globalization is “the intensification of worldwide social relations which link distant localities in such way that local happenings are shaped by events occurring many miles away and vice versa”, thereby changing all aspects of our everyday life.
This article looks at Giddens’ globalization with the systems dynamics (SD) modeling method (Forrester 1958, 1961, Sterman 2000). Lane and Husemann (2008) argue that SD can highlight the possibility that markets can shape human preferences, but human preferences in turn create, replicate and challenge market structures. They see globalization not simply as a gathering of phenomena and processes isolated from acting people, but as a phenomenon that influences human beings, but human beings also can steer its process, a notion that harmonizes with Giddens’ (1983, 1984) ideas.
globalization is “the intensification of worldwide social relations which link distant localities in such way that local happenings are shaped by events occurring many miles away and vice versa”, thereby changing all aspects of our everyday life.This article looks at Giddens’ globalization with the systems dynamics (SD) modeling method (Forrester 1958, 1961, Sterman 2000). Lane and Husemann (2008) argue that SD can highlight the possibility that markets can shape human preferences, but human preferences in turn create, replicate and challenge market structures. They see globalization not simply as a gathering of phenomena and processes isolated from acting people, but as a phenomenon that influences human beings, but human beings also can steer its process, a notion that harmonizes with Giddens’ (1983, 1984) ideas.
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