| Papers [1-16] of 100 :: [Page 1 of 7] | | Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 —> | Search results on "IMPACT GLOBALIZATION": |
|
|
Financial Impact of Globalization, 2008. This paper looks at the financial impact of globalization on manufacturing
in the United States. 1,136 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 7 sources, APA, AU$ 57.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract In this article, the writer discusses globalization in terms of its impact on US based manufacturing. The observation is made that globalization is best described as the internationalization of goods and services as well as the internationalization of production and manufacturing. The predominant business strategies related to globalization are discussed which are outsourcing and offshoring. These phenomena are related to productive output within the US economy and with total number of manufacturing positions in the market that have been lost due to globalization factors. The writer concludes that the impact of globalization on US based manufacturing has been negative in terms of total productive output as well as in total number of jobs in manufacturing.
Outline:
Abstract
Introduction
Productivity & Labor
Globalization's Affect on the US
Conclusion
From the Paper "Manufacturing and production as an economic activity consists of many factors. However, the two most important economic factors relative to manufacturing are productivity and labor because overall output is the broadest measure of productivity and labor relative to the number of manufacturing jobs present is the broadest measure of efficiency. Developing a better understanding of how globalization has affected these two factors in the US market is paramount to determining the future trends related to US manufacturing as globalization continues to be the international economic model of choice. Before examining these factors vis-a-vis the US market, it is important to describe the particular phenomena associated with globalization, which leads to the mass movement of manufacturing and production from one market to another that impacts productivity and labor metrics."
| |
|
The Impact of Globalization on Organizations, 2005. A discussion of the impact globalization has had on businesses and the way companies have to align their practices and structures to meet a competitive status. 1,753 words (approx. 7.0 pages), 6 sources, APA, AU$ 82.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper hypothesizes that global companies have an over-growing and dynamic positive impact of the globalization process in terms of increased sales, lower cost, better internal structure and improved competitive status. The hypothesis is derived from the importance of globalization in the present economy as is evident from the explosion of trade liberalization, information technology and international division of labor. The study is based on secondary research conducted on leading firms in the global economy in terms of their sizes, industry and countries.
From the Paper "Globalization is the hot topic of the new era. It is the subject of profound debate and deliberation by theorists, social scientists, economists, politicians and the like. Proponents of globalization argue that it has nurtured a stream of information exchange, increased the living standards of the poor, integrated and increased the awareness of several cultures worldwide, toppled the previously unleashed forces of communism and propagated democracy in the real sense, increased the purchasing power of all social classes and decreased inequality between the rich and the poor. Corporations are expanding in terms of increased commerce in local and global markets, more efficient and greater productivity of the employees and the firm itself, improved customer service and a better competitive status. In contrast, opponents argue that globalization has created inequality in all dimensions and has materialized the West at the expense of the developing countries."
| |
|
The Impact of Globalization on Canadian Social Policy, 2002. An analysis of the effect of globalization on Canada with a focus on its involvement in FTA and NAFTA as well as future predictions. 2,025 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 8 sources, AU$ 110.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper will examine the impact on social policy concerning the movement towards more globalized structures of production. Also, the specific case of Canada will be considered. It will be hypothesised that the emergence of the global economy threatens social policies in this country. Central to this is the notion that firms have an increasing ability to get up and go elsewhere due to the existence of free trade agreements. Hence, a central part of analysing the impact of the emerging global economy in Canada and the effect of international constraints on social policies relates to the understanding that globalisation is a process or a development that is currently in progress. Subsequently, this analysis will focus on the extent to which Canada has been affected by globalisation through its involvement in free trade through the Canada-U.S. Free Trade Agreement (FTA) as well as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). The analysis will also include what can be expected to develop in the future as globalisation proceeds.
| |
|
The Impact of Globalization, 2008. A discussion on how economic globalization is affecting local cultures. 1,379 words (approx. 5.5 pages), 7 sources, APA, AU$ 67.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper evaluates how economic globalization is affecting and influencing local cultures while also exploring why urban geographers are increasingly analyzing the world's cities for influences of globalization as well. The city of Los Angeles, California is included as an example of a city that is analyzed according to its urban layout, socio-culture influence, economic specialization, and role in globalization throughout the Southern California region in addition to the Pacific Rim. This paper concludes with a critical analysis of globalization based on the results reported.
