is not the entire thing.
Nevertheless, much of globalization is anchored on changes
in the economy. Global culture, for example, is facilitated by
trade. Filipinos would not be as aware of American culture if
not for the trade that allows locals to watch American movies,
listen to American music, and consume American products. The
globalization of politics is likewise largely contingent on trade
relations. These days, many events of foreign affairs are conducted
to cement trading relations between and among states.
Given the stak
perennially imports
just. Although som
back, policies cann
policymakers, ther
trading deals fairer
ways of cushionin
globalization, while
Guide Qu
1. _Howdo econ
2, Howis the Ph
3. Compare and
system with t
senna
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ae Learning
Global E
With the help |
trip to and famil
organization (Asi
company (Honda,
as you can during '
If this activit
accomplish these
of the institution
connections it has
of this institution
interconnections.
‘Then answer t
global economic |
Philippines?trade
or that
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The Globalization of World Economics | 25
Given the stakes involved in economic globalization, it is
perennially important to ask how this system can be made more
just. Although some elements of global free trade can be scaled
back, policies cannot do away with it as a whole. International
policymakers, therefore, should strive to think of ways to make
trading deals fairer. Governments must also continue to devise
ways of cushioning the most damaging effects of economic
globalization, while ensuring that its benefits accrue for everyone.
(?) Guide Questions
1. How do economic forces facilitate the deepening of globalization?
How is the Philippines central to the history of economic globalization?
Compare and contrast the assumptions of the original Bretton Woods
system with those of the Washington Consensus.
a E 2
“AS Learning Activity:
Global Economic Institutions
With the help of the school administration, organize a school
trip to and familiarization tour of an international economic
organization (Asian Development Bank) or an international
company (Honda, McDonald’s, etc.). Gather as much information
as you can during the tour.
If this activity cannot be arranged, go to the web and
accomplish these tasks: (a) research the origins and history
of the institution you have chosen; (b) map the international
connections it has created; (c) identify the major country-leaders
of this institution; and (d) locate the Philippines in this map of
interconnections.
‘Then answer this question: How does this institution influence
global economic activity? How does it affect economics in the
Philippines?“esor A History of Global
- Politics: Creating a
International Orde
@ Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
identify key events in the development of international relations;
differentiate internationalization from globalization;
define the state and the nation;
AWN
distinguish between the competing conceptions of internationalism;
and
5. discuss the historical evolution of international politics.
Walla eee ee ee
The world is composed of many countries or states, all of them
having different forms of government. Some scholars of politics
are interested in individual states and examine the internal politics
of these countries. For example, a scholar studying the politics
of Japan may write about the history of its bureaucracy, Other
scholars are more interested in the interactions between states
rather than their internal politics. These scholars look at trade
deals between states. They also study political, military, and other
diplomatic engagements between two or more countries. These
scholars are studying international relations. Moreover, when they
explore the deepening of interactions between states, they refer to
the phenomenon of internationalization.
Internationalization does not equal globalization, although
it is a major part of globalization. As we explained in Lesson 1,
globalization encompasses a multitude of connections and
interactions that cannot be reduced to the ties between
governments. Nevertheless, it is important to study international
relations as a facet of globalization, because states/governments
A Histor
are key drivers of global
internationalization as |
politics. Although this |
we cannot avoid histor
is largely defined by ¢
years ago. Don’t worry;
world politics. But to d
his lesson will begin
contemporary global.
this system emerge? In|
to understand the maje
lesson,
The Attributes of
World politics toda
countries or states that
Second, these countr
diplomacy. Third, ther:
United Nations (UN),
beyond simply facilitat
organizations also take
part from being a mee
of state, also has task
Organization (WHO) a
(ILO).
What are the ori
unpacking what one m¢
icademics also call the
s it seems. The nation
in human history, and
1s countries. At differe
in various regions of t
units as small as their
they see themselves as
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A History of Global Politics: Creating an International Order | 27
are key drivers of global processes. In this lesson, we will examine
internationalization as one window to view the globalization of
politics, Although this course is about the contemporary world,
we cannot avoid history. What international relations are today
is largely defined by events that occurred as far back as 400
years ago. Don’t worry; we will eventually discuss contemporary
world politics. But to do that, we need first to work backward.
This lesson will begin with identifying the major attributes of
contemporary global politics and then proceed to ask: How did
this system emerge? In doing so, you will have a solid foundation
to understand the major issues of global governance in the next
lesson.
The Attributes of Today’s Global System
World politics today has four key attributes. First, there are
countries or states that are independent and govern themselves.
Second, these countries interact with each other through
diplomacy. Third, there are international organizations, like the
United Nations (UN), that facilitate these interactions. Fourth,
beyond simply facilitating meetings between states, international
organizations also take on lives of their own. The UN, for example,
part from being a meeting ground for presidents and other heads
of state, also has task-specific agencies like the World Health
Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization
(ILO).
What are the origins of this system? A good start is by
unpacking what one means when he/she says a “country,” or what
academics also call the nation-state. This concept is not as simple
it seems. The nation-state is a relatively modern phenomenon
in human history, and people did not always organize themselves
4s countries. At different parts in the history of humanity, people
in various regions of the world have identified exclusively with
units as small as their village or their tribe, and at other times,
they see themselves as members of larger political categories like
Christendom” (the entire Christian world).28 | The Structures of Globalization
The nation-state is composed of two non-interchangeable
terms. Not all states are nations and not all nations are states, The
nation of Scotland, for example, has its own flag and national
culture, but still belongs to a state called the United Kingdom.
Closer to home, many commentators believe that the Bangsamoro
is a separate nation existing within the Philippines but, through
their elites, Tecognizes the authority of the Philippine state.
Meanwhile, if there are states with multiple nations, there are also
single nations with multiple states. The nation of Korea is divided
into North and South Korea, whereas the “Chinese nation” may
refer to both the People’s Republic of China (the mainland) and
Taiwan.
What then is the difference between nation and state?
In layman’s terms, state refers to a country and its government,
i.e, the government of the Philippines, A state has four attributes,
First, it exercises authority over a specific Population, called its
citizens. Second, it governs a specific territory. Third, a state has
a structure of government that crafts various rules th:
(society) follow. Fourth and the most crucial,
Sovereignty over its territory. Sovereignty here refer:
external authority. Internally,
at people
, the state has
's to internal and
no individuals or groups can operate
ina given national territory by ignoring the state. This means that
groups like churches, civil society organizations, corporations,
and other entities have to follow the laws of the state where they
establish their parishes, offices, or headquarters. Externally,
Sovereignty means that a state’s Policies and procedures are
independent of the interventions of other states. Russia or China,
for example, cannot pass laws for the Philippines and vice versa.
On the other hand,
the nation, according to Benedict
Anderson, is an “ima;
gined community.” It is limited because
it does not go beyond a given “official boundary,”
rights and responsibilities are mi
of the citizens of that nation.”
nation has its boundaries, This ct
and because
ainly the privilege and concern
Being limited means that the
naracteristic is in stark contrast
to many religious imagined communities. Anyone, for example,
can become a Catholic if one chooses to. In fact, Catholics want
more people to joi
to discipleship. Bu
An American can
“convert” into a Ph
to people who have
language, and live i
Calling it “ima
up. Rather, the na
community of peo
in his/her lifetime.
Olympics, for exan
athlete. Rather, you
the same Filipino
Philippine archipel:
people living in it a
become states. Nati
when that national
authority and powe
Moreover, if there 2
seek some form of
is why, for example
the state of Canade
French-speaking a1
their citizens). It is.
of the United King¢
by the Scottish Nati
Nation and stat
that facilitates state
era, it has been the
the creation of nai
sovereign because ¢
independence.
Sovereignty is,
modern state politi
entails going back asA History of Global Politics: Creating an International Order | 29
more people to join their community; they refer to it as the call
to discipleship. But not everyone can simply become a Filipino.
An American cannot simply go to the Philippine Embassy and
“convert” into a Philippine citizen. Nations often limit themselves
to people who have imbibed a particular culture, speak a common
language, and live in a specific territory.
Calling it “imagined” does not mean that the nation is made-
up. Rather, the nation allows one to feel a connection with a
community of people even if he/she will never meet all of them
in his/her lifetime. When you cheer for a Filipino athlete in the
Olympics, for example, it is not because you personally know that
athlete. Rather, you imagine your connection as both members of
the same Filipino community. In a given national territory like the
Philippine archipelago, you rest in the comfort that the majority of
people living in it are also Fillipinos. Finally, most nations strive to
become states. Nation-builders can only feel a sense of fulfillment
when that national ideal assumes an organizational form whose
authority and power are recognized and accepted by “the people.”
Moreover, if there are communities that are not states, they often
seek some form of autonomy within their “mother states.” This
is why, for example, the nation of Quebec, though belonging to
the state of Canada, has different laws about language (they are
French-speaking and require French language competencies for
their citizens). It is also for this reason that Scotland, though part
of the United Kingdom, has a strong independence movement led
by the Scottish Nationalist Party.
Nation and state are closely related because it is nationalism
that facilitates state formation. In the modern and contemporary
era, it has been the nationalist movements that have allowed for
the creation of nation-states. States become independent and
sovereign because of nationalist sentiment that clamors for this
independence,
Sovereignty is, thus, one of the fundamental principles of
modern state politics. Understanding how this became the case
entails going back as far as 400 years ago.30 | The Structures of Globalization
The Interstate System
The origins of the present-day concept of sovereignty can
be traced back to the Treaty of Westphalia, which was a set of
agreements signed in 1648 to end the Thirty Years’ War between
the major continental powers of Europe. After a brutal religious
war between Catholics and Protestants, the Holy Roman Empire,
Spain, France, Sweden, and the Dutch Republic designed a system
that would avert wars in the future by recognizing that the treaty
signers exercise complete control over their domestic affairs and
swear not to meddle in each other’s affairs.
The Westphalian system provided stability for the nations
of Europe, until it faced its first major challenge by Napoleon
Bonaparte. Bonaparte believed in spreading the principles of the
French Revolution—liberty, equality, and fraternity—to the rest
of Europe and thus challenged the power of kings, nobility, and
religion in Europe. The Napoleonic Wars lasted from 1803-1815
with Napoleon and his armies marching all over much of Europe.
In every country they conquered, the French implemented the
Napoleonic Code that forbade birth privileges, encouraged freedom
or religion, and promoted meritocracy in government service. This
system shocked the monarchies and the hereditary elites (dukes,
duchesses, etc.) of Europe, and they mustered their armies to push
back against the French emperor.
Anglo and Prussian armies finally defeated Napoleon in
the Battle of Waterloo in 1815, ending the latter’s mission to
spread his liberal code across Europe. To prevent another war
and to keep their systems of privilege, the royal powers created a
new system that, in effect, restored the Westphalian system. The
Concert of Europe was an alliance of “great powers”—the United
Kingdom, Austria, Russia, and Prussia—that sought to restore
the world of monarchical, hereditary, and religious privileges of
the time before the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars.
More importantly, it was an alliance that sought to restore the
Sovereignty of states. Under this Metternich system (named after
the Austrian diplomat, Klemens von Metternich, who was the
AHis
system’s main architec
from 1815 to 1914, at tl
Klemens Von Mett
Despite the chall
and the eventual col
War I, present-day i
history. Until now, st
attempts to violenth
countries are frowne
reat powers” still h
Vor example, the mo:
Council, has a core |
powers over the coun
Internationali
The Westphalia
into separate, sove
interstate system, threignty can
vas a set of
far between
al religious
an Empire,
ed a system
t the treaty
affairs and
he nations
Napoleon
iples of the
to the rest
bility, and
1803-1815
of Europe.
rented the
d freedom
rvice. This
tes (dukes,
ies to push
poleon in
nission to
other war
created a
stem. The
he United
to restore
vileges of
nic Wars.
store the
med after
) was the
A History of Global Politics: Creating an International Order | 31
system’s main architect), the Concert’s power and authority lasted
from 1815 to 1914, at the dawn of World War I.
Klemens Von Metternich was the architect of the ‘Concert of Europe:
Despite the challenge of Napoleon to the Westphalian system
and the eventual collapse of the Concert of Europe after World
War I, present-day international system still has traces of this
history. Until now, states are considered sovereign, and Napoleonic
attempts to violently impose systems of government in other
countries are frowned upon. Moreover, like the Concert system,
sreat powers” still hold significant influence over world politics.
Vor example, the most powerful grouping in the UN, the Security
Council, has a core of five permanent members, all having veto
powers over the council’s decision-making process.
Internationalism
he Westphalian and Concert systems divided the world
into separate, sovereign entities. Since the existence of this
te system, there have been attempts to transcend it. Some,32 | The Structures of Globalization
like Bonaparte, directly challenged the system by infringing on
other states’ sovereignty, while others sought to imagine other
systems of governance that go beyond, but do not necessarily
challenge, sovereignty. Still, others imagine a system of heightened
interaction between various sovereign states, particularly the
desire for greater cooperation and unity among states and peoples.
This desire is called internationalism.
Internationalism comes in different forms, but the principle
may be divided into two broad categori
and socialist internationalism,
: liberal internationalism
‘The first major thinker of liberal internationalism was the late
18th century German philosopher Immanuel Kant. Kant likened
States in a global system to people living in a given territory. If
People living together require a government to prevent lawlessness,
shouldn’t that same Principle be applied to states? Without a form
of world government, he argued, the international system would
be chaotic. Therefore, states, like citizens of countries, must give
up some freedoms and “establish a continuously growing state
consisting of various nations which will ultimately include the
nations of the world.” In short, Kant imagined a form of global
government.
Writing in the late 18th century as well, British philosopher
Jeremy Bentham (who coined the word “international” in 1780),
advocated the creation of “international law” that would govern
the inter-state relations. Bentham believed that objective global
legislators should aim to Propose legislation that would create “the
greatest happiness of all nations taken together.”
To many, these proposals for global government and
international law seemed to represent challenges to states. Would
not a world government, in effect, become supreme? And would
not its laws overwhelm the sovereignty of individual states?
The first thinker to reconcile nationalism with liberal
internationalism was the 19th century Italian patriot Giuseppe
Mazzini. Mazzini was both an advocate of the unification of the
various Italian-speaking mini-states and a major critic of the
AHi
Metternich system.
(without kings, queen
system of free nations
international system.
be the basis of an eq)
He argued that if the
could scale up the sys
Europe. Mazzini wa:
that free, unified n:
cooperation.
Mazzini influenc
(1913-1921) Woodro
century’s most prom
saw nationalism as «
of his faith in natio
determination—the |
free, and sovereign g
would become dem«
they be able to build
on international law «
most notable advoca
At the end of Worl
League into a venue
another war. For his
Prize in 1919.
‘American Presic
advocaAHistory of Global Politics: Creating an International Order | 33
Metternich system. He believed in a Republican government
(without kings, queens, and hereditary succession) and proposed a
system of free nations that cooperated with each other to create an
international system. For Mazzini, free, independent states would
be the basis of an equally free, cooperative international system.
He argued that if the various Italian mini-states could unify, one
could scale up the system to create, for example, a United States of
Europe. Mazzini was a nationalist internationalist, who believes
that free, unified nation-states should be the basis of global
cooperation.
Mazzini influenced the thinking of United States president
(1913-1921) Woodrow Wilson, who became one of the 20th
century's most prominent internationalist. Like Mazzini, Wilson
saw nationalism as a prerequisite for internationalism. Because
of his faith in nationalism, he forwarded the principle of self-
determination—the belief that the world’s nations had a right to a
free, and sovereign government. He hoped that these free nations
would become democracies, because only by being such would
they be able to build a free system of international relations based
on international law and cooperation. Wilson, in short, became the
most notable advocate for the creation of the League of Nations.
At the end of World War I in 1918, he pushed to transform the
League into a venue for conciliation and arbitration to prevent
another war. For his efforts, Wilson was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize in 1919.
‘American President Woodrow Wilson became the most prominent
‘advocate for the creation of the League of Nations,34 | The Structures of Globalization
The League came into being that same year. Ironically and
unfortunately for Wilson, the United States was not able to join
the organization due to strong opposition from the Senate. The
League was also unable to hinder another war from breaking out,
It was practically helpless to prevent the onset and intensification
of World War II. On one side of the war were the Axis Powers—
Hitler's Germany, Mussolini’s Italy, and Hirohito’s Japan—
who were ultra-nationalists that had an instinctive disdain
for internationalism and preferred to violently impose their
dominance over other nations. It was in the midst of this war
between the Axis Powers and the Allied Powers (composed of the
United States, United Kingdom, France, Holland, and Belgium)
that internationalism would be eclipsed.
Despite its failure, the League gave birth to some of the more
task-specific international organizations that are still around
until today, the most popular of which are the World Health
Organization (WHO) and the International Labour Organization
(ILO). More importantly, it would serve as the blueprint for
future forms of international cooperation. In this respect, despite
its organizational dissolution, the League of Nations’ principles
survived World War II.
The League was the concretization of the concepts of liberal
internationalism. From Kant, it emphasized the need to form
common international principles. From Mazzini, it enshrined the
principles of cooperation and respect among nation-states. From
Wilson, it called for democracy and self-determination. These
ideas would re-assert themselves in the creation of the United
Nations in 1946 (see next lesson).
One. of Mazzini’s biggest critics was German socialist
philosopher Karl Marx who was also an internationalist, but who
differed from the former because he did not believe in nationalism.
He believed that any true form of internationalism should
deliberately reject nationalism, which rooted people in domestic
concerns instead of global ones. Instead, Marx placed a premium
on economic equality; he did not divide the world into countries,
AHi
but into classes. The
factories, companies,
the proletariat class it
production, but instea
Marx and his co
a socialist revoltutio
the economy, the pro
famous battle cry, “W
to lose but your chai
believed it prevente
Instead of identifying
workers in individual
countries.
Marx died in 188
vision concrete by e:
‘The Socialist Interna
and labor parties es
lived, the SI’s achieve
Labor Day and the cr
importantly, it initia
workday.
The SI collapsed
refused or were unat
for the war. Many o:
each other. It was a c¢
and their organizatic
each other, their long
As the SI colla
the so-called Russia
overthrown and repl
Bolshevik Party and
called the Union of S
majority of the mem
believe in obtaining |
Rather, they exhortIronically and
not able to join
he Senate. The
n breaking out,
intensification
Axis Powers—
hito’s Japan—
nective disdain
impose their
ist of this war
posed of the
and Belgium)
ne of the more
> still around
World Health
Organization
blueprint for
spect, despite
ns’ principles
epts of liberal
need to form
enshrined the
\-states. From
1ation. These
f the United
lan socialist
alist, but who
| nationalism.
lism should
in domestic
da premium
to countries,
A History of Global Politics: Creating an International Order | 35
but into classes. The capitalist class referred to the owners of
factories, companies, and other “means of production.” In contrast,
the proletariat class included those who did not own the means of
production, but instead, worked for the capitalists.
Marx and his co-author, Friedrich Engels, believed that in
4 socialist revoltution seeking to overthrow the state and alter
the economy, the proletariat “had no nation.” Hence, their now-
famous battle cry, “Workers of the world, unite! You have nothing
to lose but your chains.” They opposed nationalism because they
believed it prevented the unification of the world’s workers.
Instead of identifying with other workers, nationalism could make
workers in individual countries identify with the capitalists of their
countries.
Marx died in 1883, but his followers soon sought to make his
vision concrete by establishing their international organization.
The Socialist International (SI) was a union of European socialist
and labor parties established in Paris in 1889. Although short-
lived, the ST’s achievements included the declaration of May 1 as
Labor Day and the creation of an International Women's Day. Most
importantly, it initiated the successful campaign for an 8-hour
workday.
The SI collapsed during World War I as the member parties
refused or were unable to join the internationalist efforts to fight
for the war. Many of these sister parties even ended up fighting
each other. It was a confirmation of Marx’s warning: when workers
and their organizations take the side of their countries instead of
each other, their long-term interests are compromised.
‘As the SI collapsed, a more radical version emerged. In
the so-called Russian Revolution of 1917, Czar Nicholas Il was
overthrown and replaced by a revolutionary government led by the
Bolshevik Party and its leader, Vladimir Lenin. This new state was
called the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, or USSR. Unlike the
majority of the member parties of the SI, the Bolsheviks did not
believe in obtaining power for the working class through elections.
Rather, they exhorted the revolutionary “vanguard” parties to36 | The Structures of Globalization
lead the revolutions across the world, using methods of terror if
necessary. Today, parties like this are referred to as Communist
parties.
Russian revolutionary Viadimir Lenin founded the Comintern to spread socialist
revolutions across the world
To encourage these socialist revolutions across the world,
Lenin established the Communist International (Comintern) in
1919. The Comintern served as the central body for directing
Communist parties all over the world. This International was not
only more radical than the Socialist International, it was also less
democratic because it followed closely the top-down governance of
the Bolsheviks.
Many of the world’s states feared the Comintern, believing that
it was working in secret to stir up revolutions in their countries
(which was true). A problem arose during World War II when the
Soviet Union joined the Allied Powers in 1941. The United States
and the United Kingdom would, of course, not trust the Soviet
Union in their fight against Hitler’s Germany. These countries
Adis
wondered if the Sovice
in their backyards. To
Stalin, dissolved the C
After the war, ho
as the Communist In,
Union took over the ¢
States, the Soviet Un
Europe into their res
like the Comintern bi
parties that had taken
With the event
whatever existing tho
practically disappear
1951, but its influenc
has never been consi
to this very day.
For the postwa
would once again be
rise of the United Na
Conclu
This lesson exa
In tracing these ro
provided. Moreove
the broader phenc
a very crucial asp.
are heightened by
increased interdep
state-to-state relati
also facilitated by
global norms and
organization, of cotods of terror if
as Communist
read socialist
ss the world,
omintern) in
for directing
tional was not
t was also less
governance of
believing that
\eir countries
r II when the
United States
ist the Soviet
ese countries
‘A History of Global Politics: Creating an International Order hey?
wondered if the Soviet Union was trying to promote revolutions
in their backyards. To appease his allies, Lenin’s successor, Joseph
Stalin, dissolved the Comintern in 1943.
‘After the war, however, Stalin re-established the Comintern
‘as the Communist Information Bureau (Cominform). The Soviet
Union took over the countries in Eastern Europe when the United
States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain divided the war-torn
Europe into their respective spheres of influence. The Cominform,
like the Comintern before it, helped direct the various communist
parties that had taken power in Eastern Europe.
With the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991,
whatever existing thoughts about communist internationalism also
practically disappeared. The SI managed to re-establish itself in
1951, but its influence remained primarily confined to Europe, and
has never been considered a major player in internat ional relations
to this very day.
For the postwar period, however, liberal internationalism
would once again be ascendant. And the best evidence of this is the
rise of the United Nations as the center of global governance.
Conclusion
‘This lesson examined the roots of the international system.
