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Globalization, regionalization and the history of international relations
In: Politica estera e opinione pubblica
Globalization, regionalization, migration: features of modern international relations
In: Nauchno-analiticheskii zhurnal Obozrevatel - Observer, Heft 1, S. 41-55
Regionalization and its Impact on the Theory of International Relations
In: Globalism and the New Regionalism, S. 203-227
Towards a Regionalization of Industrial Relations*
In: International journal of urban and regional research, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 98-113
ISSN: 1468-2427
Towards a regionalization of industrial relations
In: International journal of urban and regional research: IJURR, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 98-114
ISSN: 0309-1317
Globalization & Regionalization in International Trade
The concept of globalization refers to the growing interdependence of countries, resulting from the increasing integration of trade, finance, investments, labor markets and ideas in one globalmarketplace. The most important elements of this process are the international trade and the cross-border investment flows. Economic globalization has increased the specialization of workers, while the companies compete in global markets. Even globalization has recently become a common topic in academic discourse, many economists focused, from the 1980s and 1990s, in addition to globalization, on regionalization - the growth of networks of interdependence within multinational regions of the world. The recent decades arecharacterized by the fact that the world trade grew faster than world output, which implies that an increasing share of world GDP crosses international borders. The trend is explained, mostly, by thesubstantially declining of the trade barriers during the same period, as a result of successive trade negotiation rounds under the auspices of the GATT/WTO, unilateral trade liberalization and regional tradeagreements. Even there are global connections between all the countries, the strongest political and economic integration is being created within a few specific regions of the world: Europe, North America and East Asia.
BASE
Book Review: International Relations: Building Regions: The Regionalization of the World Order
In: Political studies review, Band 11, Heft 1, S. 104-104
ISSN: 1478-9302
Transformation of Space (1): Macro-Regionalization and New Spatial Actors of International Relations
In: Non-Western Theories of International Relations, S. 149-161
The regionalization of international investment treaty arrangements
In: Investment Treaty Law Current Issues, 5
World Affairs Online
Russia's regionalization: The international dimension
In: Working Papers, 20/1997
World Affairs Online
Studies on Sino-Indian Relation in Asia Regionalization
In: Chinese Studies: ChnStd, Band 4, Heft 4, S. 110-115
ISSN: 2168-541X
Regionalization, Pan-Asian Relations, and the Middle East
In: East Asia
Research on the emerging links between the Middle East (West Asia) and other parts of Asia has grown considerably since late twentieth century. Indeed, the contributions to this special edition of the journal reflect some of the pioneering work taking place on pan-Asian relations encompassing new analysis of the Middle East's links with the 'East'—Central, South, and East Asia. The research in this field, looking back into history as well as forward, has grown in response to the changing dynamics of intra-Asian relations following the end of the Cold War in 1990 and the collapse of the Soviet Union as a Eurasian land empire just a year later. The end of bipolarity encouraged new transnational relations and further regionalization of a new world order. As multi-polarity has steadily given way to a state of non-polarity, so the veil has also been lifted on the significant economic and political ties which have grown across strategic regions. In considering strategic regions, it is contended here that Asia is home to the most dynamic of these, in terms of asset accumulation, geopolitical weight, population size, and economic prowess. But it is also significant for the volatility which appears along the fault lines of historical animosity, national security tensions, modern-day rivalries, border and resources disputes, and the strengthening of communalism and divisive role of identity politics. Moreover, the collapse of the Soviet control of much of Central Asia opened up new spaces for exchange in Asia, much encouraged by the exploitation of hydrocarbon reserves of the Soviet successor states in Asia (also Azerbaijan in the Caucasus). But, pan-Asian ties predate the post-Cold War transformations of the global system, and several Asian powers were able to negotiate mutually beneficial links soon after the Second World War. Although evidence of ancient pan-Asian relations is to be found in the Silk Road, systemic shift in our time is clearly leading to a perceptible transfer of the global economic balance Eastwards, which has brought with it the rise of energy-hungry Asian economies in the twenty-first century. Asian demand for energy has changed the complexion of Middle East-Asia relations, and pan-Asian relations in this context are today a reflection of the changing contours of the global political economy.
Regionalization, pan-Asian relations, and the Middle East
In: East Asia: an international quarterly, Band 32, Heft 3, S. 223-339
ISSN: 1096-6838
World Affairs Online