Outline:
Executive Summary
Effects of Globalization on Local Cultures
From the Paper "Much has been written about the effects of globalization becoming increasingly synonymous with the westernization of cultures. In fact the globalization of cultures is reciprocal on each other, especially when rapid global growth of companies quickly forces two cultures together rapidly. The research of Geert Hofstede (1983) provides a useful framework for evaluating the impact of globalization on local cultures. Hofstede devised a framework for five cultural dimensions that quantify the differences between cultures on the indices of the Power Distance Index (PDI), Individualism (IDV), Masculinity (MAS), Uncertainty Avoidance Index (UAI), and Long-Term Orientation (LTO)."
| |
|
Impact of Global Economy on Organizations, 2005. A balanced presentation of the political and theoretical implications of managing organizations in the global economy. 8,093 words (approx. 32.4 pages), 24 sources, MLA, AU$ 252.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This report assesses the impact of the relatively new, global economy on organizations and examines attendant issues such as the opposition of globalization as a new type of economy and the more traditional notions of organizational functioning, which this paradigm has replaced. The report examines the impact that the global economy has had on organizations, focusing on how change in this environment has led some firms to react to the new type of economy, while others have taken more of a leading edge. The costs and benefits of these changes in regards to organizations are assessed, as are related issues of free trade in the global economy as opposed to national protectionism. The report provides a look at how changes in the global economy reflect changes in organizational management in terms of how the impact of the global economy is being managed and also presents relevant lessons that can be derived from this process. Before concluding, the report examines the issue of how management can ensure a positive effect on the organizational level.
From the Paper "Even within the global economy, forms of economic protection can sometimes be justified to foster the growth or development of young industries that would otherwise be overrun, but this type of protectionism is inherently transitory, and is not to be taken as a concrete phenomenon. This ongoing debate between protectionism and free trade has caused many problems in the forum of international trade, specially with the relatively recent political polarization caused by pro- and anti-globalization advocates, and various resolutions have been attempted through various methods to seek a balanced trade policy that takes the arguments of both sides into account."
| |
|
The Impact of Global Warming on Sweetwater Lake?s Fish, 2004. An examination of the relationship between global warming, its hydrological consequence,s and the ecological dynamics and distribution of Sweetwater fish in the Great Lakes of America. 3,693 words (approx. 14.8 pages), 25 sources, MLA, AU$ 149.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper examines how the equilibrium in a lake as an ecological ecosystem is directly dependant on the regional hydrological cycle and how, since that cycle is dependant on climate patterns, it is assumed that global warming will have an immediate effect on the lake?s physical conditions and, thus, its inhabitants. It explores the Great Lakes system in the eastern United States, which includes thermal niches suitable for the three guilds. In order to get the most accurate prediction, this paper includes parameters, such as depths, water volumes, thermocline depth, and the Great Lakes water chemistry. The main conclusions show that there are three levels of direct effect: 1) thermal niche size changes; 2) changes in growth rate and food consumption; and 3) changes in reproductive success and population size.
Outline
Abstract
Introduction
Research Area
Data Collection
Fish and Thermal Niches
Results
Food Consumption and Growth Rate Changes
Population Response
Ecosystem Response
Impacts of Changes in the Hydrological System on the Habitat
Global Warming Impact on Thermal Niches
Conclusion
From the Paper "Smallmouth bass communities thrive today in warm niches and are unlikely to be affected in the future global warming conditions. A positive response is predicted for the cool water niche, where a 9-fold increase in yearlings population and a 23-fold increase in the fishable populations are expected. This is in fact a mediocre response, intermediate to influence on cold and warm water niches.
The extended reproductive success and the increase in mature individual numbers are logical, since the growth season is expected to be longer and the winter, when the ?winter kill? phenomena (Jackson, 2002) takes place, to be shorter."
| |
|
The Impact of Global Warming, 2008. A look at the effects of global warming on the world, highlighting the necessity for change. 1,829 words (approx. 7.3 pages), 6 sources, APA, AU$ 85.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper, illustrated with graphs, discusses the basic effects of global warming, its underlying causes, and attempts to reduce it with the co-operation of all individuals. The paper relates that, as a result of global warming, climate changes have reached abnormal levels with rainfall and hurricanes of unusual intensity. The paper also warns of what will happen if action is not taken in time and discusses positive and negative economic probabilities. The paper concludes that it takes time for people to change their attitudes but in changing, the end result will be worth it.