In tracing these roots, a short history of internationalism was
provided. Moreover, internationalism is but one window into
the broader phenomenon of globalization. Nevertheless, it is
a very crucial aspect of globalization since global interactions
are heightened by the increased interdependence of states. This
increased interdependence manifests itself not just through
state-to-state relations. Increasingly, international relations are
also facilitated by international organizations that promote
global norms and policies. The most prominent example of this
organization, of course, is the United Nations.| The Structures of Globalization
(2) Guide Questions
‘What remnants of the Westphalian system can still be felt at this day
and age? In what sense has the world gone beyond the Westphalian
system?
2. What are the differences between liberal and socialist internationalism?
What are their strengths and weaknesses?
3. Doyou think internationalization erodes the sovereignty of states?
we
“Learning Activity: Imaginary Interview
Further research/read on Giuseppe Mazzini, Woodrow
Wilson, Karl Marx, or Vladimir Lenin. Conduct an imaginary
interview with one of them. In this interview, have your selected
figure answer the following questions:
1. What do you think of nationalism?
2. What is necessary for the development of an international
order?
3. What do you think of the League of Nations?
4, What is the role of revolution in internationalism?
At the end of this lessc
1. define global go
2. identify the roles
3. determine the ch
century.
Although many
imagined the possibi
sort exists today. The
are accountable to.
compel a state to 0
however, some regu!
example, they more
more often than not
Moreover, when they
2014—it becomes a
that states in an inte
global norms mean
despite the lack of a
refers to the various i
There are many
{treaties and form or
international law (i
between states as op}
non-governmental |
formal state power,_ The United Nations
, and Contemporary
- Global Governance |
© Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. define global governance;
2. identify the roles and functions of the United Nations; and
3, determine the challenges of global governance in the twenty-first
century.
Although many internationalists like Bentham and Kant
imagined the possibility of a global government, nothing of the
sort exists today. There is no one organization that various states
are accountable to. Moreover, no organization can militarily
compel a state to obey predetermined global rules. There is,
however, some regularity in the general behavior of states. For
example, they more or less follow global navigation routes and,
more often than not, respect each other’s territorial boundaries.
Moreover, when they do not—like when Russia invaded Crimea in
2014—it becomes a cause for global concern and debate. The fact
that states in an international order continue to adhere to certain
global norms means that there is a semblance of world order
despite the lack of a single world government. Global governance
refers to the various intersecting processes that create this order.
There are many sources of global governance. States sign
treaties and form organizations, in the process legislating public
international law (international rules that govern interactions
between states as opposed to, say, private companies). International
non-governmental organizations (NGOs), though not having
formal state power, can lobby individual states to behave in a0 | The Structures of Globalization
certain way (for example, an international animal protection NGO.
can pressure governments to pass animal cruelty laws). Powerful
transnational corporations can likewise have tremendous effects
on global labor laws, environmental legislation, trade policy, etc.
Even ideas such as the need for “global democracy” or the clamor
for “good governance” can influence the ways international actors
behave.
One lesson will not be able to cover the various ways global
governance occurs. As such, this lesson will only examine
how global governance is articulated by intergovernmental
organizations. It will focus primarily on the United Nations (UN)
as the most prominent intergovernmental organization today.
What is an International Organization?
When scholars refer to groups like the UN or institutions like
the IMF and the World Bank (see Lesson 2), they usually call them
international organizations (IOs). Although international NGOs
are sometimes considered as IOs, the term is commonly used to
refer to international intergovernmental organizations or groups
that are primarily made up of member-states."*
One major fallacy about international organizations is that
they are merely amalgamations of various state interests. In the
1960s and 1970s, many scholars believed that IOs were just venues
where the contradicting, but sometimes intersecting, agendas of
countries were discussed—no more than talk shops. What has
become more evident in recent years, however, is that IOs can take
on lives of their own. For example, as seen in Lesson 2, the IMF
was able to promote a particular form of economic orthodoxy that
stemmed mainly from the beliefs of its professional economists,
TOs can thus become influential as independent organizations.
International relations scholars Michael N. Barnett and Martha
Finnemore listed the following powers of IOs.
The
First, IOs have
can invent and app
standards.” For exal
Refugees (UNHCR)
for more). And since
their borders, this po
Second, IOs have
function related to
“development” neec
and individuals view
such, the meanings t
example, recently, th
as not just safety fi
environmental harm
Finally, 10s h
are accepted codes
nevertheless produ:
classify and fix mea
world, thereby est:
are, as Barnett an¢
of our time. Their
that IOs are staffe
considered experts
economists come t
thus carry some fe
norms regarding t
development projec
Because of the
great good and gr
like environmenta
other entrenched
communities that
the Nobel Prize
criticized the IMF |
economists made reThe United Nations and Contemporary Global Governance | 41
30 First, IOs have the power of classification. Because IOs
ful can invent and apply categories, they create powerful global
cts. standards.” For example, it is the UN High Commissioner for
tc. Refugees (UNHCR) that defines what a refugee is (see Lesson 10
10r for more). And since states are required to accept refugees entering
ors their borders, this power to establish identity has concrete effects.”
Second, IOs have the power to fix meanings. This is a broader
Dal function related to the first. Various terms like “security” or
ne “development” need to be well-defined. States, organizations,
tal and individuals view IOs as legitimate sources of information. As
N) such, the meanings they create have effects on various policies. For
example, recently, the United Nations has started to define security
as not just safety from military violence, but also safety from
environmental harm.”
Finally, IOs have the power to diffuse norms. Norms
are accepted codes of conduct that may not be strict law, but
ke nevertheless produce regularity in behavior. IOs do not only
m classify and fix meanings; they also spread their ideas across the
Ds world, thereby establishing global standards. Their members
to are, as Barnett and Finnemore emphasized, the “missionaries”
ps of our time. Their power to diffuse norms stems from the fact
that IOs are staffed with independent bureaucracies, who are
considered experts in various fields. For example, World Bank
1e economists come to be regarded as experts in development and
25 thus carry some form of authority. They can, therefore, create
of norms regarding the implementation and conceptualization of
development projects.
at
1s
Because of these immense powers, IOs can be sources of
ce
F great good and great harm. They can promote relevant norms
at like environmental protection and human rights. But, like
S. other entrenched bureaucracies, they can become sealed-off
5. communities that fail to challenge their beliefs. For example,
a the Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz famously
criticized the IMF for using a “one-size-fits-all” approach when its
economists made recommendations to developing countries.”*42 | The Structures of Globalization
The United Nations
The main headquarters of the United Naticns in New York
Having examined the powers, limitations, and weaknesses of.
10s, the spotlight will now fall on the most prominent IO in the
contemporary world, the United Nations (UN). After the collapse
of the League of Nations at the end of World War II, countries that
worried about another global war began to push for the formation
of a more lasting international league. The result was the creation
of the UN. Although the organization is far from perfect, it should
be emphasized that it has so far achieved its primary goal of
averting another global war. For this reason alone, the UN should
be considered a success.
The UN is divided into five active organs. The General
Assembly (GA) is UN’s “main deliberative policymaking and
representative organ.”* According to the UN charter: “Decisions
on important questions, such as those on peace and security,
admission of new members, and budgetary matters, require a
two-thirds majority of the General Assembly. Decisions on other
questions are done by simple majority. Annually, the General
Assembly elects a GA President to serve a one-year term of
office.” All member states (currently at 193) have seats in the GA.
The Philippines played a prominent role in the GA's early years
when Filipino diplomat Carlos P. Romulo was elected GA president
from 1949-1950.
The |
Chinese Presider
Although the GA
the UN, many comm
to be the most power
of 15 member states.
terms. The other fiv
5 (P5)—are China,
the United States. T
since the founding «
election. The SC tak
threat to the peace or
to a dispute to settle
methods of adjustme!
resort to imposing si
to maintain or restot
of these powers, state
state need to obtain t
a military interventi
power.
Much attention
permanent seats an
over the council’s de
member to stop an $
SC is heir to the tra
with the Metternich
lesson). It is especisnesses of
O in the
collapse
ries that
rmation
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goal of
i should
General
ing and
ecisions
ecurity,
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erm of
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y years
esident
The United Nations and Contemporary Global Governance | 43
Chinese President Xi Jinping addresses the UN General Assembly
Although the GA is the most representative organization in
the UN, many commentators consider the Security Council (SC)
to be the most powerful. According to the UN, this body consists
of 15 member states. The GA elects ten of these 15 to two-year
terms. The other five—sometimes referred to as the Permanent
5 (P5)—are China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom, and
the United States. These states have been permanent members
since the founding of the UN, and cannot be replaced through
election. The SC takes the lead in determining the existence of a
threat to the peace or an act of aggression. It calls upon the parties
to a dispute to settle the act by peaceful means and recommends
methods of adjustment or terms of settlement. In some cases, it can
resort to imposing sanctions or even authorizing the use of force
to maintain or restore international peace and security.’ Because
of these powers, states that seek to intervene militarily in another
state need to obtain the approval of the SC. With the SC’s approval,
a military intervention may be deemed legal. This is an immense
power.
Much attention has been placed on the SC’s P5 due to their
permanent seats and because each country holds veto power
‘over the council’s decisions. It only takes one veto vote from a PS
member to stop an SC action dead in its tracks. In this sense, the
SC is heir to the tradition of “great power” diplomacy that began
with the Metternich/Concert of Europe system (see the previous
lesson). It is especially telling that the PS consists of the major6 | The Structures of Globalization
to veto any action, rendering the UN incapable of addressing the
crisis. In response, NATO decided to intervene on its own. Though
the NATO intervention was largely a success, it, nevertheless, left
the UN ineffectual.
Today, a similar dynamic is evident in Syria, which is
undergoing a civil war. Russia has threatened to veto any SC
resolution against Syria; thus, the UN has done very little to stop
state-sanctioned violence against opponents of the government.
Since Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is an ally of Russian
dictator Vladimir Putin, the latter has shied away from any policy
that could weaken the legitimacy of the former. Asa result, the UN
is again ineffectual amid a conflict that has led to over 220,000
people dead and 11 million displaced.”
Despite these problems, it remains important for the SC
to place a high bar on military intervention, The UN Security
Council has been wrong on issues of intervention, but it has also
made right decisions. When the United States sought to invade
Iraq in 2001, it claimed that Iraq’s Saddam Hussein had weapons of
mass destruction (WMD) that threatened the world. However, UN
members Russia, China, and France were unconvinced and vetoed
the UN resolution for intervention, forcing the United States to
lead a small “coalition of the willing” with its allies. It has since
been discovered that there were no weapons of mass destruction,
and the invasion of Iraq has caused problems for the country and
the region that last until today.
Conclusion
Global governance is such a complex issue that one
can actually teach an entire course in itself. This lesson has
focused on the IOs and the United Nations in particular.
International organizations are highlighted because they
are the most visible symbols of global governance. The
UN, in particular, is the closest to a world government.
What is important to remember is that international
institutions like the UN are always in a precarious position.
The
On the one hand, the
they are organization
is this tension that w
organizations.
However, note tl
ideas that hold inter
own time, you may ¥
} Guide Que
1. Whyis global g
2. How do interne
What are the ct
global security:
"meeesing the
‘Though
less, left
rhich is
any SC
: to stop
rnment.
Russian
y policy
the UN
220,000
the SC
ecurity
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vetoed
ates to
s since
uction,
ry and
t one
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icular.
they
The
ment.
tional
sition.
The United Nations and Contemporary Global Governance | 47
On the one hand, they are groups of sovereign states. On the otheh
they are organizations with their own rationalities and agendas. It
is this tension that will continue to inform the evolution of thes€
organizations.
However, note that there are many institutions, groups, and
ideas that hold international and global politics together. In your
own time, you may want to explore these topics on your own.
@
) Guide Questions
1. Whyis global governance multi-faceted?
2. How do inte-national organizations take on “lives of their own?"
What are the challenges faced by the United Nations in mai
global securty?48 | The Structures of Globalization
w Learning Activity:
The United Nations Peacekeepers;
Re-enacting their Roles, Responsibilities,
and Challenges
Research in Google what the United Nations peacekeepers are,
the countries that send these peacekeepers, their responsibilities,
and the places where they have been involved in the last 50
years. After familiarizing yourselves with the UN's peacekeeping
function, you will now be teady to deal with a crisis. Read the
scenario below.
Countries A and B have been at war against each other for 50
years over a big area of land that is located in their borders. The
land consists of rainforests, suitable farmlands, and rich mineral
Tesources. It is also suspected to have oil reserves underground.
The community that lives in this area is composed of people
who have never been clear about their national loyalties, for the
simple reason that they do not recognize these borders. They have
been living in the area long before countries A and B had national
territories. They, therefore, would like to be left alone, to “go back
and forth” between the two borders.
Countries A and B, however, want to exploit the resources
of this borderland. They started supporting leaders in this
community, secretly at first, but later on with open economic
assistance. This association created tensions within the community
that soon worsened into open factional rivalries between its
leaders.
The factional rivalry started over how assistance was to be
shared, and then moved to competition over elected positions. The
rivalry took a turn for the worse when Countries A and B began
supplying their allies with arms and military training, especially
after they both realized the security problems this borderland can
cause,
The
It did not take Ic
came out in the of
affected the commur
relatives against each
And then sudd
armies into the bore
reality, to fight alon
Thousands perished
no side was winning
Eventually, exh
to realize how mu
protagonists agreed
of the United Natior
to stand between the
into a lasting peace.
Your class is tha
need to do to prepa
your presence, thir
peace, knowing thaters are,
ilities,
ast 50
eeping
ad the
for 50
s. The
ineral
d.
reople
or the
have
‘ional
back
urces
this
omic
inity
nits
o be
"gan
ally
can
‘The United Nations and Contemporary Global Governance lag
It did not take long before conflict between the two factions
came out in the open. This “mini-war” spread and seriously
affected the community, dividing families and pitting friends and
relatives against each other.
And then suddenly, the two countries were sending their
armies into the border supposedly to help keep the peace, but in
reality, to fight alongside their local allies. The war was intense.
Thousands perished and were injured. But what was clear was that
no side was winning.
Eventually, exhausted by the war (Countries A and B began
to realize how much resources they wasted in this war), the
protagonists agreed to a temporary truce. They also asked the help
of the United Nations in terms of bringing in a peacekeeping force
to stand between the two sides, and negotiate how to turn the truce
into a lasting peace.
Your class is that peacekeeping force. List down the things you
need to do to prepare for this mission. Once you have established
your presence, think of measures you have to take to keep the
peace, knowing that you will not be there permanently. Good luck.A World of Region
© Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. differentiate between regionalization and globalization;
2. explain how regions are formed and kept together;
3, discuss the advantages and disadvantages of regionalism; and
4. _ identify the factors leading to a greater integration of the Asian region.
Governments, associations, societies, and groups form
regional organizations and/or networks as a way of coping with
the challenges of globalization. Globalization has made people
aware of the world in general, but it has also made Filipinos
more cognizant of specific areas such as Southeast Asia. How,
for instance, did the Philippines come to identify itself with the
Southeast Asian region? Why is it part of a regional grouping
known as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)?
While regionalism is often seen as a political and economic
phenomenon, the term actually encompasses a broader area.
It can be examined in relation to identities, ethics, religion,
ecological sustainability, and health.” Regionalism is also a
Process, and must be treated as an “emergent, socially constituted
phenomenon.” It means that regions are not natural or given;
rather, they are constructed and defined by policymakers,
economic actors, and even social movements.
This lesson will look at regions as political entities and
examine what brings them together as they interlock with
globalization. The other facets of regionalism will then be
explored, especially those that pertain to identities, ethics, religion,
ecological sustainat
asking where all the
a nation and as citiz
Countries, Ret
Edward D, Man
and political defin
basic features that
oup of countries
area” or are “an an
of more than two
flows and policy ch
regionalism should
“regional concentr
political process ch
coordination amon
Countries re
globalization in ve
lot of resources te
global integration.
workforce to attri
countries it once «
for its goods (e.g
make up for their
location. Singapot
resources by turni
Singapore develo]
class transit port
Africa, Europe, th
countries in the |
form a regional al
in numbers.
Countries for
is for military deAWorld of Regions | 51
ecological sustainability, and health, The lesson will conclude by
asking where all these regionalisms are bringing us as members of
4 nation and as citizens of the world.
Countries, Regions, and Globalization
Edward D, Mansfield and Helen V. Milner state that economic
and political definitions of regions vary, but there are certain
basic features that everyone can agree on. First, regions are “a
group of countries located in the same geographically specified
area” or are “an amalgamation of two regions [or] a combination
of more than two regions” organized to regulate and “oversee
flows and policy choices.”® Second, the words regionalization and
regionalism should not be interchanged, as the former refers to the
“regional concentration of economic flows” while the latter is “a
political process characterized by economic policy cooperation and
coordination among countries.””
Countries respond economically and politically to
globalization in various ways. Some are large enough and have a
lot of resources to dictate how they participate in processes of
global integration. China, for example, offers its cheap and huge
workforce to attract foreign businesses and expand trade with
countries it once considered its enemies but now sees as markets
for its goods (e.g., the United States and Japan). Other countries
make up for their small size by taking advantage of their strategic
location. Singapore and Switzerland compensate for their lack of
resources by turning themselves into financial and banking hubs.
Singapore developed its harbor facilities and made them a first-
class transit port for ships carrying different commodities from
Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and mainland Southeast Asia to
countries in the Asia-Pacific. In most cases, however, countries
form a regional alliance for—as the saying goes— there is strength
in numbers.
Countries form regional associations for several reasons. One
is for military defense. The most widely known defense grouping52 | The Structures of Globalization
is the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) formed during
the Cold War when several Western European countries plus the
United States agreed to protect Europe against the threat of the
Soviet Union. The Soviet Union responded by creating its regional
alliance, the Warsaw Pact, consisting of the Eastern European
countries under Soviet domination. The Soviet Union imploded in
December 1991, but NATO remains in place.
Soldiers from NATO countries hold their flags.
Countries also form regional organizations to pool their
resources, get better returns for their exports, as well as expand
their leverage against trading partners. The Organization of the
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) was established in 1960
by Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Venezuela to regulate the
production and sale of oil. This regional alliance flexed its muscles
in the 1970s when its member countries took over domestic
production and dictated crude oil prices in the world market. In
a world highly dependent on oil, this integration became a source
of immense power. OPEC’s success convinced nine other oil-
producing countries to join it.*
Moreover, there are countries that form regional blocs to
protect their independence from the pressures of superpower
politics. The presidents of Egypt, Ghana, India, Indonesia, and
Yugoslavia created the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) in 1961
to pursue world peace and international cooperation, human
rights, national sovereignty, racial and national equality, non-
intervention, and peaceful conflict resolution. It called itself non-
aligned becat
First World cé
America or th
the NAM hac
was never for
although it lac
Finally, ¢
The Thai ec
speculators a
Thai governn
investments t
to other Asiar
foreign inves
Fund (IMF)
ASEAN oul
agreed to esta
Asian econon
The crisi
The Associat
coalition of c
the United St
ASEAN cont
after it invad
economic co
Non-Stat
Tt is not:
a single cau
organizing.
“tiny associ:
focus on a si
multitude 0
security.”
likewise relAWorld of Regions | 53
aligned because the association refused to side with either the
First World capitalist democracies in Western Europe and North
America or the communist states in Eastern Europe. At its peak,
the NAM had 120 member countries. The movement, however,
was never formalized and continues to exist up to the present,
although it lacks the same fervor that it had in the past.
Finally, economic crisis compels countries to come together.
‘The Thai economy collapsed in 1996 after foreign currency
speculators and troubled international banks demanded that the
‘Thai government pay back its loans. A rapid withdrawal of foreign
investments bankrupted the economy. This crisis began to spread
to other Asian countries as their currencies were also devalued and
foreign investments left in a hurry. The International Monetary
Fund (IMF) tried to reverse the crisis, but it was only after the
ASEAN countries along with China, Japan, and South Korea
agreed to establish an emergency fund to anticipate a crisis that the
Asian economies stabilized.
The crisis made ASEAN more “unified and coordinated.”
‘The Association has come a long way since it was formed as a
coalition of countries which were pro-American and supportive of
the United States intervention in Vietnam. After the Vietnam War,
ASEAN continued to act as a military alliance to isolate Vietnam
after it invaded Cambodia, but there were also the beginnings of
economic cooperation.
Non-State Regionalism
It is not only states that agree to work together in the name of
a single cause (or causes). Communities also engage in regional
organizing. This “new regionalism” varies in form; they can be
“tiny associations that include no more than a few actors and
focus on a single issue, or huge continental unions that address a
multitude of common problems from territorial defense to food
security.”” Organizations representing this “new regionalism”
likewise rely on the power of individuals, non-governmental54 | The Structures of Globalization
organizations (NGOs), and associations to link up with one
another in pursuit of a particular goal (or goals). Finally, “new
regionalism” is identified with reformists who share the same
“values, norms, institutions, and system that exist outside of the
traditional, established mainstream institutions and systems.”
Their strategies and tactics likewise vary. Some organizations
Partner with governments to initiate social change. Those
who work with governments (“legitimizers”) participate in
“institutional mechanisms that afford some civil society groups
voice and influence [in] technocratic policy-making processes.”
For example, the ASEAN issued its Human Rights Declaration in
2009, but the regional body left it to member countries to apply
the declaration’s principles as they see fit. Aware that democratic
rights are limited in many ASEAN countries, “new regionalism”
organizations used this official declaration to Pressure these
governments to pass laws and regulations that Protect and promote
human rights.
In South America, left-wing governments support the
Hemispheric Social Alliance’s opposition to the North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), while members of the
Mesa de Articulacién de Asociaciones Nacionales y Redes de
ONGs de América Latina y El Caribe (Roundtable of National
Associations and Networks and NGOs in Latin America and the
Caribbean) participate in “forums, summits, and dialogues with
Presidents and ministers.” Likewise, a group called the Citizen
Diplomacy Forum tries to influence the policies and programs
of the Organization of American States,” In Southeast Asia, the
organization of an ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights
was in part the result of non-government organizations and civil
Society groups pushing to “prevent discrimination, uphold political
freedom, and promote democracy and human rights throughout
the region."
Other regional organizations dedicate themselves to
specialized causes. Activists across Central and South America
established the Rainforest Foundation to Protect indigenous
Peoples and the rainforests in Brazil, Guyana, Panama, and
fier.” Young Christi
the Americas, and tl
Youth Networks to pro:
sluication, and sustait
i) Asia is another reg
‘ommitted to protect!
of migrant workers."
