Cotemporary World Module
Cotemporary World Module
Learning Module
in
The Contemporary World
Compiled by:
JENNY MEI S. PEROY
The compiler does not own any of the contents of this learning module. Due credits and
acknowledgment are given to the authors, internet sources, and researchers listed on the
reference page. Such sources are reserved to further explain concepts and cannot be credited to
the compiler and the school. All diagrams, charts, and images are used for educational purposes
only. The sole objective of this instructional material is to facilitate independent learning and
not for monetary gains because this is NOT FOR SALE.
2021 Edition
TABLE OF CONTENTS
References 77
TOPIC
1. Defining Globalization
LEARNING OUTCOMES
1
interdependence, the events happening outside us might bring a positive or
negative impact.
Central to these is the awareness, recognition, and study of globalization as a
phenomenon. And the very idea of globalization is the focus of this course subject—the
study and understanding of what makes up this process and/or phenomenon. The frame
of ontology is making sense of the existence of globalization through themes and issues
related to and confront it, and at the same time, making sense of what is to be a citizen
of the world. From this point, the main question “why do you need to study the world?”
is supplemented by “what does it mean to be a citizen of the world?” (Claudio &
Abinales, 2018).
As the main concept in the study of the contemporary world vis-à-vis the
ontology (what it is to exist) as a citizen of the world, globalization is in itself a work-in-
progress concept. Academic circles are yet to come up with an encompassing definition
that is not limited to globalization in the contexts of economy and politics. As we
progress through the course, there are numerous definitions and/or conceptualizations
of globalization that will be discussed.
Rather than defining what globalization is, Manfred B. Steger (2013), described
the phenomenon as “the expansion and intensification of social relations and
consciousness across world-time and across world-space” (as cited in Claudio &
Abinales, 2018: 7-8).
A breakdown of Steger’s (2013) description of globalization together with Claudio & Abinales’
Different levels of connections:
EXPANSION refers to both the creation of
1. Social media (establishing global
new social networks and the
connections between people)
multiplication of existing connections
2. International groups of
that cut across traditional political,
non- governmental
economic, cultural, and geographic
organizations (NGOs)
boundaries.
3
In addition to this conceptualization, Steger (2014) pointed out that critics of
globalization commit the mistake of conceptualizing the process along economic lines
only, dismissive of globalization’s multidimensional character. This multidimensional
character is described in three processes: globalization as an economic process,
globalization as a political process, and globalization as a cultural process (Steger, 2014:
6).
Points forwarded in the multidimensional take of globalization as involving three processes: economic, political, and
cultural (Steger, 2014).
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
Confused with the conceptualization of globalization? You might want to check these
materials:
Globalization I – The Upside: Crash Course World History
#41 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SnR-e0S6Ic)
Globalization in 3 minutes, theory in 3 minutes
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p6u9m5FK0IQ)
4
4. Mediascape. Flows of information. The production and dissemination of
information through electronic means. The access of people to modern popular
culture. E.g. access to international entertainment like Hollywood films, K-drama,
and anime; media such as newspapers, magazines, the social network.
5. Ideoscape. Flows of ideas. Ideologies of state, and social movements. E.g.
posting of your views on a certain event or human reality on Facebook; religious
missionaries spreading their doctrines to other regions or countries;
environmentalism.
MEDIASCAPE IDEOSCAPE
flows of information flows of ideas
Appadurai’s five ‘landscapes’ present the idea that there are multiple globalizations,
and this can help make sense the dynamics in globalization as a big process with all its
multidimensional sub-processes (Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 10). As Appadurai (1996) put
it, “[e]ach of these ‘scapes’ contains the building blocks of the new ‘imagined worlds’
that are assembled by the historically situated imaginations of persons and groups
spread around the globe” (as cited in Steger, 2014: 13).
These descriptions should provide students an overview of what to expect in
undertaking a study of the world and globalization. The concepts presented here will be
tackled in more detail in the succeeding lectures.
ASSESSMENT
Accomplish this on the worksheet available on the next page. Make sure that
your answers have substance and make sense.
5
TCW WORKSHEET NO. 1 – “THE GLOBALIZATION PROCESSES FROM MY EXPERIENCE…”
1. My personal definition and/or conceptualization of globalization.
b. TECHNOSCAPE
c. FINANSCAPE
d. MEDIASCAPE
e. IDEOSCAPE
6
TOPICS
1. The Global Economy
2. Global Interstate System
3. Contemporary Global Governance
LEARNING OUTCOMES
The succeeding topics are best explored and discussed in view of Held et al.’s
(1999) description that globalization “may be thought of initially as the widening,
deepening and speeding up of worldwide interconnectedness in all aspects of
contemporary social life. In connection to this, for Giddens (1999), these “aspects” can
refer to political, cultural, and economic features (as cited in Beczes, 2014: 900). These
conceptualizations reinforce the view of globalization as a multidimensional process or
phenomenon as discussed in the descriptions Steger (2014) provided above.
For this lecture, the economic and political aspects of globalization will be
explored. The concepts, ideas, and perspectives should provide the students with ideas
on how academics and/or scholars of globalization, economics, political science, and
international studies, among others, confront the complex and multidimensional
process of globalization.
ECONOMIC GLOBALIZATION
Economic globalization is defined as,
…a historical process, the result of human innovation and technological progress. It
refers to the increasing integration of economies around the world, particularly
through the movement of goods, services, and capital across borders. The term
sometimes also refers to the movement of people (labor) and knowledge
(technology) across international borders (IMF, 2008 as cited in Benczes, 2014:
900).
7
In this definition, it highlights the role played by the historic feats of human innovation
and the progress that materialized through it, especially in the fields of technology and
knowledge. The focus of these definitions, in relation to globalization, is the increasing
integration of economies and markets around the world. In this regard, economic
globalization has several interconnected dimensions:
1. The globalization of trade goods and services.
2. The globalization of financial and capital markets.
3. The globalization of technology and communication.
4. The globalization of production.
In discussing economic globalization, one is shedding light to the drastic economic
changes happening in the world, the increasing regard for the value of trade, the jumps
in world Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the movement of the investments at faster
rates, the role technology play in the realization of cross-border transactions and
relations among others (Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 12-13).
Furthermore, economic globalization is described as (Benczes, 2014: 900):
1. Functional integration between internationally dispersed activities as opposed
to internationalization which is about the extension of economic activities on
nation- states across borders.
2. Economic globalization is rather a qualitative transformation than just a
quantitative change.
In economic globalization, economies and economic actors are integrated through
internationally recognized and practiced economic policies and practices, where most
are created by economic giants of the First World countries. Economic globalization is
more qualitative because it highlights how it has changed the quality of economic
relations, transactions, the value of trade, capital, consumerism, and so forth.
The definition of economic globalization provided by the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) does not hold water if we take note of the nature of globalization as a
“complex, indeterminate set of processes operation very unevenly in both time and
space” (Dicken, 2004 as cited in Benczes, 2014: 900). We note that globalization in itself
is multidimensional, complex, and does not influence or affect nation-states in the same
way which makes it an uneven process as well. With this, a more substantive definition
of economic globalization is required.
The definition provided by IMF (2008) is juxtaposed with the definition provided
by Szentes (2003): “In economic terms globalization is nothing but a process making the
world economy an “organic system” by extending transnational economic processes and
economic relations to more and more countries and by deepening the economic
interdependencies among them” (as cited in Benczes, 2014: 901). Benczes (2014) notes
that this definition claims that only in a global context (i.e. an integrated world
economy) can economic activities and processes can be interpreted.
The role of the nation-state is redefined as a factor and an actor in this arena of
economic activities and processes. In the wake of the global market, nation-states
ceased to exist as primary economic organization units as people consume highly
standardized products and services produced by global corporations (Benczes, 2014:
901). In the height of the global market system, the national economy has been
transformed by globalization into a global one in that “there will be no national products
or technologies, no national corporations, no national industries” (Reich, 1991 as cited
in Benczes, 2014: 901).
WORLD BANK
9
- Two mandates of the institution: end extreme poverty and promote shared
prosperity.
- Offers financial and technical assistance to developing The World Bank logo. Image from
countries. Wikipedia.
WTO, IMF, and WORLD BANK
- 3 institutions that underwrite the basic rules
and regulations of economic, monetary, and
trade relations between countries.
- Many developing countries have loosened
their trade rules because of the influence
and pressure of these institutions.
IMF-WB-WTO. Image from imf.org
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On economic globalization and global economic actors:
Globalization- trade and transnational corporations | Society and Culture | MCAT
| Khan Academy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GmomzubjO1I)
How the IMF Monitors the Global Economy
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IlzBFLsToGk)
What's the difference between the IMF and the World Bank? | CNBC
Explains (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lN3qrFA4jXc)
Covid-19: why the economy could fare worse than you think | The
Economist (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f9v6givfTEA)
10
1964 The United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development (UNCTAD) was established with the joint
effort of the developing world.
1986 – 1994 Multilateral trade negotiations were carried out under the
Uruguay Round.
1995 The Uruguay Round gave birth to a ‘real’ international
trade institution, the World Trade Organization (WTO).
Some historical notes related to the development of economic globalization in the contemporary world (Steger, 2014;
Benczes, 2014; Claudio & Abinales, 2018).
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On the detriments of economic globalization:
Globalization and Trade and Poverty: Crash Course Economics
#16 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9MpVjxxpExM)
What global trade deals are really about (hint: it's not trade) | Haley Edwards
| TEDxMidAtlantic (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-v3uqD1hWGE)
TASK/ACTIVITY
Research on the following: (a) the origins and history of the TASK/ACTIVITY
institution you have chosen; (b) map the international connections it RUBRICS:
has created; Format: 15%
(c) identify the major country-leaders of this institution; (d) locate the Citation and ethical
Philippines in this map of interconnections. integrity: 20%
Integration,
Then answer this question: How does this institution influence global organization, and
economic activity? How does it affect economics in the Philippines? elaboration of data,
information, and
Discuss your points clearly. Don’t forget to cite your sources, use APA
points: 50%
citation style. The worksheet is on the next page. You can use another
Writing technicalities
sheet of paper if the space will not suffice.
(narrative,
Do not copy-paste from the internet. You can read references (like grammar): 15%
articles and researches) but make sure to write in your own words.
11
TCW WORKSHEET NO. 2 – GLOBAL ECONOMIC INSTITUTIONS (RESEARCH)
International Economic Organization or Transnational Company (add a short description):
(a) the origins and history of the institution you have chosen:
How does this institution influence global economic activity? How does it affect economics in the Philippines?
12
TOPIC 2: GLOBAL INTERSTATE SYSTEM
THE NATION-STATE
- The nation-state is a relatively modern phenomenon in human history, and
people did not always organize themselves as countries.
- The nation-state is composed of two non-interchangeable terms:
NOT ALL STATES ARE NATIONS. NOT ALL NATIONS ARE STATES.
E.g. many commentators believe that the Bangsamoro is a separate nation
existing within the Philippines, but through their elites, recognizes the authority
of the Philippine state (this is a case of states with multiple nations);
The nation of Korea is divided into North and South Korea (this is a case of a
single nation with multiple states).
1. THE STATE
o Refers to a country and its government.
o The institution that creates warfare and sets economic policies for a country.
