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55 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb brief introduction to a complex issue
This truly is a dazzling brief introduction to a subject that could not be covered even by a very long book. As Steger points out, the fact of globalization is the predominant issue of our time. Far too man, as he points out, tend to treat the subject in monolithic or simplistic fashion, focusing on merely one aspect of globalization, and assuming that that aspect...
Published on August 19, 2004 by Robert Moore

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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting overview but pockets of bias
Manfred Steger provides a different look at Globalization in the Very Short Introduction series by Oxford University Press. This series provides a quick overview of topics and addresses their veracity as a theory and provides a critical eye towards the controversies in each topic. I will say that I was disappointed in this particular entry into the series which seemed to...
Published on February 9, 2009 by Lehigh History Student


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55 of 57 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb brief introduction to a complex issue, August 19, 2004
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This truly is a dazzling brief introduction to a subject that could not be covered even by a very long book. As Steger points out, the fact of globalization is the predominant issue of our time. Far too man, as he points out, tend to treat the subject in monolithic or simplistic fashion, focusing on merely one aspect of globalization, and assuming that that aspect defines all of globalization. Anyone familiar with Thomas Friedman's THE LEXUS AND THE OLIVE TREE (who is frequently described as a "hyper globalizer") will recognize one such very narrow approach. Despite his brief space, Steger wants to do justice to the complexity of the subject. For the past decade, most writers on globalization have focused on economic globalization, but Steger emphasizes that the process has political, economic, religious, cultural, environmental, and ideological conditions.

Many people who tackle the question of globalization seem to want to know, "Is this a good or bad thing?" Steger is anxious to emphasize that this does not admit of an easy answer. Clearly, the massive increase of economic inequality--which occurs both on international and national levels, e.g., wealth has more and more been concentrated in the industrial countries of the northern hemisphere, and within those countries, more and more in the hands of a small economic corporate and investing elite--is not a good thing, but that is not the only aspect of globalization. Steger seems to suggest that there are both significant advantages and some lamentable dangers in globalization.

The one aspect of globalization concerning which Steger is clearly and rightfully concerned is the promotion of globalization in the ideological terms of the Neoliberal project of promoting free markets over all other concerns. The term "Neoliberal" might throw some people, since the leading Neoliberal of recent decades would include Ronald Reagan, Margaret Thatcher, and most members of the George W. Bush administration (though also many in the Clinton administration, including Clinton himself). Too many are unaware that Reagan and Bush are not conservatives by traditional understandings of the label: they both pushed for massive governmental intrusion into the markets, in taking an active role in eliminating regulation, and actively employing the government to control the economy, none of which are conservative projects. One reason that the Progressive movement gained so much steam during the McKinley, Roosevelt, and Wilson years was observing the extraordinary corruption and narrow concentration of wealth (and subsequent economic inequality) that resulted from an unregulated market economy. Steger, along with a host of others, points out that with the unfettered promotion of free market capitalism with little or no governmental regulatory control (Neoliberalism's big project) is once again resulting in extreme economic inequality. Numerous studies, to some of which he refers, have undermined one of the central claims of the Neoliberal project: that expanding world markets spreads wealth throughout the world; in fact, it actually shifts wealth into the hands of a very few, a trend that has been taking place not only on a global scale, but on the national level as well (e.g., according to Federal Reserve statistics, in 1979 1% of the population possessed 20% of the wealth in the U.S., while in 1997 the top 1% held 37%, a percentage that has surely exploded following the two massive Bush tax cuts). What I believe Steger could have emphasized even more is that economic inequality is likely going to be THE world issue in the decades to come, as it is likely to become the major issue in American politics as well (given a thirty year history of a massive shift of wealth from the middle class to a very small number of citizens).

My one complaint with the book is that many of the figures and graphs were close to unintelligible. Also, given the small format, sometimes the text and text boxes were laid out rather awkwardly. I found the annotated bibliography to be of great help in mapping out future reading (I sometimes wish that publishers would require all authors of academic books to provide either an annotated bibliography or a bibliographic essay; over the years I've probably learned of more good books to read in this fashion than in any other).