(hese organizati
standing and their a
politics. Unfortunatel
places them at a disa
sounterparts who hav
, therefore, li
polit
New regionalism
{o-state regionalism \
example, states treat
technical or econom
existing programs of
economic policies, a
issues. However, nev
Global Forum see th
development and ens
economic developme
ind hardly concerne
poor
Another challen
may emerge among
over issues like get
breaking from relig
Church, Muslim ime
rights and other p
society groups are a
may not be welcomi
after another. Migra
of Action Researc
governments to dethe
can
the
cal
put
AWorld of Regions | 55
Hey.’ Young Christians across Asia, Africa, the Middle East,
Wie Americas, and the Caribbean formed Regional Interfaith
Yauih Networks to promote “conflict prevention, resolution, peace
education, and sustainable development.™” The Migrant Forum
jy Asia is another regional network of NGOs and trade unions
“ymmitted to protect{ing] and promot[ing] the rights and welfare
‘if migrant workers.“*
These organizations’ primary power lies in their moral
sanding and their ability to combine lobbying with pressure
politic: Unfortunately, most of them are poorly financed, which
places them at a disadvantage when dealing with their official
‘ounterparts who have large state funds. Their impact in global
politics is, therefore, limited.”
New regionalism differs significantly from traditional state-
{o-state regionalism when it comes to identifying problems. For
example, states treat poverty or environmental degradation as
{echnical or economic issues that can be resolved by refining
existing programs of state agencies, making minor changes in
economic policies, and creating new offices that address these
issues. However, new regionalism advocates such as the NGO
Global Forum see these issues as reflections of flawed economic
development and environmental models. By “flawed,” they mean
economic development plans that are market-based, profit-driven,
and hardly concerned with social welfare, especially among the
poor.
Another challenge for new regionalists is the discord that
may emerge among them. For example, disagreements surface
over issues like gender and religion, with pro-choice NGOs
breaking from religious civil society groups that side with the
Church, Muslim imams, or governments opposed to reproductive
rights and other pro-women policies. Moreover, while civil
society groups are able to dialogue with governments, the latter
may not be welcoming to this new trend and set up one obstacle
after another, Migrant Forum Asia and its ally, the Coordination
of Action Research on AIDS (CARAM), lobbied ASEAN
governments to defend migrant labor rights. Their program56 | The Structures of Globalization
of action, however, slowed down once countries like Malaysia,
Singapore, and Thailand refused to recognize the rights of
undocumented migrant workers and the rights of the families of
migrants.”
Contemporary Challenges to Regionalism
Today, regionalism faces multiple challenges, the most serious
of which is the resurgence of militant nationalism and populism,
The refusal to dismantle NATO after the collapse of the Soviet
Union, for example, has become the basis of the anti-NATO.
thetoric of Vladimir Putin in Russia, Now, even the relationship
of the United States—the alliance’s core member—with NATO.
has become problematic after Donald Trump demonized the
organization as simply leeching off American military power
without giving anything in return.
Perhaps the most crisis-ridden regional organization of today
is the European Union. The continuing financial crisis of the
region is forcing countries like Greece to consider leaving the
Union to gain more flexibility in their economic policy. Anti-
immigrant sentiment and a populist campaign against Europe
have already led to the United Kingdom voting to leave the
European Union in a move the media has termed the “Brexit.”
ASEAN members continue to disagree over the extent to
which member countries should sacrifice their sovereignty for
the sake of regional stability."* The Association’s link with East
Asia has also been problematic. Recently, ASEAN countries also
disagreed over how to relate to China, with the Philippines unable
to get the other countries to support its condemnation of China’s
occupation of the West Philippine Sea.” Cambodia and Laos led
the opposition favoring diplomacy over confrontation, but the
real reason was the dramatic increase of Chinese investments
and economic aid to these countries,*° Moreover, when some
formerly authoritarian countries democratized, this “participatory
regionalism” clashed with ASEAN’s policy of non-interference, as
civil society groups
demanded that the
open attitude toward
AEC /aseat
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developing societi
globalization, dev
and Russia see de
and deepening of
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implementation o1
procedures must, tAWorld of Regions | 57
sivil society groups in Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand
‘emanded that the other countries democratized adopt a more
pen attitude towards foreign criticism.”
AEC /asean
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oO
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a
i
The member countries of ASEAN
‘A final challenge pertains to differing visions of what
regionalism should be for. Western governments may see regional
organizations not simply as economic formations but also as
instruments of political democratization. Non-Western and
developing societies, however, may have a different view regarding
globalization, development, and democracy. Singapore, China,
and Russia see democracy as an obstacle to the implementation
and deepening of economic globalization because constant public
inquiry about economic projects and lengthy debate slow down
implementation or lead to unclear outcomes. Democracy’s tedious
procedures must, therefore, give way to efficiency.58 | The Structures of Globalization
‘i :
Conclusion wp a
Empires, tc
Organize yourselv
iivisions:
North Americ;
the world’s population in 2007, These countries are also part of
“smaller” organizations that include the
Association of Southeast China
Asian Nations, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the North Raat _
American Free Trade Agreement, the Caribbean and Pacific —
Group of States, and the Union of South American Nations, Even
“isolationist” North Korea is Part of the Regional Forum, which
discusses security issues in the region,
At the beginning
yuled the world, thi
Kingdoms. When
empire, some of the
were weakened. This
colonial rule, and oth
of interests. Europear
areas.
After World W
shift, this time with
demanding that they
their own future. Th
Wilson called “the
discussion on this it
World War II destre
their independence.
In the same way the countries will find it difficult to reject all
forms of global economic integration, it will also be hard for them
to turn their backs on their regions. Even if the UK leaves the EU,
it must continue to trade with its immediate neighbors and will,
therefore, be forced to implement many EU rules. None of this isto
say that regional organizations will remain unaltered. The history
of regionalism shows that regional
global concerns arise. The future of
on the immense changes in global
21" century,
I associations emerge as new
regionalism will be contingent
politics that will emerge in the
@) Guide Questions
Choose a regions
the time before Euro
world, then during th
How is regionalism different from and yet apart of globalization?
What is the difference between state-to-state regionalism
and non-state regionalism?
inds
3. What triggers various regionalist projects? List what kin
principates, then pr
inhabit there. Final];
born from the ashes
‘on the past era to ex}
In the next meet
of the other groups. |AWorld of Regions | 59
Learning Activity: From Kingdoms to
of the Empires, to Colonies, and to Republics
Asia. Organize yourselves based on these following broad regional
ent o} ilivisions:
irt of North America South America
heas| China Japan
jorth Korea South Asia
cif Middle East Southeast Asia
At the beginning of the 16th century, before the Europeans
yuled the world, these regions had their own empires and
Kingdoms. When the Spanish established the first global
empire, some of these kingdoms and empires disappeared or
were weakened. This process was continued under the British
EU, colonial rule, and other powers began to carve their own spheres
will, of interests. Europeans dominated and made colonies out of these
is to areas.
ee After World War I, however, there began a noticeable
nea shift, this time with colonies challenging the colonial rule and
ent demanding that they be allowed to become nations and determine
the their own future. This pursuit was what US President Woodrow
Wilson called “the principle of self-determination” (see the
liscussion on this in the Lesson 3) reached a high point when
World War II destroyed the empires, and the colonies achieved
their independence.
Choose a regional division and trace how it has changed from
the time before European powers like Britain and Spain ruled the
world, then during the era of colonialism, until its independence.
List what kinds of changes happened to these areas (once
principates, then provinces, then republics) and the people who
inhabit there. Finally, see how the nations and republics that were
born from the ashes of colonialism after World War IT looked back
on the past era to explain their own histories.
In the next meeting, compare your region's changes with those
of the other groups. Pinpoint the similarities and differences.A World of Ideas:
Cultures
of Globalization
This second unit focuses on how the
globalization structures discussed in Unit 1
affect various forms of cultural life. “Culture”
is used here in the broadest’ possible sense,
referring to the daily practices of people. Thus,
if the first unit focused on a “large” form of
globalization, this unit will zero in on everyday
globalizations in the realms of religion,
culture, and city life.
‘The major learning outcome of this unit
is to explain the role of global processes in
everyday life.The Globalizatio
of Religion
@ Learning Outcomes
‘At the end of this lesson, you should be able ta
1. explain how globalization affects religious practices and beliefs
2. _ identify the various religious responses to globalization; and
3. discuss the future of religion in a globalized world.
Religion, much more than culture, has the most difficult
relationship with globalism (remember the distinction between
“globalization” and “globalism” in Lesson 1). First, the two are
entirely contrasting belief systems. Religion is concerned with
the sacred, while globalism places value on material wealth,
Religion follows divine commandments, while globalism abides by
human-made laws. Religion assumes that there is “the possibility
of communication between humans and the transcendent.”
This link between the human and the divine confers some social
power on the latter. Furthermore, “God,” “Allah,” or “Yahweh”
defines and judges human action in moral terms (good vs. bad).
Globalism’s yardstick, however, is how much of human action can
lead to the highest material satisfaction and subsequent wisdom
that this new status produces
Religious people are less concerned with wealth and all
that comes along with it (higher social status, a standard
of living similar with that of the rest of the community,
exposure to “culture,” top-of-the-line education for the
children). They are ascetics precisely because they shun
anything material for complete simplicity—from _ their
domain to the clothes they wear, to the food they eat, and
even to the manner in which they talk (lots of parables and
allegories that are supposedly the language of the divine).
\ religious person’s 1
such that when he/she
world (Le. heaven).
On the other han
they will end up in he
as they aim to seal
enterprises, improve
clites from being ex
enrich themselves. If
jlobalist sees his/her
of the community, the
another way, the reli
trains to be a shrewd
and the quest for p
weakness; the global
open up further the e
Finally, religion
religious evangelizat
globalist ideal, on th
of markets, The reli
ally, while the gl
‘The “missions” t
churches, Sufi and |
like Buddhist monas
churches are efforts
adherents abroad.
globalism (citizensh
because they are e
to a religious grou
vffiliation that com
supernatural. Being
one in a higher plan
or an Anglo-Saxon.The Globalization of Religion | 63
A religious person’s main duty is to live a virtuous, sin-less life
such that when he/she dies, he/she is assured of a place in the other
world (ie., heaven).
On the other hand, globalists are less worried about whether
they will end up in heaven or hell. Their skills are more pedestrian
us they aim to seal trade deals, raise the profits of private
enterprises, improve government revenue collections, protect the
clites from being excessively taxed by the state, and, naturally,
enrich themselves. If he/she has a strong social conscience, the
jlobalist sees his/her work as contributing to the general progress
of the community, the nation, and the global economic system. Put
another way, the religious aspires to become a saint; the globalist
trains to be a shrewd businessperson. The religious detests politics
and the quest for power for they are evidence of humanity’s
weakness; the globalist values them as both means and ends to
open up further the economies of the world.
Finally, religion and globalism clash over the fact that
religious evangelization is in itself a form of globalization. The
globalist ideal, on the other hand, is largely focused on the realm
of markets, The religious is concerned with spreading holy ideas
globally, while the globalist wishes to spread goods and services.
‘The “missions” being sent by American Born-Again Christian
churches, Sufi and Shiite Muslim orders, as well as institutions
like Buddhist monasteries and Catholic, Protestant, and Mormon
churches are efforts at “spreading the word of God” and gaining
adherents abroad. Religions regard identities associated with
sslobalism (citizenship, language, and race) as inferior and narrow
because they are earthly categories. In contrast, membership
lo a religious group, organization, or cult represents a superior
affiliation that connects humans directly to the divine and the
supernatural, Being a Christian, a Muslim, or a Buddhist places
one ina higher plane than just being a Filipino, a Spanish speaker,
or an Anglo-Saxon.64 | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
‘A Mormon missionary
These philosophical differences explain why certain groups
“flee” their communities and create impenetrable sanctuaries
where they can practice their religions without the meddling
and control of state authorities, The followers of the Dalai
Lama established Tibet for this Purpose, and certain Buddhist
monasteries are located away from civilization so that hermits can
devote themselves to Prayer and contemplation. These isolationist
justifications are also used by the Rizalistas of Mount Banahaw,
the Essenes during Roman-controlled Judea (now Israel), and for
a certain period, the Mormons of Utah. These groups believe that
living among “non-believers” will distract them from their mission
or tempt them to abandon their faith and become sinners like
everyone else.
Communities justify their opposition to government authority
on religious grounds. Priestesses and monks led the first revolts
against colonialism in Asia and Africa, warning that these
Outsiders were out to destroy their people's gods and ways of life.
Similar arguments are being invoked by contemporary versions
of these millenarian movements that wish to break away from the
hold of the state or vow to overthrow the latter in the name of God.
To their “prophets,” the state seeks to either destroy their people's
sacred beliefs or distort religion to serve non-religious goals.
Realities
In actuality, th
much more comp
secularized, the
In most of the w
fervor, occurring
traditions—Chris
and even Confuc
in many places i
religions with ind
Religions ar
Malaysian govert
system. Its consti
of the Federatio
“Head of the reli
Ayatollah Ruhol
Islamic rule ove
“there is no fi
despotic, dictate
To Khomeini, a
flawed—and Isl:
because it was sf
is associated wit!Realities
In actuality, the relationship between religion and globalism is
more complicated. Peter Berger argues that far from being
ilarized, the “contemporary world is...furious! ious.
nost of the world, there are veritable explosions of religious
rvor, occurring in one form of another in all the major religious
raditions—Christianity, Judaism, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism
nd
nd even Confucianism (if one wants to call it a religion)—
in many places in imaginative syntheses of one or more world
religions with indigenous faiths.”
Religions are the foundations of modern republics. The
Malaysian government places religion at the center of the political
gystem, Its constitution explicitly states that “Islam is the religion
of the Federation,” and the rulers of each state was also the
Head of the religion of Islam.”* The late Iranian religious leader,
Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini, bragged about the superiority of
Islamic rule over its secular counterparts and pointed out that
there is no fundamental distinction among constitutional,
despotic, dictatorial, democratic, and communistic regimes.”*
To Khomeini, all secular ideologies were the same—they were
flawed—and Islamic rule was the superior form of government
because it was spiritual. Yet, Iran calls itself a republic, a term that
is associated with the secular66 | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
Moreover, religious movements do not hesitate to appropriate
secular themes and practices. The moderate Muslim association:
Nahdlatul Ulama in Indonesia has Islamic schools (pesantren)
where students are taught not only about Islam but also about
modern science, the social sciences, modern banking, civie
education, rights of women, pluralism, and democracy.” In other
cases, religion was the result of a shift in state policy. The Church
of England, for example, was “shaped by the rationality of modern
democratic (and bureaucratic) culture.”** King Henry VIII broke
away from Roman Catholicism and established his own Church:
to bolster his own power. In the United States, religion and law
were fused together to help build this “modern secular society.” It
was observed in the early 1800s by French historian and diplomat
Alexis de Tocqueville who wrote, “not only do the Americans
practice their religion out of self-interest but they often even place
in this world the interest which they have in practicing it.”® Jose
Casanova confirms this statement by noting that “historically,
religion has always been at the very center of all great political
conflicts and movements of social reform. From independence to
abolition, from nativism to women’s suffrage, from prohibition to
the civil rights movement, religion had always been at the center of
these conflicts, but also on both sides of the political barricades.”
It remains the case until today with the power the Christian Right
has on the Republican Party.
Religion for and against Globalization
There is hardly a religious movement today that does not
use religion to oppose “profane” globalization. Yet, two of the
so-called “old world religions”—Christianity and Islam—see
globalization less as an obstacle and more as an opportunity to
expand their reach all over the world. Globalization has “freed”
communities from the “constraints of the nation-state,” but in the
process, also threatened to destroy the cultural system that bind
them together.” Religion seeks to take the place of these broken
“traditional ties” to either help communities cope with their new
situation or organize th
their lives. It can pro’
problems ranging fron
personal happiness.”*
that stops or slows do
that gives communitie
{yan instrument with
in the reshaping of th
term
Religious fundar
materialism, but it co
means of communica
with this economic t
distance transport and
as a global vernacula
modern management
of “almost promiscuot
globe in all sorts of dit
to assume that the pro
case of Islam, the rise
known as ISIS, or Isla
defense against the n
the opposite. These fu
the spread of globaliz
advantage of each othe
While religions
globalization, this do
\deology will subside
Trojan horse hiding s
liberalism, or even c
their areas to eventu
Churches—an associ:
has criticized econon
that “we as churches
of the project of e
latter's advocates inChurch
nodern
I broke
Church
rically,
olitical
ence to
tion to
nter of
des.”
1 Right
es not
of the
1—see
ity to
freed”
in the
t bind
roken
r new
The Globalization of Religion | 67
situation or organize them to oppose this major transformation of
their lives.® It can provide the groups “moral codes” that answer
problems ranging from people’s health to social conflict to even
“personal happiness." Religion is thus not the “regressive force”
that stops or slows down globalization; it is a “pro-active force”
that gives communities a new and powerful basis of identity. It
jy an instrument with which religious people can put their mark
in the reshaping of this globalizing world, although in its own
terms.
Religious fundamentalism may dislike _globalization’s
inaterialism, but it continues to use “the full range of modern
means of communication and organization” that is associated.
with this economic transformation.® It has tapped “fast long-
distance transport and communications, the availability of English
4s a global vernacular of unparalleled power, the know-how of
modern management and marketing” which enabled the spread
of “almost promiscuous propagation of religious forms across the
lobe in all sorts of directions.” It is, therefore, not entirely correct
to assume that the proliferation of “Born-Again” groups, or in the
case of Islam, the rise of movements like Daesh (more popularly
known as ISIS, or Islamic State in Iraq and Syria) signals religion's
defense against the materialism of globalization.” It is, in fact,
the opposite. These fundamentalist organizations are the result of
the spread of globalization and both find ways to benefit or take
advantage of each other.
While religions may benefit from the processes of
jlobalization, this does not mean that its tensions with globalist
ideology will subside. Some Muslims view “globalization” as a
[vojan horse hiding supporters of Western values like secularism,
liberalism, or even communism ready to spread these ideas in
their areas to eventually displace Islam. The World Council of
Churches—an association of different Protestant congregations—
has criticized economic globalization’s negative effects. It vowed
that “we as churches make ourselves accountable to the victims
of the project of economic globalization,” by becoming the
latter’s advocates inside and outside “the centers of power.””68 | A World of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
The Catholic Church and its dynamic leader, Pope Francis,
likewise condemned globalization’s “throw-away culture” that
is “fatally destined to suffocate hope and increase risks and
threats.” The Lutheran World Federation 10th Assembly's
292-page declaration message included economic and feminist
critiques of globalization, sharing the voices of members of the
Church who were affected by globalization, and contemplations
on the different “pastoral and ethical reflections” that members
could use to guide their opposition.” It warns that as a result
of globalization: “Our world is split asunder by forces we often
do not understand, but that result in stark contrasts between
those who benefit and those who are harmed, especially under
forces of globalization, ‘Today, there is also a desperate need for
healing from ‘terrorism,’ its causes, and fearful reactions to it,
Relationships in this world continue to be ruptured due to greed,
injustices, and various forms of violence.”
These advocacies to reverse or mitigate economic globalization
eventually gained the attention of globalist institutions. In 1998,
the World Bank brought in religious leaders in its discussions
about global poverty, leading eventually to a “cautious, muted,
and qualified” collaboration in 2000.” Although it only yielded
insignificant results (the World Bank agreed to support some
faith-based anti-poverty projects in Kenya and Ethiopia), it was
evident enough that institutional advocates of globalization could
be responsive to the “liberationist, moral critiques of economic
globalization” (including many writings on “social justice”)
coming from the religious.”*
With the exception of militant Islam, religious forces are well
aware that they are in no position to fight for a comprehensive
alternative to the globalizing status quo. What Catholics call
“the preferential option for the poor” is a powerful message
of mobilization but lacks substance when it comes to working
out a replacement system that can change the poor’s condition
in concrete ways.”> And, of course, the traditionalism of
fundamentalist political Islam is no alternative either, The
terrorism of ISIS is unlikely to create a “Caliphate” governed by
justice and stabilit
religious autocracy
democratic rituals
Conclusion
For a phenon
globalization is s
Peter Bayer and
is somehow ‘out
potential.”” One
globalization wit!
that is based on
reason, one will |
for fruitful think
Religion, being
proven is, there
that modernizat
secularization th
Historians,
debunked mucl
one of the strong
The Clash of Ci
by religious wo
as the 15th cen
“ideological arn
one of the gre
observed the
economic syste
that God had al
Calvinists, the
to their fate, ar
profit and its
Weber referred
modern capitalrat
nd
y's
ist
he
sstice and stability. In Iran, the unchallenged superiority of a
sous autocracy has stifled all freedom of expressions, distorted
Jemocratic rituals like elections, and tainted the opposition:
iclusion
For a phenomenon that “is about everything,’ It is odd that
lobalization is seen to have very little to do with religion. As
Religion, it seems
Peter Bayer and Lori Beaman obser
‘« somehow ‘outside’ looking at globalization as problem ot
otential.””” One reason for this perspective is the association of
obalization with modernization which is a concept of progress
at is based on science, technol reason, and the law. With
‘son, one will have “to look elsewhere than to moral discourse
globalization and religion.”*
that cannot be empirically
) modernization.” The thesis
for fruitful thinking about economic
Religion, being a belief system
proven is, therefore, anathema t
that modernization will erode religious practice is often called
secularization theory.
and philosophers have now
debunked much of secularization theory. Samuel Huntington,
alization, admits in his book,
Historians, political scientists
ne of the strongest defenders of glob:
he Clash of Civilizations, that civilizations can be held together
by religious worldviews.®” This belief is hardly new. As far back
is the 15th century, Jesuits and Dominicans used religion as an
“{deological armature” to legitimize the Spanish empire. Finally
one of the greatest sociologists of all time, Max Weber also
bserved the correlation between religion
branch of Protestantism, believed
and capitalism as an
economic system. Calvinism, @
that God had already decided who would and would not be saved.
Calvinists, therefore, made it their mission to search for clues as
to their fate, and in their pursuit, they
inner-worldly asceticism” —as
redefined the meaning of
profit and its acquisition. This
Weber referred to this Protestant ethic—contributed to the rise of
modern capitalism.”70 | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
It was because of “moral” arguments that religious people were
able to justify their political involvement. When the Spaniards
occupied lands in the Americas and the Philippines, it was
done in the name of the Spanish King and of God, “for empire
comes from God alone.”*? Then over 300 years later, American
President William McKinley claimed “that after a night of prayer
() Guide Que
1, What are the co
ideology of glo!
