Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2020
The globalization phenomenon and its attendant limitations are by now so well-known as to require no introduction. In the happy version of the story, nations converge around a consensus of political democracy, open markets, and the “end of history” as we once knew it.1 In the less happy version the phenomenon is a thinly veiled rationale for racism, oppression, and the resurgence of an American-dominated empire.2 The truth is somewhere in between: one way or another, the concept is here to stay.
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