Session 2: Globalization and geographies
1) Review of Participatory Reflective Learning
Exercise
2) Commodity exercise – Part 2
3) Globalization and geographies (Chapter 2: 2.2):
What are the connections between globalization
and the geographical?
4) Globalization and geographies (Chapter 2: 2.3):
Why do some people or groups oppose or resist
globalization?
1) World Bank group exercise / role play
New York, NY
January 16, 2015
Fouberg, E. H., Murphy, A. B., De Blij, H. J. and C. J. Nash (2012). Human Geography: People,
Place, and Culture. John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd., Mississauga.
Participatory Reflective Learning Exercise
1. What learning tools that were/could be used last semester
were useful for you developing an understanding of the
geographic concepts (e.g. videos, guest lecturers, examples
provided by the instructor, etc.)?
The following were helpful:
• guest lecturers
• videos
• more personal stories from instructor
• examples / relatable concepts
• variety of resources
• class blog
• more group discussions (aim of this term)
• in class discussions
2. What was/is important for you (e.g. appointments with the
instructor, more detailed descriptions of assignments, etc.)
in completing your assignments in a fashion that you feel
personally satisfied with (i.e. on time and of good quality)?
The following were helpful:
• being give ample time to complete assignments, most
found there was enough time last semester
• detail in descriptions of assignments
• meeting with instructor
• flexibility that was offered
• some difficulties with study habits and confidence
3. What was/would be important for you for gaining
confidence with the concepts and preparing for exams (e.g.
study groups, in-class reviews, additional resources, etc.)?
The following were helpful:
• study groups / working with classmates
• exam format worked
• *** reading the textbook BEFORE class ***
• in-class review
• study outline
• notes posted on the blog
• several students wanted to know what was on the
exam...
Beginning to think about globalization...commodity exercise...
• What materials did you research?
• Where are these materials produced?
• What kind of transportation would be required to move these
materials and produce the products that you have on hand?
• Consider the environmental, social and economic effects.
Section 2.2 - What are the connections between globalization and
the geographical?
Time-space compression: The social and psychological effects of
living in a world in which time-space convergence has rapidly
reached a high level of intensity; associated with the work of David
Harvey.
Harvey links this directly to the capitalist market – “global markets
seem to reorganize the perception of time so as to reduce the
constraints of space on their activities”
 technology as a main driver
Anthony Giddens: “the intensification of worldwide social relations”
Harvey’s
shrinking
map of the
world
Represents
space-time
compression
Amount of
time it took
to reach
destinations
has been
dramatically
reduced
Certain
places like
world cities
are more
connected
Networks: A set of interconnected nodes without a centre, as
defined by Manual Castells.
Networks can be:
• financial
• transportation
• communication
• kinship
• corporate
• nongovernmental
• trade
• government
• media
• education
• and more
Networks in Media
Vertical integration: Ownership by the same firm of a number of
companies that exist along a variety of points on a commodity chain.
Relates to parent companies...(media and other corporations)...
Geo23.1102 winter2015 session2
Synergy: The cross-promotion of vertically integrated goods.
creates gatekeepers for what information we get
is a major critique especially with news media, which is supposed
to maintain an unbiased position
Networks of Retail Corporations
Horizontal integration: Ownership by the same firm of a number of
companies that exist at the same point on a commodity chain.
Example for clothing retail:
Gap Inc. is the parent company of The Gap, Old Navy, and Banana
Republic
Why do you think a parent corporation would have different
subsidiaries?
Geo23.1102 winter2015 session2
Revisiting Placelessness
Placelessness: The loss of uniqueness of place in the cultural
landscape so that one place looks like the next, as defined by
geographer Edward Relph.
Globalization as a cause  the spread of brands  become global
brands
Places become homogenized  lesser ability to find connection to
place or ‘sense of place’  through affecting a place changes how
an individual understands his or her position in that place
Global-Local
Glocalization: The process by which people in a local place mediate
and alter regional, national, and global processes.
Term coined by geographer, Eric Swyngedouw in order to counter
the concept of “deterritorialization” behind geographical notions of
placelessness.
**insertion of local and material as a corrective to the tendency of
thinking about globalization as only a set of macro-processes
The interactions of global and local influence flows, networks, and
time-space compression.
Section 2.3 - Why do some peoples or groups oppose or resist
globalization?