2. Whyis seculariz
d de
and soul-searching, he had concluded that it was the duty of the . ae ao
United States ‘to educate the Filipinos, and uplift and civilize and eee
Christianize them, and by God’s grace do the very best we could
by them.” Finally, as explained earlier, religious leaders have used
religion to wield influence in the political arena, either as outsiders 9% Learning
criticizing the pitfalls of pro-globalization regimes, o as integral Qe what Re
members of coalitions who play key roles in policy decision-
makings and the implementation of: government projects,
Divide yoursely
one religion (Budd
Protestantism, Hin
research the histor
In short, despite their inflexible features—the warnings of
perdition (“Hell is a real place prepared by Allah for those who
do not believe in Him, rebel against His laws, and reject His
messengers”), the promises of salvation (“But our citizenship is in
foll p
Heaven”), and their obligatory pilgrimages (the visits to Bethlehem ae ;
or Mecca)—religions are actually quite malleable. Their resilience a. the religion’
has been extraordinary that they have outlasted secular ideologies b. the religion’s
(e.g, communism). Globalists, therefore, have no choice but to
c. the steps nee
accept this reality that religion is here to stay,
himself/hers¢
Afterwards, cc
relationship with |
politics? Why did i
Discuss the re
determine the sim:
Finally, compare thThe Globalization of Religion | 71
() Guide Questions
|
as |
fe 1 Whatare the conflicting ideas between religious thought and the
a ideology of globalism discussed in Lesson 1?
er 2. Why’s secularization theory outdateu? |
he 3, How do you describe the reactions of some religious movements to |
id globalization? How do others facilitate globalization? t
ld er eR
ed
rs :
A ay Learning Act
i @* What Religion are You in?
of Divide yourselves into groups. E: ch group must be assigned
i one religion (Buddhism, Christianity-Catholicism, Christianity-
a Protestantism, Hinduism, Judaism, Islam, etc.). Surf the web and
a research the history of the assigned religion. Then describe the
i following
e a. the religion’s concept of good
b. the religion’s concept of evil
c. the steps needed by a person to become good and prevent
himself/herself from becoming evil
Afterwards, conduct a research on your assigned religion's
relationship with politics, if any. In what ways is it engaged in
politics? Why did its leaders decide to be involved in politics?
Discuss the result of your research with the other groups to
determine the similarities and differences between these religions.
Finally, compare the religions’ relationship with politics.Media and
Globalization
© Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. analyze how various media drive different forms of global integration;
2. compare the social impacts of different media on the processes of
globalization;
3. explain the dynamic between local and global cultural production; and
define responsible media consumption.
MAR cele wot barsiee ohio vena ot
Globalization entails the spread of various cultures. When
a film is made in Hollywood, it is shown not only in the United
States, but also in other cities across the globe. South Korean
rapper Psy’s song “Gangnam Style” may have been about a wealthy
suburb in Seoul, but its listeners included millions who have never
been or may never go to Gangnam. Some of them may not even
know what Gangnam is. Globalization also involves the spread
of ideas. For example, the notion of the rights of lesbian, gay,
bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) communities is spreading
across the world and becoming more widely accepted. Similarly,
the conservative Christian Church that opposes these rights moves
from places like South America to Korea and to Burundi in Africa.
Korean rapper Psy
People who tra
beliefs in universitie
as guests of a family
ideas. But today, tel
movies, magazines,
to reach larger audi
conduit for the spr
then right to ask, “(
of information on r
empires have stret«
throughout their |
fiction, cuisine, a1
intermingling of m
There is an
and media which
contemporary worl
Media and It
Lule describes
such as a channelon
“d
in
y
er
n
d
1B
Ys
2s,
Media and Globalization | 73
Korean rapper Psy, was catapulted to ferme by his song “Gangnam Style”
People who travel the globe teaching and preaching their
beliefs in universities, churches, public forums, classrooms, or even
as guests of a family play a major role in the spread of culture and
ideas. But today, television programs, social media groups, books,
movies, magazines, and the like have made it easier for advocates
to reach larger audiences. Globalization relies on media as its main
conduit for the spread of global culture and ideas. Jack Lule was
then right to ask, “Could global trade have evolved without a flow
of information on markets, prices, commodities, and more? Could
empires have stretched across the world without communication
throughout their borders? Could religion, music, poetry, film,
fiction, cuisine, and fashion develop as they have without the
intermingling of media and cultures?”
There is an intimate relationship between globalization
and media which must be unraveled to further understand the
contemporary world.
Media and Its Functions
Lule describes media as “a means of conveying something,
such as a channel of communication.”* ‘Technically speaking, a4 | A World of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
person's voice is a medium. However, when commentators refer
to “media” (the plural of medium), they mean the technologies of
mass communication. Print media include books, magazines, and
newspapers. Broadcast media involve radio, film, and television.
Finally, digital media cover the internet and mobile mass
communication. Within the category of internet media, there are
the e-mail, internet sites, social media, and internet-based video
and audio.
While it is relatively easy to define the term “media,” it is more
difficult to determine what media do and how they affect societies,
Media theorist Marshall McLuhan once declared that “the
medium is the message.” He did not mean that ideas (“messages”)
are useless and do not affect people. Rather, his statement was an
attempt to draw attention to how media, as a form of technology,
reshape societies. Thus, television is not a simple bearer of
messages, it also shapes the social behavior of users and reorient
family behavior. Since it was introduced in the 1960s, television
has steered people from the dining table where they eat and tell
stories to each other, to the living room where they silently munch
on their food while watching primetime shows. Television has
also drawn people away from other meaningful activities such as
playing games or reading books. Today, the smart phone allows
users to keep in touch instantly with multiple people at the same
time. Consider the effect of the internet on relationships. Prior to
the cellphone, there was no way for couples to keep constantly in
touch, or to be updated on what the other does all the time. The
technology (medium), and not the message, makes for this social
change possible.
McLuhan added that different media simultaneously extend
and amputate human senses. New media may expand the reach
of communication, but they also dull the users’ communicative
capacities. Think about the medium of writing. Before people
wrote things down on parchment, exchanging stories was mainly
done orally. To be able pass stories verbally from one person to
another, storytellers had to have retentive memories. However,
Papyrus started becoming more common in Egypt after the fourth
century BCE, whic
write down their ste
rely completely on
{o some philosophe
remember.
Something sim
one hand, they
the capability to
simultaneously. O:
because they mak
multitasking. This
change with a trade
The question
amputate was not
New media are n
writer was merel
technologically spé
The Global V
McLuhan us¢
impact of electrc
1960s, he mainly
television. McLuh
into a “global vill
people sat down
the same stories,
tribal villages onc
the members of t
boxes in their livi
In the years
with the challen;
thinkers assume
culture. They ar;entators refer
chnologies of
igazines, and
id television.
nobile mass
lia, there are
-based video
a,” it is more
ect societies.
d that “the
(“messages”)
ment was an
‘technology,
e bearer of
and reorient
s, television
eat and tell
ently munch
levision has
ities such as
hone allows
at the same
ips. Prior to
onstantly in
e time. The
r this social
usly extend
d the reach
municative
fore people
was mainly
> person to
. However,
‘the fourth
Media and Globalization | 75
century BCE, which increasingly meant that more people could
write down their stories. Asa result, storytellers no longer had to
\ely completely on their memories. This development, according
to some philosophers at the time, dulled the people’s capacity to
remember.
Something similar can be said about cellphones. On the
one hand, they expand people's senses because they provide
the capability to talk to more people instantaneously and
simultaneously. On the other hand, they also limit the senses
because they make users easily distractible and more prone to
multitasking. This is not necessarily a bad thing; it is merely
change with a trade-off.
The question of what new media enhance and what they
amputate was not a moral or ethical one, according to McLuhan.
New media are neither inherently good nor bad. The famous
writer was merely drawing attention to the historically and
technologically specific attributes of various media.
The Global Village and Cultural Imperialism
McLuhan used his analysis of technology to examine the
impact of electronic media. Since he was writing around the
1960s, he mainly analyzed the social changes brought about by
television. McLuhan declared that television was turning the world
1 village.” By this, he meant that, as more and more
cont of their television sets and listened to
perception of the world would contract. If
collective stories,
in front of bright
into a “globa
people sat down in fr
the same stories, their
tribal villages once sat in front of fires to listen to
the members of the new global village would si
boxes in their living rooms.
In the years after McLuhan, media scholars further grappled
with the challenges of a global media culture. A lot of these early
thinkers assumed that global media had a tendency to homogenize
culture. They argued that as global media spread, people from all_ | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
Critiques of Cultu
'f cultural globalization merely entails the spread of a Western
monoculture, what explains the prevalence of regional cultural
trends? For example, the regionalization of culture was a boon to
Filipino telenovelas. From 2000 to 2002, ABS-CBN aired Pangako sa
‘Yo starring Jericho Rosales and Kristine Hermosa. The show soon
| became a hit in Singapore and Malaysia, and its two stars became
household names. In 2013, Cambodian TV even purchased the
rights to produce its own version of the show. Until now, Filipino:
telenovelas like Be Careful with My Heart find audiences across
joeihiges Asia,
Proponents of the i
{act that media messag
aye also consumed by
jyegan to pay attention t
nd interpreted media
emphasizes that media
jneaning-making proc
studies, a “text” simp!
through their own cul
critic Ien Ang studied
Netherlands experien
Dallas. Through letter:
analysis of audience~
receiving American «
she noted that viewer
process and they expe
resonated with them.”
In 1990, Elihu Ka
analysis further by ex
communities interpr
received differently t
they derived different
Thus, people from d
ways of understandit
show’s content, belie
America, but that it
viewers believed thi
primarily about the li
over the world would begin to watch, listen to, and read the same
things. This thinking arose at a time when America’s power had
turned it into the world’s cultural heavyweight. Commentators,
therefore, believed that media globalization coupled with
American hegemony would create a form of cultural imperialism
whereby American values and culture would overwhelm all
others. In 1976, media critic Herbert Schiller argued that not only
was the world being Americanized, but that this process also led
to the spread of “American” capitalist values like consumerism.”
Similarly, for John Tomlinson, cultural globalization is simply a
euphemism for “Western cultural imperialism” since it promotes
“homogenized, Westernized, consumer culture.”
These scholars who decry cultural imperialism, however, have
a top-down view of the media, since they are more concerned with
the broad structures that determine media content. Moreover,
their focus on America has led them to neglect other global flows
of information that the media can enable. This media/cultural
imperialism theory has, therefore, been subject to significant
Apart from the
critique.
imperialism thesis |
regional trends in t
example, has prolife
media. Japanese bra
to Pokémon—are n¢
‘The same can beMedia and Globalization | 7
Critiques of Cultural Imperialism
Proponents of the idea of cultural imperialism ignored the
juct that media messages are not just made by producers, they
ire also consumed by audiences. In the 1980s, media scholars
festern
cultural,
oon to
jako sa jyegan to pay attention to the ways in which audiences understood
v soon nud interpreted media messages. The field of audience studies
emphasizes that media consumers are active participants in the
jneaning-making process, who view media “texts” (in media
studies, a “text” simply refers to the content of any medium)
through their own cultural lenses. In 1985, Indonesian cultural
critic Ien Ang studied the ways in which different viewers in the
Netherlands experienced watching the American soap opers
Dallas. Through letters from 42 viewers, she presented a detailed
analysis of audience-viewing experiences. Rather than simply
came
ed the
ilipino
across,
e same
er had
itators, receiving American culture in a “passive and resigned way,”
| with she noted that viewers put “a lot ‘of emotional energy” into the
rialism process and they experienced pleasure based on how the program
Im all resonated with them.”
ot only In 1990, Elihu Katz and Tamar Liebes decided to push Ang’s
Iso led analysis further by examining how viewers from distinct cultural
rism.”” communities interpreted Dallas. They argued that texts are
nply a received differently by varied interpretive communities because
they derived different meanings and pleasures from these texts.
Thus, people from diverse cultural backgrounds had their own
ways of understanding the show. Russians were suspicious of the
motes
rs have
d with show’s content, believing not only that it was primarily about
eover, ‘America, but that it contained American propaganda. American
flows viewers believed that the show, though set in America, was
Itural primarily about the lives of the rich.
ficant Apart from the challenge of audience studies, the cultural
imperialism thesis has been belied by the renewed strength of
regional trends in the globalization process. Asian culture, for
example, has proliferated worldwide through the globalization of
media. Japanese brands—from Hello Kitty to the Mario Brothers
to Pokémon—are now an indelible part of global popular culture.
The same can be said for Korean pop (K-pop) and Koreanom | “WONG Of Idea
Cultures of Globalization
telenovelas, which are widely successful re
The observation even applies to culinary ta:
case of globalized Asian cuisine is sushi,
Bionally and globally,
stes. The most obvious
hued to spread across Asia, it is also
the case that Asian brands have Provided stiff competition, The
Philippines’ Jollibee claims to be the number one choice for fast
food in Brunei,
Hello Kitty remains proof of Japan’s continued influence over global culture.
Given these patterns, it is no longer tenable to insist that
globalization is a unidirectional Process of foreign cultures
overwhelming local ones. Globalization, as noted in Lesson 1
will remain an uneven process, and it will produce inequalities,
Nevertheless, it leaves room for
Social Media and the Creation
of Cyber Ghettoes
By now, very few media scholars argue that the world is
becoming culturally homogenous, Apart from the nature of
Any
juojative
have de
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read |
read
the jo
medis
share
reselrMedia and Globalization | 79
globally, Ay with all new media, social media have both beneficial and
t obvious, _ joyplive effects. On the one hand, these forms of communication
it is true aye democratized access. Anyone with an internet connection or
it is also 4 smart phone can use Facebook and Twitter for free. These media
ion. The | have enabled users to be consumers and producers of information
» for fast sjnnultaneously. The democratic potential of social media was most
evident in 2011 during the wave of uprisings known as the Arab
Spring. Without access to traditional broadcast media like TV,
activists opposing authoritarian regimes in Tunisia, Egypt, and
Libya used Twitter to organize and to disseminate information.
heir efforts toppled their respective governments. More recently,
the “women’s march” against newly installed US President Donald
frump began with a tweet from a Hawaii lawyer and became @
national, even global, movement.
.
st that
tures
son 1,
alities.
lange,
0 the
The massive protests of the Arab Spring were largely enabled by social media
However, social media also have their dark side. In the early
2000s, commentators began referring to the emergence of a
Id is “splinternet” and the phenomenon of “cyberbalkanization” to refer
oF to the various bubbles people place themselves in when they are
, the online. In the United States, voters of the Democratic Party largely
n of read liberal websites, and voters of the Republican Party largely
tern read conservative websites. This segmentation, notes an article in
led the journal Science, has been exacerbated by the nature of social
net, media feeds, which leads users to read articles, memes, and videos
out shared by like-minded friends.” As such, being on Facebook can
resemble living in an echo chamber, which reinforces one’s existing80 | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
beliefs and opinions. This echo chamber precludes users from
listening to or reading opinions and information that challenge
their viewpoints, thus, making them more partisan and closed-
minded.
This segmentation has been used by people in power who are
aware that the social media bubbles can produce a herd mentality.
It can be exploited by politicians with less than democratic
intentions and demagogues wanting to whip up popular anger. The
same inexpensiveness that allows social media to be a democratic
force likewise makes it a cheap tool of government propaganda.
Russian dictator Vladimir Putin has hired armies of social media
“trolls” (paid users who harass political opponents) to manipulate
public opinion through intimidation and the spreading of fake
news.” Most recently, American intelligence agencies established
that Putin used trolls and online misinformation to help Donald
Trump win the presidency—a tactic the Russian autocrat is likely
to repeat in European elections he seeks to influence.”
In places across the world, Putin imitators replicate his
strategy of online trolling and disinformation to clamp down on
dissent and delegitimize critical media. Critics of the increasingly
dictatorial regime of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan are
threatened by online mobs of pro-government trolls, who hack
accounts and threaten violence. Some of their responses have
included threats of sexual violence against women.”*
As the preceding cases show, fake information can spread
easily on social media since they have few content filters, Unlike
newspapers, Facebook does not have a team of editors who are
trained to sift through and filter information. If a news article,
even a fake one, gets a lot of shares, it will reach many people with
Facebook accounts.
This dark side of social media shows that even a seemingly
open and democratic media may be co-opted towards
undemocratic means. Global online propaganda will be the biggest
threat to face as the globalization of media deepens. Internet media
have made the world so interconnected that a Russian dictator can,
for example, influence American elections on the cheap.
As consumer:
how to distinguis!
that allows politi
advisers now call
critical of mainst
also operate basec
sources are more
written by a pro
editors is still 1
produced by som
their biases. Peop
Conclusion
This lesson :
on globalization
television was cr
likely that social
of people who d
prepared for the
Every technolog
consequences. €
time turning bi
try to keep out |
will continue t
these changes o
collectively disc
ethically.rs from
allenge
closed-
vho are
tality.
ocratic
er. The
ocratic
ganda.
| media
ipulate
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iggest
media
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Media and Globalization | 81
As consumers of media, users must remain vigilant and learn
how to distinguish fact from falsehood in a global media landscape
that allows politicians to peddle what President Trump’s senior
advisers now call “alternative facts.” Though people must remain
critical of mainstream media and traditional journalism that may
also operate based on vested interest, we must also insist that some
sources are more credible than others. A newspaper story that is
written by a professional journalist and vetted by professional
editors is still likely to be more credible than a viral video
produced by someone in his/her bedroom, even if both will have
their biases. People must be able to tell the difference.
Conclusion
This lesson showed that different media have diverse effects
on globalization processes. At one point, it seemed that global
television was creating a global monoculture. Now, it seems more
likely that social media will splinter cultures and ideas into bubbles
of people who do not interact. Societies can never be completely
prepared for the rapid changes in the systems of communication.
Every technological change, after all, creates multiple unintended
consequences. Consumers and users of media will have a hard
time turning back the clock. Though people may individually
try to keep out of Facebook or Twitter, for example, these media
will continue to engender social changes. Instead of fearing
these changes or entering a state of moral panic, everyone must
collectively discover ways of dealing with them responsibly and
ethically.32. | A World of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
®)
e
2) Guide Questions
Compare and contrast the social impacts of television and social media,
Do you think globalization leads to cultural imperialism?
What strategies can you use to distinguish between fake and factual
information on the internet?
Learning Activity:
Asian Music and Globalization
Form groups of three to five members. Pick an Asian musical
artist or group that became internationally famous (Psy, Utada
Hikaru, F4, etc). In your group report, answer the following
questions:
i.
=
a
4,
Where did the musical artist originate?
In which countries did the artist become famous?
How did the artist become famous?
Why do you think the artist became famous?
@) Learning ¢
At the end of this le
1. explain why gh
2. identify the att
3. analyze how ci
If you had the «
How about Sydne
to these major citi¢
them anyway. Som
cities as tourists or
stories about them
described buzzing
train lines that zigs
an idea of what the
in movies or TV. D
New York was des'
(Iron Man, Thor, C
Not all people
them, Their influe
these places? Why
to you?© Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
why globalization is a spatial pheno!
y the attributes of a global city; and
3. analyze how cities serve as engines of globalization.
If you had the chance, would you move to New York? Tokyo?
How about Sydney? Chances are many of you would like to move
to these major cities. And if not, you would probably like to visit
them anyway. Some of you might have already traveled to these
cities as tourists or temporary residents. Or maybe you have heard
stories about them. You may have relatives living there who have
described buzzing metropolises, with forests of skyscrapers and
train lines that zigzag on top of each other. You may likewise have
an idea of what these cities look like based on what you have seen
in movies or TV. Do you remember when downtown Manhattan in
New York was destroyed in a confrontation between the Avengers
(Iron Man, Thor, Captain America, the Hulk, etc.) and aliens?
Not all people have been to global cities, but most know about
them, Their influence extends even to one’s imagination. What are
these places? Why are they important? And how are they relevant
to you?84 | A World of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
Why Study Global Cities?
So far, much of the analysis of globalization in the previous
lessons has looked at how ideas of internationalism shaped modern
world politics. We also examined cultural movements like K-pop,
and how they spread through media like the internet. What this
lesson will emphasize, however, is that globalization is spatial. This
statement means two things.
First, globalization is spatial because it occurs in physical
spaces. You can see it when foreign investments and capital move
through a city, and when companies build skyscrapers, People who
are working in these businesses—or Filipinos working abroad—
start to purchase or rent high-rise condominium units and better
homes. As all these events happen, more Poor people are driven
out of city centers to make way for the new developments.
Second, globalization is spatial because what makes it move
is the fact that it is based in places. Los Angeles, the home of
Hollywood, is where movies are made for global consumption.
The main headquarters of Sony is in Tokyo, and from there,
the company coordinates the sale of its various electronics
goods to branches across the world. In other words, cities act on
globalization and globalization acts on cities. They are the sites as
well as the mediums of globalization. Just as the internet enables
and shapes global forces, so too do cities.
In the years to come, more and more people will experience
globalization through cities. In 1950, only 30 percent of the world
lived in urban areas. By 2014, that number increased to 54 percent.
And by 2050, it is expected to reach 66 percent. This lesson
studies globalization through the living environment of a rapidly
increasing number of people.
Defining the (
Sociologist Sasl
in the 1990s. Her «
primarily economi
global cities: New
hubs of global fina
instance, of the wo
and sell shares in
York Stock Exchar
Stock Exchange (F’
money traded in th
traded in the NYS!
the shares in the Ph
he New York Stock Exch
Limiting the
metropolises, how
global economy |
her book, and any
must take note of
have expanded th
constitutes a glob:
movie-making m
cultural influenceThe Global City | 85
Defining the Global City
Sociologist Saskia Sassen popularized the term “global city”
in the 1990s. Her criteria for what constitutes a global city were
primarily economic. In her work, she initially identified three
global cities: New York, London, and Tokyo, all of which are
hubs of global finance and capitalism.” They are the homes, for
instance, of the world’s top stock exchanges where investors buy
and sell shares in major corporations. New York has the New
York Stock Exchange (NYSE), London has the Financial Times
Stock Exchange (FTSE), and Tokyo has the Nikkei, The amount of
money traded in these markets is staggering. The value of shares
traded in the NYSE, for example, is $19,300 billion, while that of
the shares in the Philippine Stock Exchange is only $231.3 billion.
he New York Stock Exchange represents the highest concentration of capital in the world.
Limiting the discussion of global cities to these three
metropolises, however, is proving more and more restrictive. The
global economy has changed significantly since Sassen wrote
her book, and any account of the economic power of cities today
must take note of the latest developments. Recent commentators
have expanded the criteria that Sassen used to determine what
constitutes a global city. Though it is not as wealthy as New York,
movie-making mecca Los Angeles can now rival the Big Apple’s
cultural influence. San Francisco must now factor in as another86 | A World of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
global city because it is the home of the most powerful internet
companies—Facebook, Twitter, and Google. Finally, the growth
of the Chinese economy has turned cities like Shanghai, Beijing,
and Guangzhou into centers of trade and finance. The Chinese
government reopened the Shanghai Stock Exchange in late 1990,
and since then, it has grown to become the fifth largest stock
market in the world.
Others consider some cities “global” simply because they are
great places to live in. In Australia, Sydney commands the greatest
Proportion of capital. However, Melbourne is described as Sydney's
rival “global city” because many magazines and lists have now
referred to it as the world’s “most livable city”—a place with good
public transportation, a thriving cultural scene, and a relatively
easy pace of life.
Defining a global city can thus be difficult. One way of solving
this dilemma is to go beyond the simple dichotomy of global and
non-global. Instead of asking whether or not one city is a global
city (a yes or no question), it is better to ask: In what ways are cities
global and to what extent are they global?
