Title: The Formation
1Topic 2
- The Formation
- of the Global System
2Themes
- The changing historical form of political
globalization
- The growth of economic globalization
- The development of the transnational
organizations
3Questions
- What is a modern nation-state?
- What are the transnational political processes?
- What are the principles of economic
globalization?
- What is the history of the development of the
global organization
- What is the implication of studying the global
system
4Modern Nation-state and World Order
- Rise of the west the growth of a European
worldview effective enough to lend to the
economic domination of the globe
- Since the Second World War the modern
nation-state has become the principal type of
political rule across the globe.
- The modern nation-states had a particular form-
liberal or representative democracy, bureaucratic
administration and monopoly of legitimate means
of violence.
5Modern Nation-state and World Order (Cont)
- In the arena of national politics, liberal
democracy is featured by a cluster of rules and
institutions
- governing by elected representatives
- the right to vote for all adults in elections
- the right to run for public office
- the right for each citizen to freedom of
expression and association
- the accessible sources of information.
- Dynamics The enormous flows of people national
boundaries generate the problem of migration,
immigration and creation of different identities.
e.g. disapora, refuguees, refugees, exiles and
nomads
6Modern Nation-state and World Order (Cont)
- liberal democracy became the dominant type of
modern nation-state in 19th and 20th century.
- There are three waves of democratization
marking out the reach of liberal democracy over
time
- from the early 19th century to the mid-1920s
- from Second World War to the early 1960s
- from 1974 until now.
- by 1995, nearly 75 of all countries had
established and adopted formal guarantees of
political and civil rights.
- modern nation-state system the development of
liberal democracy was taken place within a
bounded political space.
- States are institutions, nations are cross-class
collectivities which share a sense of identity
and collective political fate
7The Emergence of Global Politics
- Today the global transformation of politics had
greatly changed the nation-state system.
- A new kind of global order marked by new patterns
of power, hierarchy and unevenness became
dominant.
8World Order and Military
- 1945-89 Cold War ideology
- --NATO (USA)
- --Warsaw (USSR)
- --Arab-Islamic (Middle East)
- 1989 collapse of Soviet Union
- --Rise of Japan
- --Rise of Pacific Rim (East Asian Countries)
- --Development of EU
- 2000 Industrialized Warfare
- --Four politico-economic Core North America,
Europe, East Asia and Middle East
9The Emergence of Global Politics (Cont)
- Global politics is a term, using to capture
- the stretching of political relations
across space and time, and the extension of
political power and activity across the
boundaries of modern nation-state. - It challenges the traditional distinctions
between domestic/international, inside/outside,
territorial/non-territorial politics.
10The Emergence of Global Politics (Cont)
- The state is confronted by a great number of
intergovernmental organization (IGOs),
international agencies and quasi-supranational
institutions, like the European Union or World
Bank. - Transnational bodies, such as multinational
corporations, transnational pressure groups,
transnational professional association,
international social movements also participate
intensively in global politics. - In the global arena, there emerged a polyarchic
mixed actor system in which political authority
and sources of political action are widely
diffused.
11The concept of global governance
- refers not only to the formal state institutions
and organizations, but also all organizations and
pressure groups- from MNCs, transnational social
movement to non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
which pursue goals and objectives for
transnational rule and authority. - the United Nations System, the World Trade
Organization, World Health Organization,
Greenpeace (the globalization actors) are the
central components of global governance.
12- rapid expansion of transnational links and the
demand for international governance to deal with
collective policy problems.
- In 1997 G7 summit met in London to discuss the
problem of unemployment.
- This a symbolic importance at the time in bring
unemployment to the top of international
political agenda.
13Responses to the ideology of globalization
- Far from the end of ideology
- Religious fundamentalism (911 trategeries)
- Extreme Right (Market fundamentalist)
- Extreme Left (Marxism)
- Others globalization from below and beyond
14- This led to significant changes in the
decision-making structure of world politics.
- New forms of multilateral and multinational
politics have been established involving
governments.
- In 1909 there were 37 IGOs and 176 INGOs, while
in 1996 there are nearly 260 IGOs and 5472 INGOs.
- State thus appears not so much as a single actor
on the world stage but as a multiplicity of
actors in many different forums (refer to
supplementary).
15Global Social Movements
- The extension of the concept of human rights, the
development of global civil society, the
recognition of worldwide problems and social
protest against governments or transnational
corporations - Spread of global social movements friends of
Earth, the Greenpeace, Feminist movements and
Peace Movement
16Conclusion
- Globalization of politics is transforming the
traditional forms of sovereign statehood and
reordering international political relations.