Many different reasons to be critical of globalization
e.g. International organizations such as the World Bank, IMF, and
World Trade Organization are set up to benefit the economic core
creating forced dependency (neoliberal argument)
 “anti-globalization” or “alter-globalization” movements
seek participatory democracy and social justice at a global scale
Several NGOs have sprung up to be critical of the forces of
globalization
Manitoba Council for International Cooperation (MCIC)
**guest speaker next class**
Naomi Klein
– acclaimed Canadian author of the Shock Doctrine and other books
that analyze and critique globalization
- “shocks” economics as the new model shaping globalizations (for
the past 35 years)
- “shocks” are getting bigger – “a debt crisis no longer does the
trick”... “it’s no longer enough to convince a whole society and
get them to accept their bitter medicine”
- shocks are being harnessed
- video: Naomi Klein on Global Neoliberalism
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKTmwu3ynOY
Naomi Klein
- video: Naomi Klein on Global Neoliberalism
Questions for reflection:
1. What was Klein’s point about generalizations?
2. What was Klein’s perspective on mixed economies?
3. What is the difference between rich and poor countries that
counter neoliberalism?
Social action
Protest, education, counter actions, etc. (e.g., G20 protests)
Participatory Development
Participatory development: The notion that locals should be
engaged in deciding what development means for them and how it
should be achieved.
Opposite from top-down development / governance
World Bank / IMF and other are embracing this practice
Examples from instructor’s personal experience:
• Common Ground Research Forum (www.cgrf.ca)
• Common Ground through Creativity
(commongroundthroughcreativity.org)
Local Currencies
Local exchange trading systems (LETS): A barter system whereby a
local currency is created through which members trade services or
goods in a local network separated from the formal economy.
• alternative to global norms - separate from the formal global
economy
• trade can be goods or services
• a way of coping with economic downturns
• way of moderating some of the impacts of globalization
Group exercise
Goal of the exercise: To shed light on some of the debates and
decision-making processes that occur at the World Bank.
Reading: Inside the World Bank, The Washington Post
http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=2
0050612&slug=worldbank12
What is the World Bank?
World Bank goals: End extreme poverty within a generation
and boost shared prosperity.
Moves $20 billion annually towards ending third world poverty
History (source: Globalization101.org):
In 1944, representatives from the US, Great Britain, France,
Russia, and 40 other countries met at Bretton Woods, a resort
in New Hampshire, to lay the foundation for the post-war
international financial order.
This was the United Nations Monetary and Financial
Conference
History continued...
• aimed towards preventing economic catastrophes such as the
Great Depression, which destabilized Europe and the US in the 30s
and contributed to the rise of fascism.
• the conference created the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and
the World Bank
• was to institutionalized also to rebuild economies shattered by war
• IMF: stabilize global financial markets and national currencies by
providing the resources to establish secure monetary policy and
exchange rate regimes
• World Bank: rebuild Europe by facilitating investment and
reconstruction and development.
Ways that the World Bank can affect Trade and Competitiveness
Example from Zambia
World Bank Video: Promoting Trade and Competitiveness: What Can
Zambia Do?
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZZPwiDAa8Y
Some major critiques:
• That the World Bank is on the side of big business (i.e., is looking
out for their bottom line)
• That the developing world is being saddled with a massive debt
load
• That the elites running the World Bank are wasting resources
• That the World Bank has caused major environmental and social
degradation at the local scale (e.g., GMO crops)
The case of India
Population: in 2011 was 1.24 billion up from 447.8 million in 1960
(World Bank)
Rejection of Monsanto, ¼ million suicides because of GMO crops
"In 1998, the World Bank's structural adjustment policies forced India
to open up its seed sector to global corporations like Cargill,
Monsanto, and Syngenta. The global corporations changed the input
economy overnight. Farm saved seeds were replaced by corporate
seeds which needed fertilizers and pesticides and could not be saved"
Says Vandana Shiva, leader of the movement to oust Monsanto from
India in her 2004 article The Suicide Economy Of Corporate
Globalisation.
Vandana Shiva talking about Monsanto and colonization on Strombo -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3d9k23UyQQ
Instructions for Group Exercise:
You will be divided into 3 groups: 1) Representatives from the
Democratic Republic of Hoover; 2) Critics; 3) Supporters
Together in your groups of 6 or 7, come up with an argument that
represents your position. You should use the “Fact Sheet on
Possible Sources of Energy” to help to shape your argument.