Indicators for Globality
So what are the multiple attributes of the global city? The
foremost characteristic is economic power. Sassen remains correct
in saying that economic power largely determines which cities are
global. New York may have the largest stock market in the world
but Tokyo houses the most number of corporate headquarters
(613 company headquarters as against 217 in New York, its
closest competitor). Shanghai may have a smaller stock market
compared to New York and Tokyo, but plays a critical role in the
global economic supply chain ever since China has become the
manufacturing center of the world. Shanghai has the world’s
busiest container port, moving over 33 million container units in
2013.”
Economic opps
talents from across
IT programmers at
Francisco Bay Aree
Valley’s technology
for many Filipinos
To measure tl
Economist Intellig
size, purchasing pi
potential for grow
is considered Asia
market, efficient a1
also houses the regi
Global cities a
may not be as weal
state power. Peopl
the White House,
Court, the Lincolt
Similarly, compat
is a sleepy town
as Australia’s pol:
politicians, bureau
The cities tha
also be considered
of the United Nat
Union is in Bru
Philippines is Jak
but also the locati
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exert influence or
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The Global City |
Economic opportunities in a global city make it attractive to
talents from across the world. Since the 1970s, many of the top
IT programmers and engineers from Asia have moved to the San
Francisco Bay Area to become some of the key figures in Silicon
Valley’s technology boom. London remains a preferred destination
for many Filipinos with nursing degrees.
To measure the economic competitiveness of a city, The
Economist Intelligence Unit has added other criteria like market
size, purchasing power of citizens, size of the middle class, and
potential for growth.” Based on these criteria, “tiny” Singapore
is considered Asia’s most competitive city because of its strong
market, efficient and incorruptible government, and livability.” It
also houses the regional offices of many major global corporations.
Global cities are also centers of authority. Washington D.C.
may not be as wealthy as New York, but it is the seat of American
state power. People around the world know its major landmarks:
the White House, the Capitol Building (Congress), the Supreme
Court, the Lincoln Memorial, and the Washington Monument.
Similarly, compared with Sydney and Melbourne, Canberra
is a sleepy town and thus is not as attractive to tourists. But
as Australia’s political capital, it is home to the country’s top
politicians, bureaucrats, and policy advisors.
The cities that house major international organizations may
also be considered centers of political influence. The headquarters
of the United Nations is in New York, and that of the European
Union is in Brussels. An influential political city near the
Philippines is Jakarta, which is not just the capital of Indonesia,
but also the location of the main headquarters of the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Powerful political hubs
exert influence on their own countries as well as on international
affairs. The European Central Bank, which oversees the Euro (the
European Union’s currency), is based in Frankfurt. A decision
made in that city can, therefore, affect the political economy of an
entire continent and beyond.
8788 | A World of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
Finally, global cities are centers of higher learning and culture,
A city’s intellectual influence is seen through the influence of
its publishing industry. Many of the books that people read are
published in places like New York, London, or Paris. The New York
Times carries the name of New York City, but it is far from being
a local newspaper. People read it not just across America, but also
all over the world. One of the reasons for the many tourists visiting
Boston is because they want to see Harvard University—the
world’s top university. Many Asian teenagers are moving to cities
in Australia because of the leading English-language universities
there. Education is currently Australia’s third largest export, just
behind coal and iron ore, and significantly ahead of tourism. In
2015, the Australian government reported that it made as much as
19.2 billion Australian dollars (roughly 14 billion US dollars) from
education alone.'
We have already explained why Los Angeles, the center of
the American film industry, may be considered a global city. A
less obvious example, however, is Copenhagen, the capital of
Denmark. It is so small that one can tour the entire city by bicycle
in thirty minutes, It is not the home of a major stock market, and
its population is rather homogenous However, Copenhagen is
now considered one of the culinary capitals of the world, with its
top restaurants incommensurate with its size. As the birthplace of
“New Nordic” cuisine, Copenhagen has set into motion various
culinary trends like foraging the forests for local ingredients.
Similarly, Manchester, England in the 1980s was a dreary,
industrial city. But many prominent post-punk and New Wave
bands—Joy Division, the Smiths, the Happy Mondays—hailed
from this city, making it a global household name. In Southeast
Asia, Singapore (again) is slowly becoming a cultural hub for the
region. It now houses some of the region’s top televisioa stations
and news organizations (MTV Southeast Asia and Channel News
Asia). Its various art galleries and cinemas also show paintings
from artists and filmmakers, respectively, from the Philippines
and Thailand. It is, in fact, sometimes easier to watch the movie of
a Filipino indie filmmaker in Singapore than it is in Manila!
Singapore, with its gleami
It is the cultura
imagination, Think
about New York (Ja
Frank Sinatra’s “Ne’
Simon and Garfunk
of a place where an
dreams are made of,
Today, global cit
one can try cuisines
their large Turkish
offer some of the be:
Manila is not very g
(despite the massive
it has a foreign popu
The Challenge
Global cities
exciting, cosmop
are lacking. Gl
They can be site
as tremendous \
globalization, gleSingapore, with its gleaming buildings, i often viewed as a symbol of Asian modernity
It is the cultural power of global cities that ties them to the
imagination, Think about how many songs have been written
about New York (Jay Z and Alicia Keys’s “Empire State of Mind,”
Prank Sinatra’s “New York, New York,” and numerous songs by
simon and Garfunkel) and how these references conjure up images
of a place where anything is possible—“a concrete jungle where
dreams are made of,” according to Alicia Keys.
‘Today, global cities become culturally diverse. In a global city,
one can try cuisines from different parts of the world. Because of
their large Turkish populations, for example, Berlin and Tokyo
offer some of the best Turkish food one can find outside of Turkey.
Manila is not very global because of the dearth of foreign residents
(despite the massive domestic migration), but Singapore is, because
it has a foreign population of 38%."
The Challenges of Global Cities
Global cities conjure up images of _fast-paced,
exciting, cosmopolitan lifestyles. But such descriptions
are lacking, Global cities also have their undersides
They can be sites of great inequality and poverty as well
violence. Like the broader processes of
as tremendous
winners and __ losers.
globalization, global cities create0 | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
In this section, we list some “pathologies” of the global city, based The major terror
on the research of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.” cities. Cities, especial
ists
Cities can be sustainable because of their density. As Richard target fog teripeate
as symbols of global
Florida notes: “Ecologists have found that by concentrating their
populations in smaller areas, cities and metros decrease human
encroachment on natural habitats. Denser settlement patterns
yield energy savings; apartment buildings, for example, are more
efficient to heat and cool than detached suburban houses.”
Moreover, in cities with extensive public transportation systems,
people tend to drive less and thereby cut carbon emissions. It is no
surprise to learn that, largely because of the city’s extensive train
system, New Yorkers have the lowest per capita carbon footprint in
the United States." In Asia, dense global cities like Singapore and
Tokyo also have relatively low per capita carbon footprints.
attributes that make t
them sites of potenti
this perspective will
that brought down tl
New York, and the N
zealots of the Islamic
real estate magnate I
States, security expe
that carry his name
‘Trump Towers, for ex
Not all cities, however, are as dense as New York or Tokyo. i lobal Cit
Some cities like Los Angeles are urban sprawls, with massive The Global Cit
freeways that force residents to spend money on cars and gas. And
while cities like Manila, Bangkok, and Mumbai are dense, their
lack of public transportation and their governments’ inability to
regulate their car industries have made them extremely polluted.
We have consist
paved the way for n
very pronounced in
Scandinavia, have for
led social redistribu
those in the develoy
places like Mumbai
gleaming buildings
may even be seen in.
More importantly, because of the sheer size of city populations
across the world, it is not surprising that urban areas consume
most of the world’s energy. Cities only cover 2 percent of the
world’s landmass, but they consume 78 precent of global energy."
Therefore, if carbon emissions must be cut to prevent global
warming, this massive energy consumption in cities must be
curbed. This action will require a lot of creativity. For example,
many food products travel many miles before they get to major city
centers. Shipping this food through trains, buses, and even planes
increases carbon emissions. Will it be possible to grow more food
in cities instead? Solutions like so-called “vertical farms” built in
abandoned buildings (as is increasingly being done in New York)
may lead the way towards more environmentally sustainable cities.
If more food can be grown with less water in denser spaces, cities
will begin to be greener.The Global City | 91
‘The major terror attacks of recent years have also targeted
cities, Cities, especially those with global influence, are obvious
targets for terrorists due to their high populations and their role
as symbols of globalization that many terrorists despise. The same
attributes that make them attractive to workers and migrants make
them sites of potential terrorist violence. Only by looking from
; this perspective will we be able to understand the 9/11 attacks
that brought down the twin towers of the World Trade Center in
New York, and the November 2015 coordinated attacks in Paris by
zealots of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Now that
real estate magnate Donald Trump is the president of the United
States, security experts believe that properties around the world
that carry his name may be targets of terror attacks. There are
‘Trump Towers, for example, in places like Istanbul and Manila.
The Global City and the Poor
We have consistently noted that economic globalization has
ed the way for massive inequality. This phenomenon is thus
pe
very pronounced in cities. Some large cities, particularly those in
Scandinavia, have found ways to mitigate inequality through state:
led social redistribution programs. Yet many cities, particularly
those in the developing countries, are sites of contradiction. In
places like Mumbai, Jakarta, and Manila, it is common to find
gleaming buildings alongside massive shantytowns. This duality
may even be seen in rich, urban cities.
A Mumbai slum72. | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
In the outskirts of New York and San Francisco are poor urban
enclaves occupied by African-Americans and immigrant families
who are often denied opportunities at a better life. Slowly, they are
being forced to move farther away from the economic centers of
their cities. As a city attracts more capital and richer residents, real
estate prices go up and poor residents are forced to relocate to far
away but cheaper areas. This phenomenon of driving out the poor
in favor of newer, wealthier residents is called gentrification.
In Australian cities, poor aboriginal Australians have been
most acutely affected by this process. Once living in public urban
housing, they were forced to move farther away from city centers
that offer more jobs, more government services, and better
transportation due to gentrification. In France, poor Muslim
migrants are forced out of Paris and have clustered around ethnic
enclaves known as banlieue.
In most of the world’s global cities, the middle class is also
thinning out. Globalization creates high-income jobs that are
concentrated in global cities. These high earners, in turn, generate
demand for an unskilled labor force (hotel cleaners, nannies,
maids, waitresses, etc.) that will attend to their increasing needs.
Meanwhile, many middle-income jobs in manufacturing and
business process outsourcing (call centers, for example) are moving
to other countries. This hollowing out of the middle class in global
cities has heightened the inequality within them, In places like
New York, there are high-rulling American investment bankers
whose children are raised by Filipina maids. A large global city
may thus be a paradise for some, but a purgatory for others.
Conclusion
Global cities, as
globalization. They
phenomenon. Thro
are places that crea
are also places that
remain sites of grea
entrepreneurs. The
more just is partly <
just.
() Guide au
1. Inwhat sense
2. Whyisecono
3, Whyis there:
“areneThe Global City | 93
Conclusion
Global cities, as noted in this lesson, are sites and mediums of
globalization. They are, therefore, material representations of the
phenomenon. Through them, we see the best of globalization; they
are places that create exciting fusions of culture and ideas. They
are also places that generate tremendous wealth. However, they
remain sites of great inequality, where global servants serve global
entrepreneurs. The question of how globalization can be made
more just is partly a question of how people make their cities more
just.
(?) Guide Questions
1. Inwhat sense are cities mediums of globalization?
|
2. Whyiseconomic power the most crucial determinant of a global city?
3, Whyis therea lot of inequality in global cities?
eee RT TT94 | AWorld of Ideas: Cultures of Globalization
a Learning Activity: Tracking the Metropolis
Divide yourselves into groups of five members. Check your
city/town map and learn about its different districts. Then either
drive or take a bus/jeepney around the city/town to check out these
districts. As you go around, write down what you think are the
features and characteristics of each district. Note the following:
a. The kinds of homes there are (Are townhouses or
apartments dominant? Or are there more houses?)
b. The way the neighborhoods are organized (gated residences,
open residences, gated houses, non-gated houses, etc.)
¢. The kinds of people you notice in these neighborhoods (what
you think their occupations are, how they dress, how they
treat each other, the languages they speak, even the food they
eat)
When doing a comparison of these districts, answer the
following questions:
a. The differences between these districts are quite obvious, but
can you spot any similarities?
b. How do these dis
other?
ricts complement or compete against eachMovement and
Sustainability
This final unit will discuss the various
impacts of globalization on human populations
and the environment. At its core, it will go
back to one of the basic questions of the social
sciences: How do people interact with their
surroundings? These interactions, as you
will see, are increasingly being molded by
the globalization processes discussed in the
previous lessons.
The major learning outcome of this unit
is to explain the interconnections among
population, migration, and environmental
sustainability.id a
© Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
|. _ discuss the relationship between population and economic welfare;
2. identify the effects of aging and overpopulation; and
3. _ differentiate between contrasting positions over reproductive health,
When couples are asked why they have children, their
answers are almost always about their feelings. For most, having
a child is the symbol of a successful union, It also ensures that
the family will have a successor generation that will continue its
name. The kinship is preserved, and the family’s story continues,
A few, however, worry how much strain a child can bring to the
household as he/she “competes” for the parents’ attention, and,
in reverse, how much energy the family needs to shower its love
to an additional member. Viewed from above, however, having
or not having children is mainly driven by economics. Behind
the laughter or the tears lies the question: Will the child be an
economic asset or a burden to the family?
Rural communities often welcome an extra hand to help in
crop cultivation, particularly during the planting and harvesting
seasons. The poorer districts of urban centers also tend to have
families with more children because the success of their “small
family business” depends on how many of their members can
be hawking their wares on the streets. Hence, the more children,
the better it will be for the for the farm or the small by-the-street
corner enterprises,
Urbanized, edu
incomes, however, d
partner tied down, o'
neither has the time
parenting, These fa
savings plans. They
for their retirement,
child/children.
Rural families
networks as critical
over the agricultur
“retirement homes”
care of their grandcl
the same kinship n¢
own, or because the
the basic family uni
own,
These differing
and social policies
populations. Count)
that rely on agricul
growth. The 1980
population growth
of the world rural
90 percent by the et
Since then, gl
2011, it accounted f
compared to the
population percen
site “Nourishing 1
agricultural popu!
between 1980 and
billion people dur
Urban popula
families are havirGlobal Demography | 97
Urbanized, educated, and professional families with two
incomes, however, desire just one or two progenies. With each
partner tied down, or committed to his/her respective professions,
neither has the time to devote to having a kid, much more to
parenting. These families also have their sights on long-term
savings plans. They set aside significant parts of their incomes
for their retirement, health care, and the future education of their
child/children.
Rural families view multiple children and large kinship
networks as critical investments. Children, for example, can take
over the agricultural work. Their houses can also become the
“retirement homes” of their parents, who will then proceed to take
care of their grandchildren. Urban families, however, may not have
the same kinship network anymore because couples live on their
own, or because they move out of the farmlands. Thus, it is usually
the basic family unit that is left to deal with life’s challenges on its
own.
‘These differing versions of family life determine the economic
and social policies that countries craft regarding their respective
populations. Countries in the “less developed regions of the world”
that rely on agriculture tend to maintain high levels of population
growth. The 1980 United Nations report on urban and rural
population growth states that “[t}hese areas contained 85 percent
‘of the world rural population in 1975 and are projected to contain
90 percent by the end of the [20th] century.”"°
Since then, global agricultural population has declined. In
2011, it accounted for over 37 percent of the total world population,
compared to the statistics in 1980 in which rural and urban
population percentages were more or less the same. The blog
site “Nourishing the Planet,” however, noted that even as “the
agricultural population shrunk as a share of total population
between 1980 and 2011, it grew numerically from 2.2 billion to 2.6
billion people during this period.””
Urban populations have grown, but not necessarily because
families are having more children. It is rather the combination j98 | Movement and Sustainability
of the natural outcome of significant migration to the cities by of global populat
people seeking work in the “more modern” sectors of society, to zero. Their
This movement of people is especially manifest in the developing (chemical castrat
countries where industries and businesses in the cities are child and luxury
attracting people from the rural areas." This trend has been incentives (payin
noticeable since the 1950s, with the pace accelerating in the next two children) to
half-a-century. By the start of the 21st century, the world had Population and E
become “44 percent urban, while the corresponding figures for
developed countries are 52 percent to 75 percent.”
International migration also plays a part. Today, 191 million N
people live in countries other than their own, and the United
Nations projects that over 2.2 million will move from the
developing world to the First World countries (more on this in
Lesson 11).'°Countries welcome immigrants as they offset the
debilitating effects of an aging population, but they are also
perceived as threats to the job market because they compete
against citizens for jobs and often have the edge because they
are open to receiving lower wages. Voters’ pressure has often
constrained their governments to institute stricter immigration
policies,"
The “Perils” of Overpopulation
Development planners see urbanization and industrialization
as indicators of a developing society, but disagree on the role of
Population growth or decline in modernization. This lengthy There was
discussion brings back ideas of British scholar Thomas Malthus global populati
who warned in his 1798 “An Essay on the Principle of Population” 1975 when natic
that population growth will inevitably exhaust world food supply devastations wr
by the middle of the 19th century.'"? Malthus’ prediction was off 1.8 percent per
base, but it was revived in the late 1960s when American biologist annual growth 1
Paul R. Ehrlich and his wife, Anne, wrote The Population Bomb, By limiting
which argued that overpopulation in the 1970s and the 1980s will
bring about global environmental disasters that would, in turn,
lead to food shortage and mass starvation." They proposed that
countries like the United States take the lead in the promotion
economic progt
more mouths."
“population ccre
en,
ad
or
nm
e
1
oO
e
Global Demography
of global population control in order to reduce the growth rate
to zero.“ Their recommendations ranged from the bizarre
(chemical castration) to the policy-oriented (taxing an additional
child and luxury taxes on child-related products) to monetary
incentives (paying off men who would agree to be sterilized after
two children) to institution-building (a powerful Department of
Population and Environment).""*
erpopulated planet?
‘There was some reason for this fear to persist. The rate of
global population increase was at its highest between 1955 and
1975 when nations were finally able to return to normalcy after the
devastations wrought by World War II. The growth rate rose from
1.8 percent per year from 1955 to 1975, peaking at 2.06 percent
annual growth rate between 1965 and 1970."°
By limiting the population, vital resources could be used for
economic progress and not be “diverted” and * wasted” to feeding
more mouths.” This argument became the basis for government
population control” programs worldwide. In the mid-20th) | Movement and Sustainability
century, the Philippines, China, and India sought to lower birth
rates on the belief that unless controlled, the free expansion of
family members would lead to a crisis in resources, which in turn
may result in widespread poverty, mass hunger, and political
instability." As early as 1958, the American policy journal, Foreign
Affairs, had already advocated “contraception and sterilization”
as the practical solutions to global economic, social, and political
problems." While there have been criticisms that challenged this
argument (see the next section), it persists even to this very day.
In May 2009, a group of American billionaires warned of how a
“nightmarish” explosion of people was “a potentially disastrous
environmental, social, and industrial threat” to the world.”
This worry is likewise at the core of the economist argument
for the promotion of reproductive health. Advocates of population
control contend for universal access to reproductive technologies
(such as condoms, the pill, abortion, and vasectomy) and, more
importantly, giving women the right to choose whether to have
children or not.'2! They see these tools as crucial to their nation’s
development. Thus, in Puerto Rico, reproductive health supporters
regard their work as the task of transforming their “poor country”
into a “modern nation.”
Finally, politics determine these “birth control” programs.
Developed countries justify their support for population control
in developing countries by depicting the latter as conservative
societies. For instance, population experts blamed the
“irresponsible fecundity” of Egyptians for that nation’s run-on
population growth, and the Iranian peasant’s “natural” libidinal
tendencies for the same rise in population.' From 1920 onwards,
the Indian government “marked lower castes, working poor, and
Muslims as hypersexual and hyper-fecund and hence a drain on
national resources.” These policy formulations lead to extreme
policies like the forced sterilization of twenty million “violators” of
the Chinese government’s one-child policy. Vietnam and Mexico
also conducted coercive mass sterilization.
It's the Econor
The use of poy
has its critics. For ¢
advocates of neo-N
of using population
much-needed refo
creation, provision
emancipation.” (
grow fast in many ¢
economic deyelopm
innovation and ine
acknowledged the
areas (52 percent t
1950s). They likew:
clusters in which i
housing, air poll
problems, they als
economic growth a
The median of
cities means a you
states are assured t
to two population
“As a cot
a time it con
individuals a1
all circumstat
dynamic age
historically hi
population m
per depender
increase relat
a boost.”
The producti
high in regions liGlobal Demogra
It’s the Economy, Not the Babies!
The use of population control to prevent economic crisis
has its critics. For example, Betsy Hartmann disagrees with the
advocates of neo-Malthusian theory and accused governments
of using population control as a stitute for social justice and
much-needed reforms—such land distribution, employment
creation, provision of mass education and health care, and
emancipation.””* Others pointed out that the population did
grow fast in many countries in the 1960s, and this growth “aided
economic development by spurring technological and institutional
innovation and increasing the supply of human ingenuity.” They
acknowledged the shift in population from the rural to the urban
areas (52 percent to 75 percent in the developing world since the
1950s). They likewise noted that while these “megacities” are now
clusters in which income disparities along with “transportation,
housing, air pollution and, waste management” are major
problems, they also have become, and continue to be, “centers of
economic growth and activity.””*
‘The median of 29.4 years for females and 30.9 for males in the
cities means a young working population.” With this median age,
states are assured that they have a robust military force. According
to two population experts:
“As a country’s baby-boom generation gets older, for
a time it constitutes a large cohort group of working-age
individuals and, later a large cohort of elderly people...In
all circumstances, there are reasons to think that this very
dynamic age structure will have economic consequences. A
historically high proportion of working-age individuals in a
population means that, potentially, there are more workers
per dependent than previously, Production can therefore
increase relative to consumption, and GDP capita can receive
a boost.”**
The productive capacities of this generation are especially
high in regions like East Asia as “Asia's remarkable growth in the
y | 1012 | Movement and Sustainability
past half century coincided closely with demographic change in
the region. As infant mortality fell from 181 to 34 per 1,000 births
between 1950 and 2000, fertility fell from six to two children per
woman. The lag between falls in mortality and fertility created
a baby-boom generation: between 1965 and 1990, the region’s
working-age population grew nearly four times faster than the
dependent population. Several studies have estimated that this
demographic shift was responsible for one-third of East Asia’s
economic growth during the period (a welcome demographic
dividend).
Population growth has, in fact, spurred “technological and
institutional innovation” and increased “the supply of human
ingenuity.” Advances in agricultural production have shown
that the Malthusian nightmare can be prevented. The “Green
Revolution” created high-yielding varieties of rice and other cereals
and, along with the development of new methods of cultivation,
increased yields globally, but more particularly in the developing
world." The global famine that neo-Malthusians predicted did not
happen. Instead, between 1950 and 1984, global grain production
increased by over 250 percent, allowing agriculture to keep pace
with population growth, thereby keeping global famine under
control.
