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1.2: Glossary

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    292352
  • This page is a draft and is under active development. 

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    A useful list of words for this chapter:

    • Anthropocene: The proposed geological epoch defined by the period during which human activity has been the dominant influence on the planet’s ecosystems and climate.

    • Cosmopolitanism: The ethical belief that all people belong to a single community with shared moral obligations, regardless of national borders.

    • Dependency Theory: The idea that the Global North maintains its wealth by extracting resources and labor from the Global South, creating a structural cycle of poverty.

    • Global Citizenship: The ethical idea that individuals have responsibilities and a sense of belonging to the world community that extend beyond their specific national identity.

    • Global North/South: A conceptual divide used to describe the socio-economic and political inequalities between wealthy, industrialized nations (North) and developing nations (South).

    • Global Studies: An interdisciplinary field examining global processes and issues beyond the state-centric focus of traditional international relations.

    • Globalization: The process of the widening, deepening, and speeding up of worldwide interconnectedness across political, economic, cultural, and environmental spheres.

    • Glocalization: A portmanteau of "globalization" and "localization," referring to the practice of adapting global products or ideas to fit specific local cultures and considerations.

    • Institutions: Formal organizations like the UN or IMF, as well as informal networks like migration flows or illicit trafficking, that shape the global order.

    • Interdependence: A state of mutual reliance between nations, corporations, or other global actors where actions in one area significantly impact others.

    • Network Society: A social structure made up of networks powered by microelectronics-based information and communication technologies.

    • Resilience: The capacity of a social, economic, or environmental system to absorb shocks and recover quickly from difficulties or disruptions.

    • Supply Chain: The entire multi-stage process of producing and selling commercial goods, from the extraction of raw materials to the final delivery to the consumer.

    • Systems Thinking: An analytical framework that focuses on the relationships and interactions between parts of a whole rather than looking at components in isolation.


    1.2: Glossary is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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