Positive Globalisation Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Positive Globalisation. Here they are! All 5 of them:

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People can and often do ignore or deny their common humanity with others, or deny, at least implicitly, that their common humanity commits them to sympathy or compassion for those less advantaged than themselves. Indeed, such an attitude towards one's fellows can be represented as tough, uncompromising, positively heroic: the supermen versus the wimps. But just as this ruthless world may be chosen - as it is chosen by the current rulers of the globalised neo-liberal market - so it may also be rejected.
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David Smail (Power, Interest and Psychology: Elements of a Social Materialist Understanding of Distress)
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Only from our position of power can we afford to ignore where things really come from, because we know that all things drain, like syrup through a pipeline, from the edges of the world into the centre. What we want will appear, as if by magic, on the shelves of our supermarkets because were have the money to pay for it. We don’t have to know - other people grow it and process it, and buy it and sell it until all we see is the brand, a language we understand without effort. All those strange substances are fuzed together for our convenience, our health, our pleasure.
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Richard R. Wilk (Home Cooking in the Global Village: Caribbean Food from Buccaneers to Ecotourists (Anthropology and Material Culture))
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Far from setting the stage for more prosperity, the more these markets were opened, they predicted, the more unfavorable Africa's position was likely to become and the more damage would be done to African economies. For these critics, it was utopian footling to suggest that African farmers could soon match the rich world in financial resources, technology, or infrastructure, whether on the national level (roads, ports, bridges, ect.) or in the context of individual farms. Given these realities, a far likelier outcome was the further immiseration and marginalization of Africa's rural smallholders, while the most important enduring effect of trade liberalization was the creation of new markers for the agricultural producers of the Global North.
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David Rieff (The Reproach of Hunger: Food, Justice, and Money in the Twenty-First Century)
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Increasing technologies, globalisation, and wealth, along with sedentary jobs, have led to a much less active lifestyle for many humans, with consequences for general health and increasing rates of overweight and obesity. This lack of exercise coupled with malnutrition, specifically referring here to poor-quality, obesogenic diets, are thought to be responsible for epidemics of Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), hypertension, and cardiovascular diseases (CVDs).
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Kimberly A. Plomp (Palaeopathology and Evolutionary Medicine: An Integrated Approach)
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22 but conditions in European factories can also be extremely poor. In eastern Europe shoe workers are paid 25–35 per cent of an estimated minimum living wage, often leaving people in a worse position than in China because low wages in eastern Europe are not matched by low living costs.23
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Tansy E. Hoskins (Foot Work: What Your Shoes Tell You About Globalisation)