This document summarizes key topics related to the globalization of media and religion. It discusses theories of cultural imperialism and debates around the globalization of media. It also examines perspectives on how globalization leads to both the homogenization and hybridization of culture through interactions between global and local forces. Media are seen as both spreading Western influence globally but also enabling new hybrid cultural forms to emerge through complex local adaptations to global flows. Religion is discussed as both a transnational institution and as adapting in diverse ways to globalizing influences.
In this module, you will journey to the very heart of this course: you will be asked to identify the challenges posed by globalization and consider responses to these challenges as demonstrated by experiences on the ground. For this purpose, students will produce case studies of communities (in the Philippines and other countries) experiencing the impact of globalization and their respective responses to issues that arise. There are global-civic societies engaged in advocacies relating to climate and environmental protection, for example, human trafficking across borders, the application of advances in science and technology to serve some of the world’s poorest communities, and so on. There are, too, communities that have managed, in varying degrees of success, to deal with the effects, good and bad, of globalization.
The Contemporary World: Globalization of World PoliticsRommel Regala
This course introduces students to the contemporary world by examining the multifaceted phenomenon of globalization. Using the various disciplines of the social sciences, it examines the economic, social, political, technological, and other transformations that have created an increasing awareness of the interconnectedness of peoples and places around the globe. To this end, the course provides an overview of the various debates in global governance, development, and sustainability. Beyond exposing the student to the world outside the Philippines, it seeks to inculcate a sense of global citizenship and goal ethical responsibility.
In this module, you will journey to the very heart of this course: you will be asked to identify the challenges posed by globalization and consider responses to these challenges as demonstrated by experiences on the ground. For this purpose, students will produce case studies of communities (in the Philippines and other countries) experiencing the impact of globalization and their respective responses to issues that arise. There are global-civic societies engaged in advocacies relating to climate and environmental protection, for example, human trafficking across borders, the application of advances in science and technology to serve some of the world’s poorest communities, and so on. There are, too, communities that have managed, in varying degrees of success, to deal with the effects, good and bad, of globalization.
The Contemporary World: Globalization of World PoliticsRommel Regala
This course introduces students to the contemporary world by examining the multifaceted phenomenon of globalization. Using the various disciplines of the social sciences, it examines the economic, social, political, technological, and other transformations that have created an increasing awareness of the interconnectedness of peoples and places around the globe. To this end, the course provides an overview of the various debates in global governance, development, and sustainability. Beyond exposing the student to the world outside the Philippines, it seeks to inculcate a sense of global citizenship and goal ethical responsibility.
Global Population and Mobility
- The Global City
- Global Demography
- Global Migration
- OFWs
Contemporary World
For educational purposes only. No rights to information and pictures.
SUBJECT: The Contemporary World
TOPIC: Global Migration
NOTE:
I also made a presentation for this (pptx format). Kindly Search it here in my profile or you can click this link https://www.slideshare.net/NiaMaeSabillo/global-migration-250432429. Thank you!
This is the third chapter of the course Readings in Philippine History as per the course guide from Commission on Higher Education.
Course sub-topics:
-Site of the First Mass
-Cry of Balintawak or Pugad Lawin?
-Rizal's Retraction
Why is it that everyone is in the pursuit of the good life? One must find the truth what the good is before one can even try to locate that which is good.
This paper is about conflicts and controversies in Philippine history. Among the topics were as follows:
1. Site of the First Mass
2. The Cry of Rebellion
3. The Cavite Mutiny
A brief discussion about globalization through media imperialism.
Researchers focused their effort on mostly nation-states as primary actors in international relations. The flow of news and entertainment was biased in favor of industrialized countries. Developing nations received scant and prejudicial coverage in Western Media. Emphasis on commercialization of sphere of culture. On the second stage of research in Cultural imperialism, it focused on transnational corporations as the primary actors on international relations ; and on transnational capital flows
The end of cold war as a global framework for ideological, Geopolitical, and Economic competition calls for a rethinking of the analytical categories and paradigms of thought. The nation state is no longer the sale or dominant player since transnational transactions occur on sub national, national, and supranational levels. According to John Tomlinson (1991) Globalization replaced cultural imperialism because it conveys a process with less coherence and direction, which will weaken the cultural unity of all nation -states ,Not only those in the developing world. Globalization has emerged as a key perspective across the humanities and social sciences, a current undoubtedly affecting the discipline of communication.
Globalization of culture has become a conceptual magnet attracting research and theorizing efforts from a variety of disciplines and interdisciplinary formations such as anthropology, comparative literature, cultural studies, communication and media studies, geography, and sociology.
Global Population and Mobility
- The Global City
- Global Demography
- Global Migration
- OFWs
Contemporary World
For educational purposes only. No rights to information and pictures.
SUBJECT: The Contemporary World
TOPIC: Global Migration
NOTE:
I also made a presentation for this (pptx format). Kindly Search it here in my profile or you can click this link https://www.slideshare.net/NiaMaeSabillo/global-migration-250432429. Thank you!
