| Papers [1-15] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —> | Search results on "GLOBALIZATION CATEGORIES FLOW": |
|
|
Globalization and the Categories of Flow, 2005. An argumentative essay on the spread of liberal capitalism, and globalization. 675 words (approx. 2.7 pages), 3 sources, $ 26.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines the category of flow that has most changed developing non western nations economically and politically in the age of globalization. The paper argues that true change is most likely to occur when societal attitudes and assumptions are changed. In the case of the contemporary world the spread of capital liberal western ideas has forced a reevaluation in other parts of the world of how their societies are constructed.
From the Paper "The transmission of cultural ideas and sensibilities has transformed the modern world into its present political-economic system. Indeed, more so than the flow of persons or goods or money between states and between cultures, it has been the transfer of ideas and values that has expanded the dominion of Western nations while weakening the cultural fabric of non-western nations. The following paper will examine reasons for this phenomenon while arguing that only the transfer of a culture and its ideas will lead to profound (and lasting) political-economic change in other lands. In the view of many, the most significant thing that globalization has done is to introduce to the world's outposts (through primarily peaceable means) the ideological and intellectual underpinnings of the dominant western culture. It is, in a sense, imperialism but it is an imperialism the rest of the world seems ready to accept."
| |
|
The Positive and Negative Aspects of Globalization, 2005. A discussion on the positive and negative aspects of globalization and their impact on the global community. 1,431 words (approx. 5.7 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 47.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses globalization as a process that increases tge integration of economies of countries through trade and financial flows and that involves the movement of people and knowledge across borders. The paper maintains that some of the aspects of globalization are good and some are bad. The paper then relates that some of the positive aspects are the spread of culture and ideas, the break down of the language barriers, and the reduced risk of armed conflict. In contrast, some negative aspects of globalization are the exploitation of labor, eroding and corruption of local governments and the destruction of the environment. The paper concludes that it is too early to judge the outcome of Globalization. When developing nations reach the level the U.S is at right now we will hopefully all benefit from the process of globalization
From the Paper "The spreading of cultures and ideas are positive aspects of Globalization. The spread of culture will allow nations to understand each other better .This will then lead to a reduction in cultural conflicts Culture is spread though food, music, movies and other mediums. Because the United States is such a driving force behind globalization, it is spreading its culture through almost every medium possible. The songs and movies produced in the United States are often reflective of U.S and western Culture. Therefore, they help spread the ideal and values of Capitalism and Democracy."
| |
|
Globalization of World Markets, 1996. Links globalization of world markets to globalization of finance. Looks at types of transactions, capital flows, & cross-border barriers. 2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 11 sources, $ 79.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
From the Paper "The globalization of world markets has been much noted with reference to attempts at the regional integration of trade, but it has been given somewhat less attention in terms of the globalization of financial markets. Yet, the two efforts are related, and more and more the different trading and financial structures of the world are becoming inter-related. Financial globalization involves all types of cross-border portfolio-type transactions, such as borrowing and lending, trading of currencies, and other financial claims, as well as the capital flows associated with foreign direct investment. Financial globalization also includes the broad integration of national markets associated with deregulation and manifested by increasing movements of capital across national borders."
| |
|
Globalization, 2005. This paper discusses factors, which are driving processes of globalization. 1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 7 sources, APA, $ 23.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper defines globalization. The author explains that free trade, technology transfer and capital flows are drivers of globalization. The paper relates that globalization increases the flow of capital, merchandise, people and data across national borders and the tendency of the world market homogenization.