Outline:
Introduction
Global warming and cliimate change
Predicted or noticed changes
Economic perspectives
New industries
A few industry sectors
Full economic impact
Conclusion
From the Paper "The fact is that global warming, in its smallest stages, is a natural occurrence. Everyday gases such as carbon dioxide are released to warm the earth, allowing it to be a place that can be inhabited by all living things. However once the human element, became higher in population, the warming of the earth was easier to identify. Humans needed to heat their homes, clean their clothes, as well as light their homes. Instead of doing this naturally as had been done for centuries, electricity, gases, and aerosols were created to make human lives easier. All these things and many more have contributed to the increased temperatures of the planet and the profitability of it as well."
| |
|
The Impact of Global Telecommunications Improvements on Islamic Women, 1996. An in-depth and thorough examination of the impact of technology and telecommunications advancements on the Arab world in general and on Islamic women in particular. 23,730 words (approx. 94.9 pages), 73 sources, APA, AU$ 363.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This thesis examines the impact of telecommunications improvements on the Islamic people. Specifically, the impact of these improvements on Saudi Arabia, an Arab state, and Iran, a Persian state. Although not "anti-technology" or opposed to modernization, the people in Saudi Arabia and Iran are adapting to telecommunications improvements in a method that is in accordance with their core beliefs. The belief in Islam accounts for the "non-Western" model of implementing telecommunications improvements for the citizens of these two countries.
The underpinning of this thesis is that telecommunications improvements will impact the Islamic world no less than any other region of the world experiencing the same improvements. In the case of Saudi Arabia, the CDLR(Committee for the Defense of Legitimate Rights) is an influential organization using facsimile machines to impact the domestic political environment. Iran, growing as fast in telephone line installations and satellite services as their economic peers, is moving towards privatization in telecommunication systems. Furthermore, Iran is using its capabilities to influence Central Asian neighbors and spread their Shi'i Islam belief.
With the growth and availability of telecommunications services, it is inevitable that current technology will allow unique opportunities to gain and disseminate information. The international community is unlikely to find a viable method to control the proliferation of telecommunications around the globe. Therefore, each society or nation is its own regulator of improving telecommunications systems. Each society, to include the Islamic people, must rely on their culture to determine the degree telecommunications will penetrate the fabric of their society.
Table of contents
List of Tables and Charts
Introduction
Literature Review
Social and Cultural Structures of Islam
Muhhammad: The Messenger
Islamic Cultures-Revolutionary Aspects
The Historical Influence of the West
Information Infrastructures
Electronically Influencing the Globe
Regulation in an Information World
Cultural and Societal Considerations of
Accessible Information
Images of the Middle East Through Western
Media
Saudi Arabia: Modernization and Adaptation for an Arab State
The Peninsula Prior to the Nineteenth Century
Oil Wealth: Modernizing Saudi Arabia
The Gulf War and Fundamentalism
Post Gulf War Islamist Movement
Telecommunication Trends in Saudi Arabia
Iran: An Islamic Republic and Communication Improvements
Shi'i Islam
Modernization and the Influence of the West
Current Telecommunication Trends in the Islamic Republic
Conclusion
Bibliography
From the Paper "Ranging from the dynamic to the mundane, the improvement of global information systems crosses cultures, languages, and generations. With the information communication sector growing at twice the rate of the rest of the economy, the globalization of information infrastructures has just begun. The global distribution of telephone circuitry, although not as prevalent as television sets, constitutes the largest interconnected global public communications network. Furthermore, the telephone companies, while at the forefront of media providers, are at the leading edge of the digitalization process as a result of experience in providing service and maintenance communication systems to millions of customers."
| |
|
Global Warming and its Impact on Polar Bears, 2005. A persuasive paper on the dangers of global warming and its impact on polar bears. 1,575 words (approx. 6.3 pages), 10 sources, AU$ 90.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper explores how humans pose a threat to the survival of the earth. The paper discusses the problem of global warming. Although some deny that it is a problem, this paper argues that it is indeed a problem, and that it poses a massive threat to the earth, and specifically, to polar bears.
| |
|
The Impact of 9/11 on Globalization, 2002. A study of the September 11th terrorist attack on the U.S.A. in terms of its affect on globalization. 1,200 words (approx. 4.8 pages), 5 sources, MLA, AU$ 60.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper studies the immediate effects of the attack and its influence on the U.S. economy. It then moves on to the event's international impact, namely, the threat of the first synchronized world recession of the globalization era. Surveys are cited and the importance of globalization to the U.S. is explored. It concludes with an inclusion of the positive aspects of terrorism?s influence on globalization.