This is the third chapter of the course Readings in Philippine History as per the course guide from Commission on Higher Education.
Course sub-topics:
-Site of the First Mass
-Cry of Balintawak or Pugad Lawin?
-Rizal's Retraction
Why is it that everyone is in the pursuit of the good life? One must find the truth what the good is before one can even try to locate that which is good.
This paper is about conflicts and controversies in Philippine history. Among the topics were as follows:
1. Site of the First Mass
2. The Cry of Rebellion
3. The Cavite Mutiny
A brief discussion about globalization through media imperialism.
Researchers focused their effort on mostly nation-states as primary actors in international relations. The flow of news and entertainment was biased in favor of industrialized countries. Developing nations received scant and prejudicial coverage in Western Media. Emphasis on commercialization of sphere of culture. On the second stage of research in Cultural imperialism, it focused on transnational corporations as the primary actors on international relations ; and on transnational capital flows
The end of cold war as a global framework for ideological, Geopolitical, and Economic competition calls for a rethinking of the analytical categories and paradigms of thought. The nation state is no longer the sale or dominant player since transnational transactions occur on sub national, national, and supranational levels. According to John Tomlinson (1991) Globalization replaced cultural imperialism because it conveys a process with less coherence and direction, which will weaken the cultural unity of all nation -states ,Not only those in the developing world. Globalization has emerged as a key perspective across the humanities and social sciences, a current undoubtedly affecting the discipline of communication.
Globalization of culture has become a conceptual magnet attracting research and theorizing efforts from a variety of disciplines and interdisciplinary formations such as anthropology, comparative literature, cultural studies, communication and media studies, geography, and sociology.
Globalization as Americanization? Beyond the Conspiracy TheoryIOSR Journals
Globalization and its major engines (growing human capital, free markets, increasing cross-border interaction) have created a new world order that has incited passionate debate, pro and con. In recent culture studies, one of the foremost explorations concerns the influence globalization has upon culture. In fact, one of the most common criticisms we hear about the globalization of today‟s world is that it is producing mainly one culture, it is destroying diversity, and it is bringing everyone into the same global culture. Actually, much of the sociological hype about cultural globalization, defined as the diffusion of cultural values and ideas across national borders, sees it as synonymous with homogenization. Cultural globalization is, thus, one of the major concerns of academics, journalists, political activists and leaders of “cultural preservation” movements who despise what they see as the trend toward cultural uniformity. They usually regard global culture and American culture as synonymous and, thus, express serious concerns about their cultural distinctiveness.
Intercultural Communication Studies XX 1 (2011) Sun17.docxmariuse18nolet
Intercultural Communication Studies XX: 1 (2011) Sun
17
Intercultural Communication and Global Democracy:
A Deweyan Perspective
Sun Youzhong
Beijing Foreign Studies University, China
Abstract
Understanding intercultural communication as the exchange of information between
individuals of different cultural backgrounds, theorists of this field are primarily
concerned with mapping the patterns of cultural similarities and differences, revealing
the effects of cultural factors on the process of intercultural communication, sorting
the components of intercultural communication competence, and seeking the formulas
to remove misunderstandings and breakdowns in intercultural communication.
By contrast, American philosopher John Dewey takes a moral approach to define
communication as individually distinctive members of a community sharing
experiences, participating in joint activities, cooperating in free social inquiry and the
distribution of its conclusions, transforming habits, and ultimately making life rich
and varied in meanings. This Deweyan moralist perspective can be applied to situate
intercultural communication studies in the context of a globalizing world where global
democracy, though far from playing any noticeable role in regulating international
relations at present, should ultimately rule if humankind is to have a future and continue
to thrive. From a Deweyan perspective, the construction of a global public in a global
democratic community is the foundation or precondition of global democracy. This is
where intercultural communication, understood not only as practical means to satisfy
immediate individual, organizational and national needs in intercultural contexts, but
also as consummate ends or an intercultural democratic way of life, could make its
unique contribution.
Keywords: global democracy, John Dewey, intercultural communication
Introduction
It is generally agreed that we live in an age of globalization. But when did it begin? Some
historians might point at October 24, 1946, when the first grainy, black-and-white photos of
our earth were taken from an altitude of 65 miles by a 35-millimeter motion picture camera
riding on a V-2 missile launched from the New Mexico dessert. Clyde Holliday, the engineer
who developed the camera, wrote in National Geographic in 1950, the V-2 photos showed for
the first time “how our Earth would look to visitors from another planet coming in on a space
ship.” That was the first time human beings saw with their own eyes their habitats on separate
continents as one globe. Other historians would trace further back to the late 19th century when
the second industrialization coupled with Western imperialism incorporated all the countries
of the globe into one world market system. But that first stage of modern globalization slowed
18
Intercultural Communication Studies XX: 1 (2011) Sun
down during the period from the start of the First World War until the thi.
