A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication
GLOBALIZATION THE ESSENTIALS GEORGE RITZER
Globalization
Globalization A Basic Text
George Ritzer
This balanced introduction draws on academic and popular sources to examine the major issues and events in the history of globalization.
Globalization: A Basic Text is a substantial introductory textbook, designed to work either on its own or alongside Readings in Globalization. The books are cross-referenced and are both structured around the core concepts of globalization.
2009 • 608 pages • 978-1-4051-3271-8 • paperback www.wiley.com/go/globalization
Readings in Globalization Key Readings and Major Debates
Edited by George Ritzer and Zeynep Atalay
This unique and engaging anthology introduces students to the major concepts of globalization within the context of the key debates and disputes.
Readings in Globalization illustrates that major debates in the fi eld are not only useful to examine for their own merit but can extend our knowledge of globalization. The volume explores both the political economy of globalization and the relationship of culture to globalization.
The volume is designed so it may be used independently, or alongside George Ritzer’s Globalization: A Basic Text for a complete student resource.
2010 • 560 pages • 978-1-4051-3273-2 • paperback
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A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication
GLOBALIZATION THE ESSENTIALS GEORGE RITZER
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ritzer, George. Globalization : the essentials / George Ritzer. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-470-65560-3 (hardcover : alk. paper) – ISBN 978-0-470-65561-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Globalization. I. Title. JZ1318.R5835 2011 303.48'2–dc22 2010042203
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CONTENTS
Preface xi
1 Globalization 1 Conceptualization, Origins, and History
Conceptualizing Globalization 3 From “Solids” to “Liquids” 3
“Flows” 7
“Heavy” and “Light” 8
“Heavy” Structures that Expedite “Flows” 10
“Heavy” Structures as Barriers to “Flows” 12
Subtler Structural Barriers 16
Origins and History of Globalization 17 Hardwired 17
Cycles 18
Epochs 18
Events 18
Broader, More Recent Changes 20
Chapter Summary 22
2 Theorizing Globalization 28
Imperialism 29 Colonialism 31 Development 32 Americanization 34
Anti-Americanism as a Global Process 36
Neo-Liberalism 37 Neo-Liberalism: Basic Ideas 40
The Neo-Liberal State 41
Critiquing Neo-Liberalism: Karl Polanyi 42
Contemporary Criticisms of Neo-Liberalism 44
Neo-Marxian Theories 45 Transnational Capitalism 45
Empire 47
Chapter Summary 49
3 Structuring the Global Economy 55
Before Bretton Woods 56 A Prior Epoch of Globalization 56
Contentsvi
Economic Development during and after WW II 57
Bretton Woods and the Bretton Woods System 58 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) 60
World Trade Organization (WTO) 61
International Monetary Fund (IMF) 61
World Bank 64
The End of Bretton Woods 66 Changes in, and Critiques of, Bretton-Woods-Era Organizations 67 Other Important Economic Organizations 72 The Multinational Corporation (MNC) 72 The Myth of Economic Globalization? 75 Chapter Summary 76
4 Global Economic Flows 81
Trade 82 Trade Surpluses and Defi cits 82
Global Trade: Economic Chains and Networks 82
Global Value Chains: China and the US 84
Scrap metal 84
Waste paper 85
T-shirts 86
iPhones 87
Increasing Competition for Commodities 88 The Economic Impact of the Flow of Oil 89
Oil Wealth 90
Race to the Bottom and Upgrading 91 Upgrading in the Less Developed World? 92
Outsourcing 93 Financial Globalization 95
The Great Recession 95
Consumption 98 Consumer Objects and Services 100
Consumers 100
Consumption Processes 101
Consumption Sites 101
Global Resistance 101
Chapter Summary 102
5 Global Political Structures and Processes 106
On Political Flows 107 The Nation-State 108
Threats to the Nation-State 109
Global fl ows 109
viiContents
International human rights 110
“Shadows of war” 111
In Defense of the Nation-State 111 “Imagined Community” 112 Changes in Global Nation-State Relations 114 United Nations (UN) 117
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) 118
United Nations Educational, Scientifi c, and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) 118
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) 118
Global Governance 119 Civil Society 121
International Non-Governmental Organizations (INGOs) 124
Chapter Summary 128
6 High-Tech Global Flows and Structures 133 Technology, Media, and the Internet
Technology 134 Medical Technologies 135
Space-Based Technologies 136
Leapfrogging 136
India’s “One Lakh Car” (or NANO) 138
Problematic Technological Flows 139
Media 139 Media Imperialism 139
“Media Were American” 140
New Global Media 141
Indymedia 142
Thinking about the Global Media 143
The Internet 145 Online Social Networking 146
Spam 147
Computer Viruses 147
The Internet in China 148
Chapter Summary 149
7 Global Culture and Cultural Flows 153
Cultural Differentialism 155 Civilizations 155
Cultural Hybridization 159 Muslim Girl Scouts 160
Appadurai’s “Landscapes” 161
Cultural Convergence 163
Contentsviii
Cultural Imperialism 163
Indian sari weavers 164
Deterritorialization 165
World Culture 165
McDonaldization 167
McDonaldization, expansionism, and globalization 169
Beyond fast food 170
The Globalization of Nothing 171
Cricket: local, glocal, or grobal? 173
Chapter Summary 174
8 Global Flows of Migrants 178
Migrants 179 Migration 180
Flows of Migrants to and from the US 183
Illegal Mexican migrants to the US 183
Migrants through Mexico and to the US 185
Increased law enforcement 185
Flow of Migrants Elsewhere in the World 187
Illegal immigrants in Europe 187
Great Britain 187
Switzerland 188
Greece 189
Illegal immigrants in Asia 190
The Case Against the Backlash to Illegal Immigration 191
Remittances 194
Diaspora 197
Chapter Summary 199
9 Global Environmental Flows 204
Differences Among Nation-States 207 Collapse 207 The Leading Environmental Problems 208
Destruction of Natural Habitats 208
Decline of Fish 208
Decline in Fresh Water 209
The paradox of bottled water 211
Toxic Chemicals 212
Greenhouse Gases and Global Warming 212
Rising seas 213
Global warming and health 214
Population Growth 215
The Global Flow of Dangerous Debris 215
ixContents
Global Responses 216 Sustainable Development 216
Dealing with Climate Change 218
Carbon Tax 219
Carbon Neutral 220
Alternate Fuels and Power Sources 220
Hybrid technology 220
Ethanol 221
Solar power 222
A Technological Fix? 222
Economic Issues 224
Opposing Environmentalism 224
Chapter Summary 225
10 Negative Global Flows and Processes 230 Dangerous Imports, Diseases, Crime, Terrorism, War
Dangerous Imports 232 Borderless Diseases 233
HIV/AIDS 234
Avian Flu 235
SARS 236
Ebola Virus 236
Tropical Diseases in Europe 237
Crime 237 Terrorism 242 War 247
Global Military Structures 249
Technology 249
Information War 250
Cyber-War 252
The Impact of Negative Global Flows on Individuals 253 Chapter Summary 254
11 Inequality 260
Global Inequality 261 “The Bottom Billion” 261
Migration 262
E-Waste and Inequality 263
Global Digital Divide 263
Race and Ethnicity and Gender 264 Race and Ethnicity 264
Gender 270
Gender and the economy 271
Contentsx
Global care chains 275
Traffi cking in the sex industry 276
Mail-order brides 277
Responding to and resisting global minority status: the case of women 277
Rural–Urban and Inequality 278 Rural 278
Urban 281
Cities: the main locus of global problems 283
Chapter Summary 284
12 Dealing with, Resisting, and the Future of, Globalization 291
Dealing with Globalization 292 Dealing with the Global Economy 292
Protectionism 293
Fair trade 295
Helping the “bottom billion” 298
Dealing with Political Globalization 299
Accountability 299
Transparency 299
Transparency International (TI) 300
Resisting Globalization 301 Local Resistance 304
A Social Movement? 305
More Formal Social Movements 306
World Social Forum and Cyberactivism 306
Is the Resistance to Globalization Signifi cant? 308
The Futures of Globalization 309 A “Mad Max” Scenario 311
Chapter Summary 312
Glossary 317 Index 322
PREFACE
Globalization: The Essentials is an abbreviated version of Globalization: A Basic Text (2010). While the latter is designed as a full - scale textbook for a course on global- ization, this volume is considerably shorter. It can still be used as a text in such a course, but its comparative brevity enables the instructor to assign other books, as well. In addition, it can be used as a supplementary book in a variety of other courses in sociology and the social sciences. As the title suggests, this volume retains the essential elements of the original text. Four chapters, the Appendix and various other portions of the text have been deleted from Globalization: A Basic Text to create this volume. That material is, of course, important, but hard decisions had to be made about what to cut and not to cut. It is my belief that this shorter text continues to deliver what is most important to a fundamental understanding of this most important process of our day and in the foreseeable future.