Group 1: Requests funding and gives reasons (i.e., environmental,
social, economic)
Group 2: Critiques the plans and gives reasons, and proposes
alternatives
Group 3: Supports the funding from the World Bank and gives
reasons
*before beginning with your group determine a strategy for
recording and presenting * feel free to use your imagination

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Geo23.1102 winter2015 session2

  • 1. Session 2: Globalization and geographies 1) Review of Participatory Reflective Learning Exercise 2) Commodity exercise – Part 2 3) Globalization and geographies (Chapter 2: 2.2): What are the connections between globalization and the geographical? 4) Globalization and geographies (Chapter 2: 2.3): Why do some people or groups oppose or resist globalization? 1) World Bank group exercise / role play New York, NY January 16, 2015 Fouberg, E. H., Murphy, A. B., De Blij, H. J. and C. J. Nash (2012). Human Geography: People, Place, and Culture. John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd., Mississauga.
  • 2. Participatory Reflective Learning Exercise 1. What learning tools that were/could be used last semester were useful for you developing an understanding of the geographic concepts (e.g. videos, guest lecturers, examples provided by the instructor, etc.)? The following were helpful: • guest lecturers • videos • more personal stories from instructor • examples / relatable concepts • variety of resources • class blog • more group discussions (aim of this term) • in class discussions
  • 3. 2. What was/is important for you (e.g. appointments with the instructor, more detailed descriptions of assignments, etc.) in completing your assignments in a fashion that you feel personally satisfied with (i.e. on time and of good quality)? The following were helpful: • being give ample time to complete assignments, most found there was enough time last semester • detail in descriptions of assignments • meeting with instructor • flexibility that was offered • some difficulties with study habits and confidence
  • 4. 3. What was/would be important for you for gaining confidence with the concepts and preparing for exams (e.g. study groups, in-class reviews, additional resources, etc.)? The following were helpful: • study groups / working with classmates • exam format worked • *** reading the textbook BEFORE class *** • in-class review • study outline • notes posted on the blog • several students wanted to know what was on the exam...
  • 5. Beginning to think about globalization...commodity exercise... • What materials did you research? • Where are these materials produced? • What kind of transportation would be required to move these materials and produce the products that you have on hand? • Consider the environmental, social and economic effects.
  • 6. Section 2.2 - What are the connections between globalization and the geographical? Time-space compression: The social and psychological effects of living in a world in which time-space convergence has rapidly reached a high level of intensity; associated with the work of David Harvey. Harvey links this directly to the capitalist market – “global markets seem to reorganize the perception of time so as to reduce the constraints of space on their activities”  technology as a main driver Anthony Giddens: “the intensification of worldwide social relations”
  • 7. Harvey’s shrinking map of the world Represents space-time compression Amount of time it took to reach destinations has been dramatically reduced Certain places like world cities are more connected
  • 8. Networks: A set of interconnected nodes without a centre, as defined by Manual Castells. Networks can be: • financial • transportation • communication • kinship • corporate • nongovernmental • trade • government • media • education • and more
  • 9. Networks in Media Vertical integration: Ownership by the same firm of a number of companies that exist along a variety of points on a commodity chain. Relates to parent companies...(media and other corporations)...
  • 11. Synergy: The cross-promotion of vertically integrated goods. creates gatekeepers for what information we get is a major critique especially with news media, which is supposed to maintain an unbiased position
  • 12. Networks of Retail Corporations Horizontal integration: Ownership by the same firm of a number of companies that exist at the same point on a commodity chain. Example for clothing retail: Gap Inc. is the parent company of The Gap, Old Navy, and Banana Republic Why do you think a parent corporation would have different subsidiaries?
  • 14. Revisiting Placelessness Placelessness: The loss of uniqueness of place in the cultural landscape so that one place looks like the next, as defined by geographer Edward Relph. Globalization as a cause  the spread of brands  become global brands Places become homogenized  lesser ability to find connection to place or ‘sense of place’  through affecting a place changes how an individual understands his or her position in that place
  • 15. Global-Local Glocalization: The process by which people in a local place mediate and alter regional, national, and global processes. Term coined by geographer, Eric Swyngedouw in order to counter the concept of “deterritorialization” behind geographical notions of placelessness. **insertion of local and material as a corrective to the tendency of thinking about globalization as only a set of macro-processes The interactions of global and local influence flows, networks, and time-space compression.