- But these transformative processes are neither
historically inevitable nor by any means fully
secure.
- As a result, the contemporary world order is best
understood as a highly complex and contested
process.
17Economic Globalization
- After industrial Revolution, states were
independent politically but interdependent
economically.
- An integrated system based on international
division of labor, like Taylors scientific
management and Fords assembly line
manufacturing - Development of TNC (Transnational corporation),
e.g. the use of credit card and rise of fast food
- Creation of weight-ness economy information
trading
18Economic Globalization
- There is a corresponding transnationalization of
economies, civil societies and communities.
- This transnationalization is most conspicuous in
relation to the globalization of finance and
production and the development of MNCs. Eg. 1973,
239 national banks established the SWIFT
(standard world interbank and financial
transactions) by 1989 SWIFT had 1,000 members in
51 states. - Dual Effect involving of people as consumers and
producers whilst excluding people from
substantive participation in the global economy
- The historical development of the spread of
economic globalization (see supplement)
19Consumption and Economy
- The outcome of mass production is mass
consumptionAmerican Dream
- The direct advertising of products and the
transmission of idealised images of consumer
culture have been carried out through media
- The 20th Century witnessed the development of
global communications and media networks,
especially the electronic revolution and
information-super highway and the cyberworld
20- Three principal ways of Economic Globalization
- The emergence of a global market discipline in
contrast with a mere global market-place
- The economic activities are being
re-conceptualized and re-organized
- a) real-time activities where distance
and location are no longer relevant as a
determinant of economic operations,
- b) material activities where there is
still some friction of space that limits choice
of location.
- 3. Money itself has become a real-time
resource. International mobility of finance is
qualitatively different from the previous eras.
21A Global Market Discipline
- A market-place international division of labor
and an international market exchange between
different goods and services that are produced in
different nations. - This is a pattern of inter-product trade.
- (countries that specialized in the export of one
type of product would exchange that product for
other types that they did not produce themselves.)
22A Global Market Discipline(Cont)
- A global market discipline a pattern of
intra-product trade.
- At first, multinational companies adopted simple
integration strategies.
- They set up foreign affiliates producing the same
standardized commodities.
- Next, multinational companies adopted complex
integration strategies.
23A Global Market Discipline(Cont)
- They turned their fragmented production
systems into regionally or globally integrated
production networks.
- In this way, multinational companies often farmed
out different parts of the production process to
different affiliates in different national
locations. - Each subsidiary took part in the production
process, but not one single affiliate produced
the whole product from beginning to end.
- In the early 1970s intra-product or intra-firm
trade was accounted for 20 of world trade, by
the early 1990s that share was around one-third.
24Flexible Accumulation Through Global Webs
- Relocation of factories and companies almost
anywhere in the globe due to the decreasing cost
of transporting standard products and
communicating information. - The fusion of computer technology with
telecommunications makes this possible.
- Firms relocate an ever-widening range of
operations and functions to wherever low cost of
production.
- Production capacity viewed as commodity,
something that can be instantly bought and sold
on the market.
- This is flexible accumulation through global
webs. eg, Nike footwear company.
25Global Financial Deepening
- The growth of the financial or "symbol" economy
outpaced the growth of trade and investment.
- Total annual value of transactions in the world's
financial markets is now twice the total value of
world production.
- As Peter Drucker said, "90 or more of the
transnational economy's financial transactions do
not serve what economists would consider an
economic function."
26Global Financial Deepening (Cont)
- Money is increasingly being made out of the
circulation of money, regardless of traditional
restrictions of space and time.
- The financial revolution since the 1980s has been
characterized by financial deregulation on the
one hand with information technology on the
other. - This led to a rapid increase in international
mobility of capital.
27Global Financial Deepening (Cont)
- This mobility refers not only to the speed and
freedom with which money can now move across
frontiers.
- It refers to the way it is being disconnected
from social relationships in which money and
wealth were previously embedded.
285 Ideological Claims of Globalism
- G is about liberalization and global integration
of markets
- G is inevitable and irreversible
- No one is in charge of Globalization
- G benefits everyone
- G furthers the spread of democracy in the world
29To conclude rethinking globalization
- Globalization today drives cross-border economic
integration to new levels of intensity.
- But globalization is a process, not an end-state
affairs.
- There is no such thing as a global economy or a
global society yet.
- On what direction the process of globalization
will go, it really depends on whether and how we
resist the process or go along with it.