It is also a political unit that has authority over its affairs.
o Independent political communities each of which possesses a government
and asserts sovereignty in relation to a particular portion of the earth’s
surface and a particular segment of the human population (Bull, 1995 as
cited in Schattle, 2014: 933).
o Essential elements of the state:
a. PERMANENT POPULATION – inhabitant of the country, its citizens
b. TERRITORY – total portion of the land governed
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c. GOVERNMENT – an entity that regulates relations among its people and
with other states
d. SOVEREIGNTY – supreme uncontrollable power of the state over its
territory; refers to internal and external authority
INTERNAL AUTHORITY: no individuals or groups can operate in a given
national territory by ignoring the state. I.e. groups like churches,
corporations, and other entities have to follow the laws of the state
where they establish their parishes, offices, or headquarters.
EXTERNAL AUTHORITY: a state’s policies and procedures are independent
of the intervention of other states. I.e. Russia or Germany cannot pass
laws for the Philippines and vice versa.
o States have the following rights:
a. Right to govern its people
b. Right for self-determination
c. Right to impose the country’s policy
d. Right to take over issues in its jurisdiction
2. THE NATION
o “An imagined political community”—imagined as both inherently limited
and sovereign (a conceptual definition forwarded by Benedict Anderson in
his most celebrated work, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin
and Spread of Nationalism (1983)). “Imagined” in a sense that the nation
allows one to feel a connection with the community of people even if he/she
will never meet all of them in his/her lifetime. E.g. you know that you live in a
territory with the people in the Visayas or Mindanao even if you haven’t seen
them in person.
o The concept emphasized organic ties to hold groups of people together and
inspire the senses of loyalty and belonging (Schattle, 2014: 933).
o Nations are viewed as socially constructed political communities that hold
together citizens across many kinds of cross-cutting identities: ethnicity,
language, religions, and so forth (Schattle, 2014: 933).
o Nations often limit themselves to people who have imbibed a particular
culture, speak a common language, and live in a specific territory.
o Most nations strive to become states. Nation-builders can only feel a sense
of fulfillment when the national ideal assumes an organizational form whose
authority and power are recognized and accepted by “the people”.
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o Kant argued that without a form of world government, the international
system would be chaotic.
o Kant imagined a form of global government where 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.
2. Jeremy Bentham
o British philosopher Jeremy Bentham (coined the term "international" in
1780) advocated the creation of "international law" that would govern the
inter- state relations.
o Bentham believed that objective global legislators should aim to propose
legislation that would create "the greatest happiness of all nations taken
together".
3. Giuseppe Mazzini
o First to reconcile nationalism with liberal internationalism.
o He believed that a Republican government (no kings, queens, and hereditary
succession) and proposed a system of free nations that cooperated to
create an international system.
o Free, independent states would be the basis of an equally free, cooperative
international system, the basis of global cooperation.
4. Woodrow Wilson
o Wilson saw nationalism as a prerequisite for internationalism.
o In his faith in nationalism, he forwarded the principle of self-determination—
the belief that the world’s nations had a right to free, sovereign government.
o He believed that only by being democratic nations that they would be able to
build a free system of international relations based on international law and
cooperation.
o He advocated for the creation of the League of Nations.
5. Karl Marx
o Marx was an internationalist but he did not believe in nationalism.
o He believed that any true form of internationalism should deliberately
reject nationalism, which rooted people in domestic concerns instead of
global ones.
o Marx placed a premium on economic equality.
o Marx and Engels opposed nationalism because they believed it preventing
the unification of the world’s workers.
From left to right: Kant, Bentham, Mazzini, Wilson, and Marx. Images from Google Image.
The very principles of internationalism forwarded by Kant, Bentham, and Mazzini serve
as the blueprint for the very face of internationalism in the contemporary world which is
the United Nations (this will be discussed further in the next topic).
15
Different perspectives on the role of nation-states amid globalization have
enriched the study of global politics and the interstate system. These perspectives are
varied and come from different sociopolitical realities yet offer a rich understanding of
the footing of the nation-state in the complex process of globalization.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
To better understand the relationship between nation-states and globalization processes,
you might want to check this TED Talk:
Do we need Nation States? | Toni Lane Casserly | TEDxBerlinSalon
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJPE4H_fgBQ)
The nation-states of the world are here to stay and play key roles in the shaping of
globalization. This manifests in the formation of regional partnerships with neighboring
countries (e.g. the Philippines in the ASEAN); membership, and active participation in
international organizations and global governing bodies like the United Nations;
adherence to universal norms and values; and establishment of transnational networks
among others.
Global politics and interstate conditions have their fair share of positive and
negative implications and results, yet these do not stop nation-states in increasing the
interconnectivity and interrelationship to one another as the forces of globalization bind
them together. The challenge remains as to how global policies created and lobbied by
interstate agencies with a high participatory mandate will create a more just
globalization process in all its economic, political, and cultural aspects.
17
GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
DEFINITION
There is no global government yet international transactions work in order,
stability, and predictability. This poses the question, “how is the world governed even in
the absence of a world government?” For Wiess and Thakur (2014), the answer to the
question lies in global governance. They defined global governance as “the sum of laws,
norms, policies, and institutions that define, constitute and mediate trans-border
relations between states, cultures, citizens, intergovernmental and non-governmental
organizations and the market—the wielders and the objects of exercise of the
international public power” (Weiss and Thakur, 2014: 535).
Global governance is further characterized by Weiss & Thakur (2014):
a. An authority that is constantly shifting and the patchwork of institutional
elements varies by sector.
b. All actors depend upon multilateralism and the underwriting of regularity and
public goods in the international system.
c. If the actors of global governance are to remain viable, international
organizations and the values of multilateralism embedded in them must be
reconstituted in line with 21st-century principles of governance and legitimacy.
d. Global governance actors must be capable of addressing contemporary
challenges effectively.
e. Global governance is a rules-based order without government.
f. Global governance is not a supplement but rather a kind of surrogate for
authority and enforcement for the contemporary world.
g. The emergence of global governance roots from (1) the growing recognition of
problems that defy solutions by a single state; (2) the growth in the numbers and
importance of non-state actors (civil society and market).
h. The United Nations (UN) is both a global governance actor and site.
i. “Good” global governance implies an optimal partnership between the state,
regional, and global levels of actors and between state, intergovernmental, and
nongovernmental categories of actors.
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
International Organizations (IOs) make a big part of global governance.
International Organizations refer to “international intergovernmental organizations or
groups that are primarily made up of member-states” (Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 40).
United Nations or institutions like the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World
Bank are usually categorized and called International Organizations (IOs). International
organizations are not a mere amalgamation of various state interests, but IOs can take
on lives of their own—an institution created by man yet can govern the order and
intersecting aspects of human relations and conditions.
18
POWERS OF IOs (listed by Michael N. Barnett and Martha Finnemore in Claudio &
Abinales, 2018: 41)
1. Power of classification – IOs can invent and apply categories, they create
powerful global standards. E.g. they can define what poverty means and through
that, nation-states can determine who the poor in their demographic are.
2. Power to fix meanings – a broader function related to the power of
classification; the need to address here is for concepts such as “development” to
be well- defined. IOs are viewed as legitimate sources of information by states,
organizations, and individuals. The meaning they create have effects on policies.
E.g. if an IO defined what it means when you say development, then states will
pattern its policies to achieve the kind of development defined by IOs.
3. Power to diffuse norms – IOs can define and/or forward accepted codes of
conduct or behavior. IOs also spread ideas across the world, thereby establishing
global standards. E.g. no discrimination on employment and occupation.
Norms: accepted codes of conduct that may not be strict law, but produce
regularities in behavior.
With these powers, IOs can be sources of great good and great harm (Claudio &
Abinales, 2018: 41). As IOs embody global governance, in addition to the powers they
have, the challenge for the actors that comprise these IOs is to uphold fairness in their
blanket deliberations, policies, and actions that unevenly affect nation-states engaged
in their multilateral bureaucracy and forum. Weiss & Thakur (2014) notes that the life
and survival of IOs rest on two factors: (1) the capacity to change and adapt; (2) the
quality of their governance. The capacity to adapt in an ever-changing international
condition and to uphold a premium quality in their leadership and practice of
governance.
THE UNITED NATIONS
When we talk about international organizations
and when we try to identify the realization of the
definition
of global governance in our objective reality, the
United Nations (UN) takes the center stage. Thakur
(2011) even dubbed the UN as “both a global
governance actor and site” (as cited in Weiss & Thakur,
2014: 535). The United Nations is an international
organization that is taking the lead in facilitating global
dialogue to uphold the global harmony among nation-
states and strengthen their interconnectivity and
interrelationship (Schattle, 2014: 938). The existence United Nations’ emblem. Image from
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/co
of the UN renders important for global governance in mmons/thumb/e/ee/UN_emblem_blue.svg
a world of nation-states. Weiss and Thakur (2014) /906px-UN_emblem_blue.svg.png
notes, “the world body remains as the embodiment
of the
international community of states, the focus of international expectations, and the locus
of collective action as the symbol of an imagined and constructed community of
strangers”.
CHARACTERIZING THE UN:
1. To date, there are 193 sovereign member-states. The Philippines is a member of
the UN. Filipino diplomat Carlos P. Romulo was elected General Assembly
President from 1949-1950 (Claudio & Abinales, 2014: 42).
20
SECRETARIAT: comprises the Secretary-General and tens of thousands of
international UN staff members who carry out the day-to-day work of the UN as
mandated by the General Assembly and the Organization's other principal
organs.
3. The UN has significant roles in preventing and managing conflicts, championing
human rights and international humanitarian law, liberating the colonized,
empowering women, educating children, housing the refugees, liberating the
colonized, and feeding the hungry among other (Weiss & Thakur, 2014: 535).
4. The UN provides and manages the framework for bringing together the world’s
leaders to tackle the pressing problems of the day for the survival, development,
and welfare of all peoples, everywhere (Weiss & Thakur, 2014: 538).
MANAGING KNOWLEDGE
1. Recognize the existence of the problem that goes beyond the capacity of any
state.
2. Collect solid data about the nature of the problem, and understand its causes
to explain the problem.
The UN should be a knowledge-based and knowledge management organization. UN
should use its convening capacity and mobilizing power to help funnel knowledge
from outside and to ensure its discussion and dissemination among governments.
21
DEVELOPING NORMS
Once a problem has been identified and diagnosed, the UN helps to solidify a new
norm of behavior through summit conferences, and international panels.
From knowledge to norms: when a problem serious enough warrants attention from
international policy community, new norms need to be articulated, disseminated,
and institutionalized.
International norms can be transmitted down into national politics and incorporated
into domestic laws or into the policy preferences of political leaders through elite
learning.
22
FORMULATING RECOMMENDATIONS
As new problems emerge and new norms arise, they highlight gaps in policy that also
need attention.
The policy stage refers to the statement of principles and actions that an organization
is likely to take in the event of particular contingencies.
The UN’s ability to convene and consult widely plays an enormous part in its ability to
formulate recommendations for specific policies, institutional arrangements, and
regimes.
INSTITUTIONALIZING IDEAS
Virtually every problem has several global institutions working on significant aspects
of solution.
Institutions can facilitate problem solving even though they do not possess any
coercive powers.
Globalization has led to more practice in international cooperation but has
introduced additional layers of complexity and conflict potential. The creation of
institutions requires the knowledge, normative and policy-making gaps have been at
least partially filled.
Once knowledge has been acquired, norms articulated and policies formulated, an
existing institution can oversee their implementation and monitoring.
Steps in addressing the gaps in global governance (Weiss & Thakur, 2014)
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on contemporary global governance through the United Nations:
How Does The UN Work? (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tlmYtJiUK00)
The United Nations Is Created | Flashback | History
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FnQESSTouNU)
How Powerful Is The United Nations?