  • 16. Section 2.3 - Why do some peoples or groups oppose or resist globalization? Many different reasons to be critical of globalization e.g. International organizations such as the World Bank, IMF, and World Trade Organization are set up to benefit the economic core creating forced dependency (neoliberal argument)  “anti-globalization” or “alter-globalization” movements seek participatory democracy and social justice at a global scale Several NGOs have sprung up to be critical of the forces of globalization Manitoba Council for International Cooperation (MCIC) **guest speaker next class**
  • 17. Naomi Klein – acclaimed Canadian author of the Shock Doctrine and other books that analyze and critique globalization - “shocks” economics as the new model shaping globalizations (for the past 35 years) - “shocks” are getting bigger – “a debt crisis no longer does the trick”... “it’s no longer enough to convince a whole society and get them to accept their bitter medicine” - shocks are being harnessed - video: Naomi Klein on Global Neoliberalism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKTmwu3ynOY
  • 18. Naomi Klein - video: Naomi Klein on Global Neoliberalism Questions for reflection: 1. What was Klein’s point about generalizations? 2. What was Klein’s perspective on mixed economies? 3. What is the difference between rich and poor countries that counter neoliberalism?
  • 19. Social action Protest, education, counter actions, etc. (e.g., G20 protests)
  • 20. Participatory Development Participatory development: The notion that locals should be engaged in deciding what development means for them and how it should be achieved. Opposite from top-down development / governance World Bank / IMF and other are embracing this practice Examples from instructor’s personal experience: • Common Ground Research Forum (www.cgrf.ca) • Common Ground through Creativity (commongroundthroughcreativity.org)
  • 21. Local Currencies Local exchange trading systems (LETS): A barter system whereby a local currency is created through which members trade services or goods in a local network separated from the formal economy. • alternative to global norms - separate from the formal global economy • trade can be goods or services • a way of coping with economic downturns • way of moderating some of the impacts of globalization
  • 22. Group exercise Goal of the exercise: To shed light on some of the debates and decision-making processes that occur at the World Bank. Reading: Inside the World Bank, The Washington Post http://community.seattletimes.nwsource.com/archive/?date=2 0050612&slug=worldbank12
  • 23. What is the World Bank? World Bank goals: End extreme poverty within a generation and boost shared prosperity. Moves $20 billion annually towards ending third world poverty History (source: Globalization101.org): In 1944, representatives from the US, Great Britain, France, Russia, and 40 other countries met at Bretton Woods, a resort in New Hampshire, to lay the foundation for the post-war international financial order. This was the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference
  • 24. History continued... • aimed towards preventing economic catastrophes such as the Great Depression, which destabilized Europe and the US in the 30s and contributed to the rise of fascism. • the conference created the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank • was to institutionalized also to rebuild economies shattered by war • IMF: stabilize global financial markets and national currencies by providing the resources to establish secure monetary policy and exchange rate regimes • World Bank: rebuild Europe by facilitating investment and reconstruction and development.
  • 25. Ways that the World Bank can affect Trade and Competitiveness Example from Zambia World Bank Video: Promoting Trade and Competitiveness: What Can Zambia Do? • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZZPwiDAa8Y
  • 26. Some major critiques: • That the World Bank is on the side of big business (i.e., is looking out for their bottom line) • That the developing world is being saddled with a massive debt load • That the elites running the World Bank are wasting resources • That the World Bank has caused major environmental and social degradation at the local scale (e.g., GMO crops)
  • 27. The case of India Population: in 2011 was 1.24 billion up from 447.8 million in 1960 (World Bank) Rejection of Monsanto, ¼ million suicides because of GMO crops "In 1998, the World Bank's structural adjustment policies forced India to open up its seed sector to global corporations like Cargill, Monsanto, and Syngenta. The global corporations changed the input economy overnight. Farm saved seeds were replaced by corporate seeds which needed fertilizers and pesticides and could not be saved" Says Vandana Shiva, leader of the movement to oust Monsanto from India in her 2004 article The Suicide Economy Of Corporate Globalisation. Vandana Shiva talking about Monsanto and colonization on Strombo - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3d9k23UyQQ
  • 28. Instructions for Group Exercise: You will be divided into 3 groups: 1) Representatives from the Democratic Republic of Hoover; 2) Critics; 3) Supporters Together in your groups of 6 or 7, come up with an argument that represents your position. You should use the “Fact Sheet on Possible Sources of Energy” to help to shape your argument. Group 1: Requests funding and gives reasons (i.e., environmental, social, economic) Group 2: Critiques the plans and gives reasons, and proposes alternatives Group 3: Supports the funding from the World Bank and gives reasons *before beginning with your group determine a strategy for recording and presenting * feel free to use your imagination