CHAPTER
1 Globalization Conceptualization, Origins, and History
Conceptualizing Globalization ■ From “ Solids ” to “ Liquids ” ■ “ Flows ” ■ “ Heavy ” and “ Light ” ■ “ Heavy ” Structures that Expedite “ Flows ” ■ “ Heavy ” Structures as Barriers to “ Flows ” ■ Subtler Structural Barriers
Origins and History of Globalization ■ Hardwired ■ Cycles ■ Epochs ■ Events ■ Broader, More Recent Changes
Chapter Summary
Globalization: The Essentials, by George Ritzer © 2011 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
Globalization2
Globalization is increasingly omnipresent. We are living in a – or even the – “ global age ” (Albrow 1996 ). Globalization is clearly a very important change; it can even be argued (Bauman 2003 ) that it is the most important change in human history . This is refl ected in many domains, but particularly in social relationships and social structures, especially those that are widely dispersed geo- graphically. “ In the era of globalization … shared humanity face[s] the most fateful of the many fateful steps ” it has made in its long history (Bauman 2003 : 156, italics added).
The following is the defi nition of globalization to be used in this book (note that all of the italicized terms will be discussed in this chapter and will inform the remainder of this book):
globalization is a transplanetary process or set of processes involving increasing liquidity and the growing multi - directional fl ows of people, objects, places and information as well as the structures they encounter and create that are barriers to, or expe- dite , those fl ows …
In contrast to many other defi nitions of globalization, this one does not assume that greater integration is an inevitable component of globalization. That is, global- ization can bring with it greater integration (especially when things fl ow easily), but it can also serve to reduce the level of integration (when structures are erected that successfully block fl ows).
A term that is closely related to globalization is transnationalism (Morawska 2007 ), or “ proc- esses that interconnect individuals and social groups across specifi c geo - political borders ” (Giulianotti and Robertson 2007 : 62). A related concept is transnationality , or “ the rise of new communities and formation of new social iden- tities and relations that cannot be defi ned through the traditional reference point of nation - states ” (Robinson 2007 : 1199 – 201).
Globalization and transnationalism are often used interchangeably, but transna- tionalism is clearly a more delimited process than globalization. Transnationalism is limited to interconnections that cross geo - political borders, especially those asso- ciated with two, or more, nation - states. An example is Mexican immigrants in the US sending remittances home to family members in Mexico. Globalization includes such connections, but is not restricted to them and encompasses a far wider range of transplanetary processes (e.g. direct relationships between people in many places in the world networking via the Internet). Further, geo - political borders are only one of the barriers encountered, and often overcome, by globalization. Some phe- nomena, labor unions for example, are better thought of as transnational than as global. That is, the relationship between labor unions in, for example, the US and Sweden is more important than are moves toward a global labor movement.
Globalization : Transplanetary process(es) involving increasing liquidity and growing multi - directional fl ows as well as the structures they encounter and create.
Transnationalism : Processes that interconnect individuals and social groups across specifi c geo - political borders.
Transnationality : Rise of new communi- ties and formation of new social identities and relations that cannot be defi ned as nation - states.
3Globalization
Transnationalism is most often used in thinking about, and research on, immi- grants who move from one country to another, but who continue to be involved in various ways with the country from which they came (Portes 2001 ).
The case of baseball is useful in clarifying the distinction between globalization and transnationalism (Kelly 2007 : 79 – 93). Baseball is a transnational sport because many of its fundamentals – techniques, strategies, etc. – and players have circulated across the borders of a small number of nations, especially Japan, Taiwan, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and, of course, the US. However, it is not global because it has not fl owed on a transplanetary basis to a large portion of the world.
In contrast, soccer would be much more clearly a global sport because it exists in virtually every area of the world. For example, over 200 of the world ’ s nations are members of a global organization, the F é d é ration Internationale de Football Association (FIFA). Another example of globalization in the realm of sports is the summer (and winter) Olympics, sponsored by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), in which about the same number of nations participate.
CONCEPTUALIZING GLOBALIZATION
In spite of the focus in this book on globalization, there are many scholars who do not accept the idea. Nevertheless, this book embraces, and operates from, a “ glo- balist ” perspective (Hirst and Thompson 1999 ) – globalization is a reality. Debates about globalization are one of the reasons that there is undoubtedly no topic today more diffi cult to get one ’ s head around, let alone to master, than globalization. However, of far greater importance is the sheer magnitude, diversity, and complex- ity of the process of globalization which involves almost everyone, everything, and every place, in innumerable ways. (The concept of globality refers to the condition [in this case omnipresence] resulting from the process of globalization [Scholte 2004 : 102 – 10].)
Before proceeding to the next section, a note is needed on the use of metaphors (Brown 1989 ), which will occupy a prominent place in the ensuing discussion. A metaphor involves the use of one term to help us better understand another term. Thus, in the next section, we will use the metaphor of a “ solid ” to describe epochs before the era of globalization. Similarly, the global world will be described as being “ liquid. ” The use of such metaphors is designed to give the reader a better and a more vivid sense of the global age and how it differs from prior epochs.
From “ Solids ” to “ Liquids ”
Prior to the current epoch of globalization (as we will see in the second part of this chapter, most observers believe that there was a previous epoch, if not many
Globality : Omnipresence of the process of globalization.