From the Paper "According to Yip and Keegan, the following definition of globalization can be derived. Globalization to business administration is the set of transformations faced by companies as a consequence of the contemporary phenomenon typical of the post Cold War, which is constituted by the empowerment of transnational organizations, the mass information technology, evolution the increasing flows of capital merchandise, people and data across national borders and the tendency of the world market homogenization. Economic globalisation so to speak affects the ... "
| |
|
Economic Globalization, 2006. This paper discusses economic globalization at a time when markets, business and consumers have stepped onto an international level. 2,013 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 11 sources, MLA, $ 63.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract In this article, the writer explains that in economic globalization there should be free trade or what can be called "flow of goods or services". The writer looks at the benefits of economic globalization in today's international market. Further, the writer discusses the downfalls of economic globalization and looks at its negative effects. The writer examines how huge corporations have always favored economic globalization and because they control the policy and influence the elections, their policies always promote economic globalization regardless of its negative effects seen globally. The writer contends that the general public is against this view and aims for a system that would help the people to get more jobs and allow the developing countries to get developed. The writer concludes that it is important that people should realize that economic globalization is not the best option and there is a need to drift to alternatives presented by many economists who aim for a better future.
From the Paper "Trade is an important factor for the economical strengthening of the nations across the globe. The exports would be the input of the money into the country where the imports are described as the output of money of a country or nation. Moreover, due to international trade, the consumers in America have the chance to buy the same goods which the local producers make, at relatively cheap prices which do not affect the quality of the product. It is the trade of one good that a country specializes in with a good that another specializes in. Therefore both import and export are necessary and one cannot exist without another. International trade also reduces the inflexibility of an economy and enhances its flexibility and thus enables it to respond to the changing of the economic condition. Competition increases with trade and thus every organization aims at producing better quality products at lower prices. In practical this is seen in the case of Japan, who in a small time frame has successfully produced low-priced yet high quality products as compared to other competitors from across the globe."
| |
|
Globalization, 2006. An overview of some of the main causes of globalization. 1,297 words (approx. 5.2 pages), 8 sources, MLA, $ 43.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines how globalization is a result of an interdependency that developed and continues to develop between the many countries of the world and is a trend toward the integration of the world's many economic fronts and mainly through the means of trade and financial flows. It looks at how it is clear that globalization has many causative factors, which are interconnected, just as the countries that are a part of the globalist society.
Outline
Introduction
Capitalism
The Internet: Communications, Technology and Global Integration
Necessity: Policy Results
Effects of Globalization
Conclusion
From the Paper "The rapid growth of the Internet and other information technology and communications capabilities empowering and enabling complex applications that can take place while the major actors are all hundreds of miles from the location. "Real-time" communications is expedient as well as efficient which are two desired elements in the industry. The pursuit of foreign markets by the United States as well as those of the European and Latin American markets is causative factor in globalization. The companies that compete throughout the world are seeking methods for integration of all aspects of their corporation. "
| |
|
Aristotle's Categories, 2005. A discussion of Aristotle's first five categories with particular emphasis placed on the second and fifth categories. 3,093 words (approx. 12.4 pages), 1 source, APA, $ 90.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines Aristotle's first five chapters or categories, paying particular attention to the second, which categorizes the essential things that can be said to exist into four distinct subsets regarding what one might call their subjectivity, and the fifth, in which the author and
philosopher characterizes the subjects about which he writes in a manner that is both cryptic and simple.
From the Paper "The division of beings in this section is said to be related to the subject of the being, as it is opposed to the subject the being that is alternately classified as "in a subject." What Aristotle is doing in this section of the Categories is dividing the essential reality of things, or their existence, into four separate classes. Each of these classes has its limitations and parameters, but not all of them are mutually exclusive, which makes
this passage difficult to understand from the first reading: it initially appears that the philosopher is listing some things, such as "an individual man" in many different categories at once, rather than separating them. This example is give as being both of a subject and neither in nor of a subject, but it is done so in a way that makes an individual man appear at first to be the classifying parameters of "of a subject," rather than open to many categories at once, synchronously, or synonymously. The philosopher gives examples of each category or class of things that exist, but it is my opinion that he could have been more clear in differentiating these definitions, rather than proposing some that exist in many categories."
| |
|
Globalization, 2005. This paper discusses globalization and the development of the U.S. as a hegemonic power. 2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 6 sources, $ 89.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses globalization in the context of the growth of international commerce as huge transnational companies (TNCs), which use the entire world, rather than just one country, as their marketplace. The author points out that globalization includes the growth of international trade and the international flow of people, technologies, raw materials, money and products. The paper argues that globalization has reached such proportions that it is beginning to operate as a kind of new colonialism perpetrated by the powerful industrial countries, particularly the U.S.A..