I have read several of the volumes in the Oxford University Press Very Short Introductions series, and this easily ranks as one of my favorites. I highly recommend it to anyone wanting to gain a handle on one of the crucial issues of our time.
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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent overview of globalization, June 3, 2006
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Steger begins by defining the term "globalization": A "set of processes" (not a "condition") towards greater interdependence and integration among the various cultures of the world. He makes a point to emphasize that economics is only ONE aspect of globalization: there are also political, cultural and ideological aspects. Moreover, he dedicates one chapter to showing that globalization is by no means a NEW phenomenon: cultural exchanges can be traced back to the prehistoric period.

I found the chapter on the economic aspects of globalization (chapter 3) very useful. It explains the history and role of the IMF, WTO and the World Bank in the global economy. It also discusses the West's transition from "controlled economies" to "free market capitalism." Arguing that globalization is an uneven process, the author shows how it is having very different effects on the various regions of the world. This gives us a clear vision of some of the negative impacts of the new world economy, such as a larger gap between rich and poor nations. His realistic view of globalization is a nice antidote to the cheerleading of hyperglobalizers like Thomas Friedman.

The chapter on opposition to globalization (chapter 7) does an excellent job of explaining challenges that are coming from both the right and the left. The particularist protectionists (on the right) feel threatened by multiculturalism because they want to maintain a sort of cultural purity. This often leads to their rallying against immigration and appealing to nationalism. However, like the left, they also criticize the power of the corporate elite and the negative effects globalization is having on the average domestic worker (i.e., jobs going overseas, lower wages). In the US, Pat Buchanan is a good example of this view. The universalist protectionists (on the left) tend to criticize the poor working conditions of both domestic and foreign workers. In general, universalist protectionists "are concerned with protection of the environment, fair trade and international labor issues, human rights, and women's issues." Ralph Nader is an example of a universalist protectionst.

Overall, an excellent introduction to the various facets of one of the most important issues of our time.
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10 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent Brief Introduction to a Vast Topic, December 17, 2003
By 
Manfred Steger does an excellent job summing up the most important subtopics within the vast and complex field of Globalization. He also provides an excellent bibliography for further reading. This tiny book is a great jumping-off point for those looking to delve deeper into the subject as well as a great overview for those simply interested in the major pluses and minuses of the world's greatest social trend.
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8 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Steger's Globalization a winner!, July 28, 2005
By 
This little book is a concise and sophisticated and very readable account of a very significant process in the world today. It objectively examines the positive and negative consequences of the globalization process and intelligently evaluates it's role in world development. He also includes some very interesting statistics on a variety of economic statuses of particular countries and corporations.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A very good introduction to Globalization, September 26, 2010
By 
dnk "dnkboston" (Boston, MA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) (Paperback)
This book explains globalization, surveys some of what has been written, then holds it under logical scrutiny. It also describes how contempory events relate to globalization.

This book was written in 2003 when the Al Qaeda attacks were still foremost on our consciousness. The author opens by deconstructing the video bin Laden released in October of 2001. For all of his bluster about imperialistic globalization, it is clear through not only his accessories (nice Timex) but also the mode his message was delivered through that he and his organization have been direct beneficiaries of the globalization he claims to despise. The author's point isn't so much bin Laden but that very few of us can escape the emerging "globality" that the processes of globalization have led us to.

In the introductory chapter, the author explains the difference between the condition of globality and the processes of globalization. He notes that much of the contemporary writings on the subject have focused on one process to the exclusion of the others, but that they are all part of a whole (the analogy of the blind scholars examining the elephant comes up). This was the hardest chapter to get through out of the whole book. In addition to parsing through existing concepts, he also used some really obtuse language. "Extensity" is a word, but maybe something like "pervasive" would have worked better? And "areas of contestation" wins this month's prize for the most awkward phrasing I have seen in a book. "Contested areas" wouldn't have been appropriate why?

That's the worst thing I can say about the book. He gives an excellent breadown of the history of trade, modernity and emerging globalization. (If you've read "Guns, Germs and Steel", you can just skim this part.) The next chapters break down the economic, political, cultural and ideological dimensions of globalization processes. This was not a straight survey: he asserts and then provides evidence for his contention that the arguments about the benevelonce and inevitability of globalization and its links to free trade, laissez-fair economic policy and democracy are circular at best.