Metaphors : Use of one term to help us better understand another.
Globalization4
previous epochs, of globalization), it could be argued that one of the things that characterized people, things, information, places, and much else was their greater solidity . That is, all of them tended to be hard or to harden (metaphorically, fi gu- ratively, not literally, of course) over time and therefore, among other things, to remain largely in place. As a result, people either did not go anywhere or they did not venture very far from where they were born and raised; their social relationships
were restricted to those who were nearby. Much the same could be said of most objects (tools, food, and so on), which tended to be used where they were produced. The solidity of most ma- terial manifestations of information – stone
tablets, newspapers, magazines, books, and so on – also made them at least some- what diffi cult to move very far. Furthermore, since people didn ’ t move very far, neither did information. Places were not only quite solid and immoveable, but they tended to confront solid natural (mountains, rivers, oceans) and humanly con- structed (walls, gates) barriers that made it diffi cult for people and things to exit or to enter.
Above all, solidity describes a world in which barriers exist and are erected to prevent the free movement of all sorts of things. It was the nation - state that was most likely to create these “ solid ” barriers (for example, walls [e.g. the Great Wall of China; the wall between Israel and the West Bank], border gates and guards), and the state itself grew increasingly solid as it resisted change. For much of the twentieth century this was epitomized by the Soviet Union and its satellite states which sought to erect any number of barriers in order to keep all sorts of things out and in (especially a disaffected population). With the passage of time, the Soviet Union grew increasingly sclerotic. The best example of this solidity was the erection (beginning in 1961), and maintenance, of the Berlin Wall in order to keep East Berliners in and Western infl uences out. There was a more fl uid relationship between East and West Berlin prior to the erection of the Wall, but that fl uidity was seen in the East as being disadvantageous, even dangerous. Once the Wall was erected, relations between West and East Berlin were virtually frozen in place – they solidifi ed – and there was comparatively little movement of anything between them.
The Wall, together with East Germany and the Soviet Union, is long gone and with it many of the most extreme forms of solidity brought into existence by the Cold War. Nonetheless, solid structures remain – e.g. the nation - state and its border and customs controls – and there are ever - present calls for the creation of new, and new types of, solid structures. Thus, in many parts of Europe there are demands for more barriers to legal and illegal immigration. This has reached an extreme in the US with concern over illegal Mexican (and other Latin American) immigration leading to the erection of an enormous fence between the two countries. Thus, solidity is far from dead in the contemporary world. It is very often the case that demands for new forms of solidity are the result of increased fl uidity. However, a strong case can, and will, be made that it is fl uidity that is more characteristic of today ’ s world, especially in terms of globalization.
Solidity : People, things, information, and places “ harden ” over time and therefore have limited mobility.
5Globalization
Of course, people were never so solid that they were totally immobile or stuck completely in a given place (a few people were able to escape East Berlin in spite of the Wall and many will be able to enter the US illegally even when the fence on the Mexican border is completed), and this was especially true of the elite members of any society. Elites were (and are) better able to move about and that ability increased with advances in transportation technology. Commodities, especially those created for elites, also could almost always be moved and they, too, grew more moveable as technologies advanced. Information (because it was not solid, although it could be solidifi ed in the form of, for example, a book) could always travel more easily than goods or people (it could be spread by word of mouth over great distances even if the originator of the information could not move very far; it moved even faster as more advanced communication technologies emerged [telegraph, tele- phone, the Internet]). And as other technologies developed (ships, automobiles, airplanes), people, especially those with the resources, were better able to leave places and get to others. They could even literally move places (or at least parts of them), as, for example, when in the early 1800s Lord Elgin dismantled parts of the Parthenon in Greece and transported them to London, where to this day they can be found in the British Museum.
However, at an increasing rate over the last few centuries, and especially in the last several decades, that which once seemed so solid has tended to “ melt ” and become increasingly liquid . Instead of thinking of people, objects, information, and places as being like solid blocks of ice, they need to be seen as tending, in recent years, to melt and as becoming increasingly liquid. It is, needless to say, far more diffi cult to move blocks of ice than the water that is produced when those blocks melt. Of course, to extend the metaphor, there continue to exist blocks of ice, even glaciers (although even these are now literally melting), in the contemporary world that have not melted, at least not completely. Solid material realities (people, cargo, newspapers) continue to exist, but because of a wide range of technological devel- opments (in transportation, communication, the Internet, and so on) they can move across the globe far more readily. Everywhere we turn, more things, including ourselves, are becoming increasingly liquefi ed.
Karl Marx opened the door to this kind of analysis (and to the use of such meta- phors) when he famously argued that because of the nature of capitalism as an economic system “ everything solid melts into air. ” That is, many of the solid, ma- terial realities that preceded capitalism (e.g. the structures of feudalism) were “ melted ” by it and were transformed into liquids. However, while Marx was describ- ing a largely destructive process, the point here is that the new liquids that are being created are inherent parts of the new world and are radically transforming it. In the process, they are having both constructive and destructive effects (Schumpeter 1976 ).
Marx ’ s insight of over a century - and - a - half ago was not only highly prescient, but is far truer today than in Marx ’ s day. In fact, it is far truer than he could ever have imagined. Furthermore, that melting, much like one of the great problems in the global world today – the melting of the ice on and near the North and South
Globalization6
poles as a result of global warming (see Chapter 9 ) – is not only likely to continue in the coming years, but to increase at an exponential rate. Indeed, the melting of the polar icecaps can be seen as another metaphor for the increasing fl uidity associ- ated with globalization, especially its problematic aspects. And, make no mistake, the increasing fl uidity associated with globalization presents both great opportuni- ties and great dangers.
Thus, the perspective on globalization presented here, following the work of Zygmunt Bauman (2000, 2003, 2005, 2006) , is that it involves, above all else, increasing liquidity (Lakoff 2008 : 277 – 300). Several of Bauman ’ s ideas on liquidity are highly relevant to the perspective on globalization employed here.
For example, liquid phenomena do not easily, or for long, hold their shape. Thus, the myriad liquid phenomena associated with globalization are hard - pressed to maintain any particular form and, even if they acquire a form, it is likely to change quite quickly.
Liquid phenomena fi x neither space nor time. That which is liquid is, by defi ni- tion, opposed to any kind of fi xity, be it spatial or temporal. This means that the spatial and temporal aspects of globalization are in continuous fl ux. That which is liquid is forever ready to change whatever shape (space) it might take on momen- tarily. Time (however short) in a liquid world is more important than space. Perhaps the best example of this is global fi nance, where little or nothing (dollars, gold) actually changes its place (at least immediately), but time is of the essence in that the symbolic representations of money move instantaneously and great profi ts can be made or lost in split - second decisions on fi nancial transactions.
Liquid phenomena not only move easily, but once they are on the move they are diffi cult to stop. This is exemplifi ed in many areas, such as foreign trade, invest- ment, and global fi nancial transactions (Polillo and Guillen 2005 : 1764 – 802), the globality of transactions and interactions (e.g. on Facebook, Twitter [Clive Thompson 2008 : 42ff.]) on the Internet, and the diffi culty in halting the global fl ow of drugs, pornography, the activities of organized crime, and illegal immigrants.
