Archive for the ‘Globalization’ Category

The Impacts of Globalization on Tajikistan: New Roles for Conflict Resolution

BY SANDRA I. CHELDELIN AND SUSAN F. HIRSCH In 2004, in collaboration with a local NGO in Dushanbe, our faculty at the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution launched a multiyear project to increase conflict resolution capacities of local actors in Tajikistan. We worked with government, religious and academic leaders, created a conflict resolution resource [...]

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Posted by on June 18th, 2008 No Comments

Three-D Security: Defending America by Helping Others

BY REUBEN E. BRIGETY, II It isn’t every day that I find myself in northern Kenya visiting a camp with 150,000 Somali refugees, or hearing an American soldier talk about the strategic importance of vaccinating sheep in Djibouti as part of the Global War on Terror. But neither is it every day that, as a [...]

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Posted by on March 20th, 2008 No Comments

Making The Ideal Real: A South Asian Social Movement’s Construction of a Buddhist Cultural Identity

BY JEREMY RINKER The tension and excitement were palpable. It was October 2, 2006 and thousands of disaffected youth wagged their fists towards the sky from atop the numerous light posts and vehicles that dotted the divided thoroughfare. Crowds of revelers packed the entrance to the giant stupa which marks the hallowed grounds where, in [...]

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Posted by on March 20th, 2008 No Comments

Advertising The “New” India in Post-Liberalization India: Creating New Consumers With Advertising Images

BY NAYANTARA SHEORAN Advertising has traditionally been the machinery that has affected change in the thinking of people. Advertising in post-liberal India took on the task of creating consumers. This article originates from a conference presentation where a semiotic analysis was employed to examine the visuals in some Indian advertising campaigns, which aimed to affect [...]

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Posted by on March 20th, 2008 No Comments

Understanding India’s Service Sector Growth in the Post-Liberalization Period

BY BHAVANI ARABANDI India’s current growth rate of 8 percent has been attributed to the successful implementation of economic liberalization policies in 1991 that opened the economy to global corporations seeking to do business in India. These policies encouraged the formation of partnerships between domestic firms and global corporations, as well as the entry of [...]

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Posted by on March 20th, 2008 No Comments

The Globalization of Biotechnology

BY M. SALEET JAFRI The application of biotechnology has the potential to create rapid advances on a global scale in the agricultural and medical fields. Significant financial rewards are possible however there are also certain ethical responsibilities that need to be met. Biotechnology has the potential to improve the human situation in developing nations as [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Globalization & Public Health Research

BY KATHRYN H. JACOBSEN In 2003 several individuals who ate at a chain restaurant near Pittsburgh died from hepatitis A virus. The outbreak was eventually linked to green onions imported from Mexico. Oddly enough, people who live in the United States are in some ways at greater risk of death from hepatitis A than populations [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Nutrition Education as a Global Health Intervention: Effects Among Nicaraguan Adolescent Girls

BY LISA PAWLOSKI Adolescent girls in developing countries are often considered a nutritionally at-risk group. Nutritional anthropologists study the impact of nutrition on adolescent growth and development and the sociocultural factors which influence nutritional status. Ten years ago, I examined the nutritional status of adolescent girls living in Mali, West Africa, and found them to [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Challenges in International Health for the New Millennium: NGOs & US Bilateral Assistance

BY CURTISS SWEZY Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) have long played a key role in providing health care in the US. Originally referred to as PVOs, or private voluntary organizations, these charitable hospitals and inner city resettlement homes provided some of the first health and social safety net care for remote and disenfranchised populations from the western [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments

Population Growth as a Driving Force of Global & Environmental Changes

BY DAVID W. WONG Two recent events attracted different levels of attention nationally and globally. After several decades of debates and rigorous research, and the discovery of hard evidence, climatologists and Earth scientists have come to the conclusion that global warming is not a hypothesis anymore but a fact. Global warming has triggered various policy [...]

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Posted by on November 21st, 2007 No Comments