Economic globalization
In: Wochenschau
In: Sek. I 68. Jahrgang, Nr. 4s (Mai/Juni 2017)
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In: Wochenschau
In: Sek. I 68. Jahrgang, Nr. 4s (Mai/Juni 2017)
In: Understanding China
In: Understanding China
Moeller's book The Veil of Circumstance, published in 2016, discussed the impact of technology, dehumanization and values on politics and economics. In this book, he takes the analysis one step further. The cocktail of capitalism, globalization and technology has turned toxic, causing disruptions and cracks in the global economy and societal structures. Economic globalization is being replaced by a mixture of globalization, regionalization and economic nationalism. Neither the United States nor China will in the mid-2030s possess the strength to be a global leader. Power will mainly rotate around a regional axis instead of globally. The existing political systems and institutions governing the global system see their primogeniture challenged. Social networks open the door to communication for literally everybody; while they link the world to a degree never seen before, they also divide people according to cultural norms and values. The large data companies possess enormous power that threatens both national governments and the global political and economic infrastructure.
Globalization 2.0 -- Sustaining human life: why exchange is necessary -- Christian moral theology and economics -- Markets, competition, and cooperation -- Creative destruction, the state, and the Holy Spirit -- The good of affluence -- Poverty and impoverishment -- ... but not sufficient: enabling human flourishing -- Reorienting exchange -- Koinonia: communicating the goods of creation -- Civil society and political ordering -- Freedom and justice -- Stewardship
In: Cambridge studies in law and society
World Affairs Online
In: Working paper 381
In: Palgrave Macmillan socio-legal studies
The idea of the "global city," which focuses on globalisation's impact on the social, financial, and political reality of cities in advanced economies, has become widely influential in the decades since its introduction-and yet the major issues in the "global city debate" remain unresolved. This book provides a systematic overview of the debate and competing theoretical notions, as well as an argument for the need to test the framework's empirical validity before the unresolved questions can be fruitfully addressed. By testing data from the Netherlands in the 1990s and 2000s, the author demonstrates the value of rigorous empirical scrutiny while offering fresh insights for the global city debate as a whole.