Finally, and perhaps most importantly, that which is liquid tends to melt what- ever stands it its path (especially solids). This is clearest in the case of the much discussed death, or at least decline, of the nation - state and its borders in the era of increasing global fl ows (see Chapter 5 ). According to Cartier ( 2001 : 269), the “ forces of globalization have rendered many political boundaries more porous to fl ows of people, money, and things. ”
It is clear that if one wanted to use a single term to think about globalization today, liquidity (as well as the closely related idea of fl ows) would be at or near the top of the list. That is not to say that there are no solid structures in the world – after all, we still live in a modern world, even if it is late modernity, and modernity has long been associated with solidity. And it does not mean that there is not a constant interplay between liquidity and solidity, with increases in that which is liquid (e.g. terrorist attacks launched against Israel from the West Bank during the
Liquidity : Increasing ease of movement of people, things, information, and places in the global age.
7Globalization
Intifada) leading to counter - reactions involving the erection of new solid forms (e.g. that fence between Israel and the West Bank), but at the moment and for the foreseeable future, the momentum lies with increasing and proliferating global liquidity.
“ Flows ”
Closely related to the idea of liquidity, and integral to it, is another key concept in thinking about globalization, the idea of fl ows (Appadurai 1996 ; Rey and Ritzer 2010 ); after all liquids fl ow easily, far more easily than solids. In fact, it is the concept of fl ows that is widely used in the literature on globalization and it is the concept that will inform a good deal of the body of this book.
Because so much of the world has “ melted, ” or is in the process of “ melting, ” and has become liquefi ed, globalization is increasingly characterized by great fl ows of increasingly liquid phenomena of all types, including people, objects, information, decisions, places, and so on. For example, foods of all sorts increasingly fl ow around the world, including sushi globalized from its roots in Japan (Bestor 2005 : 13 – 20), Chilean produce now ubiquitous in the US market (and elsewhere) (Goldfrank 2005 : 42 – 53), Indian food in San Francisco (and throughout much of the world) (Mankekar 2005 : 197 – 214), and so on. In many cases, the fl ows have become raging fl oods that are increasingly less likely to be impeded by, among others, place - based barriers of any kind, including the oceans, mountains, and especially the borders of nation - states. This was demonstrated once again in late 2008 in the spread of the American credit and fi nancial crisis to Europe (and elsewhere): “ In a global fi nancial system, national borders are porous ” (Landler 2008 : C1).
Looking at a very different kind of fl ow, many people in many parts of the world believe that they are being swamped by migrants, especially poor illegal migrants (Moses 2006 ). Whether or not these are actually fl oods, they have come to be seen in that way by many people, often aided by politicians and media personalities in many countries who have established their reputations by portraying them in that way.
Undoubtedly because of their immateriality, ideas, images, and information, both legal (blogs) and illegal (e.g. child pornography), fl ow (virtually) everywhere through interpersonal contact and the media, especially now via the Internet.
Decisions of all sorts fl ow around the world, as well as over time: “ The effect of the [economic] decisions fl owed, and would continue to fl ow, through every possible conduit. Some decisions would be refl ected in products rolling off assembly lines, others in prices of securities, and still others in personal interactions. Each decision would cascade around the world and then forward through time ” (Altman 2007 : 255).
Even places can be said to be fl owing around the world as, for example, immi- grants re - create the places from which they came in new locales (e.g. Indian and
Flows : Movement of people, things, information, and places due, in part, to the increasing porosity of global barriers.
Globalization8
Pakistani enclaves in London). Furthermore, places (e.g. airports, shopping malls) themselves have become increasingly like fl ows (for more on this and the transition from “ spaces of places ” to “ spaces of fl ows ” see Castells 1996 ).
Even with all of this increasing fl uidity, much of what would have been consid- ered the height of global liquidity only a few decades, or even years, ago now seems increasingly sludge - like. This is especially the case when we focus on the impact of the computer and the Internet on the global fl ow of all sorts of things. Thus, not long ago we might have been amazed by our ability to order a book from Amazon. com and receive it via an express package delivery system in as little as a day. That method, however, now seems to operate at a snail ’ s pace compared to the ability to download that book in minutes on Amazon ’ s Kindle system (a wireless reading device to which books and other reading matter can be downloaded).
“ Heavy ” and “ Light ”
There is another set of conceptual distinctions, or metaphors, that are useful in thinking about globalization. In addition to the change from solids to liquids, we can also think in terms of change that involves movement from that which is heavy to that which is light (this is another distinction traceable to the work of Zygmunt Bauman).
The original Gutenberg bible (in mid - fi fteenth - century Germany) was usually published in two volumes, ran to close to 1,400 pages, and was printed on very heavy paper or vellum. It was in every sense of the term a heavy tome (almost like the one you are now reading), diffi cult, because of its sheer weight and bulk, to transport. Fast forward to 2006 and a much lighter bound copy of the bible could easily be purchased from Amazon.com and transported in days via express mail virtually anywhere in the world. By 2007 that bible had become weightless since it could be downloaded using the Kindle system.
More generally, it could be argued that both pre - industrial and industrial societies were quite “ heavy, ” that is, characterized by that which is diffi cult to move. This applies to those who labored in them (e.g. peasants, farmers, factory workers), where they labored (plots of land, farms, factories), and what they pro- duced (crops, machines, books, automobiles). Because of their heaviness, workers tended to stay put, and what they produced (and what was not consumed locally) could be moved, especially great distances, only with great effort and at great expense. Later advances, especially in technology, made goods, people, and places “ lighter, ” easier to move. These included advances in both transportation and technology that made all sorts of industrial products smaller, lighter, and easier to transport (compare the netbook computer of today to the room - size computer of the mid - twentieth century).
Karin Knorr Cetina ( 2005 : 215) has written about what she calls “ complex global microstructures, ” or “ structures of connectivity and integration that are global in scope but microsociological in character. ” She has described fi nancial markets (Knorr Cetina and Bruegger 2002 : 905 – 50) in these terms and, more recently, global
9Globalization
terrorist organizations such as al - Qaeda. We will have more to say about these global microstructures (see Chapter 10 ), but the key point here is that while Knorr Cetina sees these global microstructures as having several characteristics, of primary importance is their “ lightness ” in comparison to “ heavy ” bureaucratic systems. Thus, unlike the armed forces of the United States, al - Qaeda is not a heavy bureau- cratic structure, but rather a light “ global microstructure. ” It is al - Qaeda ’ s (as well as the Taliban ’ s in Afghanistan) lightness that gives it many advantages over the extremely cumbersome US military, and the huge bureaucracy of which it is part, and this helps account, at least so far, for the latter ’ s inability to suppress al - Qaeda or to catch Osama bin Laden.
