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Development Policies in a World of Globalization

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Development Policies in a World of Globalization
Author(s)Stiglitz, Joseph E.
AbstractThe author argues that an idea, a relationship, can go extinct, just like an animal or a plant. The idea in this case is “nature,” the separate and wild province, the world apart from man to which he adapted, under whose rules he was born and died. The argument that nature is ended is complex, profound objections to it are possible, and in this chapter Bill McKibben details his argument and tries to answer these objections.
IssueNo
Pages15-32
ArticleAccess to Article
SourcePutting Development First: The Importance of Policy Space in the WTO and International Financial Institutions
VolumeNo
PubDate2005
ISBN_ISSN1842776347

Globalization

  • Communications and Transportation
  • Culture and Consumption
  • Economic Assistance
  • Economic Transitions
  • Evaluation and Assessment of Globalization
  • Financial Globalization
  • Food and Agriculture
  • Foreign Direct Investment
  • Global Environmental Issues
  • Global Governance
  • Global Neoliberal Regime
  • Global Trade
  • Globalization and Human Capital
  • Globalization and Women
  • Globalization: Negative Development Impacts
  • Globalization: Positive Development Impacts
  • Inequality
  • Multilateral Institutions: Bretton Woods System
  • Multilateral Institutions: Other
  • Regulation and Deregulation
  • Transnational Corporations


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