From the Paper "On September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks against the United States resulting in the destruction of the Twin Towers and the deaths of thousands. As a result, the repercussions of the attacks have rippled through the American economy and affected the phenomenon of globalization.
"As a result of the terrorism attacks, many businesses were forced to shut down or downsize; travel and luxury industries experienced an enormous blow; and trade around the world decreased."
| |
|
Globalization and Global Labour Patterns, 2005. An analysis of the factors leading to globalization and global labour patterns. 2,700 words (approx. 10.8 pages), 10 sources, AU$ 155.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper discusses globalization and global labour patterns. The paper argues that in a globalized world corporations are determining the labour conditions in both developed and developing countries. It suggests that the corporations are essentially making cheap, unskilled and flexible labourers.
From the Paper "Globalization and Global Labour Patterns Globalization is one of the most controversial issues in politics and economics. In "Note on Terminalogy" David McNally defines globalization as, "The mainstream term for the new world Economy of the past twenty years" (McNally 9). How exactly has the world economy changed? While discussing the political and economic changes that have occurred over the last three decades Teeple explains, A system of highly integrated world trade was an irreversible fact by the end of the 1970s, confirmed and hastened by the new means of transportation and communications, whose increased productivity were transforming the worldwide distribution of products and hence the global conditions for valorization (Teeple 71)."
| |
|
Processes of Globalization and Shared Global Culture, 2005. A discussion on whether the processes of globalization are producing a shared global culture. 2,028 words (approx. 8.1 pages), 4 sources, APA, AU$ 94.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract The paper states that it is not complicated to find some globalized places such as airline terminals, international hotels or CNN business news revealing the effects of globalization and its repercussions on our understanding of culture in the modern world. The paper relates that through the growing of global interconnections and the processes of ideas and global goods crossing national borders, cultures fuse across the globe. The paper also discusses the presence of English as an international language, and a homogenization of culture. The paper confirms that, culture is a set of values and practices characterized by its particularity, which nevertheless needs universal criteria as a reference to justify this particularity. It is also crucial to define culture as an "encompassing" concept and to keep in mind that it is difficult to know what is cultural.
From the Paper "In addition, a shared global culture is also relevant as a global dissemination of an American or Western culture. Indeed the processes of globalization are providing fuel for a cultural imperialism, that is to say a global culture liable to be a hegemonic culture. Thus the assertion of a shared global culture seems to be linked to what Friedman describes as "the increasing hegemony of particular central cultures, the diffusion of American values, consumers goods and lifestyles" (Friedman, 1994: 195). The diffusion of dominant standard icons and references such as MacDonald's, Coca-Cola leads to think about an obvious Americanization. In a word, cultures are both confronted by a global dominance of the western culture and by the practices of global capitalism. The result is probably a decrease of cultural differences: a process which undeniably worked to the advantage of the USA and others Western nations. A striking example of this tendency of cultural imperialism is the United Nations Educations Scientific and Cultural Organization's call for a "new world information and communication order" and its politics on global culture."
| |
|
Globalization and Global Survival, 2005. This paper discusses the effects and dangers of globalization. 1,800 words (approx. 7.2 pages), 5 sources, AU$ 103.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This article examines the cultural, commercial, political and environmental effects of globalization. The writer then looks at the related challenges and dangers. The writer discusses how the existence of international monopolies together with the third world sweat shops and additional factors endanger global survival. The writer further discusses that globalization's exportation of environmentally and perhaps socially unsustainable Western materialism to populous developing nations such as India and China is also worrying for the future of the planet.
