Alter globalizatio This view posits that the nature of globalization is not predetermined and does not follow a given evolutionary path. Rather, it is a consequence of human actions and particular political choices. The political implications of this view are reformist, citizens and nation-states have a role to play in resisting and regulating it, and alternative and progressive globalizations are possible(see Chapter 9). As such, globalization can yield both positive and negative outcomes depending on how it is constructed. The major task then is changing the nature of globalization through human action-but not destroying it. A number of the groups lumped together under the anti-globalization' label might be more appropriately placed in this school of thought. This view is associated to a large degree with the rransformationalist school of thought(see Chapter 2), and the majority of the work undertaken in human geography to date falls into this camp although it has tended to be a little more radical than the weak or passive transformationalist view, as we will see