International Journal of Humanities and Social Science Invention (IJHSSI) is an international journal intended for professionals and researchers in all fields of Humanities and Social Science. IJHSSI publishes research articles and reviews within the whole field Humanities and Social Science, new teaching methods, assessment, validation and the impact of new technologies and it will continue to provide information on the latest trends and developments in this ever-expanding subject. The publications of papers are selected through double peer reviewed to ensure originality, relevance, and readability. The articles published in our journal can be accessed online.
Essay on Cultural Globalization
Essay on The History of Globalization
An Overview of Globalization Essay
Globalization : A Deeper Look At Globalization
Globalization : A Short History
Synthesis Essay On Globalization
The Realization Of Globalization
Personal Reflection on Globalization
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Globalization : A Very Short Introduction
Globalization
Globalization: Countries
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Globalization : A World Wide Movement Essay
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Globalization : A Clear Image Of Globalization
This is a presentation by Dada Robert in a Your Skill Boost masterclass organised by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan (EFSS) on Saturday, the 25th and Sunday, the 26th of May 2024.
He discussed the concept of quality improvement, emphasizing its applicability to various aspects of life, including personal, project, and program improvements. He defined quality as doing the right thing at the right time in the right way to achieve the best possible results and discussed the concept of the "gap" between what we know and what we do, and how this gap represents the areas we need to improve. He explained the scientific approach to quality improvement, which involves systematic performance analysis, testing and learning, and implementing change ideas. He also highlighted the importance of client focus and a team approach to quality improvement.
How to Make a Field invisible in Odoo 17Celine George
It is possible to hide or invisible some fields in odoo. Commonly using “invisible” attribute in the field definition to invisible the fields. This slide will show how to make a field invisible in odoo 17.
Ethnobotany and Ethnopharmacology:
Ethnobotany in herbal drug evaluation,
Impact of Ethnobotany in traditional medicine,
New development in herbals,
Bio-prospecting tools for drug discovery,
Role of Ethnopharmacology in drug evaluation,
Reverse Pharmacology.
The Indian economy is classified into different sectors to simplify the analysis and understanding of economic activities. For Class 10, it's essential to grasp the sectors of the Indian economy, understand their characteristics, and recognize their importance. This guide will provide detailed notes on the Sectors of the Indian Economy Class 10, using specific long-tail keywords to enhance comprehension.
For more information, visit-www.vavaclasses.com
Model Attribute Check Company Auto PropertyCeline George
In Odoo, the multi-company feature allows you to manage multiple companies within a single Odoo database instance. Each company can have its own configurations while still sharing common resources such as products, customers, and suppliers.
We all have good and bad thoughts from time to time and situation to situation. We are bombarded daily with spiraling thoughts(both negative and positive) creating all-consuming feel , making us difficult to manage with associated suffering. Good thoughts are like our Mob Signal (Positive thought) amidst noise(negative thought) in the atmosphere. Negative thoughts like noise outweigh positive thoughts. These thoughts often create unwanted confusion, trouble, stress and frustration in our mind as well as chaos in our physical world. Negative thoughts are also known as “distorted thinking”.
Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
This presentation provides a briefing on how to upload submissions and documents in Google Classroom. It was prepared as part of an orientation for new Sainik School in-service teacher trainees. As a training officer, my goal is to ensure that you are comfortable and proficient with this essential tool for managing assignments and fostering student engagement.
The Roman Empire A Historical Colossus.pdfkaushalkr1407
The Roman Empire, a vast and enduring power, stands as one of history's most remarkable civilizations, leaving an indelible imprint on the world. It emerged from the Roman Republic, transitioning into an imperial powerhouse under the leadership of Augustus Caesar in 27 BCE. This transformation marked the beginning of an era defined by unprecedented territorial expansion, architectural marvels, and profound cultural influence.
The empire's roots lie in the city of Rome, founded, according to legend, by Romulus in 753 BCE. Over centuries, Rome evolved from a small settlement to a formidable republic, characterized by a complex political system with elected officials and checks on power. However, internal strife, class conflicts, and military ambitions paved the way for the end of the Republic. Julius Caesar’s dictatorship and subsequent assassination in 44 BCE created a power vacuum, leading to a civil war. Octavian, later Augustus, emerged victorious, heralding the Roman Empire’s birth.
Under Augustus, the empire experienced the Pax Romana, a 200-year period of relative peace and stability. Augustus reformed the military, established efficient administrative systems, and initiated grand construction projects. The empire's borders expanded, encompassing territories from Britain to Egypt and from Spain to the Euphrates. Roman legions, renowned for their discipline and engineering prowess, secured and maintained these vast territories, building roads, fortifications, and cities that facilitated control and integration.
The Roman Empire’s society was hierarchical, with a rigid class system. At the top were the patricians, wealthy elites who held significant political power. Below them were the plebeians, free citizens with limited political influence, and the vast numbers of slaves who formed the backbone of the economy. The family unit was central, governed by the paterfamilias, the male head who held absolute authority.