It could be argued that we moved from the heavy to the light era in the past century or two. However, by about 1980, we can be said to have moved beyond both of those epochs. We are now in an era that is increasingly defi ned not just by lightness, but by something approaching weightlessness. That which is weightless, or nearly so, clearly moves far more easily (even globally) than that which is either heavy or light. The big changes here involved the arrival and expansion of cable and satellite television, satellite radio, cell phones, PDAs, and, most importantly, the personal computer and the advent of the Internet (and networking sites such as Twitter). It is with the personal computer and the Internet that globalization reaches new heights in terms of the fl ow of things and of social relationships, in large part because they, and everything else, have approached weightlessness.
An excellent example of this can be found in the world of music. Vinyl records were quite heavy and the shift to cassettes and later CDs did not make music much lighter. However, the creation of advanced technologies such as iPods and cell phones allows us to carry around thousands of once very heavy albums in our pockets. We can carry that music with us anywhere in the world and we can exchange music over the Internet with people around the globe.
Of course, there are still many heavy things in our increasingly weightless world. Factories, offi ces, buildings, large and cumbersome machines (including MRI machines), newspapers, hardback books, and even some people (made “ heavy ” by, for example, minority status, poverty, a lack of education) continue to exist. All, of course, are nevertheless being globalized to some degree in one way or another, but their weightiness makes that process more cumbersome and diffi cult for them. For example, the global parcel delivery systems (e.g. FedEx) have become very effi cient, but they still need to transport a physical product over great distances. Clearly, that process is still quite weighty, in comparison to, say, the downloading of weightless movies from Netfl ix (a website that began by allowing members to receive heavier DVDs via snail - mail). In fact, of course, it is increasingly the case that that which is weightless (e.g. iTunes and downloadable music in general, downloadable movies, blogs) is destroying that which is comparatively heavy (e.g. the CD, the DVD, newspapers).
The ideas of increasing liquidity and weightlessness being employed here do not require that the world be “ fl at ” or be considered as such (Friedman 2005 ). Fluids
Globalization10
can seep through all sorts of tall and wide structures and, in the case of a fl ood, those structures can even be washed away (as was the Berlin Wall, for example, and more metaphorically, the Iron Curtain), at least temporarily. Further, that which is weightless can waft over and between the tallest and widest structures. Thus, the world today is increasingly characterized by liquidity and weightlessness, but it is not necessarily any fl atter than it ever was. Those tall, wide structures continue to be important, especially in impeding (or attempting to impede) the movement of that which is solid and heavy. It is less clear how successful these structures will be in impeding that which is liquid, light, or weightless.
The most obvious of such structures are the borders (Crack 2007 : 341 – 54; Rumford 2007 : 327 – 39) between nation - states and the fact that in recent years we have witnessed the strengthening (heightening, lengthening, etc.) of many of those borders. Similarly, the Chinese government has sought to restrict the access of its citizens to at least some aspects of the Internet that the government feels are dan- gerous to its continued rule. The electronic barrier that the government has con- structed is known as the “ Great Firewall ” (French 2008 : A1, A6). (A fi rewall is a barrier on the Internet; the idea of the “ Great Firewall ” plays off China ’ s Great Wall.)
The huge “ digital divide ” in the world today (Drori and Jang 2003 : 144 – 61), especially between North and South, is another example of a barrier. The relative absence in the South of computers and the supporting infrastructure (telephone and broadband connections) needed for a computerized world creates an enormous barrier between the North and the South. In terms of computerization, the world may be increasingly fl at (although certainly not totally fl at) among and between the countries in the North, but it has many hills in the South and huge and seemingly insurmountable mountain ranges continue to separate the North from the South.
The history of the social world and social thought and research leads us to the conclusion that people, as well as their representatives in the areas in which they live, have always sought to erect structural barriers to protect and advance them- selves, and to adversely affect others, and it seems highly likely that they will continue to do so. Thus, we may live in a more liquefi ed, more weightless, world, but we do not live in a fl at world and are not likely to live in one any time soon, if ever. Even a successful capitalist, George Soros, acknowledges this, using yet another metaphor,
in his analysis of economic globalization when he argues: “ The global capitalist system has pro- duced a very uneven playing fi eld ” (Soros 2000 : xix, italics added).
“ Heavy ” Structures that Expedite “ Flows ”
The liquefaction of the social world, as well as its increasing weightlessness, is only part of the story of globalization. As pointed out already, another major part is the fact that many heavy, material, objective structures continue to exist and to be created in the globalized world. Some are holdovers from the pre - global world, but
Economic globalization : Growing economic linkages at the global level.
11Globalization
others are actually produced, intentionally or unintentionally, by global forces. In studying globalization we must look at both all of that which fl ows (or “ wafts ” ) with increasing ease, as well as all of the structures that impede or block those fl ows (see below for more on these) as well as serve to expedite and channel those fl ows. To put it another way, we must look at both that which is light and weightless and that which is solid and heavy and that greatly affects their fl ow in both a positive and a negative sense (Inda and Rosaldo 2008 : 29).
For example, there are various “ routes ” or “ paths ” that can be seen as structures that serve both to expedite fl ows along their length, as well as to limit fl ows that occur outside their confi nes.
• Intercontinental airlines generally fl y a limited number of well - defi ned routes (say between New Delhi and London) rather than fl ying whatever route the pilots wish and thereby greatly increasing the possibility of mid - air collisions.
• Illegal immigrants from Mexico have, at least until recently, generally followed a relatively small number of well - worn paths into the US. Indeed, they often need to pay smugglers large sums of money and the smugglers generally follow the routes that have worked for them (and others) in the past.
• Goods of all sorts are generally involved in rather well - defi ned “ supply chains ” (see Chapter 4 for a discussion of this concept) as they are exported from some countries and imported into others.
• Illegal products – e.g. counterfeit drugs – follow oft - trod paths en route from their point of manufacture (often China), through loosely controlled free - trade zones (e.g. in Dubai), through several intermediate countries, to their ultimate destination, often the US, where they are frequently obtained over the Internet (Bogdanich 2007 : A1, A6).
Then there are an increasing number of formal and informal “ bridges ” (Anner and Evans 2004 : 34 – 47) created throughout the globe that expedite the fl ow of all sorts of things. This idea applies perhaps best to the passage of people across borders legally through the process of migration (Sassen 2007 : 788 – 95). It is clear that in the not - too - distant past there were many structural barriers to the fl ow of people. There are even a few places in the world today where this remains true – e.g. between the US and Cuba. However, with the end of the Cold War, there are now many bridges for people (and products) to cross openly not only between the countries of the old East and West, but also among and between virtually every country and region of the world. However, illegal migrants are likely to need to be more covert in their movements. All sorts of illegal products are also less likely to move openly across such “ bridges ” where they would be highly visible to the authorities. Thus, there are also more hidden structures that permit movement of illegal people and products.