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yH6Y2jUaLvI)
FAO Policy Series: Global Governance
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CUWiW8RqWSM)
23
ASSESSMENT
THINKPIECE:
As we have familiarized ourselves with the mandate and institutional nature
of the United Nations, let’s take a closer look at its role in the world and in
the country. In your paper,
1. explore the importance of the United Nations for the global interstate
system, why do we need such international organization; and
2. cite three (3) instances where the United Nations has helped,
influenced, and/or affected the Philippines in any way (be it in policy
making, human rights, calamities and disasters, and diplomacy).
Provide necessary details of each instance.
Discuss your points clearly. Don’t forget to cite your sources, use APA citation
style.
Do not copy-paste from the internet. You can read references (like articles)
but make sure to write your own paper. Refer to the rubrics below, this is
how I will grade your paper.
Format: 500 words maximum. Times New Roman. 12 font size. Single-space.
In short bond paper (8.5 x 11 in. paper size).
ASSESSMENT RUBRICS:
Format: 15%
Citation and ethical integrity: 20%
Sense and clarity of arguments, data, information, and points: 50%
Writing technicalities (narrative, grammar): 15%
24
TOPICS
1. Global Divides: Locating the Global South
2. Asian Regionalism
LEARNING OUTCOMES
In the illustration provided below, the world is presented in a binary. The blue
areas are what constitutes the global north, and the red areas constitute the global
south—our cou ntry, the Philippines is a part of this. The concepts of ‘global north’ and
‘global south’, ‘First World country’, and ‘Third World country’, and ‘developed country’
and ‘developing country’ are social constructs that relate to the very nature of
unevenness and inequality in the process of globalization. We note in the previous
discussions that globalization does not affect every nation-state or country in the same
way. At the end of the day, globalization has produced losers and winners in terms of
25
socioeconomic and politico dynamics found in this increasing interconnectivity and
expansion of networks. As Claudio (2014) put it, globalization creates undersides and
engenders the visible process of the north-south divide.
26
Illustration of the Brandt Line. Image from https://www.rgs.org/CMSPages/GetFile.aspx?nodeguid=9c1ce781-9117-
4741-af0a-a6a8b75f32b4&lang=en-GB
Substantial researches reveal that the inequality between the world’s richest
countries and the poorest countries is widening.
Economic development and inequalities become more complex that the Brandt Line
of a binary nature in a geo-economic sense does not account for poorer countries
experiencing significant socioeconomic development, and countries located at the
global north experience third world realities.
27
The global south has been the specter and the necessary counterpoint of global
modernity as it has been articulated in various forms. The paradox of globalization
remains no development without underdevelopment, no globalism without
parochial localism.
For Walden Bello (2006), development in the global south must catalyze the
country’s financial resources for development from within, rather from a
dependence on foreign investments and foreign financial markets (as cited in
Claudio, 2014: 853).
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on global divides:
What Does 'Third World Country' Mean?
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X1xBpBaBbrA)
Why Some Countries Are Poor and Others Rich
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-4V3HR696k&t=86s)
Third World vs First World Countries - What's The Difference?
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1yKvwOydZFw&t=276s)
Income and Wealth Inequality: Crash Course Economics #17
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xMCWr0O3Hs)
28
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On globalization theories:
Globalization theories | Society and Culture | MCAT | Khan
Academy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=lQIVIYCZ4ec&t=238s)
29
The discussion of the imaginary yet highly social, political, economic, and cultural
divide between the ‘global north’ and the ‘global south’ presents complex and
intersecting processes of economics, power relations and dominations, and
developmental thrusts. Although the global south is presented as standing in the losing
side of very Western and First World oriented economic globalization policies and
practices, it still signifies that the countries associated with this label continue to be
globalized. Reiterating Claudio’s (2014) notes on challenging and diminishing global
and/or interstate inequalities, “global institutions have yet to prove that ‘they can
diminish international inequalities’, while ‘nation-states… are in a position to diminish
regional or group inequalities to some extent” (p. 853). Global inequality is a social
construct which makes it viable for deconstruction and therefore, change.
Another way of looking at the world apart from distinctions of ‘global north’ and
‘global south’—these are social constructs connoting the unevenness and inequality
inherent with globalization which produces winners and losers in social, political, and
economic senses—is through the idea of regions. Take the Philippines, for example. Our
country’s archipelagic nature has formed a sense of local regionalism where close-knit
provinces are grouped within a region. The Philippines has seventeen (17) regions.
Although separated by regions, the sense of nationalism of Filipino citizens remains true
as to recognize oneself as a part of a nation-state.
The regionalism in the Philippines is different from the regionalism that will be
discussed for this topic. The lens to look at the phenomenon of regionalism shifts from
the Philippines and extends to its neighboring countries. This poses the questions, “how
did the Philippines come to identify itself with the Southeast Asian region? Why is it a
part of a regional grouping known as the Association of Southeast Asian Nation
(ASEAN)?” (Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 50). The answer to these questions lies at the very
nature of regionalism.
30
ASEAN region map. Image from https://assets.weforum.org/editor/BJWwsWYHgg5DIHZFkW8HxsmFOpbXPz_e2J6-JNcffTM.png
32
c. Protect independence from pressures of superpower politics e.g. Non-Aligned
Movement (NAM) which is an organization of countries that refuse to align with
the Western superpowers
d. Economic crisis compels countries to come together e.g. regional organizations
can establish an emergency fund that can be utilized by their constituent states
struck by the economic crisis to stabilize their economy and not affect the other
economies.
REGIONALISM vis-à-vis GLOBALIZATION: THE CASE OF ASIA PACIFIC AND SOUTH ASIA
In his article, Globalization and the Asia Pacific and South Asia, Ehito Kimura
(2014) presented three (3) frameworks by which we can understand the relationship
between globalization and the regions in the Asia Pacific and South Asia. These
frameworks show how globalization is related to regionalism, yet regionalism can be a
reaction against globalization as well. In his words, the “various lenses through which to
explore the relationship between globalization and the region of [the] Asia Pacific and
South Asia… shows how globalization is a complex process where regional dynamics
must be understood as both a cause and a consequence” (Kimura, 2014: 843). Kimura
explained his frameworks further by citing economic, political, and cultural instances
that happened in the Asia Pacific and South Asia regions throughout history.
Let us be reminded of the definitions of globalization, regionalism, and region:
Globalization – worldwide integration along economic, political, social, and cultural lines
Regionalism – a political process characterized by economic policy cooperation and
coordination among countries; pertains more on intergovernmental collaborations
Region – a group of countries located in the same geographically specified area or an
amalgamation of two regions [or] a combination of more than two regions organized to
regulate and oversee flows and policy choices
The three (3) frameworks for understanding the relationship between globalization and
the regions of the Asia Pacific and South Asia are (Kimura, 2014):
33
Illustration of the Asia Pacific and South Asia region. Image from https://media.corporate-
ir.net/media_files/nys/im/presentations/koppen/img009.gif
FRAMEWORK DESCRIPTIONS
The region has Globalization transforms the region of the Asia Pacific and
been affected by South Asia
The duality of the effects of globalization on the region:
globalization
a. A positive force for bringing economic development,
(externalist political progress, and social and cultural diversity.
view) b. A negative force with the role it plays in economic
underdevelopment and the uprooting of local tradition
and culture.
MANIFESTATIONS THROUGHOUT THE REGION’S HISTORY:
- The “Western arrival” to the region through colonialism
(beginning from the 1500s) brought enormous changes.
Through colonial rule in the Asia Pacific and South Asia
countries, Europeans brought new economic practices,
religious beliefs, cultural values, and political structures
that affected and changed the region drastically.
- The consequences of Western influence. E.g. pressures
from Western superpowers have made Japan take
subsequent political and economic transformation turning
Japan into a regional and eventually world power.
- Movements for nationalism and independence emerged
in many parts of the world, the Asia Pacific and South Asia
regions included. These movements are products of an
increasingly globalized world. Benedict Anderson (2007)
highlighted that idea of nationalism became modular and
spread to other parts of the globe.
- Post-World War II economic developments and the rise
of financial investments through the role of International
Financial Institutions (IFIs) like World Bank and
International Monetary Fund (the cornerstones of
economic liberalization and globalization in the post-war
global economy). I.e. East Asian countries like Japan,
Korea, and Taiwan drew their economic developments
through economic policies they saw as an increasingly
globalized economic system. IFIs turned their attention to
developing
countries in Southeast Asia.
34
- The Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 which had the Thai
economy at its core and affected most of Asia was seen as
a result of a failed globalization and the limits of deep
impact globalization in economies in the region.
- Other regional effects of economic globalization and
liberalization include the changes in labor practices and
the rise of non-standard employment (i.e. temporary and
part- time employment). In this type of employment,
workers are not consignees of legal contracts and are
subject to poor working conditions.
- Politics has been a defining characteristic of globalization
as well. The region of the Asia Pacific and South Asia has
witnessed the fall of authoritarian regimes and the rise of
democratic governments. This shift in politics has been
attributed to factors such as the rising middle classes and
a more globally interconnected world.
- The effects of globalization on culture. The idea that
globalization is a form of Westernization, that
globalization is leading to cultural homogenization and the
loss of cultural diversity. This is seen in the changing diet
of Asians (preference for fast food and supermarket
produced goods), changing tastes in music, clothing,
television, and film. This point argues that Western
cultural trends have spread globally and increasingly
marginalized how cultural practices are expressed.
This framework forwards the idea that the relationship
between globalization and the region is largely a “one-way
process”—outside forces have brought fundamental and far-
reaching changes to the region.
The region is an This framework forwards the idea that the region is more of
active agent an autonomous agent serving as an engine for globalization.
This view shows the important ways in which the region is
pushing the
also influencing and transforming the nature of globalization
process of itself.
globalization MANIFESTATIONS THROUGHOUT THE REGION’S HISTORY:
forward - The presence of the spice trade route suggests the idea
that early modern-day history Asia has led the global
economy and fell behind from the 18th-century. I.e. before
Europe circumnavigated the world, spices were already
making their way to various parts of the globe and the
European were interested in cutting out the middleman.
- Asia, not the West, was the central global force in the
early modern world economy (because of the important
trade routes located in the region and the advancements
in science and medicine). The rise of Europe in the 18th-
century came only after the colonial powers extracted
silver from the colonies and pried their way into the Asian
markets.
- Colonies in the Asia Pacific and South Asia influenced the
West as much as the West influenced the region. E.g.
practices and technologies such as counterinsurgency,
surveillance, and torture were developed and perfected in
the colonial Philippines before making their way back to
America.
35
- Cases to dispute the claim that the Asia Pacific and South
Asian countries are at the receiving end of globalization:
Japanese development in the 1950s-1970s shaped and
globalized key parts of the world economy. China’s impact
on the availability and consumption of goods around the
globe.
- Countries in the region like India and China become a
major source of international migrant labor—one of the
fundamental characteristics of globalization. I.e.
remittance from migrants has become a core source of
income for many if the region’s economies. The region is
both the source and recipient of the influences of the
massive globalization of migration.
- The rise of regional free trade arrangements (regionalism)
in the Asia Pacific and South Asia. This regionalism (as
compatible and even pushing forward the process of
global economic integration) can promote regional
cooperation to global cooperation. E.g. open regionalism
embodied by the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation
(APEC)
- A broad area of culture and globalization in the region.
The region is the source of a wide variety of cultural
phenomena that have also spread outward to the West
and the rest of the world. E.g. Japan’s Hello Kitty and
Anime, Korea’s K-drama and K-pop, Chinese kung-fu
movies, and India’s Bollywood films.
