Saturday, May 27, 2017

Global series: Globalisation Under Pressure



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The rise in nationalism. Brexit and Trump. Reactionary far-right parties wooing millions of voters around the world. The facts on the ground are clear: globalisation – and the international economic and political system that has underpinned it for the past half-century – is fracturing. The Conversation

Globalisation Under Pressure is a new series from The Conversation Global that both analyses the old international order and surfaces local stories of finance, migration, jobs, education and culture that show the far-reaching impacts of the changes underway today.



Is China the potential driver of a new wave of globalisation?




While China has so far secured support from a number of governments for its Belt and Road Initiative, the recent forum in Beijing also highlighted some obstacles to its advancement.

Globalisation isn’t dead, it’s just shed its slick cover story



Today’s ugly politics are not a backlash against global capitalism, they’re an open embrace of the racism and greed that has always underpinned so-called global governance.

Expert conversation: ‘The right to luxury could constitute a legitimate claim’





Luxury is a global phenomenon present in all societies in various forms.

The global market for wine: China leads the emergence of a new world order





Vinyards in the Sancerre wine-growing region of France. Peter/Flickr, CC BY-SA, CC BY-SA


The latest figures on the world wine market confirm that the industry is undergoing considerable change, with European countries finding their positions and strategies challenged by the new world.

From Bulgaria to East Asia, the making of Japan’s yogurt culture





One of Japan’s biggest food trends right now is Bulgarian yoghurt. City foodsters/Kakigōri Kanna/Flickr, CC BY-ND, CC BY-ND


How a simple bacterium traveled across time and space to become Japan’s latest food fad.

The road to the great regression





War, Ford, fascism, Reaganomics, the pink tide, the EU, debt crises, rights-based activism, a fierce backlash… none of this is new. Wikimedia


We may think of current reactionary politics as radical and new, but unchecked mercantilism has always ended with a fierce backlash from both left and right. Here’s what history tells us about today.

China can help us rethink our response to deadly pandemics





The ancient Greeks were the first to use the word pandemic, but not in the modern sense of a global disease outbreak. Dedden /Wikimedia


Pandemics are global threat, but not everyone prepares for them in the same way.

Our 24/7 economy and the wealth of nations



Ever more people are stuck with shift work in a globalised economy that operates twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

Angola’s ‘suitcase traders’ sell Brazilian trends, and dreams too





An Angolan importer buying Havaianas in the market of Brás, São Paulo, Brazil. Léa Barreau Tran, Author provided, Author provided


Brazilian soap operas are wildly popular in Portuguese-speaking Angola, influencing style and creating a business opportunity for thousands of Angolan female entrepreneurs who travel the world to bring fashion back in their luggage.

These Swedish economists foresaw the globalisation backlash



Can a 90-year-old insight into the distributive effects of free trade help us mitigate the downsides of globalisation?

Catesby Holmes, Global Commissioning Editor, The Conversation; Clea Chakraverty, Commissioning Editor, The Conversation; Fabrice Rousselot, Global Editor, The Conversation; Reema Rattan, Global Commissioning Editor, The Conversation, and Stephan Schmidt, Audience Developer, The Conversation

This article was originally published on The Conversation.

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