It is also the case that an increasing number of people, perhaps nearly everyone, are involved in, and affected by, global relations and fl ows and personally partici- pate in global networks (Singh Grewal 2008 ) of one kind or another (networks of communication and information technology, interpersonal networks involving
Globalization12
individuals and groups). While global networks span the globe (e.g. cables under the oceans that permit transoceanic communication [Yuan 2006 : A1]), or at least much of it, there are other types of networks including transnational (those that pass through the boundaries of nation - states [Portes 2001 : 181 – 93]), international (those that involve two or more nation - states), national (those that are bounded by the nation - state), and local (those that exist at the sub - national level) (Mann 2007 : 472 – 96). Networks can expedite the fl ow of innumerable things, but they are perhaps best - suited to the fl ow of information (Connell and Crawford 2005 : 5 – 26). People involved in networks can communicate all sorts of information to one another in various ways – telephone calls, snail - mail, e - mail, blogs, social network- ing websites, and so on. These networks have revolutionized and greatly expanded the global fl ow of information. As with all other structures, such networks can be blocked in various ways (e.g. the “ Great Firewall ” ).
All sorts of networks have been made possible by the Internet. The Internet can be seen as being of enormous importance in allowing information of various sorts to fl ow in innumerable directions. One important example involves the formation of the networks that became and constitute the alter - globalization move- ment (see Chapter 12 ). This movement (as well as its various political actions, most notably the anti - WTO [World Trade Organization] protests in Seattle in 1999 [Smith 2001 : 1 – 20]), like much else in the world today (e.g. Barack Obama ’ s suc- cessful 2008 presidential campaign), was made possible by the Internet (Juris 2008 : 353 – 4).
Finally, it is not only individuals who are increasingly involved in networks. An increasing number of social structures (e.g. states, cities, law) and social institutions (the family, religion, sport) are interconnected on a global basis and these, too, enable and enhance global fl ows. For example, the international banking system has an infrastructure that facilitates the global movement of funds among a network of banks. Included in that infrastructure are IBANs (International Bank Account Numbers), rules, norms, and procedures on how such money transfers are to occur, and a highly sophisticated technical language that allows those in the business to communicate with one another wherever they are in the world. Another example involves global (Sassen 1991 ) and world cities (Marcuse and van Kempen 2000 ) that are increasingly interconnected with one another directly rather than through the nation - states in which they happen to exist (see Chapter 11 ). The fi nancial markets of the global cities of New York, London, and Tokyo are tightly linked, with the result that all sorts of fi nancial products fl ow among them and at lightning speed. More generally, in this context, we can talk in terms of the “ global economy ’ s connectedness ” (Altman 2007 : 255).
“ Heavy ” Structures as Barriers to “ Flows ”
While there is no question that the world is increasingly characterized by greater liquidity and increased fl ows, as well as various structures that expedite those fl ows, we also need to recognize that there are limits and barriers to those fl ows. The world
13Globalization
is not just in process, there are also many material structures (trade agreements, regulatory agencies, borders, customs barriers, standards, and so on) in existence. As Inda and Rosaldo ( 2008 : 31) argue: “ Material infrastructures do not only promote mobility. … They also hinder and block it. ” Any thoroughgoing account of globalization needs to look at both fl ows and structures and, in terms of the latter, the ways in which they both produce and enhance fl ows as well as alter and even block them. In other words, there is interplay between fl ows and structures, especially between fl ows and the structures that are created in an attempt to inhibit or stop them. As Shamir ( 2005 : 197 – 217) puts it, globalization is an epoch of increased openness and “ simultaneously an era of growing restrictions on movement. ” Borders, of course, are major points at which movement is blocked. There are many examples of this including the toughening of border controls in France (and elsewhere in Europe) because of growing hostility to refugees (Fassin 2008 : 212 – 34).
There are challenges to the idea that all there is to globalization is fl ows and fl uidity (Tsing 2000 : 327 – 60). In examining global fl ows (some of which have been anticipated above), we also need to consider those agents who “ carve ” the channels through which things fl ow, those who alter those channels over time, national and regional units that create and battle over fl ows, and coalitions of claimants for control over channels.
A focus on the above kinds of agents and structures, rather than fl ows, promises a more critical orientation to globalization in terms of the structures themselves, as well as in terms of who creates the structures through which things fl ow and who does and does not control and profi t from them.
The idea of fl ows is criticized for other reasons, as well. For example, there is a kind of timelessness to the idea of fl ows and, as a result, it implies that they are likely to continue well into the future and there is little or nothing that can be done to stop them. This implies that everyone – scientists and businesspeople who profi t from fl ows, as well as those at the margins of those fl ows and perhaps even those hurt by them – is swept up in the same processes. The focus on fl ows tends to com- municate a kind of enthusiasm for them and the erroneous idea that virtually everyone benefi ts from fl ows of all types.
Also important in this context is what has been called “ awkward connections ” (Inda and Rosaldo 2008 : 31). While the idea of global fl ows and fl uids communi- cates a sense of total and uniform connectedness, we know that this is simply not the case and that in many places in the world, especially those that are less devel- oped, there are awkward connections (e.g. being restricted to slow and unreliable dial - up connections to the Internet), as well as no connections at all (no Internet service of any kind).
A similar idea is “ frictions, ” or the “ awkward, unequal, unstable … interconnec- tion across difference ” (Lowenhaupt Tsing 2005 : 4). The key point is that the global fl ows that create interconnections do not move about smoothly; they do not move about without creating friction. Friction gets in the way of the smooth operation of global fl ows. However, friction not only slows fl ows down, it can also serve to
Globalization14
keep them moving and even speed them up. Highways can have this double - edged quality by both limiting where people and vehicles can go while at the same time making movement “ easier and more effi cient ” (Lowenhaupt Tsing 2005 : 6). More generally, “ global connections [are] made, and muddied, in friction ” (Lowenhaupt Tsing 2005 : 272). The key point in this context is that fl ows themselves produce friction that can slow or even stop global fl ows: “ without even trying friction gets in the way of the smooth operation of global power. Difference can disrupt, causing everyday malfunctions as well as unexpected cataclysms. Friction refuses the lie that global power operates as a well - oiled machine. Furthermore, difference sometimes inspires insurrection. Friction can be the fl y in the elephant ’ s nose ” (Lowenhaupt Tsing 2005 : 6). A prime example of this today is the many frictions being produced in many parts of the world by large numbers of legal and illegal immigrants (e.g. the millions of migrants from Zimbabwe who have fl ed to South Africa eliciting violent reactions from South Africans who feel threatened by, and resent, them) ( Economist 2008 : May 22).
As has already been mentioned, the most important and most obvious barriers to global fl ows are those constructed by nation - states. There are borders, gates, guards, passport controls, customs agents, health inspectors, and so on, in most countries in the world. (The great exception is the countries that are part of the European Union [EU] where barriers to movement among and between member countries have been greatly reduced, if not eliminated. The EU is a kind of structure that allows people and products to move much more freely and much more quickly. At the same time, it serves to reduce the need to use hidden channels since there is far less need to conceal what is moving among and between EU countries.) Although many people (illegal immigrants) and things (contraband goods) do get through those barriers, some of them are successfully blocked or impeded by them. However, it is far more diffi cult to erect barriers against many newer phe- nomena, especially the non - material phenomena associated with cell phones and the Internet.