In contradiction to the first framework, this framework views
globalization as not working in a one-way street description,
the region is generative of many aspects of the globalization
process.
The region can The last framework focuses on viewing regionalism as an
be understood as alternative to globalization.
This perspective sees the region as a source of resistance to
posing an
globalization or global or Western powers.
alternative to MANIFESTATIONS THROUGHOUT THE REGION’S HISTORY:
globalization - Japan’s colonization of the Asian region and the creation
of the East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere is viewed as a push
back against Western imperialism. E.g. propaganda
centered on the idea of “Asia for Asiatics” and the need to
“liberate” the region from Europe.
- The conceptualization of the Asian values of leaders in the
region argued that Asia has culturally distinct
characteristics that make it different from Western liberal
democracies. Proponents of the Asian value describe
Asians as respectful of authority, hardworking, thrifty, and
emphasizes the community rather than individuality is
antithetical to Western concepts such as individual rights,
political liberalism, and democracy.
- Regional arrangements provide another way that region
serves as an alternative to globalization. I.e. there are
other institutions proposed or implemented at the regional
level that are more exclusive and self-consciously ‘Asian’
such as the East Asia Economic Caucus (EAEC), the
proposed Asian
Monetary Fund (AMF).
36
37
- A more subversive articulation of regionalism as an
alternative to globalization is the emergence of regional
terror networks. E.g. Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), main
operation in Indonesia with links in Malaysia, the
Philippines, and Thailand.
- Disengagement from globalization through various local
movements. E.g. community currency in the village of
Santi Suk in Thailand, local associations, self-sufficiency
groups,
cooperative, and local production movements.
Kimura (2014) notes that these frameworks are not definitive, yet they already
offer rich analyses through historical and contemporary accounts on the ways by which
we can see the relationship between globalization and the region of the Asia Pacific and
South Asia.
In connection with Kimura’s (2014) postulations on the relationship between
globalization and regions, the Asian Development Bank (2008) has enumerated several
points regarding the benefits Asia gain from regionalism and the benefits the world gain
from Asian regionalism to answer the question of why Asian regionalism?
BENEFITS OF ASIA FROM REGIONALISM (ADB, 2008: 13)
1. link the competitive strengths of its diverse economies in order to boost their
productivity and sustain the region’s exceptional growth;
2. connect the region’s capital markets to enhance financial stability, reduce the
cost of capital, and improve opportunities for sharing risks;
3. cooperate in setting exchange rate and macroeconomic policies to minimize the
effects of global and regional shocks and to facilitate the resolution of global
imbalances;
4. pool the region’s foreign exchange reserves to make more resources available
for investment and development;
5. exercise leadership in global decision making to sustain the open global trade
and financial systems that have supported a half-century of unparalleled
economic development;
6. build connected infrastructure and collaborate on inclusive development to
reduce inequalities within and across economies and thus to strengthen support
for pro-growth policies; and
7. create regional mechanisms to manage cross-border health, safety, and
environmental issues better.
BENEFITS THE WORLD GAIN FROM ASIAN REGIONALISM (ADB, 2008: 14)
1. generate productivity gains, new ideas, and competition that boost economic
growth and raise incomes across the world;
2. contribute to the efficiency and stability of global financial markets by making
Asian capital markets stronger and safer, and by maximizing the productive use
of Asian savings;
3. diversify sources of global demand, helping to stabilize the world economy and
diminish the risks posed by global imbalances and downturns in other major
economies;
4. provide leadership to help sustain open global trade and financial systems; and
5. create regional mechanisms to manage health, safety, and environmental issues
better, and thus contribute to more effective global solutions to these problems.
38
In summary, regionalism comes as a different phenomenon from globalization
yet it is still highly related to the latter. Both processes are engaged in a complex
flux, continually affecting one another in a two-way connection. Asian regionalism
has its sense of identity and autonomy, as member-states work towards a common
goal/s, participate in regional economy building, and maintain a sense of interstate
community.
The discussions on seeing the world in divides and regions do not aim to
perpetuate a sense of division but a sense of distinction on how globalization as a
multidimensional and uneven phenomenon creates and perpetuates inequality on
one hand, and promote solidarity and community among interstates that are
continually being shaped by globalization and regionalism.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on Asian regionalism:
ASEAN explained in 5 minutes (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAnfj8v5acM)
Benefits and Opportunities of Regional Cooperation in South Asia
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpKwv4qtrZ8)
What is ASEAN? | CNBC Explains (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VDTdXDDzJ1k)
What Is ASEAN And Why Is It Important For Southeast Asia?
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FIl3bxwLdw)
TASK/ACTIVITY
39
DOWN
1. economic development is conceptualized in a linear process
7. for the reason that globalization is uneven, it produces and perpetuates a sense of…
11. the regional group in which the Philippines is a part of
ACROSS
2.the bases of the gap between the Global North and the Global South
3.a political process characterized by economic policy cooperation and
coordination among countries
4.an economic framework which leans more on free-market capitalism
5.regional concentration of economic flows; the growing intensity of interaction and
cooperation between neighboring countries
6.the geographical split of 1980s
8.the symbolic designation meant to capture the semblance of cohesion that
emerged when former colonial entities engaged in political projects of
decolonization and moved toward the realization of a postcolonial international
order
9.a group of countries located in the same geographically specified area” or “an
amalgamation of two regions or a combination of more than two regions” organized to
regulate and “oversee flows and policy choices
10. the 3 frameworks Kimura (2014) forwarded underscores the relationship of regionalism
with...
ASSESSMENT
STATE PROFILING
Select a country, do research, and describe the following aspects:
1. The country’s economic policies
2. The country’s foreign and/or diplomatic policies
3. Membership of the country to international organizations (IO)
4. Determine if the country you have choses is part of the global north or
the global south
5. The country’s condition under globalization and regionalism
ASSESSMENT RUBRICS:
Format: 15%
Citation and ethical integrity: 20%
Integration, organization, and elaboration of data, information, and points: 50%
Writing technicalities (narrative, grammar): 15%
40
TCW WORKSHEET NO. 3 – STATE PROFILING
County:
Determine if the country you have choses is part of the global north or the global south, provide discussion about their
condition:
41
TOPICS
1. Global Media Cultures
2. The Globalization of Religion
LEARNING OUTCOMES
In the pursuit to answer the question of “when did globalization begin?”, cultural
anthropologist Arjun Appadurai (1996) contends that advances in media (i.e. television,
computers, and cellphones) together with migration (i.e. changing migration patterns as
people easily move around the world) fundamentally changed the human life and gave
way to globalization (as cited in Lule, 2014: 662). With this contention, we go back to
Appadurai’s (1996) five ‘scapes’: ethnoscape (flows of people), technoscape (flow of
technology), finanscape (flow of money), mediascape (flow of information), and
ideoscape (flow of ideas), all of which helps us to gain an understanding to the
42
multidimensional character of globalization, these flows make up the multiple and
intersecting dimensions shaping the global culture.
In his article, Globalization and Media: Creating the Global Village, Lule (2014)
forwards the ideas that (1) globalization could not occur without media; and (2)
globalization and media have proceeded together through time and supported these
claims by outlining the development of media throughout time. The essence of these
ideas is simplified in the statement that “media have made globalization possible”
(Lule, 2014: 661). Moreover, he cited instances by which media has played significant
roles in shaping the global processes of economics, politics, and culture—the three
aspects that make up the multidimensionality of globalization. Lastly, Lule’s (2014)
article looks at the concept and phenomenon of the ‘global village’ through the
conceptualizations and perspectives offered by Marshall McLuhan and Lewis Mumford.
CONCERTO OF GLOBALIZATION AND MEDIA (Lule, 2014)
Globalization – a set of multiple, uneven, and sometimes overlapping historical
processes, including economics, politics, and culture, that have combined with the
evolution of media technology to create the conditions under which the globe itself can
now be understood as ‘an imagined community’
This definition entails that
1. Globalization involves multiple processes—economic, political, and cultural.
2. Developments in media technology are crucial to globalization.
3. We can understand that globe itself as an ‘imagined community’.
Media – plural for medium; a means of conveying something, such as channel of
communication
EVOLUTION OF MEDIA AND GLOBALIZATION
Lule (2014) outlined five major media periods throughout history through which
he described the process of how the media of each time shaped and/or contributed to
the globalization of our world (p. 664). The five media periods are oral communication,
script, print, electronic, and digital—all are nuanced medium that played key roles in
pushing forward the economic, political, and cultural processes of globalization. The
descriptions Lule provided should help you grasp the ideas mentioned above, that
globalization could not occur without media, and globalization and media have
proceeded together through time.
oral
communication script print electronic digital
43
ORAL COMMUNICATION
The human speech is the oldest and most enduring medium.
How language facilitated globalization?
1. Language allowed humans to cooperate.
2. Sharing information about necessities such as land and water source as well as
knowledge on the climate and weather helped humans to travel and adapt to
their environments.
3. Sharing of information about tools and weapons led to the spread of
technology—language was the most important tool.
4. As human beings settled, language led to markets, trade of goods and services,
and eventually into international trade routes.
SCRIPT
Script, as the very first writing, allowed humans to communicate and share knowledge
and ideas over much larger space and across much longer times.
Scripts such as the alphabet learned by people around the world is central to the
evolution of humankind and its civilizations.
Scripts allowed for the written and permanent codification of economic, cultural,
religious, and political practice. These codes spread out over large distances and
handed down through time.
ELECTRONIC MEDIA
PRINTING PRESS
Electronic media include
The ‘information the telegraph,
revolution’ telephone,
transformed markets,radio, film, and television.
businesses, nations, schools,
These media helped in shaping globalization
churches, governments, and armies among others. through the following:
1. the
With Corporations
advent of the andprinting
businesses
press, were
readingable to exchange
material suddenly information about
was cheaply made
markets
and easily and prices,
circulated. and newspapers
Millions of books, could report information
pamphlets, and flyer wereinstantaneously
produced,
through the telegraph,
reproduced, and circulated. telephone, and cellphone.
The2.printing
Artistspress
usedencouraged
film to capture powerful
the literacy narratives
of the public andthat
theresonated
growth ofwithin and
schools.
across cultures.
The explosive flow of economic, cultural, and political ideas around the world
3. Television
connected allowedpeople
and changed peopleand
to view pictures and stories from across the globe—
cultures.
the world was
Two consequences brought through
produced into the the
homes.
development and practice of printing press
(Eisenstein, 1979):
1. Printing press preserved and standardized knowledge.
2. Print encouraged the challenge of political and religious authority because of
its ability to circulate competing views.
44
DIGITAL MEDIA
The computer has facilitated globalization through the following:
1. In the area of economics, computers allow global trading to happen 24 hours
a day. Computers allow for the access of economic information as well.
Moreover, computers and the internet allow the streamline of tasks,
research, and industrial or corporate aspect to a global marketplace.
2. In politics, the computer and internet allow citizens access to information from
around the world, even information that governments would like to conceal.
3. With the access to information from around the globe, the internet allows
people to adopt new practices in music, sports, education, religion, arts and
other areas of cultures.
4. Social networking sites connect people around the world in a virtual
community.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on the interplay of globalization, culture, and media:
Cultures, Subcultures, and Countercultures: Crash Course Sociology
#11 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RV50AV7-Iwc)
Mass media | Society and Culture | MCAT | Khan
Academy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=5RRyX9mI5Lw)
The Medium is the Message (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ko6J9v1C9zE)
But Wait: How DOES The Media Tell You What To
Think? (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=F7SzwMJ3MZQ)
45
4. For Lewis Mumford, the dark side of the ‘global village’ lies at how corporations
and industries used media technology, not for beyond-borders-human-
connections-and-relations but capitalism, militarism, profit, and power plays.
