(globalization)
1globalization — globalization, globalization theory Globalization theory examines the emergence of a global cultural system. It suggests that global culture is brought about by a variety of social and cultural developments: the existence of a world satellite… …
2Globalization — Globalization is best defined as increasing interconnectedness between human beings on a global scale, plus increasing awareness of such interconnectedness. On both accounts, the Age of Imperialism was an age of rapid globalization in all… …
3globalization — [glō΄bəl i zā′shən, glō΄bəl ī zā′shən] n. the process of globalizing something; specif., the expansion of many businesses into markets throughout the world, marked by an increase in international investment, the proliferation of large… …
4Globalization — Globalization, in a fashion sense, is the unification of the fashion world as it relates to trends, branding, and manufacturing. The fashion industry saw the implementation of globalization in the 1980s when the Western world discovered the… …
5Globalization — Chermany Chimerica Chindia Chindonesia globality globitarian globophobe glocalization …
6globalization — 1961, from globalize, which is attested at least from 1953 in various senses; the main modern one, with reference to global economic systems, emerged 1959 …
7globalization — (Amer.) n. becoming universal, making worldwide (also globalisation) …
8globalization — [glō΄bəl i zā′shən, glō΄bəl ī zā′shən] n. the process of globalizing something; specif., the expansion of many businesses into markets throughout the world, marked by an increase in international investment, the proliferation of large… …
9Globalization — The European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, is the central bank for the Eurozone. Globalization refers to the increasing unification of the world s economic order through reduction of such barriers to international trade as tariffs, export… …
10Globalization — Russia has an ambiguous position on globalization, which can be defined as the interdependency that results from commercial, cultural, economic, and political interaction between states and nonstate actors driven by sustained linkages of goods …