Specifi c examples of barriers created by the nation - state involve blocking eco- nomic transactions that it regards as not in the national interest. For example, in 2006 the US government blocked a deal in which a Dubai company was to purchase an American company involved in the business of running America ’ s ports ( Economist 2006 : March 10). The government felt that such ownership would be a threat to national security since foreign nationals, perhaps enemies, could acquire information that would allow terrorists easy entr é e to the ports. In another example, in early 2008 the US government blocked an effort by a Chinese company to pur- chase (in conjunction with an American private equity fi rm) an American company (3Com) that, among other things, manufactured software that prevented hacking into military computers (Weisman 2008 : C1 – C4).
However, many of the barriers created by nation - states that we assume are, or can be, successful do not in fact deal with the fl ows they are supposed to stem. It remains to be seen whether the new fence between Mexico and the US can reduce the fl ow of illegal immigrants to the US. Similarly, it is not clear that the wall
15Globalization
between Israel and the West Bank will stop the fl ow of terrorists into Israel if (when?) hostilities in the Middle East fl are up yet again.
There are many different kinds of organizations that, while they may expedite fl ows for some, create all sorts of barriers for others. Nation - states are, in fact, one such organization and they (generally) work to the advantage of their own citizens (and their fl ows as well as the fl ows of things important to them) in many different ways while creating many roadblocks for those from other countries. For example, nation - states create protectionist (Reuveny and Thompson 2001 : 229 – 49) tariff systems that help their own farms, corporations, and so on to succeed by making the products of their foreign competitors more expensive. That is, the tariffs help the fl ow of products from a nation - state ’ s own farms and manufacturers while inhibiting the fl ow into the country from its foreign competition.
Corporate organizations, say a multinational corporation like Toyota, are devoted to optimizing the fl ow of their automobiles to all possible markets through- out the world. They also seek to compete with and out - perform other multinational corporations in the automobile business. If they are successful, the fl ow of automo- biles from those corporations is greatly reduced, further advantaging Toyota.
Labor unions are also organizations devoted to the fl ow of some things while working against the fl ow of others (Bronfenbrenner 2007 ). Unions often oppose, for example, the fl ow of illegal immigrants because they are likely to work for lower pay and fewer (if any) benefi ts (e.g. health insurance) than indigenous, unionized workers. Similarly, they oppose the fl ow of goods produced in non - union shops in other countries (and their own) since the success of the latter would adversely affect the shops that are unionized and that, in turn, would hurt the union and its members.
While organizations of many types, including nation - states, corporations, and labor unions, serve as structures that can operate against global fl ows, the fact is that there are signs that many organizations are changing and are themselves becoming more fl uid and increasingly open.
One of the roots of this change is open - sourcing and the Internet. The best - known example of open - sourcing is Linux, a free computer - operating system. Anyone in the world with the needed skills can make changes in, and contributions to, it. (The best - known operating systems are produced by Microsoft [Windows and now Windows 7]. They cost a great deal and are closed in that only those who work for the company can, at least legally, work on and modify them.) In recent years a traditional closed organization – IBM – has not only embraced the Linux system, but opened up more and more of its own operations to outside inputs. The Internet has a number of open systems associated with what is known as Web 2.0 (Beer and Burrows 2007 ). One example is the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia (or wikis more generally) where again (virtually) anyone, anywhere in the world, can contribute to the defi nition of terms in it. The contrast here is the traditional (and costly) dictionary (e.g. Merriam - Webster ’ s Dictionary ) and encyclopedias written by selected experts ( Encyclopedia Britannica) and closed to contributions from anyone else.
Globalization16
However, in spite of this new openness, most organizations and systems remain closed to various fl ows. This usually benefi ts (often economically) those in the system and disadvantages those outside the organization. Even with the new open systems, there are structural realities that help some and hinder others. For example, to contribute to Linux or Wikipedia one must have a computer, computer expertise, and access to the Internet (especially high - speed access). Clearly, those without economic advantages – in the lower classes in developed countries or who live in the less developed countries of the South (i.e. those on the other side of the “ digital divide ” ) – do not have any, many, or all, of those things. As a result, they are unable to contribute to them or to gain from them to the same degree as those in more privileged positions or areas.
Subtler Structural Barriers
This brings us to a series of other structural barriers that also serve to contradict the idea of total global fl uidity. These structures are less blatant, more subtle, than the kinds of structures discussed above, but in many ways more powerful and more important from a social point of view. Included here are a variety of structures that serve to differentiate and to subordinate on the basis of social class , race , ethnicity , gender , and region of the world (North – South). In fact, these phenomena tend to be interrelated. Thus in the disadvantaged South, one is more likely to fi nd large numbers of poor people in the lower social classes, disadvantaged racial and ethnic minorities, and women who are discriminated against on the basis of gender (Moghadam 2007 : 135 – 51). As a result, various efforts by the North to subordinate the South serve to further disadvantage people there in all of those categories. Furthermore, these categories overlap – a black female who is a member of the Ibo tribe in Africa is likely to be in a lower social class. (And there is a similar overlap among those who are advantaged – for example, white, upper - class, male Anglo - Saxons in Europe and North America.) Thus, the combination of these disadvan- taged statuses ( “ intersectionality ” [Hill Collins 2000 ]) has a disastrous effect on those with these disesteemed characteristics.
Those who occupy superordinate positions in these hierarchies tend to erect structures that halt or slow various fl ows. These restrictions are designed to work to their advantage and to the disadvantage of others. Good examples involve the operations of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Trade Organization (WTO), and World Bank, which, for example, can serve to restrict fl ows of badly needed funds into Southern nations unless, for example, those nations engage in restructuring and austerity programs that are designed to slow down their econo- mies (at least in the short run). Such programs often involve insistence that welfare programs be cut back or eliminated and the result is that the most disadvantaged members of Southern countries – racial and ethnic minorities, women, those in the lower classes – are hurt the most by these programs.
Those in superordinate positions also encourage certain kinds of fl ows that work to their advantage (and to the disadvantage of subordinates). For example, the so -
17Globalization
called “ brain drain ” (Landler 2007 : A10) is a global phenomenon and it most often takes the form of highly trained people leaving the South and moving to the North. Those in the North actively seek out skilled people in the South and expedite their movement to the North. At the other end of the spectrum, also encouraged, although less these days, is the movement of unskilled workers to the North to occupy poorly paid menial positions – for example, as farm, or household, workers.
It is also the case that the prototypical Northern male upper - class white Anglo - Saxon Protestant has, in the contemporary world, acquired a great deal of fl uidity and “ lightness ” in the form of mobility, and thus is able to move about the globe quite readily and easily. In contrast, the Southern female, lower - class, black, Ibo is far less fl uid, much “ heavier, ” and therefore has far less capacity to move about the globe.
While the advantages of those in the North over those in the South remain, the South has been increasingly successful, at least in some instances, at gaining advan- tages by better controlling fl ows into and out of that part of the world. For example, Middle Eastern oil used to be largely controlled by Northern corporations (e.g. Shell) which kept the price low and made sure that the more developed North was adequately supplied with comparatively inexpensive oil. This adversely affected oil - producing countries, which did not get the price they deserved and furthermore a large proportion of the profi ts went to the Northern corporations and not the Middle Eastern countries from which the oil came. Now, of course, those countries (through OPEC) control the fl ow of oil and are profi ting enormously from it.