Because media and globalization have connected people from around the world,
it is safe to imagine the world as a ‘global village’ yet this idea presents to us that the
connection, closeness, and interdependence of the social structures that comprise the
global village did not lead to collective harmony and peace. The dynamics between
media and globalization in the economic, political, and cultural aspects show the
dystopia in the conception of the global village.
The table below presents descriptions by which economic, political, and cultural
globalization and the media is affecting one another in the shaping of the global village.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On global village and dynamisms of culture with globalization:
Diversity and globalization: James Sun at TEDxBayArea Ignite
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-K_bYQ11DE&pbjreload=101)
Multiculturalism as a threat and multiculturalism as an asset | Rebar Jaff |
TEDxErbil (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FSHKircIoA)
Marshall McLuhan - The World is a Global Village (CBC
TV) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeDnPP6ntic)
47
48
TASK/ACTIVITY
KOMIKS
Create a six-panel comic strip illustrating your experience with the global
media cultures. As an individual connected to the world through different
media (language, news, magazines, popular culture, and the internet), how
does this shape or influence your life. You can derive your illustration from
any of these ideas:
a. The manner by which the accessibility of ideas/information, and the
growing connection of peoples and cultures shape or influence the
way you live and the way you understand your place in the world.
b. The positive and negative effects of using media that you
experienced personally.
c. Your experience of local media cultures versus your experience of
American media cultures in terms of popular culture like music and
film.
d. The way by which global media cultures have helped you to stay
connected, informed, and sane during the Covid-19 pandemic
lockdowns.
You are free to use any illustration style and materials in your comics.
Create your comics strip in a short bond paper.
TASK/ACTIVITY RUBRIC:
Artistic elements (design, art style, medium):
20%
Creativity: 30%
Narrative, theme, ideas and/or ideals
forwarded through the comic strip: 50%
An example of a six-panel comic strip
Religion is both an institution and a facet of a culture where the belief systems
and/or world views of peoples are contained. And if institutions and culture, in their
general sense, are subject to a dynamic relationship with globalization then religion is no
exception. There are contrasting views when it comes to the interplay of religion vis-à-
vis globalization. One pertains to the idea that religion rides at the back of globalization
and benefits from it. The other is rooted in the perspective of religious people that
globalization is an immoral thing that subjects man into the pursuit of economic
development and stability rather than a divine-ordained life that is characterized by
humility, dependence, and faith to God.
49
An illustration of religion and globalization. Image from https://www.mercurynews.com/wp-
content/uploads/2016/08/20131031_011553_1103lipcol.jpg?w=640
Claudio and Abinales (2018) enumerated the clash between religion (i.e. a
collection of cultural systems, belief systems, and world views that establish symbols
that relate to humanity to spirituality and moral values) and globalism (i.e. a widespread
belief among powerful people that the global integration of economic market is
beneficial for everyone since it spreads freedom and democracy across the world) in
terms of ideas and practices related to the powerful force of globalization.
The clash between religion and globalism is described through the following (Claudio &
Abinales, 2018: 62-63):
RELIGION GLOBALISM
• concerned with the sacred • places value on material wealth
• follows divine commandments • abide by human-made laws
• assumes the possibility of • puts premium on how much human
communication between humans action can lead to the highest
and the supreme being material satisfaction
• the supreme being has a social • globalists are not worried if they
power over the human being and go to heaven or hell, they life is
judges human action in moral about developing skills on how to
terms seal trade deals, raise profits,
• less concerned with wealth, they improve government revenue
refuse materiality for a collections, protect the rich from
simple/humble existence excessive taxing, and enriching
• a religious person's duty is to live themselves
righteously such that when they • globalists trains to be
die, they are assured with a place in shrewd businessperson
heaven • globalists use politics as both means
• religious people aspire to and ends to open up further the
become saints economies of the world
• religious people detest politics • the globalist idea is focused on
• religious evangelization is in itself the realm of markets
a form of globalization • globalists wishes to spread goods
• religions are concerned with and services
spreading holy ideas around
the world
50
With these clashing points between religion and globalism, several questions can be
raised, how exactly religion relates to globalization? What are the ways by which
globalization influence or affect the religions in the contemporary world? And, is religion
for or against globalization?
Victor Roudometof (2014) in his article, Religion and Globalization, discussed the
sociological take on the relationship of religion with globalization under the idea of what
he called the ‘religion-globalization problematic’ (p. 882). An overview of the
secularization paradigm became a prerequisite and sets the stage for the study and
presentation of the religion-globalization problematic. The inquiry on the relationship
between religion and globalization has produced agendas by which it can be interpreted
and then understood (Roudometof, 2014: 882).
SECULARIZATION PARADIGM
The modern world is a secular one, not because of people becoming less
religious or the growing separation of the church and the state, but because there has
been a shift in the framework of understanding human conditions (Roudometof, 2014:
883). Secularization is understood as this shift; “it makes it possible for people to have a
choice between belief and non-belief in a manner hitherto unknown” (Ibid.). In our
secular society today, people have the freedom to choose if they are going to live their
life under a belief or non-belief. Individuals today are not compelled to be members of a
religion or to follow and live by religious practices. The presence of agnostics (do not
have any belief in any deity) and atheists (they do not believe in the existence of a deity)
today are manifestations of this shift of human condition with regards to belief systems
and/or worldviews contained in religions.
Two Ideas Concerning Secularization (Roudometof, 2014: 883-884):
1. Post-secular society
- This idea was forwarded by Jürgen Habermas
- Post-secularity is seen in contemporary societies, whereby religion makes a
return to the public sphere
- It is characterized by a revitalized religiosity that takes many forms:
fundamentalism, and public flagging of religious belief that is not matched by
religious practice
2. Secularism as an active project
- This idea forwards that secularism is a multifaceted movement
- Secularization occurs as an outcome of social action and no longer occur as a
result of broader cultural, economic, and political changes
Limits of the Secularization Paradigm (Roudometof, 2014: 884-885):
1. It is unable to recognize the social and cultural power of the religious factor.
2. The limited view on the study of religion: limited to the study of the institution
and the individual, disregarding the non-institutional, collective, and public
cultural dimension of religion.
3. The focus and descriptions of the study of religion and secularization paradigm
were drawn from mainly the cultural elements and historical experience of the
West and ignore the non-Western religions.
51
4. A central issue in this paradigm concerns non-Western experience and major
contentions on the existence of Western bias in concepts, methods, and
research agendas.
GLOBALIZATION OF RELIGION
• The spread of religions and specific genres/forms/blueprints of
religious expression across the globe.
• Forwards the idea that the very notion of what constitutes a ‘religion’ is the
product of a long-term process of inter-civilization or cross-cultural interactions.
• The study of secularism and the adaptation of secularization in various
cultures and faiths across the globe is an important facet of this.
• The spread of religion through missionaries that benefit from the channels of
globalization such as international travel, and the use of media (news,
internet, film, music, television) to become familiar to proliferate religious
53
is an instrument with which religious people can put their mark in the reshaping of
this globalizing world, although in its own terms (p. 67).
The relationship between religion and globalization, then, cannot be limited to the idea
that the two are entirely opposing and/or contradicting as the diagram on the
contradictions between religion and globalism shows (see diagram above).
As another institutional and cultural force shaping the integration and
interconnection of people in the borderless world, the difference in religions and beliefs
encourages genuine respect from one another rather than mere tolerance that can
parade as a mask for discrimination and racism among others. Religion and globalization
will remain to coexist in the contemporary world, the shifts and changes in related
human conditions will be shaped by the interplay of culture with economics and politics.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On religion in the contemporary world:
The five major world religions - John Bellaimey
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6dCxo7t_aE)
Religion, faith and the role they play today | The
Economist (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=paVXPXoyDdo)
Animated map shows how religion spread around the
world (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AvFl6UBZLv4)
Religion: Crash Course Sociology #39 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pIgb-
3e8CWA)
Faith and Globalization (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5OLHAWfJ_8Y)
ASSESSMENT
54
TCW WORKSHEET NO. 4 – RELIGIONS IN THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD
Religion (provide a short description as well):
c. The steps needed by a person to become good and prevent himself/herself from becoming evil.
d. The religion’s relationship with politics, if any. In what ways is it engaged in politics? Why did its
leaders decide to involve in politics?
TOPICS
1. The Global City
2. Global Demography
3. Global Migration
LEARNING OUTCOMES
We constantly note that globalization has paved the way for the increasing
integration and interconnection of economies, political structures, cultures, and
peoples from all over the world. Globalization has established both international and
transnational institutions and social structures. Because globalization is ‘global’ we
assume that it is embodied by the whole world—like the entirety of the earth. But
because globalization is inherently uneven, some contexts and spaces embody its
essence more than the other. If London, New York, and Tokyo are considered and
recognized as
57
‘global cities’, then this poses the question, what constitutes a global city? If these cities
can be global cities, can Manila be one as well?
The conception of the ‘global city’ answers to the character of globalization as a
spatial phenomenon because it occurs in physical spaces and because its movements
are based in places (Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 84). The increase in skyscrapers seen in
the horizon, the movement of people to the cities for work, studies, or leisure, and the
conditions by which the poor are displaced outside the city to give way to ‘progress’
manifest the idea that globalization—although global in scope—its entirety can be seen
in the unit of a city. For Claudio and Abinales (2018), “cities act on globalization and
globalization acts on cities. They are sites of as well as the mediums of globalization. Just
as the internet enables and shapes global forces, so too do cities.” In connection to this,
Colic-Piesker (2014) argues that the idea of a ‘global city’ “has a central place in
understanding contemporary spatial patterns of globalization.”
CHARACTERIZING THE GLOBAL CITY (Claudio & Abinales, 2018; Colic-Peisker, 2014)
The global city is the main physical and geographic context of globalizing forces, the
global flow of people, capital, and ideas are interconnected in the daily experiences
of its residents.
The global city represents and contains the world in a bounded space.
Global cities are hubs of innovation, creativity, and productivity. Global cities are
financial centers, with great concentration of geopolitical power, cultural
powerhouses, and higher education hubs and creative industries.
For sociologist Saskia Sassen (1991), the most defining characteristic is economic
power, which largely determines which cities are global. According to Sassen, global
cities are the “command centers”, the main spaces of triumphant global capitalism.
E.g. New York has the largest stock market; there are 613 company headquarters in
Tokyo; the biggest container port in the world is found in Shanghai.
According to the Global Power City Index by the Japanese Mori Foundation, the
global power of cities is measured through six criteria:
a. Economy
b. Research and development
c. Cultural interaction
58
d. Liveability
e. Environment
f. Accessibility
Moreover, according to the Index, there is a sense of “magnetism” by which global
cities deserve their status: a comprehensive power to attract creative people and
excellent companies from around the world. Similar to Moretti (2012), global cities
represent “brain hubs” that have concentrations of innovative people and firms, has
good “human ecosystems” for businesses, and provides support functions or
“secondary services” for innovators.
The ‘things’ produced in global cities are not material, they are immaterial such as
ideas and knowledge. This “symbolic economy” based on abstract products like
financial instruments, information, and popular culture (arts, fashion, music, etc.)
has increasing importance as manufacturing companies move out of cities into slum
cities in Third World countries.
Economic opportunities in a global city attract talents from across the world. E.g. IT
programmers and engineers from Asia moved to San Francisco and became key
figures in Silicon Valley’s technological boom.