I cringed when I read quotes from New York Times darlings Krugman and Friedman, both of whom assert the inevitability of globalization as some kind of corollary to the Invisible Hand (maybe it's the Invisible Wrist?). Friedman goes on to assert that globalization will, somehow, demand democracy as it works to strengthen economies. Sadly, the Chicago Tribune cites a report by the New Economic Information Service that begs to differ: between 1989 and 1999, the percentage of imports the US purchased from Global South democracies decreased even as the number of such democracies increased. Why? Because dictatorships tend to be less labour- and environment-friendly, thus lowering the costs of production.

The author goes on to discuss the foes of globalization. While they may both equally irritate large transnational corporations, Pat Buchanan is a particularist protectionist and Ralph Nader is a universalist protectionist (or he was before his most recent book). Both are American examples, but there are multiple varieties of each in every country.

The author notes at the outset that he is critical of the path globalization has followed over the last four decades, but not critical of globalization or globality itself. He ends the book with the hope that some of the benefits of globalization can be enjoyed by the Global South. Unfortunately, this was written before the Iraq War; global equity has been the least of the Global North's concerns.

Although written in 2003, this book does not suffer from being dated. On the contrary, he makes many prescient observations, not the least of which that much of the wealth generated was based not only on money but on money not yet created (hedge funds and futures). I wonder what he had to say about the 2008 financial crash.

Excellent primer on globalization.
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5.0 out of 5 stars tiny, February 9, 2012
By 
Jandro Torres (California, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) (Paperback)
tiny book with all that main and important stuff you need to know about globalization, and how it helps america and europe (west) by taking advantage of the rest of the world.
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5.0 out of 5 stars New book and fast shipping, January 13, 2012
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This review is from: Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) (Paperback)
Brand new book and came very fast for before I had to leave for college. No markings as promised and new. It is very helpful to have a clean book to read from!
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7 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting overview but pockets of bias, February 9, 2009
Manfred Steger provides a different look at Globalization in the Very Short Introduction series by Oxford University Press. This series provides a quick overview of topics and addresses their veracity as a theory and provides a critical eye towards the controversies in each topic. I will say that I was disappointed in this particular entry into the series which seemed to be far more critical towards globalization and spent more time on the flaws than addressing a fair and balanced look at the series. His book is broken down into key components of globalization including historical, cultural, economic, ideological, political, and cultural aspects and then he looks at some of the issues of globalization. The aspects chapters are done fairly well, although there is a distinct Marxist bias when you look at the sources in the economic chapter, showing how each of these facets impacts globalization. One of the strengths of the book is that a multidisciplinary approach is evident in Steger's approach showing how complex the discipline is. It was in the last chapter where I was disappointed and felt a strong bias towards anti-globalization forces. The author would present several quotes or facts about one of the issues and then pick the weakest one and tear it apart without really addressing the other two. There is also a championing of anti globalization forces in the forms of Ralph Nader and WTO protesters in Seattle. I will admit that I am reading the 2003 version and thought it was way to early to call anything about the Iraq war and its effect on diminishing globalization by sowing global discontent and further Islam backlash so perhaps the newer version puts this into a more appropriate context. Overall an interesting book and worth time in the pantheon of globalization literature but its bias should be taken into account.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved this book, December 20, 2011
This review is from: Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) (Paperback)
I actually bought the book of ebay for a college class and I loved it. I found myself reading chapters that weren't even assigned because I love the whole globalization topic. The text can be a bit difficult to decipher because it does use large perplexing words but taking it slowly makes it much easier and it really is an interesting read. It also is a really cool like mini hard back type of book. Any political enthusiasts should definitely read this book.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Globalization, September 22, 2011
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This review is from: Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) (Paperback)
I'm very happy with the service I got, and I was pleased to note that my book got to me in the exact condition that was specified by the merchant. I would definitely be happy to go through them again and would recommend them to my friends.
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Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions)
Globalization: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) by Manfred B. Steger (Paperback - March 15, 2009)
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