Culturally, the Romans were eclectic, absorbing and adapting elements from the civilizations they encountered, particularly the Greeks. Roman art, literature, and philosophy reflected this synthesis, creating a rich cultural tapestry. Latin, the Roman language, became the lingua franca of the Western world, influencing numerous modern languages.
Roman architecture and engineering achievements were monumental. They perfected the arch, vault, and dome, constructing enduring structures like the Colosseum, Pantheon, and aqueducts. These engineering marvels not only showcased Roman ingenuity but also served practical purposes, from public entertainment to water supply.
How to Create Map Views in the Odoo 17 ERPCeline George
The map views are useful for providing a geographical representation of data. They allow users to visualize and analyze the data in a more intuitive manner.
Palestine last event orientationfvgnh .pptxRaedMohamed3
An EFL lesson about the current events in Palestine. It is intended to be for intermediate students who wish to increase their listening skills through a short lesson in power point.
2024.06.01 Introducing a competency framework for languag learning materials ...Sandy Millin
http://sandymillin.wordpress.com/iateflwebinar2024
Published classroom materials form the basis of syllabuses, drive teacher professional development, and have a potentially huge influence on learners, teachers and education systems. All teachers also create their own materials, whether a few sentences on a blackboard, a highly-structured fully-realised online course, or anything in between. Despite this, the knowledge and skills needed to create effective language learning materials are rarely part of teacher training, and are mostly learnt by trial and error.
Knowledge and skills frameworks, generally called competency frameworks, for ELT teachers, trainers and managers have existed for a few years now. However, until I created one for my MA dissertation, there wasn’t one drawing together what we need to know and do to be able to effectively produce language learning materials.
This webinar will introduce you to my framework, highlighting the key competencies I identified from my research. It will also show how anybody involved in language teaching (any language, not just English!), teacher training, managing schools or developing language learning materials can benefit from using the framework.
2. TOPICS
The Globalization of
Religion
Global Media Cultures
2.1 2.2
o Cultural Imperialism and
the Global Media Debate
o Media, Globalization, and
Hybridization
o Religious Perspectives on Globalization
o Religion and Religions in Globalization
o Religion as Transnational Institution
o Religion as Cultural and Political
Resource
o Religion and Religions as Globalizing
System
o Religion, Globalization, and the Human
Condition
3. INTRODUCTION
The topic A World of Ideas delves
on how various media drives
various forms of global integration.
It explains the dynamic between
local and global cultural
production; and how globalization
affects religion.
5. The received view about the
globalization of culture is one where the
entire world has been molded in the image
of Western, mainly American, culture. The
globalization of culture is often chiefly
imputed to international mass media. After
all, contemporary media technologies such
as satellite television and the Internet have
created a steady flow of transnational
images that connect audiences worldwide.
The role of the mass media in the
globalization of culture is a contested issue
in international communication theory and
research.
6. Early theories of media influence,
commonly referred to as "magic bullet" or
"hypodermic needle" theories, believed
that the mass media had powerful effects
over audiences. Since then, the debate
about media influence has undergone an
ebb and flow that has prevented any
resolution or agreement among
researchers as to the level, scope, and
implications of media influence.
Nevertheless, key theoretical formulations
in international communication clung to a
belief in powerful media effects on
cultures and communities.
7. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
In international communication theory
and research, cultural imperialism theory
argued that audiences across the globe are
heavily affected by media messages emanating
from the Western industrialized countries.
Although there are minor differences between
"media imperialism" and "cultural imperialism,"
most of the literature in international
communication treats the former as a category
of the latter. Grounded in an understanding of
media as cultural industries, cultural imperialism
is firmly rooted in a political-economy
perspective on international communication.
8. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
In the early stage of cultural
imperialism, researchers focused their efforts
mostly on nation-states as primary actors in
international relations. They imputed rich,
industrialized, and Western nation-states with
intentions and actions by which they export
their cultural products and impose their
sociocultural values on poorer and weaker
nations in the developing world.
These concerns led to the rise of the
New World Information Order (NWIO) debate,
later known as the New World Information
and Communication Order (NWICO) debate.
9. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
Although the debate at first was
concerned with news flows between the north
and the south, it soon evolved to include all
international media flows. This was due to the
fact that inequality existed in news and
entertainment programs alike, and to the
advent of then-new media technologies such
as communication satellites, which made the
international media landscape more complex
and therefore widened the scope of the
debate about international flows.
10. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
The global media debate was launched
during the 1973 General Conference of the
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in Nairobi,
Kenya. As a specialized agency of the United
Nations, the mission of UNESCO includes issues
of communication and culture. During the
conference, strong differences arose between
Western industrialized nations and developing
countries. Led by the United States, the first
group insisted on the "free flow of information"
doctrine, advocating "free trade" in information
and media programs without any restrictions.
11. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
The second group, concerned by the
lack of balance in international media flows,
accused Western countries of invoking the
free flow of information ideology to justify
their economic and cultural domination. They
argued instead for a "free and balanced flow"
of information. The chasm between the two
groups was too wide to be reconciled. This
eventually was one of the major reasons given
for withdrawal from UNESCO by the United
States and the United Kingdom—which
resulted in the de facto fall of the global media
debate.
12. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
A second stage of research identified
with cultural imperialism has been associated
with calls to revive the New World Information
and Communication Order debate. What
differentiates this line of research from earlier
cultural imperialism formulations is its emphasis
on the commercialization of the sphere of
culture. Research into this area had been a
hallmark of cultural imperialism research, but
now there is a deliberate focus on transnational
corporations as actors, as opposed to nation-
states, and on transnational capital flows, as
opposed to image flows.
13. Cultural Imperialism and the Global Media Debate
Cultural imperialism does have some
weaknesses, but it also continues to be useful.
Perhaps the most important contribution of
cultural imperialism is the argument that
international communication flows, processes,
and effects are permeated by power.
Nevertheless, it seems that the concept of
globalization has in some ways replaced
cultural imperialism as the main conceptual
umbrella under which much research and
theorizing in international communication
have been conducted.
14. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
First, the end of the Cold War as a global
framework for ideological, geopolitical, and economic
competition calls for a rethinking of the analytical
categories and paradigms of thought. By giving rise to
the United States as sole superpower and at the same
time making the world more fragmented, the end of
the Cold War ushered in an era of complexity between
global forces of cohesion and local reactions of
dispersal. In this complex era, the nation state is no
longer the sole or dominant player, since transnational
transactions occur on subnational, national, and
supranational levels.
15. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
Conceptually, globalization appears to capture this
complexity better than cultural imperialism.
Second, according to John Tomlinson (1991),
globalization replaced cultural imperialism because it
conveys a process with less coherence and direction,
which will weaken the cultural unity of all nation-states,
not only those in the developing world. Finally,
globalization has emerged as a key perspective across
the humanities and social sciences, a current
undoubtedly affecting the discipline of communication.
16. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
One perspective on the globalization of culture,
somewhat reminiscent of cultural imperialism in terms
of the nature of the effect of media on culture, but
somewhat different in its conceptualization of the issue,
is the view that the media contribute to the
homogenization of cultural differences across the
planet. This view dominates conventional wisdom
perspectives on cultural globalization conjuring up
images of Planet Hollywood and the MTV generation.
17. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
One of the most visible proponents of this
perspective is political scientist Benjamin Barber, who
formulated his theory about the globalization of culture
in the book Jihad vs. McWorld (1996). The subtitle, "How
Globalism and Tribalism Are Reshaping the World,"
betrays Barber's reliance on a binary opposition
between the forces of modernity and liberal democracy
with tradition and autocracy.
Although Barber rightly points to transnational
capitalism as the driving engine that brings Jihad and
McWorld in contact and motivates their action, his
model has two limitations.
18. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
First, it is based on a binary opposition between
Jihad, what he refers to as ethnic and religious
tribalism, and McWorld, the capital-driven West. Barber
(1996, p. 157) seemingly attempts to go beyond this
binary opposition in a chapter titled "Jihad Via
McWorld," in which he argues that Jihad stands in "less
of a stark opposition than a subtle counterpoint."
However, the evidence offered in most of the book
supports an oppositional rather than a contrapuntal
perspective on the globalization of culture.
19. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
The second limitation of Barber's book is that
he privileges the global over the local, because,
according to him, globalization rules via transnational
capitalism. "[T]o think that globalization and
indigenization are entirely coequal forces that put Jihad
and McWorld on an equal footing is to vastly
underestimate the force of the new planetary
markets.… It's no contest" (p. 12).
Another perspective on globalization is cultural
hybridity or hybridization. This view privileges an
understanding of the interface of globalization and
20. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
localization as a dynamic process and hybrid product of
mixed traditions and cultural forms. As such, this
perspective does not give prominence to globalization
as a homogenizing force, nor does it believe in
localization as a resistive process opposed to
globalization. Rather, hybridization advocates an
emphasis on processes of mediation that it views as
central to cultural globalization.
One of the most influential voices in the debate
about cultural hybridity is Argentinean-Mexican cultural
critic Nestor García-Canclini.
21. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
In his book Hybrid Cultures (1995), García-Canclini
advocates a theoretical understanding of Latin
American nations as hybrid cultures.
According to García-Canclini, there are three
main features of cultural hybridity. The first feature
consists of mixing previously separate cultural systems,
such as mixing the elite art of opera with popular
music. The second feature of hybridity is the
deterritorialization of cultural processes from their
original physical environment to new and foreign
contexts.
22. Media, Globalization, and Hybridization
Third, cultural hybridity entails impure cultural
genres that are formed out of the mixture of several
cultural domains. An example of these impure genres is
when artisans in rural Mexico weave tapestries of
masterpieces of European painters such as Joan Miró
and Henri Matisse, mixing high art and folk artisanship
into an impure genre.