Global cities are characterized by occupational and income polarization, with the
highly paid professionals on one end and providers of low-paid skill services on the
other. This condition continually reimagines social classes, income distribution, and
the labor market, and perpetuates the inherent inequality in globalization.
Global cities are centers of authority and in some instances, centers of political
influence. E.g. Washington D.C. is America’s seat of state power; United Nations’
headquarters in New York; headquarters of ASEAN in Jakarta.
Global cities are centers of higher learning and cultural experiences. They attract
international students. E.g. Harvard University in Boston; the American film industry
in Los Angeles; Singapore’s cultural hub.
The cultural power of global cities ties them to the imagination. I.e. references in
songs and films deliver a message of a “greater pasture” in global cities, persuading
people to move into one.
Global cities are melting pots for cultural diversity, as a consequence of human
mobility and migration. I.e. presence of foreign population either for work,
education, or tourism purposes.
Globalization has created the global labor market, leading to an increase in
transnational mobility and migration of people coming from different places
into the global cities.
The “magnetism” of global cities is not only for the creative and innovative
professionals and firms but also for other necessary workers (those in the
low- skilled, poorly paid service sector).
UNDERSIDES OF THE GLOBAL CITY (Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 89-92)
Global cities can be sites of great inequality, poverty, and violence—these spaces
create winners and losers.
Among the most profound downsides of everyday life in a global city are high
housing costs, long working hours, competitive labor market, long commuting time,
discrimination and racism, loss of sense of community which promotes greater
individuality among neighbors and residents.
Environmental aspect:
59
a. Cities like Singapore and Tokyo with dense population and extensive public
transportation systems have lower carbon footprints environmentally
sustainable
b. Cities like Manila and Bangkok with dense population and no extensive public
transportation coupled with unregulated car industries lead to a high level of
pollution environmentally unsustainable
c. Cities consume the most energy
Socio-political aspect:
- Cities are targeted for major terrorist attacks because of their high
population, global influence, and their embodiment of globalization. E.g.
9/11 attack in New York
Economic aspect:
- Today, it is common to find towering buildings alongside shantytowns
housing the urban poor population.
- Cities are now becoming the same mechanism that drives out and displaces
the poor, in favor of wealthier people (gentrification).
- The number of middle-class population is decreasing as the binary socio-
economic divide between the rich and the poor widens.
The very nature of global cities as the sites and medium of globalization
embody complex and interwoven economic, political, cultural, and demographic
processes. If we perceive globalization as an abstract process taking place at the world
level, the conditions in the global city illustrate to us that globalization is also tangible
and closer to home. Global cities pretty much exemplify globalization and its intricate
influence and relation to our everyday lived experiences.
As global cities are viewed as more of a horseman of economic globalization than
the other aspects of politics and culture, the inherent unevenness and inequality of
globalization manifest on how it treats economic players, human agency, human labor,
social structures, human experiences, and living conditions. The challenge of creating an
experience of globalization in an equalizing manner is yet to materialize.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on global city:
Global Cities - Full Documentary (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-
4oMnmu47Q&t=68s)
Urbanisation and the growth of global cities
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EpBbnL3pMRA)
Issues Illustrated: Global Cities
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2x8zmA9RYrM)
Saskia Sassen | Global Cities
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZP2VE7ptKjI&t=91s)
Urbanization and the future of cities - Vance Kite
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fKnAJCSGSdk)
How to Make an Attractive City
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hy4QjmKzF1c&t=104s)
60
TASK/ACTIVITY
61
Global demography. Image from https://s03.s3c.es/imag/_v0/770x420/d/f/8/Personas-mapa-mundo-iStock.jpg
The movements of people to urban areas and/or global cities are marking
significant changes in demography as well. As people move to the cities for work,
studies, and other reasons, population count and human density in cities with small
land-area spike up. In a similar case, international migration has been an omnipresent
force in relation to globalization and its influence on the human population.
DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
In his article, The Demographic Transition: Three Centuries of Fundamental
Change, Ronald Lee (2003) traced and discussed the dramatic demographic transition in
three centuries by taking a comparative lens on different demographic aspects
(mortality declines, fertility transition, population growth, and shifts in age distribution)
from cases and data of three categories of countries (Most Developed Countries, Less
Developed Countries, and Least Develop Countries).
For Lee (2003), there are temporal phases of demographic transition, which are
the pre-demographic transition phase and the actual demographic transition period. Lee
(2003) characterized the two phases.
• life was short • mortality decline
PRE-DEMOGRAPHIC ACTUAL DEMOGRAPHIC
• births were many • fertility decline
TRANSITION
• growth was slow
TRANSTION PERIOD
• growth rates: accelerate and
• the population was young then slow again
• low fertility
• long life
• an old population
62
CLASSIC DEMOGRAPHIC TRANSITION
increase
and
mortality reduced decrease population
decline fertility in aging
population
growth
63
These aspects are largely situated within the international contexts by comparing
trends, forecasts, and projection regarding the trajectory of the global population, 50
years or a century from now.
THE PERILS AND CONTROL-MECHANISMS OF OVERPOPULATION
The current figures when it comes to the global population are at 7.8 billion
people in the whole world. As the trajectory of population growth leans more on the
increasing size for the next 50 or 100 years, the current problem with overpopulation
will heighten. As the number of people increases, the perils of overpopulation loom.
Claudio and Abinales (2018) have discussed some of these ‘perils’ and prospective
solutions governments can take to ‘control’ their population growth:
1. Overpopulation will bring about the environmental degradation that will lead to
food shortage and massive starvation. There is a growing sense of global food
insecurity.
2. The free expansion of family members would lead to a crisis in resources, which
may result in widespread poverty, mass hunger, and political instability.
3. Advocates of population control push for universal access to reproductive
technologies (condoms, pills, abortion, and vasectomy) and giving women the
right to choose whether to have children or not.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On global demographic transition and human population trajectories:
Mapping global population and the future of the world | The
Economist (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ur77lDetI9Q)
Overpopulation – The Human Explosion Explained
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QsBT5EQt348)
Demographic transition | Society and Culture | MCAT | Khan
Academy (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6P2bsPWCRvM)
Population dynamics | Society and Culture | MCAT | Khan Academy
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4CAQN-nc8Ac&pbjreload=101)
64
Demographic forecasts and predictions indicate an increasing trajectory of the Filipino
population for the next thirty years. With our existing institutional crises, failing
governmental policies and programs, rampant poverty and hunger, increasing
unemployment rate, decreasing purchasing power of the poor, environmental
degradation, the continuing trend of the population will pose challenges and problems
at intersecting and multilevel dimensions. We will start to ask how we are going to feed
additional million mouths, how are we going to accommodate more people in our
limited land area, how do we mitigate the tendency to move past our carrying capacity,
and how do we assure the next generations that they can still live securely.
Global demography is a broad topic which draws a lot of data and analyses from
different disciplines in the social sciences, data sciences, and statistics. Globalization will
continue to have a huge impact on human populations, mobility, migration, and related
conditions. Aside from the challenges of making globalization more just and capable of
upholding interstate and global harmony, making the results of the processes more
humane and mindful of different human conditions should be considered as well.
65
TOPIC 3: GLOBAL MIGRATION
In the discussion of the global city, we focused on the spaces by which the large-
scale process of globalization manifests greatly in a context-bound perspective. In the
previous topic on the global population, we looked at forecasts and predictions of
human population trajectories in light of an ongoing demographic transition process. For
the last topic of this chapter, we focus on the movements of people under the push and
pull of globalization.
Global migration, or the process of migration in general, is seen as another
product of the increasing interaction and interconnection of peoples, structures, and
systems brought by globalization. People can move from one country to another.
Migration is an intersection of economic, political, sociological, and anthropological
processes and conditions that pushes or pulls people toward the idea and action of
moving or migrating to another place.
66
MIGRATION - the temporary or
permanent movement of people
from one place to another
67
BENEFITS AND DETRIMENTS OF MIGRATION (Claudio & Abinales, 2018)
BENEFITS DETRIMENTS
• Migrant workers' remittances make • Brain Drain - poor countries lose
significant contributions to the their skilled workers to rich
development of small- and medium- countries; professionals, skilled
term industries that help generate and talented workers are moving
jobs to richer countries because of
• Remittances change the economic better opportunities and benefits
and social standing of the migrant • Governments of home countries
workers in their home country, are aware that they are losing
• The purchasing power of the professional workers yet they
migrant worker's family doubles, continue to promote migrant work
they can now afford education and because of the remittance's impact
healthcare on the country's GDP
• Human trafficking
• Integration of the migrants to
the host country
The inherent inequality and unevenness in the process of globalization have created
winners and losers when it comes to the globalization of people. Richer countries
became winners for having skilled, talented, and professional workers from other
countries working for their economies. While poor countries experience brain drain
because all of the skilled and professional people have left the country, in part, through
the state policy and the role remittances play in the home country’s GDP. Likewise, for
the migrants themselves, they are winners if they can lift their families from poverty for
having better economic and living conditions in their host countries. But for migrants
who experience a rather negative turn of events, e.g. through human trafficking, they
will not see migration as something beneficial to them but rather detrimental and
dislocating.
Nation-states have different takes on migration. Not every state is willing to
usher in migrant workers, many have strict state policies in ensuing that foreigners will
not easily enter their territories and commit international violations and/or crimes. In
the part of the migrating people, they still face discrimination from the citizens of their
host country in terms of their work (the blue- and white-collar jobs divide), cultural and
linguistic differences, and a sense of intensified exclusion and “othering” among others.
Global migration has its fair share of beneficial and detrimental results. As it
manifests and pushes forward greater globalizing processes in economic, political, and
cultural levels the challenge in terms of the movements of people around the world or
locally is how to ensure that the migrants are safe from abuse, oppression, and
discrimination. On a greater scale, making globalization just in all economic, political,
cultural, and human population and movement aspects remains the biggest challenge.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on migration:
How migration could make the world richer | The Economist
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjKYtfpe1a0)
Map Shows How Humans Migrated Across The Globe
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJdT6QcSbQ0)
Migrations and Intensification: Crash Course Big History #7
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oy2XJMczUNc)
68
ASSESSMENT
OFW INTERVIEW:
Interview a former or a current OFW (face-to-face or online). Ask them about the reason for their migration,
the positive and negative sides of being a migrant worker, and what do they think about the current
conditions of global migration in relation to the state of our country’s economy.
In an essay, write about what you’ve learned or your insights from your interview on global migration from the
first-hand experiences and/or realities of the OFW you did an interview with.
Format: 500 words. Times New Roman. Font size 12. Single-space. In short bond paper (8.5 x 11 in). Be honest
about the data that you will present and the narrative that you will write. Do not write made-up stories.
Conduct a proper interview and write your essay about it by following the guidelines.
OFW INTERVIEW WRITE-UP GUIDELINES
You can follow this outline or you can create your own outline to present your narrative.
PART 1
Introduce your participant/interviewee. If you asked for their consent to use their details for your
paper and they agreed, you can present their relevant details in your paper. If they did not allow you
to use their names in your paper, then just opt on writing using third-person pronouns like “he” “she”
“him” “her” “they” “them” and so on. Basically, introduce your participant/interviewee in this part.
Provide the necessary information to set the stage for your analysis later on.
You can write in your paper more about your participant/interviewee, like what was/is their job
abroad, where did they work, how was their experience as an or being an OFW, being away from their
families, how was their economic condition before and now in relation to being an OFW.
