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Global Challenges, Local Responses, and the Role of Anthropology

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Title: Global Challenges, Local Responses, and the Role of Anthropology


1
Chapter 16
  • Global Challenges,Local Responses, andthe Role
    of Anthropology

2
What Are the Cultural Trends in Our Globalizing
World?
  • Globalization is a major cultural trend,
    including adoption of the products, technologies,
    ideas, and cultural practices of powerful Western
    countries.
  • The move toward a global culture is countered by
    a trend of ethnic and religious groups
    reasserting their cultural identities.
  • The growing concern that rising populations,
    spiraling energy use, and expanding consumption
    are devastating our natural resources.

3
World Migrations
  • Migration continues to have a significant effect
    on world social geography, contributing to
    culture change, to the diffusion of ideas and
    innovations, and to the complex mixture of
    cultures in the world today.
  • Internal migration occurs within the boundaries
    of a country.
  • External migration is movement from one country
    or region to another.

4
World Migrations
  • Prior to the mid-20th century, three types of
    external migration were most important
  • Voluntary - in search of better opportunities
  • Forced - people who have been driven from their
    homelands by war, environmental disasters, or
    transported as slaves
  • Imposed - not entirely forced but made advisable
    by the circumstances.

5
World Migrations
6
Refugees
  • Almost fifty years ago, when the Chinese
    communist government in Beijing annexed Tibet and
    imposed its rule over the Buddhist people in this
    Himalayan region, tens of thousands of Tibetans
    were forced to flee to neighboring Nepal and
    India.
  • Among the refugees is the Dalai Lama, Tibets
    spiritual leader .

7
Multiculturalism
  • A policy of mutual respect and tolerance for
    cultural differences.
  • Ethnic tension, common in pluralistic societies,
    sometimes turns violent, leading to formal
    separation.
  • To manage cultural diversity within such
    societies, some countries have adopted
    multiculturalism as an official public policy.

8
Global Corporations
  • Their power and wealth, often exceeding that of
    national governments, has increased dramatically
    through media expansion.
  • Megacorporations have enormous influence on the
    ideas and behavior of hundreds of millions of
    people worldwide.
  • States and corporations compete for scarce
    natural resources, cheap labor, new commercial
    markets, and ever-larger profits in a political
    arena that spans the entire globe.

9
Multinational Corporations
10
Structural power
  • The global forces that direct economic and
    political institutions and shape public ideas and
    values.
  • Hard power is backed up by economic and military
    force.
  • Soft power is ideological persuasion.

11
Soft Power and Mass Media
  • Global mass media corporations like Cable News
    Network (CNN) possess enormous soft power.
  • With bureaus in over thirty countries, its
    24-hour news coverage is available to 1.5 billion
    people all over the world.

12
Overpopulation
  • In 1750, 1 billion people lived on earth.
  • Over the next two centuries our numbers climbed
    to nearly 2.5 billion.
  • Between 1950 and 2000 the world population soared
    above 6 billion.
  • Today, India and China have more than 1 billion
    inhabitants each.
  • Population projections suggest that global
    population will peak around 2050 at about 9.37
    billion people.

13
Pollution and Over Population
  • A direct threat to humanity.
  • Western societies have protected their
    environment only when a crisis warranted.
  • Many of the worlds developing countries have
    policies for population growth that conflict with
    other policies.
  • Even with replacement reproduction, the
    population would continue to grow for 50 years.

14
Replacement Reproduction
  • When birth rates and death rates are in
    equilibrium.
  • People produce only enough offspring to replace
    themselves when they die.

15
Global pollution
  • Air pollution is potentially one of the most
    dangerous human modifications in environmental
    systems.
  • Pollutants such as various oxides of nitrogen or
    sulfur cause the development of acid
    precipitation, which damages soil, vegetation,
    and wildlife.
  • Most atmospheric scientists believe that the
    greenhouse effect is being enhanced by increased
    carbon dioxide, methane, and other gases produced
    by industrial and agricultural activities.

16
Global Pollution
17
The Culture of Discontent
  • For the past several decades, the worlds poor
    countries have been sold on the idea they should
    and actually can enjoy a standard of living
    comparable to that of the rich countries.
  • The resources necessary to maintain such a
    luxurious standard of living are limited.
  • This growing gap between expectations and
    realizations has led to the creation of a culture
    of discontent.

18
Global Energy Consumption
19
Globalization
  • During the past five centuries, millions of
    indigenous peoples have perished due to foreign
    diseases, habitat destruction, warfare, and
    genocide.
  • Some 4,000 languages have disappeared due to
    acculturation, assimilation, or the physical
    extinction of their speakers.
  • 6,000 languages remain, along with a still vast
    array of distinct peoples with unique cultures.
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