Lately, a middle ground emerged between these two extremes,
Scholars and policymakers agree with the neo-Malthusians but
suggest that if governments pursue population control programs,
they must include “more inclusive growth” and “greener economic
growth.”
Women and Reproductive Rights
The character in the middle of these debates—women—is
often the subject of these Population measures. Reproductive
rights supporters argue that if population control and economic
development were to reach their goals, women must have control
over whether they will have children or not and when they will
have their progenies,
be able to pursue th
political—and contri
This serial corr
has motivated count
strengthen their rep
High-income First |
were able to sustair
the power of choice
In North America 2
abortion upon a mot
woman is, the better
position.” Women
their higher educati
this time to take car
Most countries
they worry about |
average total fertili
Bolivian governme!
that included the le
in unsafe abortior
rate went down to
A similar pattern
expanded reproduc
that of the Bolivi
steeply...and conti
seemed to draw th
the United Nations
allowing abortion
increased from 63
the mental health
percent.'"
Opponents reg
front for abortion.
conception endang
The religious winGlobal Demography | 1 03
have their progenies, if any. By giving women this power, they will
be able to pursue their vocations—be they economic, social, or
political—and contribute to economic growth.
‘This serial correlation between fertility, family, and fortune
has motivated countries with growing economies to introduce or
strengthen their reproductive health laws, including abortion."
High-income First World nations and fast-developing countries
were able to sustain growth in part because women were given
the power of choice and easy access to reproductive technologies.
In North America and Europe, 73 percent of governments allow
abortion upon a mother’s request." Moreover, the more educated a
woman is, the better are her prospects of improving her economic
position.” Women can spend most of the time pursuing either
their higher education or their careers, instead of forcibly reducing
this time to take care of their children.'**
Most countries implement reproductive health laws because
they worry about the health of the mother. In 1960, Bolivia’s
average total fertility rate (TFR) was 6.7 children. In 1978, the
Bolivian government put into effect a family planning program
that included the legalization of abortion (after noticing a spike
in unsafe abortion and maternal deaths). By 1985, the TFR
rate went down to 5.13 and further declined to 3.46 in 2008."
A similar pattern occurred in Ghana after the government
expanded reproductive health laws out of the same concern as
that of the Bolivian government. As a result, “fertility declined
steeply...and continued to decline [after] 1994.” Such examples
seemed to draw the attention of other countries. Thus, in 2014,
the United Nations report noted that the proportion of countries
allowing abortion to preserve the physical health of a woman
increased from 63 percent to 67 percent, and those to preserve
the mental health of a woman increased from 52 percent to 64
percent."
Opponents regard reproductive rights as nothing but a false
front for abortion. They contend that this method of preventing
conception endangers the life of the mother and must be banned.
The religious wing of the anti-reproductive rights flank goes4 | Movement and Sustainability
further and describes abortion as a debauchery that sullies the
name of God; it will send the mother to hell and prevents a new
soul, the baby, to become human." This position was a politically
powerful one partly because various parts of the developing
world remain very conservative. Unfailing pressure by Christian
groups compelled the governments of Poland, Croatia, Hungary,
Yugoslavia, and even Russia to impose restrictive reproductive
health programs, including making access to condoms and
other technologies difficult.' Muslim countries do not condone
abortion and limit wives to domestic chores and delivering
babies. Senegal only allows abortion when the mother’s life is
threatened." The Philippines, with a Catholic majority, now has a
reproductive health law in place, but conservative politicians have
enfeebled it through budget cuts and stalled its implementation by
filing a case against the law in the Supreme Court.#5
A country being industrialized and developed, however, does
not automatically assure pro-women reproductive regulations.
In the United States, the women’s movement of the 1960s was
responsible for the passage and judicial endorsement of a pro-
choice law, but conservatives controlling state legislatures have also
slowly undermined this law by imposing a restriction on women’s
access to abortion. While pro-choice advocates argue that abortion
is necessary to protect the health of the mother, their conservative
rivals shift the focus on the death of the fetus in the mother’s
womb as the reason for reversing the law. This battle continues to
be played out in all the political arenas in the United States.
The Feminist Perspective
Feminists approach the issue of reproductive rights from
another angle. They are, foremost, against any form of population
control because they are compulsory by nature, resorting to
a carrot-and-stick approach (punitive mechanisms co-exist
alongside benefits) that actually does not empower women.
They believe that government assumptions that poverty and
environmental degradation are caused by overpopulation are
wrong. Th
like the un
nets like u
programs. |
that point
ecological
Gover!
but one <
Conferenc
of this iss
that wom
abortion,
nature of
parenthoo
countries
into prog)
on reprod
the strugs
level. It is
today.
Popul:
Tod
estimate
by 210
the maGlobal Demography | 105
wrong, These factors ignore other equally important causes
like the unequal distribution of wealth, the lack of public safety
nets like universal health care, education, and gender equality
programs. Feminists also point out that there is very little evidence
that point to overpopulation as the culprit behind poverty and
ecological devastation."*
Governments have not directly responded to these criticisms,
but one of the goals of 1994 United Nations International
Conference on Population and Development suggests recognition
of this issue. Country representatives to that conference agreed
that women should receive family planning counseling on
abortion, the dangers of sexually transmitted diseases, the
nature of human sexuality, and the main elements of responsible
parenthood.'"” However, the conference also left it to the individual
countries to determine how these recommendations can be turned
into programs. Hence, globally, women’s and feminist arguments
on reproductive rights and overpopulation are acknowledged, but
the struggle to turn them into policy is still fought at the national
level. It is the dilemma that women and feminist movements face
today.
“The feminist approach to reproductive issues is primarily rights-based.
Population Growth and Food Security
‘Today's global population has reached 7.4 billion, and it is
estimated to increase to 9.5 billion in 2050, then 11.2 billion
by 2100.8 The median age of this population is 30.1, with
the male median age at 294 years and female, 30.9 years.
"
|106 | Movement and Sustainability
Ninety-five percent of this Population growth will happen in the
developing countries, with demographers predicting that by the
middle of this century, several countries will have tripled their
Population. The opposite is happening in the developed world
where populations remain steady in general, but declining in some
of the most advanced countries (Japan and Singapore). However,
this scenario is not a run-off that could get out of control.
Demographers predict that the world population will stabilize by
2050 to 9 billion, although they warn that feeding this population
will be an immense challenge.
The decline in fertility and the existence of a young productive
population, however, may not be enough to offset this concern
over food security. The Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) warns that in order for countries to mitigate the impact of
population growth, food production must increase by 70 percent;
annual cereal production must rise to 3 billion tons from the
current 2.1 billion; and yearly meat production must g0 up to 200
million tons to reach 470 million. The problem here is that the
global rate of growth of cereals had declined considerably —from
3.2 percent in 1960 to just 1.5 percent in 2000.
The FAO recommends that countries increase their
investments in agriculture, craft long-term policies aimed at
fighting poverty, and invest in research and development. The
UN body also suggests that countries develop a comprehensive
social service program that includes food assistance, consistent
delivery of health services, and education especially for the poor.
If domestic production is not enough, it becomes essential for
nations to import. The FAO, therefore, enjoins governments to
keep their markets open, and to eventually “move towards a global
trading system that is fair and competitive, and that contributes to
a dependable market for food,”"*!
The aforementioned are worthy recommendations but nation-
states shall need the political will to push through these sweeping
changes in population growth and food security. This will take
some time to happen given that good governance is also a goal
that many nations, especially in the developing world, have yet
to attain.
Conclusion
Demograp
integration o}
seen, demogr.
environment,
demography 2
species. It may
is ultimately «
globalization
next lesson w:
will focus par
() Guid
1. Doyo
2. Howe
press
3, Unde
030°
veGlobal Demography | 107
by a Conclusion
steel Demography is a complex discipline that requires the
nso integration of various social scientific data. As you have
weve seen, demographic changes and policies have impacts on the
ontrol, environment, politics, resources, and others. Yet, at its core,
ize by demography accounts for the growth and decline of the human
lationt species. It may be about large numbers and massive effects, but it
is ultimately about people. Thus, no interdisciplinary account of
. globalization is complete without an accounting of people. The
uctive next lesson will continue on this theme of examining people, and
ncern will focus particularly on their global movement.
zation
act of
rcent;
n the
0 200 (P) Guide Questions
at the ee
from! 1. Doyou believe in the neo-Malthusian argument? Why or why not?
>. How-an technology and interventions in development offset the
doie pressures of population growth?
Ld at 3, Under what circumstance is rapid population growth beneficial
The to societies?
nsive
stent
Door.
1 for
ts to
lobal
es to
ion-
ping
take
goal
yet| Movement and Sustainability
ae . =
“WS Learning Activity: Family Trees
Create two family trees based on interviews with each of
your parents. Try to trace your family connections as far back as
you can. Expand lateral connections as well. The “higher” you go
vertically, the better. Unless you are the child of a single parent,
please remember that you have to trace the lines of two families—
your mother’s and father’s.
If you are a family of migrants, determine if your family
moved from the provinces to the big cities (Metro Manila or Metro
Cebu) or vice versa. If they migrated to the cities, ask them when
the family moved, and why they left the provinces for the cities.
Compare your findings to those of your classmates and see
if there is a pattern of demographic changes. If there are more
than one of you whose families come from a similar province,
form a group with them and discuss your data. Then, prepare
a joint report on the reasons why your family moved, the job
opportunities opened to them and to which they applied, the
problems they encountered, and the ways in which they tried to
resolve these problems.
Learning ¢
At the end of this le:
1. identify the rez
2. explain why st
3, discuss the eff
well-being of
This lesson wii
both the sending a
numerous challeng
be considered a “f
about moving fre
have always been
that areas get pop
economies prospe
terms of a simplist
phenomenon that
What is Mig!
There are t
which refers to
within one cow
people cross bo!
can be further t
who move per
The second r77 =
Learning Outcomes
At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. identify the reasons for the migration of people;
2. explain why states regulate migration; and
3, _ discuss the effects of global migration on the economic
well-being of states.
‘This lesson will look at global migration and its impact on
both the sending and receiving countries. Although we will cite
numerous challenges relating to migration, migration should not
be considered a “problem.” There is nothing moral or immoral
about moving from one country to another. Human beings |
have always been migratory. It is the result of their movements i}
that areas get populated, communities experience diversity, and 1
economies prosper. Thus, rather than looking at migration in
terms of a simplistic good vs. bad lens, treat it as a complex social |
phenomenon that even predates contemporary globalization. |
What is Migration? |
‘There are two types of migration: internal migration,
Which refers to people moving from one area to another i
within one country; and international migration, in which i
people cross borders of one country to another. The latter ib
can be further broken down into five groups. First are those ih!
who move permanently to another country (immigrants). I
The second refers to workers who stay in another |
i) | Movement and Sustainability
country for a fixed period (at least 6 months in a year).!#
Mlegal migrants comprise the third group, while the fourth are
migrants whose families have “petitioned” them to move to the
destination county. The fifth group are refugees (also known as
asylum-seekers), i.e., those “unable or unwilling to return because
of a well-founded fear of persecution on account of race, religion,
nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political
opinion.”
Demographers estimate that 247 million people are currently
living outside the countries of their birth. Ninety percent of them
moved for economic reasons while the remaining 10 percent
were refugees and asylum-seekers.'® The top three regions of
origin are Latin America (18 percent of global total), followed by
Eastern Europe and Central Asia (16 percent), and the Middle
East and North Africa (14 percent). On a per country basis, India,
Mexico, and China are leading, with the Philippines, together with
Afghanistan, only ranking 6th in the world. The top 10 country
destinations of these migrants are mainly in the West and the
Middle East, with the United States topping the list.!5°
Fifty percent of global migrants have moved from the
developing countries to the developed zones of the world and
contribute anywhere from 40 to 80 percent of their labor force,
Their growth has outstripped the population growth in the
developed countries (3 percent versus only 0.6 percent), such that
today, according to the think-tank McKinsey Global Institute,
“first-generation immigrants constitute 13 percent of the
population in Western Europe, 15 percent in North America, and
48 percent in the GCC countries.” The majority of migrants
remain in the cities. The percentages of migrants in cities are 92
percent in the United States, 95 percent in the United Kingdom,
and 99 percent in Australia, Once settled, they contribute
enormously to raising the productivity of their host countries
(Table 1).
Table 1. Migrant Con
in dollars and as perc’
Unites States
Germany
United Kingdom
Australia
Canada
The migrant inf
over the issue of \
national developme
argue that governm
stop to illegal entry
groups are gaining
their beliefs. Examy
UK Prime Ministe
existing pro-immi:
their states.'” Most
the United States o!
those with proper
about his election |
States and Mexico.
The wisdom of
belied by the dat
on the impact of
and magnitude of
immigration are
The fiscal impact
be “very small.”
welfare spending b
Development (OE!
receive higher sup]Global Migration | 111
).192 Table 1. Migrant Contribution to Destination Country,
are in dollars and as percentage of national GDP, 2015
the Country oer peer
a Unites States $2 trillion 11 percent
us Germany $550 billion 17 percent
al United Kingdom $390 billion 14 percent
Australia $330 billion 25 percent
Canada $320 billion 21 percent
tly,
em The migrant influx has led to a debate in destination countries
ent over the issue of whether migrants are assets or liabilities to
of national development. Anti-immigrant groups and nationalists
by argue that governments must control legal immigration and put a
dle stop to illegal entry of foreigners.* Many of these anti-immigrant
ia, groups are gaining influence through political leaders who share
ith their beliefs. Examples include US President Donald Trump and
ry UK Prime Minister Theresa May, who have been reversing the
he existing pro-immigration and refugee-sympathetic policies of
their states." Most recently, Trump attempted to ban travel into
the United States of people from majority-Muslim countries, even
those with proper documentation. He also continues to speak
about his election promise of building a wall between the United
States and Mexico.
at The wisdom of these government actions has been consistently
re, belied by the data. A 2011 Harvard Business School survey
ne on the impact of immigration concluded that the “likelihood
id and magnitude of adverse labor market effects for native from
ts immigration are substantially weaker than often perceived.”
2 ‘The fiscal impact of immigration on social welfare was noted to
n, be “very small.” Furthermore, the 2013 report on government
te welfare spending by Organization for Economic Co-operation and
°s Development (OECD) clearly shows that native-born citizens still
receive higher support compared to immigrants.’112 | Movement and Sustainability
This process has oft
again to the McKin
Africa and Asia hav
percent of those w!
graduates, compar
the country. Fifty
the developed wor
double the 23 perce
The massive inflow of refugees from Syria and Iraq has raised |
alarm bells once again, but has not proved to be as damaging as_
expected. The International Monetary Fund predicted that the
flow of refugees fleeing the war in Syria and Iraq would actually |
grow Europe’s GDP, albeit “modestly.”"* In Germany, the inflow _
of refugees from the Middle East has not affected social welfare
Programs, and had very little impact on wages and employment, -
In fact, they have brought much-needed labor to the economy _
instead.' Furthermore,
such as doctors, |
countries. In 2006,
21 sub-Saharan A
States or Canada;
(where 43 percent |
(20 percent).”"”
Benefits and Detriments for the Sending
Countries
Even if 90 percent of the value generated by migrant workers”
remains in their host countries, they have sent billions back to
their home countries (in 2014, their remittances totaled $580
billion). In 2014, India held the highest recorded remittance
($70 billion), followed by China ($62 billion), the Philippines
($28 billion), and Mexico ($25 billion). These remittances
make significant contributions to the development of small- and
medium-term industries that help generate jobs." Remittances
likewise change the economic and social standing of migrants, as
shown by new or renovated homes and their relatives’ access to
new consumer goods. The purchasing power of a migrant’s family
doubles and makes it possible for children to start or continue their
schooling."
Governments
no choice but to
state policy becau
equally “concern
workforce and in
remittances.” Go
recruitment and
special departme
and Training in
Emigrants withit
Overseas Emple
of migrant-depe
Yet, there remain serious concerns about the economic strength of these
sustainability of those reliant on migrant monies. The Asian
Development Bank (ADB) observes that in countries like the
Philippines, remittances “do not have a significant influence on
other key items of consumption or investment such as spending
on education and health care.” Remittances, therefore, may help in
lifting “households out of poverty...but not in rebalancing growth,
especially in the long run.”"**
More importantly, global migration is “siphoning...
qualified personnel, [and] removing dynamic young workers.”Global Migration 1113
s raised This process has often been referred to as “brain drain.” According
ging as again to the McKinsey Global Institute, countries in sub-Saharan
hat the ‘Africa and Asia have lost one-third of their college graduates. Sixty
ctually percent of those who moved to OECD destinations were college
inflow graduates, compared to just 9 percent of the overall population in
velfare the country. Fifty-two percent of Filipinos who leave for work in
yment. the developed world have tertiary education, which is more than
onomy double the 23 percent of the overall Filipino population.
Furthermore, the loss of professionals in certain key roles,
such as doctors, has been detrimental to the migrants’ home
countries. In 2006, some 15 percent of Jocally trained doctors from
21 sub-Saharan African countries had emigrated to the United
States or Canada; the losses were particularly steep in Liberia
orkétd (where 43 ipereenit of doctors left), Ghana (30 percent), and Uganda
aa (20 percent).””
$580 Governments are aware of this long-term handicap, but have
ttance no choice but to continue promoting migrant work as part of
spines state policy because of the remittances’ impact on GDP. They are
aioe equally “concerned with generating jobs for an under-utilized
- anit workforce and in getting the maximum possible inflow of worker
ances remittances.” Governments are thus actively involved in the
its, as recruitment and deployment of works, some of them setting up
£55 to special departments like the Bureau of Manpower, Employment
amily and Training in Bangladesh; the Office of the Protector of
their Emigrants within the Indian Labor Ministry; and the Philippine
Overseas Employment Agency (POEA).!”! The sustainability
omic of migrant-dependent economies will partially depend on the
Asi strength of these institutions.
sian
e the
"eon
ding
Ip in
wth,
ng...
5.169
OFWs in Hong Kong for their weekly picnic14 | Movement and Sustainability
The Problem of Human Trafficking
On top of the issue of brain drain, sending states mut
likewise protect migrant workers. The United States Feder
Bureau of Investigation lists human trafficking as the thi
largest criminal activity worldwide.” In 2012, the Internation:
Labour Organization (ILO) identified 21 million men, women,
and children as victims of “forced labor,” an appalling three oul
every 1,000 persons worldwide. Ninety percent of the victims (18.7
million) are exploited by private enterprises and entrepreneurs;
22 percent (4.5 million) are sexually abused; and 68 percent (14,2
million) work under compulsion in agricultural, manufacturing,
infrastructure, and domestic activities."”? Human trafficking has
been very profitable, earning syndicates, smugglers, and corrupt
state officials profits of as high as $150 billion a year in 2014.
Governments, the private sector, and civil society groups have
worked together to combat human trafficking, yet the results
remain uneven,
‘A campaign sign against human trafficking
ine untris
Jost nations GDP,
Integration
A final issue
w home countri
gducation is not eas
jy the economic int
{ndia, and Western
{rom the Middle E
greater challenges
Singapore, there a
workers (doctors,
the professional, \
easier to integrate.
Democratic s
granting them cit
public education
citizens, switchit
difficulties, cust
religions may ¢t
receiving count
migrants of brir
amplifying diff
the lack of in
groups more |
are often not
culture).””
Migrants \
themselves.” T
and often “str
citizens” that
of uprooting
Benevolent /
for new Chi
setting up thGlobal Migration 113
Integration
States my A final issue relates to how migrants interact with their
ates Fede jew home countries. They may contribute significantly to a
is the thi howt nation’s GDP, but their access to housing, health care, and
nternatioy education is not easy. There is, of course, considerable variation
en, wom iy) the economic integration of migrants.'”° Migrants from China,
1g three
ictims (18;
repreneur
India, and Western Europe often have more success, while those
{rom the Middle East, North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa face
greater challenges in securing jobs.” In the United States and
ercent (14, Singapore, there are blue-collar as well as white-collar Filipino
Macturiny workers (doctors, engineers, even corporate executives), and it is
icking the professional, white-collar workers that have oftentimes been
id corny easier to integrate.”
in 2014.1
Democratic states assimilate immigrants and their children by
granting them citizenship and the rights that go with it (especially
public education), However, without a solid support from their
citizens, switching citizenship may just be a formality. Linguistic
difficulties, customs from the “old country,” and, of late, differing
religions may create cleavages between migrants and citizens of
receiving countries, particularly in the West.'* The latter accuse
migrants of bringing in the culture from their home countries and
amplifying differences in linguistic and ethnic customs. Crucially,
the lack of integration gives xenophobic and anti-immigrant
groups more ammunition to argue that these “new citizens
are often not nationals (in the sense of sharing the dominant
culture).""
Migrants unwittingly reinforce the tension by “keeping among
themselves.” The first-time migrant’s anxiety at coming into a new
and often “strange” place is mitigated by “local networks of fellow
citizens” that serve as the migrant’s safety net from the dislocation
of uprooting oneself. For instance, the Chinese Consolidated
Benevolent Association of California provides initial support
for new Chinese migrants, guiding them in finding work or in
setting up their smal] businesses (restaurants and laundromat) in16 | Movement and Sustainability
the state and elsewhere." The drawback of these networks is that
instead of facilitating integration, they exacerbate differences an
discrimination.
Governments and private businesses have made policy changes
to address integration problems, like using multiple languages
in state documents (in the case of the United States, Spanish and
English). Training programs complemented with counseling.
have also helped migrant integration in Hamburg, Germany,
while retail merchants in Barcelona have brought in migrant
shopkeepers to break down language barriers while introducing
Chinese culture to citizens." Whether these initiatives will
succeed or not remains an open question.
Conclusion
Global migration entails the globalization of people. And
like the broader globalization process, it is uneven. Some
migrants experience their movement as a liberating process.
A highly educated professional may find moving to another
country financially rewarding. At the other end, a victim of sex
trafficking may view the process of migration as dislocating and
disempowering.
Like globalization, moreover, migration produces different
and often contradictory responses. On the one hand, many
richer states know that migrant labor will be beneficial for their
economies. With their aging populations, Japan and Germany
will need workers from demographically young countries like the
Philippines. Similarly, as working populations in countries like
the United States move to more skilled careers, their economies
will require migrants to work jobs that their local workers are
beginning to reject. And yet, despite these benefits, developed
countries continue to excessively limit and restrict migrant labor.
They do so for numerous factors already mentioned. Some want
to preserve what they perceive as local culture by shielding it from
newcomers. Other states use migrants as scapegoats, blaming them
for economic woes tha
and not by foreigners.