You can write in your paper more about your participant/interviewee, like what was/is their job
abroad, where did they work, how was their experience as an or being an OFW, being away from their
families, how was their economic condition before and now in relation to being an OFW.
This is part 1 but this can have more than one paragraph. Do not squeeze in all the details in one
paragraph, learn to partition the narratives and areas of focus. So if in the first paragraph you are
introducing your participant, maybe in the next you can present now their life as an OFW and all the
relevant details, and then in the next their perspective on our current economy in relation to overseas
workers and their impact/importance to Philippine economy, and their perspective about migration in
general.
PART 2
Write about your insights or realizations in light of the details your participant/interviewee shared
with you. In your conversation with your participant what detail or information strike you the most
and made you realize something about migration, the international labor market, the status of our
economy, and globalization, among others.
PART 3
Attach the photo you have taken during the interview session and a copy of the consent form
you have prepared before you conducted the interview.
ETHICAL GUIDELINES FOR THIS ASSESSMENT:
1. Prior to the conduct of the interview, prepare a consent letter for your target participant/interviewee. Make sure to provide
the necessary details about this activity (purpose, who else has access to the information/data that you will be presenting,
assurance that you will uphold their rights whether they consent for the interview or not).
2. When the consent has been granted, make sure to respect the participant/interviewee’s conditions (in terms of the duration
of the interview and the information he/she will disclose).
3. During the interview, maintain proper interview etiquette even if the flow of the interview is informal (lax conversation
between the student and the participant).
4. Constantly create an atmosphere of respect in the manner of asking your interview questions and assessing their responses if
the need for follow-up questions arises.
5. Do not forget to end the interview in a positive note. Thank your participant and reaffirm that the data/information you
gathered from them will be used for academic purposes only.
6. For proof of credibility, attach a photo of your interview session (a photo of you and your participant if you conducted face-
to- face or video conference interview, or screenshots of your interview session). Make sure that you will also ask for their
consent to take a photo or take screenshots of your conversation. Do not attach a photo that will incriminate and/or violate
your participant’s rights to privacy.
ASSESSMENT RUBRICS:
Format: 10% Interview and narrative drawn from the OFW interviewee: 25%
Discussion of Insights, thoughts, and realizations vis-à-vis the conditions and realities of global migration: 50%
Writing technicalities (narrative, grammar): 15%
69
TOPICS
1. Sustainable Development
2. Global Food Security
LEARNING OUTCOMES
70
TOPIC 1: SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL CRISIS
The ecological crisis, pollution problems, climate change, and global warming are
among the most pressing problems we face at the global level when it comes to the
relationship of development (under economic globalization) with the environment.
These problems are largely shaped by human actions and by how human populations
interact with their environment in light of their pressing needs. According to Conserve
Energy Future (as cited in Claudio & Abinales, 2018: 120), there are numerous
environmental challenges that the world faces today:
a. The destruction caused by industrial and transportation toxins and plastic in the
ground; the defiling of the sea, rivers, and water beds by oil spills and acid rain;
the dumping of urban waste
b. Changes in global weather patterns (flash floods, extreme snowstorms, and the
spread of deserts) and the surge in the ocean and land temperature 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
c. Overpopulation
d. The exhaustion of the world’s natural non-renewable resources from oil reserves
to minerals and potable water
e. 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
f. The destruction of million-year-old ecosystems and the loss of biodiversity
(destruction of coral reefs and massive deforestation) that have led to the
extinction of particular species and the decline in the number of others
g. The reduction of oxygen and the increasing 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
h. The depletion of the ozone layer protecting the planet from the sun’s deadly
ultraviolet rays due to chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in the atmosphere
i. Deadly acid rain as a result of fossil fuel combustion, toxin chemicals from
erupting volcanoes, and the massive rotting vegetables filling up garbage dumps
or left on the streets
j. Water pollution arising from industrial and community waste residues seeping
into underground water tables, rivers, and seas
k. Urban sprawls that continue to expand as a city turns into a megalopolis,
destroying farmlands, increasing traffic gridlock, and making smog cloud a
permanent urban fixture
l. Pandemics and other threats to public health arising from wastes mixing with
drinking water, polluted environments that become breeding grounds for
mosquitoes and disease-carrying rodents, and pollution
m. A radical alteration of food systems because of genetic modifications in food
production
71
Globalization and ecological challenges. Image from https://earth.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/media/image/2019-10/science_phones.jpg
These environmental problems are global in scale but affect people unevenly.
Affluent people can ‘tolerate’ environmental degradation because they have the means
and access to healthcare, unpolluted areas for their residence, healthy food items, and
clean water among others. While poor people suffer even more as they usually live in
urban slums with a high concentration of waste pollution, they have no access to
healthy food items and clean water, air pollution from vehicles lead to respiratory
diseases (they cannot afford healthcare services), and because of their lower purchasing
power, they can only afford to buy goods that are packed in plastic packaging (which in
turn perpetuates the waste pollution they have in their areas) among others.
In another perspective, richer nations in the global north produce wastes,
pollution, and environmental problems in third world countries where their industries
are located, e.g. Coca-Cola factories in India which waste and chemical byproducts are
unregulated and spill to community areas caused great problems as the community’s
water sources accumulate waste toxins and cannot be used for the people’s necessities.
The irony is that these environmental problems from first world industries and
corporations are projected as the sole problem of the third world country and that the
third world country should solve these problems for the sake of the whole world. Third
world countries are left with all these environmental problems reinforcing their poverty,
‘under-development’, and ecological disadvantage when the root of all these comes
from uneven economic globalization and the ills of capitalism.
Now, the question we pose is if it is possible to continue with developments
under globalization while mitigating ecological degradation, climate change, and global
warming altogether? How can we achieve sustainable development? And, what does it
take to forward just and environmentally-wise economic policies and practices at the
global scale?
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On the global environmental crisis:
Causes and Effects of Climate Change | National Geographic
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4H1N_yXBiA)
Fleeing climate change — the real environmental disaster | DW Documentary
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cl4Uv9_7KJE)
Why humans are so bad at thinking about climate change
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkZ7BJQupVA)
The disarming case to act right now on climate change | Greta Thunberg
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2QxFM9y0tY)
Who Is Responsible For Climate Change? – Who Needs To Fix It?
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ipVxxxqwBQw)
72
TOWARDS SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
In the Brundtland Report of the United Nations in 1987, sustainability, in its
economic sense, was defined as “development that meets the needs of the present
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs”
(Plóciennik, 2014: 162). The definition of sustainability has three fundamental
components: environmental protection, economic growth, and social equity. In the
Sustainable Development Framework, the aspect of the environment in relation to
economic development is given more focus and importance, calling out institutional
practices (in economy and politics) that will help preserve the environment and make
the people responsible for the use of resources.
The United Nations is leading the call for action in mitigating environmental
degradation, climate change, and global warming with their Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) initiative which started in 2015 and with the participation of 193 nation-
states. These goals are desired to be achieved by the year 2030. According to the UN,
[t]he Sustainable Development Goals are the blueprint to achieve a better and
more sustainable future for all. They address the global challenges we face,
including those related to poverty, inequality, climate change, environmental
degradation, peace, and justice. The 17 Goals are all interconnected, and in order
to leave no one behind, it is important that we achieve them all by 2030 (n.d.).
73
The 17 Goals (from SDGs booklet, United Nations (n.d.))
1. No poverty – end extreme poverty in all forms by 2030
2. Zero Hunger – end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and
promote sustainable agriculture
3. Good health and well-being – ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for
all at all ages
4. Quality education – ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and
promote lifelong learning and opportunities for all
5. Gender equality – achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls
6. Clean water and sanitation – ensure availability and sustainable management of
water and sanitation for all
7. Affordable and clean energy – ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable,
and modern energy for all
8. Decent work and economic growth – promote sustained, inclusive and
sustainable economic growth, full and productive employment and decent work
for all
9. Industry, innovation, and infrastructure – build resilient infrastructure, promote
inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation
10. Reduced inequalities – reduce inequality within and among countries
11. Sustainable cities and communities – make cities and human settlements
inclusive, safe, resilient, and sustainable
12. Responsible consumption and production – ensure sustainable consumption
and production patterns
13. Climate action – take urgent action to combat climate changes and their impacts
14. Life below water – conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas, and marine
resources for sustainable development
15. Life on land – protect, restore, and promote sustainable use of terrestrial
ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and
reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss
16. Peace, justice, and strong institutions – promote peaceful and inclusive societies
for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective,
accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels
17. Partnership for the goals – strengthen the means of implementation and
revitalize the global partnership for sustainable development
Because the 17 Goals are varied and cover most, if not the entirety, of the different
problems humanity face today, the SDGs are perceived as very ambitious. But the UN
assures that through their United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and with
the partnership of individual nation-states, stakeholders, and the civil society, it is
possible to champion these goals by 2030.
Globalization has produced both the problem and the perceived solution
concerning the pressing environmental crisis and the goals for sustainable development.
As globalization forward capitalistic and unethical practices that leave our environment
in a detrimental state, the members of the global governance (made possible through
globalization) are doing their best to comply and achieve the goals of sustainable
development.
The UN-SDGs are not mere idealism, because they are rooted in actual
materialistic human conditions. The goals of sustainable development are inclusive, it is
not only on the aspect of the human needs like food and water, but it also
accommodates strengthening the institutions and developing mechanisms and
practices by which the
74
natural resources can be sustained. The present generations owe a secure future for the
coming generations.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on climate action and sustainable development:
The Green New Deal, explained
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxIDJWCbk6I)
How We Can Make the World a Better Place by 2030 | Michael Green | TED
Talks (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o08ykAqLOxk)
What Is Sustainable Development?
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WODX8fyRHA)
Sustainable Development Goals: Improve Life All Around The
Globe (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kGcrYkHwE80)
Going green shouldn't be this hard (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=BxKfpt70rLI&t=306s&pbjreload=101)
TASK/ACTIVITY
TASK/ACTIVITY RUBRICS:
Quality of content (persuasion, information, action): 30%
Creativity: 20%
Narrative, theme, ideas and/or ideals forwarded vis-à-vis campaign towards
sustainability: 50%
The current status and challenges with global food security are largely anchored
on the pressing environmental crises, demographic changes, socioeconomic inequalities,
and related issues we face today. International organizations, nation-states, and
concerned civil society are turning their focus on the topic and discourse of global food
security and its implications to human life in an ever-complex and complicated
contemporary world.
75
The discourse on global food security catalyzes on the issue of feeding the
increasing population of the world, and the prevalence of hunger and malnutrition
that people, mostly from poor and/or developing countries, experience. According to
Barthwal-Datta (2014), “the challenge of food security in a globalized world is complex,
multi-dimensional and multi-sectoral—and one being compounded by the impacts of
climate change” (p. 122). Global food security is complex, multi-dimensional, and multi-
sectoral as it is influenced by the intersecting processes of economy, politics,
demography, climate change, human rights, and sustainability. Even in the Sustainable
Development Goals discussed in the previous topic, “Zero Hunger” is the second goal
hoped to achieve by 2030.