From the Paper "Is the United States becoming a hegemonic power under globalization? The phenomenon of globalization is widely talked about at the moment. There are different definitions of what globalization actually is, but in this context I am referring to the growth of international commerce as huge transnational companies (TNCs) use the entire world, rather than just one country, as their marketplace. This is combined with the growth of international trade, and the international flow of people, technologies, raw materials, money and products. It is argued that globalization as here defined has reached such proportions that it is beginning to operate as a kind of new colonialism perpetrated by the powerful industrial countries, and in particular by the USA."
| |
|
Globalization, 2007. An examination of globalization and its benefits versus the harm it causes. 3,291 words (approx. 13.2 pages), 11 sources, MLA, $ 94.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The term globalization has attracted much controversial concern. This paper examines how some regard it as crucial to the global economic development while others view it as causing inequalities within nations. It defines the term globalization as the growing integration of economies around the globe, specifically by means of trade and financial flows. It also explains that free trade entails significant gains although many focus on the intra-country inequalities that exist as a result in many developing nations. The paper concludes that a majority of economists reveal the fact that trade generates net benefits. Nevertheless, most Americans perceive the contrary views and prefer to emphasize the costs instead of the benefits.
From the Paper "The globalization in its broader sense also includes cultural, political and environmental integration. The concept of globalization came into general usage ever since the 1980s, representing the technological progress that has facilitated the international transactions. It normally indicates the expansion of market drives beyond the national borders that have been in operation, at all levels of economic functioning like village markets, urban industries, or financial centers. Markets foster efficiency through competition and division of labor-the specialization that permits people and economies to concentrate on what they perform the best."
| |
|
Globalization in Canada., 2002. Discusses the downside of globalization for Canada's economy. 1,400 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 6 sources, $ 53.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract It shows that, by increasing capital flows across borders, globalization significantly weakens Canadian sovereignty. Moreover, it fuels the policies of deregulation and privatization, which, in turn, hurts Canadian social programs and poor people. .
| |
|
Globalization, 2004. Discusses the advantages and disadvantages of globalization. 1,002 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 3 sources, MLA, $ 35.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines how global markets provide Americans and other citizens of the world with more opportunities for people to tap into more and larger markets around the world. It looks at how we now have greater access to more capital flows, technology, cheaper imports, and larger export markets. It also notes how new risks come with these new opportunities and how, as we move into a global era, we must reevaluate our security strategies.
From the Paper "As a result of the globalization boom of the 1990s, we now live in a world in which markets, media, law, corporations, labor, scientific research and advocacy groups are international, multinational, and multicultural. This has resulted in an enormous increase in multiculturalism around the world. Thus, globalization has encouraged differences in our daily lives. For example, nearly every city in the world now provides its residents with a variety of food choices, including Spanish, French, Italian, Thai, Middle Eastern, Indian, Mexican, Chinese and more."
| |
|
The Effects of Globalization, 2002. The paper discusses the potential effects globalization will have on the world. 2,410 words (approx. 9.6 pages), 5 sources, MLA, $ 73.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract Globalization in general refers to the ways in which capital, people, information and images and culture now flow back and forth across national borders with a greater ease and greater rapidity than they had before. This paper examines what the implications of such exchanges are and what are some of the most serious consequences of a world with such permeable borders, especially in terms of human rights and the environment.