24. The dialogical approaches to globalization, in
conjunction with those that stress globalization from
below, are of special significance when it comes to the
topic of religion. By far the greatest portion of the by
now vast literature on globalization completely or almost
completely ignores religion, the partial exception being
the attention that Islamicist political extremism receives.
This absence can perhaps be attributed to the
dominance of economic and political understandings of
globalization, including among those observers who look
at the phenomenon from within religious traditions.
25. Consideration of the relation between religion
and globalization involves two basic possibilities. There
are, on the one hand, religious responses to globalization
and religious interpretations of globalization. These are,
as it were, part of doing religion in a globalizing context.
On the other hand, there are those analyses of
globalization that seek to understand the role of religion
in globalization and the effects of globalization on
religion. They focus on observing religion in a global
society. By far the largest portion of the literature that
relates religion and globalization is of the former sort,
and therefore it is well to begin there.
26. Religious Perspectives on Globalization
A great many religious commentators
understand globalization as at once a largely
economic, imperialistic, and homogenizing
process. They share the economic/mass
cultural/political perspective, evaluating
globalization as anywhere from a threatening
challenge to the manifestation of evil in our world.
In many respects globalization in this segment of
the literature is a successor term for what used to
be censured as the capitalist system or cognate
terms. Accordingly, globalization results in violence
and the unjust oppression of the majority of people
around the world.
27. Religious Perspectives on Globalization
It threatens local and indigenous cultures,
imposing a particularly heavy burden on women. It
is the chief cause of global and local environmental
degradation, again to the principal detriment of
the mass of marginalized humanity.
Such theologically inspired positions are
not restricted to the representatives of a particular
religious tradition. Thus, for example, Christians,
Buddhists, Muslims, Jews, and those speaking from
indigenous traditions all arrive at similar critical
assessments of globalization.
28. Religious Perspectives on Globalization
Some theologically oriented observers
argue that religion has an essential role in shaping
globalization; that the negative outcomes of
globalization point to the need for a positive global
ethic, which religions can provide. The efforts led
by Hans Küng in this direction are perhaps the
most well known.
For Küng, not only does the globalized
world require a guiding global ethic, but key to the
development of that ethic is harmonious relations
and dialogue among the world's religions.
29. Religious Perspectives on Globalization
The combination signals a dialogical
understanding of globalization that Küng shares
with many other observers. Here it applies to
religion: the globalized whole depends for its
viability on the contribution of religion, yet this
contribution presupposes a plurality of particular
religions that come to understand themselves in
positive relation to one another.
30. Religious Perspectives on Globalization
Unity and diversity are both constitutive of
the global. This core assumption of Küng's Global
Ethic Project points to general features of how
those contributions to the globalization debate
that do not ignore religion have sought to
understand its role in the process: as an important
dimension of globalization that exhibits the
characteristic dynamic tension between global and
local, between homogeneity and heterogeneity,
between the universal and the particular.
31. Religion and Religions in Globalization
Certain approaches analyze religion as a global or transnational
institution, whose diverse manifestations operate to a large extent
independently of economic and political structures and that bind
diverse regions of the world together in ways comparable to global
trade, international relations, mass media, sport, communications
media, or tourism.
A second but related focus of observation is the role that
religious systems play as powerful cultural resources for asserting
identity and seeking inclusion in global society, especially among
less powerful and marginalized populations.
32. Religion and Religions in Globalization
It is in this context that religio-political movements, including so-called
fundamentalisms, receive the most focused attention.
A third strategy goes even further, attempting to show how the
formation, reformation, and spread of religions have been an integral
dimension of globalization as such. From this angle, what we today
conceive as the most typical forms of religion and even the typical
understandings that we have of religion are themselves outcomes and
reflections of the historical process of globalization.
33. Religion as Transnational Institution
Of the forces that have in the past been instrumental in
binding different regions of the world together, in creating a
larger if not exactly a geographically global system, economic
trade and political empire have certainly been the most
obvious; but in conjunction with these, it is equally clear that
what we today call religions have also at times played a
significant role. Hindu civilization at one time spread
throughout South and Southeast Asia. Buddhist teaching and
monastic traditions linked together the vast territories from
Sri Lanka and the Indian subcontinent, through Afghanistan
and China to Korea, Japan, and most of Southeast Asia.
34. Religion as Transnational Institution
In the early Middle Ages the Christian church was the
only institution that overarched and even defined as a single
social unit that northwestern portion of the Eurasian
landmass known as Europe.
The churches accompanied European colonizers in
Africa, the Americas, and Australasia; Christian missions,
whether independently or in conjunction with secular
authorities, sought conversions in all corners of the globe. In
consequence, today the vast majority of globally extended
religious institutions are in fact Christian organizations and
movements.