Yet, despite thes
different forms of gle
migration will conti
contemporary world
entirely dependent «
to continue growing
protectionist Japan)
countries like the PI
need for remittances
Hence, it is inevi
to prevent their econ
various responses to
nationalism in the re
countries—will cont
P Guide Que
1. Why are migra
2. Whatare the b
migrant remit
3 Whyismigran
How do migra
countries?
meworks is thi
ferences an
icy change
e languages
Spanish an
counseling
, Germany,
in migrant
introducing
iatives will
cople. And
ven. Some
18 process,
to another
tim of sex
cating and
s different
nd, many
il for their
Germany
ies like the
ntries like
-conomies
orkers are
developed
rant labor.
ome want
ng it from
ning them
Global Migration | 117
for economic woes that are, in reality, caused by government policy
and not by foreigners.
Yet, despite these various contradictions, it is clear that
different forms of global interdependence will ensure that global
nntinue to be one of the major issues in the
migration will cos
hose economies have become
contemporary world. Countries w!
entirely dependent on globalization and rely on foreign labor
to continue growing (e.g» Singapore, Saudi Arabia, and even
protectionist Japan) will actively court foreign workers. Likewise,
countries like the Philippines with an abundance of labor and a
need for remittances will continue to send these workers.
Hence, it is inevitable that countries will have to open up again
onomies from stagnating or even collapsing. The
phobia and extreme
vy in the sending
to prevent their ec
various responses to these movements—xeno|
nationalism in the receiving countries; dependenc
countries—will continue to be pressing issues.
(?) Guide Questions
1. Whyare migrants mostly beneficial for receiving countries?
2. Whatare the benefits and detriments of economies dependent on
migrant remittances?
3. Whyis migrant integration a challenging issue for states?
snts prompt xenophobia and racism in receiving
How do migrar
countries?118 | Movement and Sustainability
9
oe Learning Activity: OFW Survey
Do a survey in your neighborhood and ask families about their
relatives (parents, children, uncles, aunts, cousins, etc.) who had
migrated or worked abroad. List down who they are, where they
migrated or are working, and for how long they have been there.
Your goal is to map your neighborhood and determine how
much of the families there are reliant on relatives living and/or
working abroad. After finishin,
to determine how different homes are supported by immigrants/
migrant workers. Check the architecture of the homes, the way
your neighbors dress, their vehicles, etc,
In class, compare your own survey with that of your classmates
and ask yourself the following questions:
a. What has changed in our communities bec.
migration?
©eaming c
Atthe end of this les
1. discuss the orig
2. relate everyday
desertification,
of environment
3. examine the p¢
st address th
use of global mae
b. How are people copin
ig With the visit or return of the
immigrants?
If you live in Mi
work) every day, th
already exposed tot
the deteriorating st:
gate, the fetid smel
near the trash bin,
see rotting vegetabl
in plastic. These t
environmental pro!
compost pile; the ré
lice that might jum
and the plastics wa:
wastes, it cannot de
What changed among the immigrants/overseas workers
when they went back (or visited) home?
You hop on th
Santos Avenue (EL
the normal Manil:
turtle can outpaceEnvironmental Crisis
Bes
and Sustainable
Development
teaming Outcomes
‘At the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
1. discuss the origins and manifestations of global environmental crises;
2. telate everyday encounters with pollution, global warming,
desertification, ozone depletion, and many others with a larger picture
of environmental degradation; and
3, examine the policies and programs of governments around the world
that address the environmental crisis.
[aa |
If you live in Metropolitan Manila and travel to school (or to i
work) every day, the moment you step out of your home, you are
already exposed to the most serious problem humanity faces today:
the deteriorating state of the environment. As you walk out of the
gate, the fetid smell of uncollected garbage hits you and you go
near the trash bin, curious about what is causing the smell. You
see rotting vegetables, a dead rat, and a bunch of whatnot packed
in plastic. These three “wastes” are already indicative of some
environmental problems—the vegetables ought to be added to a
compost pile; the rat either buried or burned (to also get rid of the
lice that might jump into the hair of the children playing nearby);
and the plastics washed and recycled because, unlike the other two
wastes, it cannot decompose.
You hop on the first bus and as it approaches Epifanio de los }
Santos Avenue (EDSA), the traffic slows down considerably. It is
the normal Manila morning traffic where, as the joke goes, the
turtle can outpace even the fastest of motor vehicles. You look out {i120 | Movement and Sustainability
of the window and see the smoke coming out of diesel vehi
2. Changes
and as you lift your head up to the sky, you see nothing but smo, snowstor
courtesy of the cars and buses, as well as the coal plant and seve ocean ani
industrial sites located alongside the Pasig River. You notice t! (as the pc
oil spots on the river, not to mention the tons of effluents (hum flooding
and non-human wastes) floating alongside each other. In the cil 3. Overpop
you live in, there is a dying river, an increasingly poisonous sky, a 4. The exh
enormous amount of waste, and a declining quality of life. : resource
It is at this point that you recognize the ecological crisi 5, A waste
happening around you, and how the deterioration of the of waste
unloade
ocean; a
6. The des
of biodi
deforest
species
7. The red
in thea
rise in
250 yea
8. The de
the sur
(CECS)
9. Deadly
chemi
vegeta
The World’s Leading Environmental Problems fo Wate
was!
The Conserve Energy Future website lists the following rivers
environmental challenges that the world faces today. '*? ll. Urbar
~ 1 The depredation caused by industrial and transportation e sal
‘oxins and plastic in the ground; the defiling of the sea, es
rivers, and water beds by oil spills and acid rain; the fans
dumping of urban wasteEnvironmental Crisis and Sustainable Development lar
2. Changes in global weather patterns (flash floods, extreme
snowstorms, and the spread of deserts) and the surge in
ocean and land temperatures leading to a rise in sea levels
(as the polar ice caps melt because of the weather), plus the
flooding of many lowland areas across the world
3. Overpopulation (see Lesson 9)
4, The exhaustion of the world’s natural non-renewable
resources from oil reserves to minerals to potable water
5, A waste disposal catastrophe due to the excessive amount
of waste (from plastic to food packages to electronic waste)
unloaded by communities in landfills as well as on the
ocean; and the dumping of nuclear waste
6. The destruction of million-year-old ecosystems and the loss
of biodiversity (destruction of the coral reefs and massive
deforestation) that have led to the extinction of particular
species and the decline in the number of others
7. The reduction of oxygen and the increase in carbon dioxide
in the atmosphere because of deforestation, resulting in the
rise in ocean acidity by as much as 150 percent in the last
250 years
8. The depletion of the ozone layer protecting the planet from
the sun’s deadly ultraviolet rays due to chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs) in the atmosphere
9, Deadly acid rain as a result of fossil fuel combustion, toxic
chemicals from erupting volcanoes, and the massive rotting
vegetables filling up garbage dumps or left on the streets
10, Water pollution arising from industrial and community
waste residues seeping into underground water tables,
rivers, and seas
11. Urban sprawls that continue to expand as a city turns into
a megalopolis, destroying farmlands, increasing traffic
gridlock, and making smog cloud @ permanent urban
fixture (see Lesson 8)122 1 Movement and Sustainability
12. Pa
ur
Pauintry was at |
Wlequate mor
quality networl
Hurthermore, 9:
ollution that
while Gaborone
sity in the worl
eur exhaust, bu
diesel-fueled el
projected to que
peace
13. A radical alteration
modifications in food
Many of these problems are caused by natural change
Volcanic eruptions release toxins in the atmosphere and loy
the world’s temperature. The US Geological Survey measu,
the gas emissions fr. ilauea volcano in Hawaii a
concluded “that Kilauea has been releasing more than twice ¢
amount of noxious sulfur dioxide gas (SO,) as the single dirti
Power plant on the United States mainland.” The 15 milli
tons of sulfur dioxide that were released when Mount Pinatul
erupted on June 15, 2001 created a “hazy layer of aerosol particl
composed Primarily of sulfuric acid droplets” that brought down
the average global femperature by 0.6 degrees Celsius for the next
15 months,'* Volcanologists at the University of Hawaii added that
Pinatubo had released “15 to 29 megaton. ..of [sulfur dioxide] into
the stratosphere...to offset the
Present global warm ing trends and
Severely impact the ozone budget.” 185
Of food sy:
stems because of gen
Production
‘om the active Kj
Waste com
gut into the riv
the bodies of
tuna, promine
in India dis«
streams, while
Shanxi Maanq
of gold per ye
Conditions in
products of f
more rapidly t
a century, coa
laden wastew:
into the wate
into a poison
generations @
undrinkable’
Pollution
circulation s
temperature
Asian monso
into the strat
to the spread
in changing
‘These climat
Man-made PollutionEnvironmental Crisis and Sustainable Development | 123
rising i Greenpeace India reported that in 2015, air pollution in the
paiintry was at its worst, aggravated by the Indian government’s
jjudlequate monitoring system (there are only 17 national air
uality networks covering 89 cities across the continent!).'**
of gem Jiisihermore, 94 percent of Nigeria’s population is exposed to air
pollution that the WHO warned as reaching dangerous levels,
while Gaborone, the capital ‘of Botswana, is the 7 most polluted
| chan,
and lo ily in the world. The emission of aerosols and other gases from
measuy fr exhaust, burning of wood or garbage, indoor-cooking, and
awaii ay iliesel-fueled electric generators, and petrochemical plants are
twice t] projected to quadruple by 2030."°
© dirti Waste coming out of coal, copper, and gold mines flowing
milli gut into the rivers and oceans is destroying sea life or permeating
*inatu the bodies of those which survived with poison (mercury in
Particl (una, prominently). The biggest copper mine in Malanjkhand
ht down in India discharges high levels of toxic heavy metals into water
the next streams, while in China, the “tailings” from the operations of the
led that Shanxi Maangiao Ecological Mining Ltd., producing 12,000 tons
de] into of gold per year, “have caused pollution and safety problems.”
ids and Conditions in China have become very critical as the “toxic by- f
products of production processes...are being produced much |
more rapidly than the Earth can absorb.”"" Meanwhile, for over
a century, coal mines in West Virginia have pumped “chemical-
laden wastewater directly into the ground, where it can leech
into the water table and turn what had been drinkable...water
lems. into a poisonous cocktail of chemicals.” The system “goes back
haust generations and could soon render much of the state's water
ealth undrinkable.”” 1
a Pollution in West Africa has affected “the atmospheric
— circulation system that controls everything from wind and
reas temperature to rainfall across huge swathes of the region.” The
+i ‘Asian monsoon, in turn, had become the transport of polluted air
ti
into the stratosphere, and scientists are now linking Pacific storms {
to the spread of pollution in Asia.!” Aerosol is tagged the culprit \
in changing rainfall patterns in ‘Asia and the Atlantic Ocean.'*
‘These climatic disruptions have similarly caused drought all over
nes,
vb124 | Movement and Sustainability
Asia and Africa and accelerated the pace of desertification i
certain areas. Twenty years ago, there were over 50,000 rivers
China. In 2013, as a result of climate change, uncontrolled urb;
growth, and rapid industrialization, 28,000 of these rivers h
disappeared.!°
People’s health has been severely compromised, An archiv
article in the journal Scientific American blamed the polluti
for “contributing to more than half a million premature death;
each year at the cost of hundreds of billions of dollars.” T]
International Agency for Research on Cancer blamed air polluti
for 223,000 lung cancer deaths in 2010." In Indonesia ai
Malaysia, the link between forest fires and mortality had bee:
well-established."* The aforementioned coal mining in We:
Virginia (mentioned above) has also made people sick, so
with “rare cancers, little kids with kidney stones [and]
deaths,” and children born with congenital disabi
having shorter life expectancy.”
premature
ies and adults
Ithas been the poor who are most severely affected by these
environmental problems. Their low income and poverty already
put them at a disadvantage by not having the resources to afford
good health care, to live in unpolluted areas, to eat healthy food,
etc. In the United States, a Yale University research team studying
areas with high levels of pollution observed that the “greater the
concentration of Hispanics, Asians, African-Americans, or poor
residents in an area, the more likely that dangerous compounds
such as vanadium, nitrates, and zinc are in the mix of fine particles
they breathe.” In India, studies on adults health revealed
that 46% in Delhi and 56% of in Calcutta have “
“impaired lung
function” due to air pollution.” In China,
the toxicity of the soil
has raised concerns over food sec urity and the health of the most
vulnerable, especially the Peasant communities and those living
in factory cities." In 2006, 160 acres of land in Xinma, China was
badly poisoned by cadmium. Two people died and 150 were known
to be poisoned; the entire village was abandoned?” Hong Kong
faces the same problem.
In Metropolitan Manila, 37 percent (4 million people) of the
Population live in slum communities, areas where “[tJhe effects
of urban
are also
poor air
risk man
Marife B
deepens
and non.
growth.”
One
ne
problem
the bus.
consider
pollutior
worsen |
as the re
travel.
The
the mot
Accordi
India, “
most A:
more SI
matter
motore)
prolifer
lower p
hence a
four tin
“Cate
Th
resolve
becom
and inEnvironmental Crisis and Sustainable Development | 125
on in of urban environmental problems and threats of climate change
rs in are also most pronounced...due to their hazardous location,
ban, poor air pollution and solid waste management, weak disaster
had risk management, and limiting coping strategies of households.”
Marife Ballesteros concludes that this unhealthy environment
“deepens poverty, increases the vulnerability of both the poor
lived
ition and non-poor living in slums, and excludes the slum poor from
-aths growth2"*
The One of the major ironies of urban pollution is that the
ition necessities that the poor has access to are also the sources of the
and problem. The main workhorse of the public transport system is
been the bus. However, because it runs mainly on diesel fuel, it is now
Neng considered “one of the largest contributors to environmental
omg pollution problems worldwide.” This problem is expected to
ture: worsen as the middle classes and the elites buy more cars and
halts as the road systems are improved to give people more chance to
travel.
hese ‘The other mode of transportation that the poor can afford is
ady the motorbike (also called the two- and three-wheeled vehicles).
ford [According to the Centre for Science and Environment in Delhi,
od, India, “two-wheelers form a staggering 75%-80% of the traffic in
mng most Asian cities.” Motorbikes burn oil and gasoline and “emit
the more smoke, carbon monoxide, hydrocarbons, and particulate
ear matter than the gas-only four-stroke engines found in newer
nds motorcycles.”” Finally, adding to this predicament is the
cles proliferation of diesel-run cars. These vehicles usually command a
led lower price because of their durability and low operating cost, and
ng hence affordable to the middle class. However, they also release
oil four times the toxic pollution as the buses.
ost
ny
me “Catching Up”
wn
ng
resolve because governments believe that for their countries to
|
h become fully developed, they must be industrialized, urbanized, }
in and inhabited by a robust middle class with access to the best |
ts
‘These massive environmental problems are difficult to |
|
\126 | Movement and Sustainability
of modern amenities. A developed society, accordingly, must
also have provisions for the Poor—jobs in the industrial sector,
public transport system, and cheap food. Food depends on a
country’s free trade with other food producers. It also relies on a
“modernized” agricultural sector in which toxic technologies (such
as fertilizers or pesticides) and modified crops (eg, high-yielding
varieties of rice) ensure maximized productivity.
The model of this ideal modern Society is the United States,
which, until the 1970s, was a global economic power, with a middle
class that was the envy of the world. ‘The United States, however,
did not reach this high point without serious environmental
consequences. To this very day, it is “the worst polluter in the
history of the world,” responsible for 27 percent of the world’s
carbon dioxide emissions.” Sixty percent of the carbon emission
comes from cars and other vehicles plying American highways
and roads, the rest from smoke and soot from coal factories, forest
fires, as well as methane released by farms and breakdown of
organic matter, paint, aerosol, and dust"
These ecological consequences, however, are far from the
mind of countries like China, India, and Indonesia, which are now
in the midst of a frenzied effort to achieve and sustain economic
Srowth to catch up with the West. In the “desire to develop and
improve the standard of living of their citizens, these countries will
opt for the goals of economic growth and cheap energy,” which,
in turn, would “encourage energy Over-consumption, waste, and
inefficiency and also fuel environmental pollution.”?? With their
industrial sector still having a small share of the national wealth,
these countries will be using first their natural reso
oil, forest and agricultural products, and minerals to generate a
national kitty that could be invested in industrialization.
urces like coal,
These “extractive” economies, however, are “terminal”
economies." Their resources, which will be eventually depleted,
are also sources of pollution. In Nigeria, Niger Delta oil companies
have “caused substantial land, water, and air pollution.” Nigeria
is caught in a bind. If it wants “to maintain its current economic
growth path and sustain
its drive for poverty reduction,
[the very polluting]
to be a dominant ec
environment suffer
its people, developit
could not sacrifice t
This issue be
sustainability ens
development needs
Climate Chan
Governments I
with, but these stat
to global warming,
warming is the res
from coal-burnin
air pollutants, and
These pollutants t
the earth’s surface
and other gases, t!
the world tempera
temperature has r
continues to go
the world had cool
The greenhou
and long drought
and devastating hi
California had ex
due to global wa
brought rain in t
is that the state is
century.”* In Ind
the summer mon
that seriously aff
as infrastructure
Super Typhoon HEnvironmental Crisis and Sustainable Development | 127
ly, must [the very polluting] oil exploration and production will continue
il sector, to be a dominant economic activity.” If the United States lets its
ds ona environment suffer to achieve modernity and improve the lives of
lies ona its people, developing countries see no reason, therefore, why they
ad bi: could not sacrifice the environment in the name of progress.
mereing This issue begs the question: How is environmental
sustainability ensured while simultaneously addressing the
1 States, development needs of poor countries?
| middle
jowever,
wmientl Climate Change
‘in the
world’s Governments have their own environmental problems to deal
mission with, but these states’ ecological concerns become worldwide due
ghways to global warming, which transcends national boundaries. Global
ace warming is the result of billion of tons of carbon dioxide (coming
from coal-burning power plants and transportation), various
own
air pollutants, and other gases accumulating in the atmosphere.
m the These pollutants trap the sun’s radiation causing the warming of
re now the earth’s surface. With the current amount of carbon dioxide
a and other gases, this “greenhouse effect” has sped up the rise in
asd the world temperature."* There is now a consensus that the global
es will temperature has risen at a faster rate in the last 50 years and it
which, continues to go up despite efforts by climate change deniers that
: aad the world had cooled off in and around 1998."
their The greenhouse effect is responsible for recurring heat waves
ealth, and long droughts in certain places, as well as for heavier rainfall
- coal, and devastating hurricanes and typhoons in others, Until recently,
rate a California had experienced its worst water shortage in 1,200 years
due to global warming.”” This changed recently when storms
inal* brought rain in the drought-stricken areas. The result, however,
ted is that the state is having some of its worst flashfloods in the 21"
nd century."* In India and Southeast Asia, global warming altered
anies the summer monsoon patterns, leading to intermittent flooding
a that seriously affected food production and consumption as well
as infrastructure networks. Category 4 or 5 typhoons, like the
tion, Super Typhoon Haiyan that hit the central Philippines in 2013, had8 | Movement and Sustainability
“doubled and even tripled in some areas of the (Southeast Asian)
basin. Scientists claim that there will be more {of such] typhoons
in the coming years.”*” In the eastern United States, the number
of storms had also gone up, with Hurricane Katrina (2005) and
Hurricane Sandy (2012) being the worst.22°
Glaciers are melting every year since 2002, with Antarctica
losing 134 billion metric of ice. There is coastal flooding not
only in the United States eastern seaboard but also in the Gulf of
Mexico. Coral reefs in the Australian Great Barrier Reef are dying,
and the production capacities of farms and fisheries have been
affected. Flooding has allowed more breeding grounds for disease
carriers like the Aedes aegypti mosquito and the cholera bacteria.
The melting of the polar ice caps illustrates the reality of man-made climate change.
Since human-made climate change threatens the entire world,
it is possibly the greatest present risk to humankind.
Combating Global Warming
More countries are now recognizing the perils of global
warming. In 1997, 192 countries signed the Kyoto Protocol to
reduce greenhouse gases, following the 1992 United Nations Earth
Summit where a Framework Convention for Climate Change was
finalized.” The protocol set targets but left it to the individual
countries to determine how best they would achieve these goals.
While some countries have made the necessary move to reduce
their contribution to
biggest polluter in the
countries lack the fun
many of them need in
World Bank report
slight impact on redu
non-binding nature o}
‘The follow-up tre
negotiated by 195 cot
the increase in the g
goals as recommend
which has predetern
Paris Accord provi¢
their national targe'
because it emphasi
whether this agreem
Protocol.
Social movemer
together, with som
global warming. |
environmental activ
and to lobby parli
laws." Across the
grassroots organiz¢
diversification, a rec
protection of endat
of commercial fish
by deforestation u
from a nearby dam
in producing attai
University of Chicé
to work with gover
coming up with v
between urgently
quality.”Environmental Crisis and Sustainable Development 1129
their contribution to global warming, the United States—the
biggest polluter in the world—is not joining the effort. Developing
countries lack the funds to implement the protocol’s guidelines as
many of them need international aid to get things moving. A 2010
World Bank report thus concluded that the protocol only had a
slight impact on reducing global emissions, in part because of the
non-binding nature of the agreement. **
The follow-up treaty to the Kyoto Protocol is the Paris Accord,
negotiated by 195 countries in December of 2015. It seeks to limit
the increase in the global average temperature based on targeted
goals as recommended by scientists. Unlike the Kyoto Protocol
which has predetermined CO, emission limits per country, the
Paris Accord provides more leeway for countries to decide on
their national targets. It largely passed as international legislation
because it emphasizes consensus-building, but it is not clear
whether this agreement will have any more success than the Kyoto
Protocol.
Social movements, however, have had better success working
together, with some pressure on their governments to regulate
global warming. In South Africa, communities engage in
environmental activism to pressure industries to reduce emissions
and to lobby parliament for the passage of pro-environment
laws2% Across the Atlantic, in El Salvador, local officials and
grassroots organizations from 1,000 communities push for crop
diversification, a reduction of industrial sugar cane production, the
protection of endangered sea species from the devastating effects
of commercial fishing, the preservation of lowlands being eroded
by deforestation up in rivers and inconsistent release of water
from a nearby dam.” Universities also partner with governments
in producing attainable programs of controlling pollution. The
University of Chicago's Energy Policy Institute sent teams to India
to work with government offices, businesses, and communities in
coming up with viable ground-level projects that “strike a balance
between urgently needed economic growth and improved air
quality?™*) | Movement and Sustainability
When these local alliances between the state, schools, and
communities are replicated at the national level, the success
becomes doubly significant. In Japan, population pressure forced
the government to work with civil society groups, academia, and
Political parties to get the parliament to pass “a blizzard of laws—
14 passed at once—in what became known as the Pollution Diet of
1970. These regulations did not eliminate environmental problems,
but today, Japan has some of the least polluted cities in the world.”