In the end, then, globalization involves fl ows and a wide range of structures that not only expedite, but also impede, and even halt, those fl ows.
Having given a sense in this introductory discussion of the way globalization today – the global age – is conceptualized in this book, we turn now to some back- ground on its origins and history.
ORIGINS AND HISTORY OF GLOBALIZATION
Telling the story of the origins and history of globalization is no easy matter since there are a number of different perspectives on these issues. In this section we will offer fi ve different ways of thinking about what turn out to be very complex issues.
Hardwired
Nayan Chanda ( 2007 : xiv) argues that “ globalization stems, among other things, from a basic human urge to seek a better and more fulfi lling life ” (2007: xiii). This leads him to trace “ the initial globalization of the human species, [to] when in the late Ice Age, a tiny group of our ancestors walked out of Africa in search of better food and security. In fi fty thousand years of wandering along ocean coasts and chasing game across Central Asia, they fi nally settled on all the continents. ”
Globalization18
Chanda focuses on four specifi c aspects of globalization that relate to a basic “ urge ” for a better life – trade (or commerce), missionary work (religion), adven- tures and conquest (politics and warfare). All of these are key aspects of global- ization, all can be traced to early human history, and all, as well as much else, will be dealt with in this volume. However, Chanda ’ s view that globalization is hardwired into humans is not the one accepted here since we argue that we are now living in a distinctive global age.
Cycles
The second perspective is that globalization is a long - term cyclical process. It is not only diffi cult in this view to fi nd a single point of origin, but the effort is largely irrelevant since there have long been cycles of globalization and it is those cycles that are of utmost importance, not any particular phase or point of origin (Scholte 2005 ). This view, like Chanda ’ s, tends to contradict the idea that we live today in a new “ global age. ” Rather, this suggests that there have been other global ages in the past and that what now appears to be a new global age, or the high point of such an age, is destined to contract and disappear in the future. Eventually, it, too, will be replaced by a new cycle in the globalization process.
Epochs
In an example of the third approach to the beginnings (and history) of global- ization, Therborn ( 2000 : 151 – 79) sees six great epochs, or “ waves, ” of globalization, that have occurred sequentially, each with its own point of origin:
1. The fourth to the seventh centuries which witnessed the globalization of reli- gions (e.g. Christianity, Islam).
2. The late fi fteenth century highlighted by European colonial conquests. 3. The late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries during which various intra -
European wars led to globalization. 4. The mid - nineteenth century to 1918; the heyday of European imperialism. 5. The post - World War II period. 6. The post - Cold War period.
From this, Therborn concludes that globalization today is not unique. However, his historical or epochal view also rejects the cyclical view of globalization. Past epochs are not returning, at least in their earlier form, at some point in the future.
Events
A fourth view is that instead of cycles or great epochs, one can point to much more specifi c events that can be seen as the origin of globalization and give us a good
19Globalization
sense of its history. In fact, there are many such possible points of origin of globali- zation, some of which are:
• The Romans and their far - ranging conquests in the centuries before Christ (Gibbon 1998 ).
• The rise and spread of Christianity in the centuries after the fall of the Roman Empire.
• The spread of Islam in the seventh century and beyond. • The travels of the Vikings from Europe to Iceland, Greenland, and briefl y to
North America in the ninth through the eleventh centuries as examples of, and landmarks in, globalization.
• Trade in the Middle Ages throughout the Mediterranean. • The activities of the banks of the twelfth - century Italian city - states. • The rampage of the armies of Ghengis Khan into Eastern Europe in the thir-
teenth century ( Economist 2006 : January 12). • European traders like Marco Polo and his travels later in the thirteenth century
along the Silk Road to China. (Interestingly, there is now discussion of the development of an “ iron silk road ” involving a linked railroad network through a variety of Asian countries that at least evokes the image of the lure of Marco Polo ’ s Silk Road.)
• The “ discovery of America ” by Christopher Columbus in 1492. Other important voyages of discovery during this time involved Vasco Da Gama rounding the Cape of Good Hope in 1498 and the circumnavigation of the globe completed in 1522 by one of Ferdinand Magellan ’ s ships (Rosenthal 2007 : 1237 – 41).
• European colonialism, especially in the nineteenth century. • The early twentieth - century global Spanish fl u pandemic. • The two World Wars in the fi rst half of the twentieth century.
It is also possible to get even more specifi c about the origins of globalization, especially in recent years. A few rather eclectic recent examples include:
• 1956 – The fi rst transatlantic telephone cable. • 1958 – While it was possible to fl y across the Atlantic in the 1930s on seaplanes
that made several stops along the way, the big revolution in this area was the arrival of transatlantic passenger jet travel, with the fi rst fl ight being Pan Am ’ s fl ight from New York to London (with a stopover for refueling required in Newfoundland).
• 1962 – The launch of the satellite Telstar and soon thereafter the fi rst transat- lantic television broadcasts.
• 1966 – The transmission from a satellite of the picture of the earth as a single location, not only leading to a greater sense of the world as one place (increased global consciousness [Robertson and Inglis 2004 : 38 – 49]), but also of great importance to the development of the global environmental movement.
Globalization20
• 1970 – The creation of the Clearing House Interbank Payment System (CHIPS), making global electronic (wire) transfers of funds (now $2 trillion a day) pos- sible among fi nancial institutions.
• 1977 – The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications (SWIFT) came into being, making more global transfers of funds possible by individuals.
• 1988 – The founding of the modern Internet based on Arpanet (which was created in 1969). While it took the Internet several years to take off, this was a turning point in global interconnection for billions of people.
• 2001 – The terrorist attacks on the Twin Towers in New York and on the Pentagon in Washington, as well as later terrorist attacks on trains in Madrid (March 11, 2004) and London (July 7, 2005), among others. The following is a specifi c example in support of the idea that 9/11 can be taken as a point of origin for globalization (at least of higher education): “ Since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, internationalization has moved high on the agenda at most universities, to prepare students for a globalized world, and to help faculty members stay up - to - date in their disciplines ” (Lewin 2008 : 8).
This, of course, brings us very close to the present day and it is possible that other specifi c events (especially the Great Recession which began in late 2007) will almost certainly come to be associated by future observers with the birth, or further devel- opment, of globalization.
Broader, More Recent Changes
The fi fth view focuses on broader, but still recent, changes. There is a sense in this view that a sea change occurred in the last half of the twentieth century. Three of these momentous changes have been identifi ed by scholars as the point of origin of globalization as it exists today:
• The emergence of the United States as the global power in the years following WW II.
The US not only projected its military power throughout the world (Korea in the early 1950s; disastrously in Vietnam in the 1960s and early 1970s), it extended its reach in the economic realm as it became the dominant industrial power when WW II decimated most of its competitors militarily (Germany, Japan) and/or economi- cally (the Axis powers as well as Allies such as France and Great Britain). Many other aspects of America ’ s global reach either accompanied these changes or soon followed. Among them were the diplomatic clout of the US government, the reach of the US media, the power of Hollywood, and so on. Such a view closely aligns globalization with the idea of Americanization (see Chapter 2 ).