35. Religion as Transnational Institution
A wide variety of these include, for instance, the Roman
Catholic Church (along with many of its religious orders),
several Protestant and Eastern Orthodox churches, the World
Council of Churches, Seventh-day Adventists, the worldwide
Pentecostal movement, and Jehovah's Witnesses. Christian
missions still crisscross the world: American missionaries are
to be found in Latin America, Africa, and Asia; African and
Latin American Christians conduct missions in Europe and
the United States; Australians serve in India; South Koreans
are a major presence in southern Africa; and everyone is
trying to spread the word in the countries of the former
Communist bloc.
36. Religion as Transnational Institution
Although Christian establishments thus dominate
numerically, they are far from being alone among
transnational religious institutions. Muslim movements and
organizations such as the Ṣūfī and neo-Ṣūfī ṭarīqah, or
brotherhoods (for example, Naqshbandīyah, Murīdīya,
Qādirīyah), reform movements like the Pakistani Tablighi
Jamaat and the Turkish Milli Görüş, and unity foundations like
the World Muslim Congress or the World Muslim League are
broadly established in different regions. Buddhist
organizations such as the Foguangshan or the Sōka Gakkai
have a worldwide presence as do Hindu movements like the
Ramakrishna Math and Mission, the Vishwa Hindu Parishad,
and the Sai Baba movement.
37. Religion as Transnational Institution
The specific literature on any of these is fairly
substantial. Yet with some exceptions, notably Christian
manifestations like the Roman Catholic Church and
Pentecostalism, globalization perspectives have not
concentrated on these perhaps most obvious of global
religious forms as a characteristic dimension of the
globalization process. Instead, a growing literature has been
focusing on religion in the context of global migration.
Dialogical theories of globalization and those that
stress globalization from below have been particularly apt to
analyze the consequences of global migration, but the issue is
not missing from many that understand globalization
primarily in economic or political terms.
38. Religion as Transnational Institution
Like global capitalism or international relations, this
question is not susceptible to easy understanding on the
basis of theories that take a more limited territory, above all a
nation-state or a region like Europe, as their primary unit of
analysis.
Not infrequently in such analyses, the sorts of
transnational religious organizations and movements just
mentioned are salient topics, since the migrant communities
are often instrumental in bringing about, developing, and
maintaining their global character.
39. Religion as Transnational Institution
Thus, for instance, we have consideration of Senegalese
murīd presence in the United States, Taiwanese Foguangshan
establishments in Canada, Turkish Süleymanli communities in
Germany, Tablighi Jamaat mosques in Great Britain, Japanese
Buddhist temples in Brazil, as well as African or Latin
American Pentecostal churches in North America and Europe.
Moreover, the consideration of the role of transnational
religious institutions in the context of global migration
already implicates the second way that religion has been
understood as a significant contributor to globalization
processes, and that is as a cultural, but especially political
resource.
40. Religion as Cultural and Political Resource
People who migrate from one part of the world
to another in search of a better life often depend on
their religions and their religious institutions to address
an array of attendant problems. Religion can furnish
them with a strong sense of identity and integrity in a
situation where they may be strangers.
A Christian church founded by Mexican
migrants in Atlanta is an important community
resource for its participants, but it may also have ties
with the church back in the Mexican village from
which most of them originate, providing financial and
other resources for that village church as well.
41. Religion as Cultural and Political Resource
The role of religion in providing, broadly
speaking, cultural resources in a global context is not
limited to the situation of migrants, however. In Latin
America, for instance, one reason for the rapid rise of
Pentecostal Christian churches along with significant
growth among Afro-Brazilian religions like Candomblé
and certain Roman Catholic movements is that these
institutional religious forms provide people with ways
of understanding themselves and coping in a world
where their situation is changing and often precarious.
They afford people narratives with attendant life
practices by which they can give themselves a
meaningful and dignified place in this world.
42. Religion as Cultural and Political Resource
Religion lends them a measure of power. Even more
clearly, in sub-Saharan Africa above all Christian and
Islamic organizations, centers, networks, and
movements offer large numbers of people at least
some access to an institution that actually functions
reasonably to their benefit.
Although they are localized institutions and
largely in the control of local people, a far from
insignificant part of the appeal of these religious
establishments is that they have links to and represent
access to the wider globalized world.
43. Religion as Cultural and Political Resource
This has always been one of the attractions of both
Christianity and Islam; they have in effect been global
religions for many centuries. In today's world they
continue to fill that role. The degree to which religions
contribute to the globalized circumstance as well as
their character as globalized institutions becomes
evident in these cases.
From the rise of Hindu nationalism in India and
the heavy political involvement of certain Buddhist
organizations in Japan to the many highly politicized
Islamicist movements in countries as diverse as Iran,
Indonesia, and Nigeria, politicized religion has been a
constant feature of the global world since at least the
44. Religion as Cultural and Political Resource
1960s and in many respects well back into the
nineteenth century.
Although the literature often analyzes them
under the somewhat tendentious label of
fundamentalisms, two of their most basic features
illustrate quite clearly how relevant they are for
theories of globalization and how they manifest the
global nature of so much contemporary religion.
