Sunday, March 18, 2012

GLOBALISAZTION vs GLOBALISM

INTRODUCTION
What is globalization? In contrast, what is globalism? And how do both of these concepts shape our world? Joe Nye, the former Dean of the Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, outlines the fundamental differences between these two concepts. Globalism describes the reality of being interconnected, while globalization captures the speed at which these connections increase or decrease.
Globalism versus globalization? Many people would think the two terms refer to the same phenomenon. However, there are important differences between the two.
Globalism, at its core, seeks to describe and explain nothing more than a world which is characterized by networks of connections that span multi-continental distances.
It attempts to understand all the inter-connections of the modern world and to highlight patterns that underlie (and explain) them.
In contrast, globalization refers to the increase or decline in the degree of globalism. It focuses on the forces, the dynamism or speed of these changes.
To some people globalization can also refer to the integration of economic, political, and cultural systems across the globe. To others it can mean the dominance of developed countries in decision-making, at the expense of poorer, less powerful nations.
Humble questions to you all reading this piece of work:
Is globalization a force for economic growth, prosperity, and democratic freedom? Or is it a force for environmental devastation, exploitation of the developing world, and suppression of human rights? Does globalization only benefit the rich or can the poor take advantage of it to improve their well-being?
In short, consider globalism as the underlying basic network, while globalization refers to the dynamic shrinking of distance on a large scale.
Globalism is a phenomenon with ancient roots. Thus, the issue is not how old globalism is, but rather how "thin" or "thick" it is at any given time.
Globalism can have at least two different and opposing meanings. One meaning is the attitude or policy of placing the interests of the entire world above those of individual nations. Another is viewing the entire world as a proper sphere for one nation to project political influence.
American political scientist Joseph Nye, co-founder of the international relations theory of neoliberalism, argues that globalism refers to any description and explanation of a world which is characterized by networks of connections that span multi-continental distances; while globalization refers to the increase or decline in the degree of globalism.
In his 2005 book The Collapse of Globalism and the Reinvention of the World, Canadian philosopher John Ralston Saul argued that, far from being an inevitable force, globalization is already breaking up into contradictory pieces and that citizens are reasserting their national interests in both positive and destructive ways.
The general point is that the increasing intensity, or thickness, of globalism, the density of networks of interdependence, is not just a difference in degree from the past. An increasing "thickness" changes relationships, because it means that different relationships of interdependence intersect more deeply at more different points.
At the same time, it is important to note that globalism does not imply universality. After all, the connections that make up the networks to define globalism may be more strongly felt in some parts of the world than in others.
For example, at the turn of the 21st century, a quarter of the U.S. population used the World Wide Web. At the same time, however, only one-hundredth of one percent of the population of South Asia had access to this information network.
Since globalism does not imply universality and given that globalization refers to dynamic changes, it is not surprising that globalization implies neither equity — nor homogenization. In fact, it is equally likely to amplify differences — or at least make people more aware of them.
Four dimensions of globalism
Both globalism and globalization are all too often defined in strictly economic terms, as if the world economy as such defined globalism. But other forms are equally important. There are four distinct dimensions of globalism: economic, military, environmental — and social.
Economic globalism involves long-distance flows of goods, services and capital and the information and perceptions that accompany market exchange.
These flows, in turn, organize other processes linked to them. One example of economic globalization is low-wage production in Asia for the United States and European markets. Economic flows, markets and organization — as in multinational firms — all go together.
The environmental dimension
Environmental globalism refers to the long-distance transport of materials in the atmosphere or oceans or of biological substances such as pathogens or genetic materials that affect human health and well-being.
In contrast, examples of environmental globalization include the accelerating depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer as a result of ozone-depleting chemicals — or the spread of the AIDS virus from central Africa around the world beginning at the end of the 1970s.
The military dimension
What made this interdependence distinctive was not that it was totally new, but that the scale and speed of the potential conflict arising from interdependence were so enormous.
Military globalization manifested itself in recent times in the tragic events of September 11. Here, geographical distances were shrunk as the lawless mountains of Afghanistan provided the launching pad for attacks on New York and Washington — some 4,000 miles away.
A flow of information and ideas
The fourth dimension is social and cultural globalism. It involves movements of ideas, information, images and of people, who of course carry ideas and information with them.
Examples include the movement of religions or the diffusion of scientific knowledge. In the past, social globalism has often followed military and economic globalism.
However, in the current era, social and cultural globalization is driven by the Internet, which reduces costs and globalizes communications, making the flow of ideas increasingly independent of other forms of globalization.
Why are these divisions useful?
The division of globalism into separate dimensions, as presented above, is inevitably somewhat arbitrary. Nonetheless, it is useful for analysis, because changes in the various dimensions of globalism do not necessarily go together. For example, economic globalism rose between 1850 and 1914 — and fell between 1914 and 1945.
However, at the same time as economic globalism was declining during the two World Wars, military globalism rose to new heights — as did many aspects of social globalism.
Take, for example, the worldwide influenza epidemic of 1918-19, which took 21 million lives. It was propagated by the flows of soldiers around the world.
Does this suggest that globalism declined or rose between 1914 and 1945? It depends on the dimension, or sphere, of globalism one is referring to.
Without an adjective, general statements about globalism are often meaningless — or misleading. The same applies when talking about globalization or globalism today.
Entering a world of uncertainty
Based on the historic evidence, we should expect that globalism will be accompanied by continuing uncertainty.
There will be a continual competition between increased complexity and uncertainty on the one hand — and efforts by governments, market participants and others to comprehend and manage these systems on the other.
Military globalism
Military globalism refers to long-distance networks in which force, and the threat or promise of force, are deployed. A well-known example of military globalism is the "balance of terror" between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War — a strategic interdependence that was both acute and well-recognized.
Points to note
We should not expect or fear that globalism will lead to homogenization. Instead, it will expose us more frequently and in more variations to the differences that surround us.

We can however see globalization and globalism like two complementary tendencies, in some way and measure even mutually indispensable to each other. A globalization that does not attain the visions and the reflections of globalism is destined to produce, in the long run, more troubles than benefits. Globalists who are not also globalizers risk, on the contrary, to create knowledge and wisdom without the concrete abilities of the action.

It is important have well clear in mind the distinction between these two terms and their respective meanings and rôles, as from the good equilibrium of the energies put in movement by them derives our survival and that of our very planet.

CONCLUSION
While we can attribute to the term globalization a value of activity, of active intervention, to the term globalism we can correlate processes of analisys and reflection. To the first term we can link the figure of the globalizer, a real colonizer on a planetary scale, a person with great talents but with few free time to deeply reflect; to the second term we can link the figure of the globalist, a researcher, a philosopher who has as object of his thoughts the happy and prosper interaction between the peoples on the planet. It is not casual that we cannot find a verb to link to the terms "globalism" and "globalist", just because at them no action is connected in the material reality. While at the terms "globalization" and "globalizer" we can link easily the verb to globalize.












REFERENCES

Nye, J.(2002): "Globalism Versus Globalization"
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/globalism
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/globalism
http://www.theglobalist.com/StoryId.aspx?StoryId

1 Comments:

Blogger Unknown said...

You need to read Joseph Nye's works on the East African Community in the 1960s and 1970s. His research career was formed in East Africa. Also watch this:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=keO8yJAbfhg

1:20 AM  

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