The imperative now is for everyone to set up these kinds of
coalitions on a global scale. For at this point, when governments
still hesitate in fully committing themselves to fight pollution
and when international organizations still lack the power to
enforce anti-pollution policies, social coalitions that bring in
village associations, academics, the media, local and national
governments, and even international aid agencies together may be
the only way to reverse this worsening situation,
Conclusion
Perhaps no issue forces people to think about their role as
citizens of the world than environmental degradation. Every
person, regardless of his/her race, nation, or creed, belongs to
the same world. When one looks at an image of the earth, he/
she will realize that, he/she belongs to one world—a world that is
increasingly vulnerable. In the fight against climate change, one
cannot afford to simply care about his/her own backyard. The
CO, emitted in one country may have severe effects on the climate
of another. There is no choice but to find global solutions to this
global problem.
(2) Questions:
1, Howdo poor cc
necessity to pro
2. How do you del
‘What are the mi
How are these
q
a8 Learning
“Finding E
Go around your
pollutants that you s
areas surrounding y‘
Make a list of t
recycled and which
men to collect. Wit
you can do to make
not simply limit you
Your report must i
barangay, and the ciEnvironmental Crisis and Sustainable Development | 131
(P) questions for Discussion
1. Howdo poor counties balance their need for development with the
necessity to protect the environment?
2. How do you define sustainable development?
3, Whatare the major environmental problems you are exposed to?
How are these problems global?
®)
ae Learning Activity:
Finding Everyday Pollution
Go around your neighborhood and list the different kinds of
pollutants that you see. Widen your observation by looking at the
areas surrounding your neighborhood.
Make a list of these pollutants and check which ones can be
recycled and which ones need to be put together for the garbage
men to collect. With the recycled ones, list the possible things that
you can do to make them usable and explain this in a report. Do
not simply limit yourself to what you can do with the recyclables.
Your report must include suggestions to the neighborhood, the
barangay, and the city district.32 | Movement and Sustainability
Conclusion:
The Global Filipino
In this book, you have seen how your lives have always been
tied to global processes. These connections have become more
Pronounced in recent years. Today,
depends largely on incomes from jobs
The first is migrant labor. In 2015, t
and Employment reported that the nu
the country to work overseas rose fro
2015, a 51-percent increase in the spi
there were 2.4 million Filipinos leavi
of the country,
the Philippine economy
with global connections.
he Department of Labor
mber of Filipinos leaving
m 4,018 in 2010 to 6,092 in
an of five years.” In 2016,
ing and/or working outside
*” They sent back $25.8 billion in 2015, roughly 8.5
percent of the country’s gross domestic product.” The second is
business process outsourcing (BPO) that the Philippines provides
for foreign clients. In 2015, BPO operations yielded $24 billion.
Combined, these two economic activities have plowed over $51
billion into the country’s national coffers.?*!
The third source of national in
The Philippines exports machiner
&xPort crops and fruits, minerals (gold and copper), ships, and
vehicles to other Asian countries, Europe, and North America.
In 2016, these exports earned $56.3 billion.2*2 The fourth largest
source of income is tourism, which reached about $6.05 billion by
the end of 2016.28 Added to the $51 billion from OFW and BPO
earnings, the total revenue of $113.35 billion makes the Philippines
the 36th largest economy in the world.
come is comprised of exports,
¥> semiconductors, wood, cars,
Again, if you take these export products from the equation,
only rice is left in the Philippines. While it is the 8th largest
tice producer in the world, the country is also one of the largest
importers of this basic staple.?"
Political
Philippines
well as the
the islands
with China
period. The
Spanish and
Western po’
Philippines |
between the
Soviet Socie
intervened
form the ¢
Treaty Orgs
to “contain
Even the in
regional an
illegal imm
Sabah, Sin
postwar ref
These netw
Finally.
corrupting
the West ir
lingua fran
basketball t
The 2014 |
92% of Fill
Yet, thy
American.
Mexican p
as the nov
families a
the countr
their cloth
it is in theConclusion: The Global Filipino | 133
Politically, there has never been a time in the long life of the
Philippines that it existed in isolation from the Asian region as
well as the world. Historians have shown that communities in
the islands of the archipelago were engaged in extensive trade
with China and maritime Southeast Asia in the pre-colonial
period. The Philippines became a colony of two empires—the
Spanish and then the American—existing in a region where other
Western powers and Japan had extended their reach. When the
Philippines became independent, it took sides in a global Cold War
between the capitalist United States and the communist Union of
Soviet Socialist Republics. In the 1960s, when the United States
intervened in the civil war in Vietnam, the Philippines helped
form the anti-communist regional body, the Southeast Asia
Treaty Organization (SEATO), created by the American hegemon
to “contain” the alleged spread of communism in the region.”
Even the informal economy of the country survived because of its
regional and global connections. Guns, drugs, merchandise, and
illegal immigrants flowed between the Philippine south, Borneo,
Sabah, Singapore, and southern China. Colonial powers and
postwar republics tried to contain these illegal networks but failed.
These networks persist to this day.
Finally, despite passionate nationalist warnings about the
corrupting influence of Western culture, Filipinos continue to hold
the West in high regard. English is now the other largely spoken
lingua franca of the country, and American popular culture—from
basketball to fashion to hip-hop—remains the model of modernity.
The 2014 Pew Research Center survey, for instance, showed that
92% of Filipinos are pro-American.”
Yet, the cultures imported to the Philippine shores are not just
‘American. The country has adopted Japanese, Korean, and even
Mexican popular culture, notable in teenage boy/girl bands as well
as the now ubiquitous telenovelas. Returning OFWs or migrant
families also bring back some of the practices and customs of
the countries they have lived in. Filipinas working in Japan alter
their clothing styles to look and act more like Japanese.*” Oddly,
it is in the diaspora that there is a greater attempt to “preserve”| Movement and Sustainability
Filipino culture. Filipino-American artists,
“revived” the use of the kulintang, an instrum
the Moros of Mindanao.” This peculiar “pres
(sic) Pilipino arts” indicates a “reverse flow” i
now transposed oversea:
connections.
for example, have
ent associated with
servation” of “tribal
in which the local ig
s.°” Again, these are indicative of global
Filipinos really have very little choice but to accept thi {
globalized state as a country and a people. Globalization’s impact |
has, admittedly, been uneven and often does not benefit most _
Filipinos. Yet, there is some movement; there is progress when the
Philippines at the end of the 20th century is analyzed. And part
of that is because—right or wrong—Philippine political leaders _
decided to open up the country to the world. The next step now
is to make sure that the imbalance from globalization’s benefits is _
corrected to allow more Filipinos to live a better life.
Capstone Activity:
What is Global Citizenship?
Notice that at no point in this course did we define global
citizenship. That was intentional because YOU will provide that
definition. For your final activity, through an essay, a poem, a
video, a drawing, or a mindmap, try to answer the question: What
Joes it mean to be a citizen of the world?
Endnate:
1 Manfred B, Sigs, Glo
edition (OxfaiOxfor
2 Ibid. 13.
a Ibid. 14
4 Associated Prs,“Hor
CNS News, Jaury 31
honda-sees-ip-dro
2017).
s Ibid, 15.
«Manfred B, Se, “Id
Ideologies \(,u,1 (2(
> Internationd|(onetai
Brief Overvia! May
ib/2008/053i8htm (
s Ibid.
» United Natit Cont
Investment iqurt 201
2016): 3-4
so Dennis O. inn and
“The Origindiiorld
(1995): 201
un Ibid. 214
12 Barry Eichageen, (
Internationi\loneta
University es, 200
x Office of thetistoric
1976, httpsitistory,
(last acceswiMarch
1s Stoyan Bojns, “Ila
‘Trader HQom, Ap!
history-evsp-5¢
1s World Trat0rgani
the Future(WorldEndnotes
. Manfred B. Sigr Globalization: A Very Short Introduction, Third
edition (Oxfat0xford University Press, 2013), 15.
2 Ibid. 13.
3 Ibid., 14.
4 Associated Pes,“Honda Sees Sharp Drop in Profit on Thai Floods,”
CNS News, mary 31, 2012, http://www.cnsnews.com/news/article/
honda-sees-fup-drop-profit-thai-floods (last accessed February 13,
2017).
Tbid., 15.
Manfred B. Sgr, “Ideologies of Globalization,” Journal of Political
Ideologies \\u.1 (2005): 11-30.
Internationallonetary Fund, “Issues Brief—Globalization: A
Brief Overvia! May 2008, https://www.imf.org/external/np/ext/
ib/2008/053ikhtm (last accessed March 9, 2017).
s Ibid.
United NatitsConference on Trade and Development, World
Investment lgort 2016 (New York: ‘United Nations Publications,
2016): 3-4.
tive of global
accept this
tion’s impact
Denefit most
ess when the
d. And part
tical leaders.
xt step now
’s benefits is.
fine global
rovide that
a poem,
ie wh e to Dennis O.Finand Arturo Girdldez, “Born with a ‘Silver Spoon’:
: What “The Origineliorld Trade in 1571)” Journal of World History 6, no. 2
(1995): 201
Ibid, 214
Barry Eichgeen, Globalizing Capital: A History of the
Internationi\onetary System, Second edition (Princeton: Princeton
University tes, 2008), 87.
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Trader HQon, April 5, 2014, http://tradehq.com/illustrated-
history-eve}sp-500-bear-market/ (last accessed March 6, 2017).
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the FuturedWorld Trade,” n.d., 60.136 | Endnotes
16 International Monetary
Y Fund, “Issues Brief—Globalization: A Brief
Overview”
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a Ibid, 712.
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2 Ibid.
2 Ibid.
2 Ibid,
2 Ibid.
2 Ibid.
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8
Paul Battersby, and Joseph M. Siracues
Publications Ltd, 2014), 363,
6 Ibid, 365,
7 Herbert I. Schiller,
Communication and Cultural Domination (White
Plains, N.Y.: Intern;
‘ational Arts and Sciences Press, 1976),
8 John Tomlinson, “Globalization and Cultural Identity,” in The
Global Transformations Reader. Secon edition, eds, David Held and
Andrew McGrew (Cambridge UK: Polity, 2003), 269,
Ken Ang, Watching Dallas: Soap Opera and the Melodramatic
{magination, Revised ed. (London; New York: Routledge, 1985), 24,
> Elihu Katz and ‘Tamara Liebes, “Interacting with ‘Dallas’: Cross
Cultural Readings of American Ty" Canadian Journal of
Communication 15, no, 1 (1990), 57,
Eytan Bakshy
Ideologically
no. 6239 (Jun
x Shaun Walke
Guardian, Ag
apr/02/putin
os Luke Hardin
Election,” Zit
www.theguar
viadimir-put
sos Maeve Shear!
‘The Guardia
world/2016/1
trolls-attacks
5 Saskia Sasser
N.J: Princetc
ss Richard C. L
Council on ¢
org/sites/ def
o tbid.
ss “Hot Spots:
‘The Econom
web/201407(
default/files/
os Ibid, 10.
ro Tim Dodd,
Billion Expo
com/news/P
australias-2¢
sr According t
foreign pop
in the Philip
Statistics Au
foreign-citiz
see Mark Fe
February 21
foreigner-pr
Singaporear
wor Richard Lor
We cierel aeee 4ng
9s
aw
102
CEE ORE
Eytan Bakshy, Solomon Messing, and Lada A. Adamic, “Exposure to
Ideologically Diverse News and Opinion on Facebook; Seience 348,
no, 6239 (June 5, 2015): 1230-1132.
Shaun Walker, “Salutin’ Putin: Inside a Russian Troll House,” The
Guardian, April 2, 2015, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/
apr/02/putin-kremlin-inside-russian-troil-house,
Luke Harding, “What We Know about Russia's Interference in the US
Election,” The Guardian, December 16, 2016, sec. US news, https://
www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/dec/16/qa-russian-hackers-
vladimir-putin-donald-trump-us-presidential-election.
Maeve Shearlaw, “Turkish Journalists Face Abuse and Threats,”
‘The Guardian, November 1, 2016, https://www.theguardian.com/
‘world/2016/nov/01/turkish-journalists-face-abuse-threats-online-
trolls-attacks.
Saskia Sassen, The Global City: New York, London, Tokyo (Princeton,
Nj: Princeton University Press, 1991).
Richard C. Longworth, “On Global Cities” (Chicago: The Chicago
Council on Global Affairs, 2615), https://www.thechicagocouncil.
org/sites/default/files/On_Globai_Cities,pdf.
Ibid.
“Hot Spots: Benchmarking Global City Competitiveness” (London:
‘The Economist Intelligence Unit, 2012), https://web.archive.org/
web/20140709133545/http://www.economistinsights.com/sites!
default files/downloads/Hot%20Spots.pdf.
Tbid., 10.
Tim Dodd, “Education Revenue Soars to Become Australia’s $20
Billion Export,’ Financial Review, February 3, 2016, http://wwwaatr.
com/news/policy/education/education-revenue-soars-to-become-
australias-20-billion-export-20160203-gmke3k,
According to a 2010 census (the latest material we have), the
foreign population of NCR is only 0.4 percent. “Foreign Citizens
in the Philippines (Results from the 2010 Census)” (Philippine
Statistics Authority, November 19, 2012), https://psa.gov.ph/content/
foreign-citizens-philippines-results-2010-census. On Singapore,
see Mark Fenn, “Singapore's Foreigner Problem,” The Diplomat,
February 21, 2014, http://thediplomat.com/2014/02/singapores-
foreigner-problem/. By 2030, experts predict that nearly half of the
Singaporean population will be foreigners.
Richard Longworth, On Global Cities, kindle edition (The Chicago
Council on Global Affrairs, 20 May 2015).144 | Endnotes
v1 Bloom and Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes? 11-12. Japan has
recently become the first country in history with an average age of
40. Japan is projected to have nearly one million centenarians (19%
of the population) by 2050. David E. Bloom and David Canning,
“Global Demographic Change: Dimensions and Economic
Significance,’ Harvard Initiative for Global Health Working Paper
Series, Program on the Global Demography of Aging, Working
Paper 1, April 2005, http://www.globalhealth.harvard.edu/
WorkingPapers.aspx (last accessed January 8, 2017): 14.
12 Bloom and Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes? 11.
xs B. H. Farmer, “Perspectives on the Green Revolution in South Asia”
Modern Asian Studies 20, no. 1 (1986): 175-199. For an updated
discussion of the Green Revolution, see Gordon Conway, One Billion
Hungry: Can We Feed the World? (Ithaca and London: Cornell
University Press, 2012).
vs Michael Herrmann, “Sustainable Development, Demography and
Sexual Reproductive Health: Inseparable Linkages and ‘Their Policy
Implications,” Reproductive Health Matters 22, no. 43 (May 2014):
28-42.
135 Bloom and Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes? 4.
136 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs
Population Division, “Abortion Politics and Reproductive Health
around the World,” Economic and Social Affairs, 2014, 1, http://www.
tun.org/en/development/desa/population/publications/pdf/policy/
AbortionPoliciesReproductiveHiealth.paf (last accessed January 20,
2017).
Roser and Ortiz-Ospina, “World Population Growth” (last accessed
January 8, 2017).
Jocelyn E. Finlay, David Canning, and June Y.T. Po, “Reproductive
Health Laws around the World,” Harvard Program on the Global
Demography of Aging, Working Paper No. 96, October 2012,
17-18, https://www:hsph.harvard.edu/program-on-the-global-
demography-of-aging/ WorkingPapers/2012/PGDA_WP _96.pdf
(last accessed January 20, 2017)
y
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws around the
World,’ 22. A severe drought that made it extremely difficult for
large families to feed their children was equally a factor in the
Ghanaian government’ decision to liberalize reproductive health
laws.
wo Finlay, Cannin
World? 15.
aa United Nations
Population Div
around the Wo
ie Finlay, Cannin
World? 7.
vs Finlay, Cannin
World,’ 20.
as Republic of th
Despite Budge
us Sharmila Parn
Rights Legisla
Transformatio
government 0
rights and has
threat of legis
Implementati
January 14, 2
us For a compre
applies to the
Rights and W
South End Pr
a7 United Natio
on Populatio
Anniversary
unfpa.org/pt
development
sas United Natic
Population F
http://www.
report.html
us David E. Ble
sso Food and A\
20507” 2, htt
paper/How.
23, 2017).
asi Food and A
2050,” 3.2. Japan has
erage age of
larians (1%
‘Canning,
mic
king Paper
Working
du/
South Asia,”
updated
'y; One Billion
Sornell
raphy and
Their Policy
fay 2014):
airs
re Health
http://www.
lf/policy/
January 20,
st accessed
roductive
» Global
12,
lobal-
96.pdt
und the
cult for
n the
e health
8
Endnotes | 145
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws around the
World? 15.
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs
Population Division, “Abortion Politics and Reproductive Health
around the World? 6.
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws Around the
World?’ 7.
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws Around the
World? 20.
Republic of the Philippines, “RH Law Implementation Continues
Despite Budget Cut) Official Gazette, January 14, 2016.
Sharmila Parmanand, “Mapping the Path to Philippine Reproductive
Rights Legislation: Signs of Progress amidst Obstacles,’ Social
‘Transformation 2, no. 1 (February 2014): 61-80. The current
government of President Rodrigo Duterte is pro-reproductive
rights and has vowed to continue with the project despite the
threat of legislature. See Republic of the Philippines, “RH Law
Implementation Continues Despite Budget Cut,” Official Gazette,
January 14, 2016.
For a comprehensive discussion of this problem especially as it
applies to the developing world, see Betsy Hartmann, Reproductive
Rights and Wrongs: The Global Politics of Population Control (Boston:
South End Press, 1999).
United Nations Population Fund, International Conference
on Population and Development Programme of Action: 20"
Anniversary (New York: United Nations, 2014), http://www.
tunfpa.org/publications/international-conference-population-and-
development-programme-action (last accessed February 13, 2017)
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, “World
Population Projected to Reach 9.7 Billion by 2050," July 29, 2015,
http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/news/population/2015-
report.html (last accessed March 8, 2017).
David E. Bloom and David Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes,” 8.
Food and Agriculture Organization, “How to Feed the World in
2050,” 2, http://www.fao. org/fileadmin/templates/wsfs/docs/expert
paper/How_to_Feed_the_World_in_2050.pdf (last accessed January
23, 2017).
Food and Agriculture Organization, “How to Feed the World in
2050,” 3.144 | Endnotes
x Bloom and Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes.” 11-12. Japan has
recently become the first country in history with an average age of
40. Japan is projected to have nearly one million centenarians (1%
of the population) by 2050. David E. Bloom and David Canning,
“Global Demographic Change: Dimensions and Economic
Significance,’ Harvard Initiative for Global Health Working Paper
Series, Program on the Global Demography of Aging, Working
Paper 1, April 2005, http://www.globalhealth.harvard.edu/
WorkingPapers.aspx (ast accessed January 8, 2017): 14,
182 Bloom and Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes,” 11.
vB. H. Farmer, “Perspectives on the Green Revolution in South Asia”
Modern Asian Studies 20, no. 1 (1986): 175-199. For an updated
discussion of the Green Revolution, see Gordon Conway, One Billion
Hungry: Can We Feed the World? (Ithaca and London: Cornell
University Press, 2012).
x Michael Herrmann, “Sustainable Development, Demography and
Sexual Reproductive Health: Inseparable Linkages and Their Policy
Implications,” Reproductive Health Matters 22, no. 43 (May 2014):
28-42.
us Bloom and Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes? 4,
136 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs
Population Division, “Abortion Politics and Reproductive Health
around the World; Economic and Social Affairs, 2014, 1, http://www.
tun.org/en/development/desa/population/publications/pdf/policy/
AbortionPoliciesReproductiveHealth.pdf (Iast accessed January 20,
2017).
187 Roser and Ortiz-Ospina, “World Population Growth” (last accessed
January 8, 2017).
ve Jocelyn E. Finlay, David Canning, and June Y.T: Po, “Reproductive
Health Laws around the World,” Harvard Program on the Global
Demography of Aging, Working Paper No. 96, October 2012,
17-18, https://www-hsph.harvard.edu/program-on-the-global-
demography-of-aging/ WorkingPapers/2012/PGDA_WP_96.pdf
(last accessed January 20, 2017).
uo Finla
y, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws around the
World” 22. A severe drought that made it extremely difficult for
large families to feed their children was equally a factor in the
Ghanaian government's decision to liberalize reproductive health
laws.
wo Finlay, Canning, an
World? 15.
ss: United Nations Dey
Population Divisior
around the World?
se Finlay, Canning, an
World? 7.
so Finlay, Canning, an
World? 20.
us Republic of the Phi
Despite Budget Cu
us Sharmila Parmana
Rights Legislation:
Transformation 2,
government of Pre
rights and has vow
threat of legislatur
Implementation C
January 14, 2016.
ue Fora comprehens
applies to the devi
Rights and Wrong
South End Press,
uw United Nations P.
on Population anc
‘Anniversary (New
unfpa.org/public
development-pro
ue United Nations L
Population Proje
http://www.un.o1
report.html (last
x David E. Bloom;
uo Food and Agricu
20507" 2, http://
paper/How_to_}
23, 2017).
ast Food and Agrict
20507 3.apan has
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ans (1%
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150
Endnotes | 145
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws around the
World?’ 15.
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs
Population Division, “Abortion Politics and Reproductive Health
around the World,” 6.
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws Around the
World? 7.
Finlay, Canning, and Po, “Reproductive Health Laws Around the
World? 20.
Republic of the Philippines, “RH Law Implementation Continues
Despite Budget Cut,” Official Gazette, January 14, 2016.
Sharmila Parmanand, “Mapping the Path to Philippine Reproductive
Rights Legislation: Signs of Progress amidst Obstacles,’ Social
Transformation 2, no. 1 (February 2014): 61-80. The current
government of President Rodrigo Duterte is pro-reproductive
rights and has vowed to continue with the project despite the
threat of legislature. See Republic of the Philippines, “RH Law
Implementation Continues Despite Budget Cut;’ Official Gazette,
January 14, 2016.
For a comprehensive discussion of this problem especially as it
applies to the developing world, see Betsy Hartmann, Reproductive
Rights and Wrongs: The Global Politics of Population Control (Boston:
South End Press, 1999).
United Nations Population Fund, International Conference
on Population and Development Programme of Action: 20"
“Anniversary (New York: United Nations, 2014), http://www.
‘unfpa.org/publications/international-conference-population-and-
development-programme-action (last accessed February 13, 2017)
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, “World
Population Projected to Reach 9.7 Billion by 2050,’ July 29, 2015,
http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/news/population/2015-
report.html (last accessed March 8, 2017).
David E. Bloom and David Canning, “Booms, Busts and Echoes,’ 8.
Food and Agriculture Organization, “How to Feed the World in
2050? 2, http://www-fao.org/fileadmin/templates/wsfs/docs/expert_
paper/How_to_Feed_the World_in_2050,pdf (last accessed January
23, 2017).
Food and Agriculture Organization, “How to Feed the World in
205073.$1 Endnotes
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3 Ibid, 272,
vt The World Bank, “Topics/Migration: Overview,” 2006, http://www.
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17 Ibid,, 57,
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There's no Easy
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articles/2016-06-16/anger-at-immigration-fuels-the-uks-brexit-
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