From the Paper "Evidence of increasing hegemony by an ever shrinking number of multinational conglomerates is fuelling increasing concern regarding global cultural, commercial, political and environmental effects from such inequitable distribution of power. The creation of international industrial monopolies and massive fortunes of unprecedented size, accompanied as it is by equally massive down-sizing, unemployment, environmental degradation and the exponential increase of Third World sweat shops and child labor, seems to be leading to disaster on a global scale."
| |
|
Globalization and the United Arab Emirates, 2004. Study of the impact of globalization on the economy, society, and culture of the United Arab Emirates. 13,525 words (approx. 54.1 pages), 20 sources, MLA, AU$ 363.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper provides an overview of the variety of ways globalization has impacted the economy of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), its social systems, and its culture. The paper also explains how the impact of globalization has been both positive and negative and details how it has affected the role and position of women in UAE society.
The Economic Impact -- An Overview
Impact of Globalization on the Social System of the UAE
Role of Women in the Wake of Globalization and Liberalization
Cultural Impact of Globalization
From the Paper "The Arab world has long been the source of oil and natural gas to the entire world. In being so the emirate has thrived for long as a world leader and a conglomerate of oil rich nations. Globalization has on its part been a source of extensive influence in many different spheres; economically, socially, politically, culturally or militarily. Largely a desert dominated topography, the nations of the United Arab Emirates have thrived on oil and energy related foreign trade that has bolstered their economic and political status across the globe and has placed them on par with superpowers of the world as in the likes of the United States, The United Kingdom, and The European Union and so on. The vast and untapped potential hidden in the expanses of the desert hemisphere has long been the focal point of observation and interest of many a western nation who wanted to play a dominant role in exerting its presence in the region."
| |
|
Globalization and Immigration in Canada, 2008. An analysis of the impact of globalization in terms of the immigrant population of the Greater Toronto Area. 2,208 words (approx. 8.8 pages), 10 sources, MLA, AU$ 99.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper focuses on the impact of globalization upon the geography of population in urban and suburban Toronto, with specific reference to how it has transformed immigration to Canada and immigrant settlement in this region in particular. The thesis is argued that the impact of globalization and immigration in this regard has been mixed: on the one hand fostering economic growth and the creation of a multicultural society, while on the other increasing social and economic inequality leading to the concentration and segregation of immigrant populations within urban spaces. Beginning first with an outline of globalization and its relationship to immigration, the paper explores in greater detail the impact of these phenomena upon the local geographies of immigrant settlement in the urban and suburban areas of the Greater Toronto region.
From the Paper "In this analysis, in order for Canada to meet the competitive demands of the globalized economy, it had to increase the number of immigrants for its labour force. Given the increasing prosperity of the traditional source countries in Europe, immigrants were increasingly drawn from non-traditional source countries in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The results of this are apparent in the increasing multicultural population of the city of Toronto. However, scholars have also noted how immigration has played a critical role in not only allowing the labour force to (re)produce itself generationally - in complementing the deficit from declining fertility levels - but also in introducing new skill sets and foreign capital to the economy. "
| |
|
The Global South and the Global North, 2007. An analysis of the impact of globalization on the inequality between the global north and the global south. 1,402 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 8 sources, MLA, AU$ 67.95 »
Click here to show/hide summary
Abstract This paper looks at globalization and discusses how it has exacerbated the pre-existing inequalities between the poor global south and the wealthy global north. It illustrates how globalization forces some people (predominantly in the southern regions of the planet) to work while permitting other people (predominantly individuals residing in the global north) to become wealthy.
From the Paper "To start with, it is commonly known that powerful multinational corporations in the global north habitually take their manufacturing operations from Europe and/or America and deposit those aforementioned manufacturing operations in global south countries where they can avoid the onerous regulatory regimes, high corporate taxes, and high wage costs they associate with the north. At the same time, the movement of jobs and plants to the south has the unhappy effect of not only costing workers jobs in the north but also of reducing the south to the subordinate position of being "hewers of wood and drawers of water" for multinationals that are looking for cheap human resources that can be utilized in a working environment that is more permissive than the highly-regulated work environments of America and/or Europe. A good example of this phenomenon can be found in the IT sector where skilled U.S. workers are losing jobs to individuals overseas (Sosbe, 4) - presumably because the "cost of doing business" vis-a-vis wage expenses is lower in global south nations which do not have a strong tradition of labor activism or of government involvement in employee-employer relations."
|
|
|