The first is simply that they have arisen in so
many different countries, and almost always on the
basis of the traditions and institutions of one of the
globally recognized religions such as Islam, Christianity,
Judaism, Hinduism, Sikhism, or Buddhism.
45. Religion as Cultural and Political Resource
Religions that are very different from one
another provide the resources for remarkably similar
political movements. The fact that one of the broadly
homologous modern states is invariably implicated by
such movements is one reason for this similarity, but so
is the explicitly global view that they typically
represent.
46. Religion and Religions as Globalizing System
It focuses on the degree to which both modern
institutional forms and modern understandings of
religion are themselves manifestations of globalization.
These religions, in virtually every region of the globe,
include Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism,
but a variable list of other religions receives almost as
broad legitimacy. Among these are Judaism, Sikhism,
Daoism, and Jainism, followed again by another set of
less consistently or more regionally accepted ones such
as Bahāʾī, Shintō, Candomblé, African Traditional
Religions (ATR), Scientology, and so forth.
47. Religion and Religions as Globalizing System
The idea that religion manifests itself through a
series of distinct religions may seem self-evident to
many people, including a great many of their
adherents.
Symptomatic of both aspects are ongoing and
recent debates among scholars of religion concerning
the meaning of the concept and its supposed
Eurocentrism. One perspective in these controversies
has it that religion is at best an abstract term, useful for
certain kinds of analysis but not something real that is
actually out there in the world. A prime argument in
support of this position is how the ideas of religion as a
48. Religion and Religions as Globalizing System
separate domain of life and of the distinct religions are
so demonstrably products of relatively recent history
and so clearly attendant upon and implicated in the
concomitant spread of Christian and European
influence around the world. Another is that religions is
empirically too narrow, as what is meant by them does
not cover nearly everything in our world that is
manifestly religious using slightly different notions of
religion.
Similar to global capitalism and the global
system of sovereign states, the idea and its putting into
practice exclude as well as include.
49. Religion and Religions as Globalizing System
It also involves power and imposition, as do all human
institutions.
A strict corollary of this theory, a consequence
of the selective nature of this religious system, is that
new religions will constantly try to form and that much
religiosity will escape the system. The existence of this
global religious system, simultaneously at the global
and local levels, therefore spawns its constant
development and the constant challenging of the way
it operates. That idea leads logically to consideration of
the religiousness of the global system itself.
50. Religion, Globalization, and the Human Condition
Positive and unitary interpretations come in a
number of variants. There are still a few that see
globalization as inevitably moving the world toward a
future of ever greater material prosperity, political
democracy, and technological progress shared equitably
among all peoples. Far more numerous are those that
share ideals such as equality and inclusion of all people in
the benefits of global society, perhaps under the rubric of
universal human rights; but they consider that at the very
least human society has a long way to go before these are
realizable, and that certain features of globalization
actually stand in the way of their realization.
51. Religion, Globalization, and the Human Condition
Several perspectives grounded in institutionalized
religion fall under this heading, for instance, the already
discussed Global Ethic Project led by Hans Küng, or the
Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation program of the
World Council of Churches. Typically, these and other
examples consider such values as equality among peoples,
religions, classes, and genders to be completely
unquestionable. With equal self-evidence they exhibit
strong ecological sensibility and valorize the natural
environment. Into this category also belong those social-
scientific approaches that stress the global preponderance
of idealized models, especially models of progressive
52. Religion, Globalization, and the Human Condition
economy, the nation-state, education, legal structures,
mass media, art, and culture.
Unitary but negative visions share most of these
characteristics but reject the idea that any of these
developments can have a positive outcome. Sometimes
these take world-rejecting communitarian directions,
advocating retreat from the globalized world. Ironically
perhaps, it is not uncommon for these visions to espouse
precisely the sort of egalitarian values typical of the
positive versions but insist that this is only possible in a
separated—and usually quite small-scale—society.
53. Religion, Globalization, and the Human Condition
By contrast, there are those rejections of a unitary
globalization that insist on the unique validity of a
particular culture or society. Some so-called
fundamentalist visions fall in this category, but it must be
stressed how comparatively rare they are. The Afghan
Pashtun Taliban, in contrast to most Islamicist
perspectives, may have been one of the few.
Pluralist visions of the world are variations on the
unitary ones, putting greater stress on, respectively, the
difference or the irreconcilability of diverse worldviews.
The clash of civilizations model made famous by Samuel
Huntington is representative of a negative version,
54. Religion, Globalization, and the Human Condition
dependent as it is on the idea—not to say ideal—that
quasi-essential civilizations with particular characteristics
actually exist logically prior to the globalized context in
which mutually identifying them might make sense.
55. Thanks for Listening!
Group 3
Parido, Princess Marimar A.
Patan, Ana Carmela I.
Pelismino, James Rovenn E.
Pendejeto, Robelyn S.
Quirong, Abegail C.
Ridad, Raffy Jay M.
Salvan, Hazel M.
Teric, Jezel L.
Velez, Mark Angelo P.