Reimagining Globalization Forces that Dive and Forces that Unite
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The realm of ideas, values, institutions, organizations, networks, and individuals located between the society, the state, and the market and operating outside and apart from the confines of national societies, polities, and economic structures.
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Organizations with an international membership, scope, and presence whose members are nonstate actors of various types drawn from the private and nonprofit sector.
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A group of relevant actors bound together by shared values, a common discourse, and a dense exchange of information. TANs are organized around promoting principles and ideas with the goal of changing the behavior and policy of states and IGOs.
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Ideas that come to be shared by the majority of the population in a given society, such that they become the basis for assessing and regulating social conduct and behavior.
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The broad and deep dependence of issues and actors in the contemporary global political system that many scholars believe is a by-product of globalization.
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The view of global politics as an economic system in which the Global South is dependent upon and disadvantaged by the Global North as a perpetuation of the imperialist relationships established in previous centuries.
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A particular, literalist interpretation of and approach to ones faith tradition that seeks a return to traditional religious attitudes and beliefs as well as the introduction of such attitudes and beliefs into the social, political, and legal realms.
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A multifaceted concept that represents the increasing integration of economics, communications, and culture across national boundaries.
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Social, political, economic, and cultural activities and processes that transcend and permeate the borders and authority of states.
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The accelerated and illicit movement of drugs, counterfeit goods, smuggled weapons and small arms, laundered money, trafficked humans and organs, and piracy from the high seas to cyberspace.
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A measure of economic activity within a country including activity by both domestic and foreign-owned sources.