ISBN-13: 9780415277303 / Angielski / Twarda / 2002 / 292 str.
ISBN-13: 9780415277303 / Angielski / Twarda / 2002 / 292 str.
Globalization is a defining feature of our times, covering everything from economic and political issues to the spread of American culture. However, its status is controversial, with some viewing it as leading to greater development for all, and others as a threat to national cultures and democratic political life. This book shows how simplified such binary views are and examines how various globalizing forces have affected Asian societies. It discusses the relationshipbetween globalization, identity and democratic developments in Asia both theoretically and empirically, and aims at understanding how economic, political and social forces interact and are mutually reinforced in Asian societies. All the chapters show the volatile nature of the relationship between the global and the local in Asia. Together they provide a picture of Asia characterized both by global flows of capital, information and people, and by localized contextual historical interpretations of such flows. It is at this nexus of the global and local that identity, as social relations, becomes the missing link for understanding globalization and democratization in Asia.