From the Paper "NAFTA has helped to produce a world in which workers are now linked across national borders through the globalization of production. In other words, NAFTA has allowed jobs that once belonged Americans to be sent to other countries ? which has detrimental short-term effects on Americans as well as detrimental long-term effects on the workers of all the countries involved. And to short-term and long-term harm to the environment that we all share. All people find themselves increasing connected in this world. The clothes someone wears might well have been sewn in a country thousands of miles away of fiber grown in a third country."
| |
|
Criminal Behavior Categories, 2004. An overview and comparison of nine different criminal behavior categories. 3,229 words (approx. 12.9 pages), 20 sources, MLA, $ 93.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines how, in many contemporary criminology texts, theories concerning criminal behavior are generally classified according to some biological, psychological, or sociological perspective. It looks at how, in recent years, however, several theories of criminal behavior have appeared that make such simple categories inadequate for the complexities that have been identified in such analyses and how these new behavioral theories have specifically combined both biological and social environmental variables in their explanations of people's varying tendencies to commit crime. It reviews nine such categories of criminal behavior, followed by an analysis and summary of the research in the conclusion.
Outline
Introduction
Review and Discussion.
Classical
Psychobiological
Sociological
Conflict
Emergent
Biological
Psychological
Social-Psychological
Phenomenological
Conclusion
From the Paper "This category of crime holds that criminal behavior is caused by exercise of free will and criminal responsibility. The classical theory of criminal behavior was prevalent prior to "modern" criminology's search for the causes of crime, which did not begin until the nineteenth century. Classical theory did not attempt to explain why people commit crime but was rather a strategy for administering justice according to rational principles (Garland, 1985). Classical theory was based on assumptions about how people living in the emerging historical period of seventeenth-century Europe, called the "Classical period" or "Enlightenment era," began to reject the traditional idea that people were fixed social types (e.g., landed gentry and serfs) with vastly different rights and privileges."
| |
|
Legal Categories of Murder, 2006. This paper discusses legal definitions of categories of murdering humans such as homicide, suicide, manslaughter, murder, infanticide and feticide. 2,050 words (approx. 8.2 pages), 6 sources, APA, $ 64.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper explains that murder, according to the U.S. Code Section 1122, involves the unlawful killing of a human being with malice aforethought. The author points out that justifiable homicide is an instance in which the accused is treated differently from other intentional killers because the circumstances present a good excuse and exculpation for the killing. The paper concludes that suicide, which is the act of killing one's self, is a major cause of death among Americans, especially young people ages 15-24.
Table of Contents:
Murder
Homicide
Negligent Homicide
Culpable Homicide
Justifiable Homicide
Department of Justice Statistics on Homicides
Homicide and Children
Homicide and Young People
Manslaughter
Voluntary Manslaughter
Involuntary Manslaughter
Infanticide
Female Infanticide
Feticide
Suicide
From the Paper "And even though the literacy rate in India has improved, the views on sex discrimination as regards prejudice against girls and women shows the country is not yet enlightened. "We have a great task in front of us changing the mindset of parents," Damle writes, away from "cultural myths and beliefs" that keep girls and women from full opportunities due to feticide and infanticide. Mothers often refuse to breast feed their daughters the writer continues, and this neglect affects the girl throughout her whole life."
| |
|
Kant?s Categories, 2002. This paper seeks to make clear what Kant means by category and how this notion fits in with his overall theory of knowledge. 2,104 words (approx. 8.4 pages), 5 sources, $ 66.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper looks at two works by Immanuel Kant: "Critique of Pure Reason" and "The Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics". The writer first defines the term category and takes a step-by-step look at the possible categories Kant uses in his discussions and their implications.
Table of Contents:
A Priori
Intuition and Intuitive Knowledge
Space and Time
Experience
On Category
From the Paper "Kant refers to the categories either implicitly or explicitly in support of his theory of knowledge throughout much of his discussions in the Critique of Pure Reason and the Prolegomena to Any Future Metaphysics. To isolate the categories or the notion of category from the context of other central issues mentioned in these texts is a difficult task, particularly to one whose study of Kant has only very recently begun. However, such a task I have set myself to do. Drawing from several secondary sources and from the original texts previously mentioned, I shall try to make clear what Kant means by category and how this notion fits in with his overall theory of knowledge."
|
|
|