76
UTILIZATION
encompasses all food safety and quality aspects of nutrition
its sub-dimensions are related to health, including the sanitary conditions
across the entire food chain
77
challenge of feeding billions of people
78
- as more and more people move from the rural to urban areas in search of
better livelihoods, there are fewer people of working age left behind to
produce the growing quantities of food required to meet the rising demands
in urban areas
- as urban populations expand further, the pressure on food systems in terms
of the increased demand for land and water, and environmental degradation
and pollution from urban and industrial waste, are set to intensify further
3. Rising incomes and changing diets
- an overall growing global population means a corresponding increase in the
total demand for food at the global level
- as incomes in developing countries continue to grow, more and more people
can access food in greater quantities (not only in cereals but also in meat and
food items with sugar)
- the overall demand for grains for direct consumption and indirect
consumption through animal products (poultry, pork, eggs, and dairy items)
continues to expand
4. Biofuel production, land-use change, and access to land
- biofuel production involves using plant starch, oils, animal fats, and sugars to
create an alternative fuel and lessen the use of fossil fuels; in this manner,
crops are produced to be used as biofuel and not to be eaten by people
- there are serious risks of creating a battle between food and fuel that will
leave the poor and hungry at the mercy of the rapidly rising prices for food,
land, and water
- in diverting food crops away from use as food and livestock feed, biofuel
production puts pressure within the food system to bring other lands into
cultivation for food purposes, with implications for greenhouse gas emissions
- there are land grabbing cases by which small farmers are being forcibly
removed from their lands without compensation, thereby contributing to
both land concentration (in the hands of wealthier farmers and large
agribusiness) and landlessness in these communities
- without tenure security, small farmers tend to refrain from investing in
practices that ensure the sustainable use and management of natural
resources such as land and water, this has negative consequences for the
environment and farm productivity
5. Climate change
- climate change affects all four dimensions of food security: food availability,
food accessibility, food utilization, and food systems stability—it has an
impact on human health, livelihood assets, food production, and distribution
channels, as well as changing purchasing power and market flows
- agriculture is highly sensitive to climate, and food production is affected
directly by variations in agro-ecological conditions for growing crops
- the impacts of climate change will be mixed and uneven across regions
- the geographic location of most poor, developing countries around the world
and their continuing dependence on agriculture as the single most source of
livelihoods, means that climate change will bring them high costs and few
benefits, their heightened vulnerabilities to the impacts of climate change
are also an impediment to adaptation
- the impacts of climate change may further damage the agricultural resource
base by shrinking the availability of suitable land for crop production and
freshwater resources
- climate change is expected to have a corresponding impact on incomes,
worsening poverty, and the ability of households to invest in a better future,
forcing them to use up meager saving just to survive
79
- climate change is expected to cause further increases in global food prices
and continue to drive people out from their homes within countries across
borders in search of food, water, and livelihoods
- many crops reliant on irrigation are requiring greater amounts of water as
temperatures rise, while the availability of freshwater resources is being
threatened by rising seas levels that cause saltwater intrusion in
groundwater
The issues confronting global food security are shaped by the interplay of demographic,
socio-economic, environmental, and policy-related factors. In order to respond to these
challenges, nation-states, organizations, and other actors need to strengthen and
further develop agricultural knowledge, science and technology, and supporting
policies and institutions. We have yet to achieve the four key dimensions of food
security to be able to provide for the current generations and the generations to come.
The human agency plays a key role in the process of achieving global food
security and championing the “zero hunger” goal. Our mundane yet very relevant
relationship with the environment, our diets, consumption patterns, and purchasing
power have an impact on how we move towards sustainability and global food security.
Of course, human agency is just a fraction. Structural, institutional, and systemic
changes must be undertaken to fully ensure a sustainable and secure future not only for
human beings but for the natural world that houses them. We are yet to champion
socio-economic and political justice, sustainability, and food security in the
contemporary world.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
On global food security:
The diet that helps fight climate change
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nUnJQWO4YJY)
Food waste is the world's dumbest problem
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RlxySFrkIM)
Food security of world’s poorest communities threatened by Covid-19 pandemic,
warns UN food body (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0eAN1m0TK8)
Why beef is the worst food for the climate
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3lrJYTsKdUM)
Ensuring food security in the time of pandemic |
ANC (https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=3xIPYMt7rxY)
Food Security in an Insecure World | Future of Food
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jvRB8U8vEw)
A global food crisis may be less than a decade away | Sara
Menker (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzA6jRYjVQs)
80
ASSESSMENT
CAMPAIGN-MAKING
Given the issues the population of the world faces in relation to global food
security, civil awareness and involvement plays a significant role in calling
out injustices in the corporate food regimes, raising awareness on
environmental degradation in relation to food production and consumption,
and coming up with alternatives that can promote global food security,
among others. As we problematize on food insecurity, hunger, and
malnutrition, we can start contributing to the mitigation of these through
our human agency (our choices, decisions, ethical consumption patterns,
and involvement to call out injustices and make the perpetrators
accountable).
For this activity, create a slogan or campaign that is anchored on the status
and challenges of global food security. The slogan can be a persuasive
material to raise awareness on the conditions of hunger and malnutrition
people experience, or to encourage people to practice ethical food
consumerism (buying goods from local farmers rather than from
corporations). Include an illustration for the background of your slogan.
Format: in short bond paper (8.5 x 11); the slogan is at the center;
illustration as the background of the text (you can draw, paint, or digitally
make the background); your slogan should not exceed 15 words.
[slogan]
ASSESSMENT RUBRICS:
Background design and creativity: 20%
Syntax (how the phrase/sentence is constructed) and pragmatics (meaning)
creativity: 30%
Slogan content, adherence to the theme, and the idea/s forwarded: 50%
81
TOPIC
1. Global Citizenship
LEARNING OUTCOMES
The discussions about the contemporary world through the lens of globalization
began with understanding interrelated macrostructures such as economy, politics, and
culture. As the lessons progress, the framework for looking at globalization vis-à-vis the
contemporary world shifts from macro- to micro-analysis. We began by understanding
globalization as a concept and as a process and proceeded to unravel the structures of
globalization, i.e. the global economy, interstate system, and contemporary global
governance. Apart from being a multidimensional process, globalization is inherently
uneven or unequal as well, the conceptualization of global divides and regionalism
attests to these. Moreover, globalization has created global media cultures and global
cities as hubs of globalizing processes closer to individuals and their homes. In terms of
globalization and the aspect of the human population, demographic transitions and
migration are evident on a global scale. Globalization has an impact on the environment
as well, and the challenges of sustainability and food security are pressing on.
These globalization processes and patterns are not abstract structures and
systems, the human agency plays a great part in creating globalization (before it
transcends to abstraction itself yet still material) and sustaining it. Our lives have been
tied to globalization processes. In an earlier discussion on global media cultures, we note
that we are global citizens of the world—the processes of globalization made us one.
But we may ask, what do we do as global citizens? How significant is our human agency
in the grand narrative of globalization in the contemporary world? And how do we
become ethical and just in dealing with the benefits and detriments of globalization? The
answers to these lie at understanding and practicing global citizenship.
The notion of global citizenship is largely anchored on the notion of global civil
society, and to understand what constitutes a global citizen necessitates the discussion
of the global civil society. It is impossible to make sense of global citizenship or what it
means to be a global citizen without understanding the context which makes it possible
for us to conceptualize one. The discussion on the global civil society already gives us
ideas on global citizenship.
82
To contextualize the topic and the discussion on global civil society vis-à-vis
global citizenship, it is important to note that many perspectives equate activists of
transnational social movements with the status of global citizens (Carter, 2001).
Accordingly, global civil society is perceived to be a product of the development of
transnational organizations pursuing professional and social interests as an important
feature of international politics (Carter, 2001: 77). Because global civil society is
international, it exists on different levels from interstate relationships. Global civil
society may appear as an amalgamation of campaigning transnational organizations and
volunteers committed to global causes (Carter, 2001: 78). Characterizing the global civil
society may prove more points.
83
a. Global civil society strengthens international society as opposed to anarchy
between nation-states. Friendship and cooperation between peoples are
likely to encourage cooperation between governments.
b. Popular initiative to promote universal humanitarian goals strengthen the
political salience of principles of human solidarity or respect for human rights
—global civil society underpins and promotes emerging international law.
c. The role of many bodies within global civil society is to assist and lobby
international government organizations to promote goals of governmental
internationalism or cosmopolitanism.
Global civil society is creating a context for strong forms of international law and
global governance.
THE GLOBAL CITIZEN
According to Oxfam, “[a] global citizen is someone who is aware of and
understands the wider world—and their place in it. They take an active role in their
community, and work with others to make our planet more equal, fair, and sustainable.”
In another description, “global citizenship is all about encouraging young people to
develop the knowledge, skills, and values they need to engage with the world. And it's
about the belief that we can all make a difference” (Oxfam, n.d.). The descriptions are
self-explanatory yet encourage a deeper reflection and self-assessment. Are you aware
and do you understand the world and your place in it? Do you play an active role in your
community? What are you doing to forward equality, justice, and sustainability? How do
you develop knowledge, skills, values, and ethics to engage with the world? In what
ways do you produce positive and lasting change that ripples throughout consciousness
and practices? More importantly, how do you know that you are a global citizen?
84
oppressive systems in relation to human rights, equality, socio-economic development,
environmentalism, consumerism, and ethics.
The inherent inequality in globalization confronts the global citizen with
dilemmas in social, economic, and political inequalities, discrimination and prejudice,
and the challenges that come from environmental degradation, food insecurity, and
overpopulation. With these, the global citizen is endowed with ethical obligations. The
global citizen is an individual who is aware of and firmly understands the
interdependent system of societies and their relative position in the arena. The global
citizen is a vehicle for materializing ideals and ideas, and making things happen at the
transnational level. The global citizen acts beyond the interest of their nation-state to
connect with other peoples and join in their thrust to social justice, rule of law,
solidarity, harmony, and peace.
Just like any sense of citizenship, global citizenship through the global civil
society perpetuates a way of life that weighs ethics in the multidimensional and uneven
process of globalization. With our exposure and contribution to the different facets of
globalization, it is evident that we have roles to play. It takes awareness, participation,
and action to live by the ways of social citizenship. We are called to become active
agents of positive change—champion human rights and gender equality, mitigate
environmental degradation and become ecological citizens, become ethical consumers,
and help put an end to any kind of oppression. These appear as big responsibilities but
these are obligations that come with becoming more aware, emphatic, and progressive.
In the words of Carter (2001), “a global citizen is someone who consciously adopts this
role and is committed to social justice, diversity, sustainable economic development
respecting the environment, and to a peaceful world” (p. 96).
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS
More on global citizenship:
Civil Society | Shaping A Future Where People Matter
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vUrvugQrmk)
What does it mean to be a citizen of the world? | Hugh
Evans (https://youtu.be/ODLg_00f9BE)
Global citizenship is… (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVSgbU6WVSk)
Learning to live together in peace through Global Citizenship Education
(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuKzq9EDt-0)
The Benefits of Global Citizenship (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23Jy2iPfVX8)
ASSESSMENT
“I AM A GLOBAL CITIZEN”
The idea of becoming or being a global citizen seems far-fetched
especially if one is in denial that globalization is real or if a global ASSESSMENT
civil society really exists. To resolve this dilemma, one way would RUBRICS:
be is for the individual to reflect upon him/herself and assess if in Quality of
any way or in any effort does he/she manifest “global citizenship” content: 30%
traits. Ideas,
arguments,
For your final activity, through an essay, a poem, a video, a points, and
drawing, or a mind map, try to answer the question: philosophies
What does it mean to be a citizen of the world? Or, what does it forwarded: 50%
mean to be a Filipino and a citizen of the world? How can you Creativity, : 20%
become an ethical global citizen?
85
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Barthwal-Datta, M. (2014). “Global Food Security: The Challenge of Feeding the World”.
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Carter, A. (2001). “Global Civil Society: Acting as Global Citizens”. In The Political Theory
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20of%20the%202010%20Census-Based%20Population%20Projections.pdf
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