Global citizenship: From public support to active participation
- Publication date
- 1 February 2012
- Publisher
- __Abstract__
Globalisation is not something that has happened overnight. It is an ongoing
process that, by trial and error, is part of human development. And yet, the
last few decades have seen the unprecedented acceleration of changes in
global relations. The fall of the Berlin Wall, the advent of the Internet and
communication technology, the attacks of 9/11, the sudden awakening to
the speed of climate change, the recent economic and monetary crises, the
shifts in geo-political relations; these have all contributed to today’s world
being very different from the world of 20-25 years ago.
These changes are certainly (partly) positive: global trade in goods and
services has seen enormous growth, global communication is much easier
today, a large number of countries that used to be poor have developed
into centres of economic growth and millions of people have been lifted
out of poverty. But at the same time, increased growth has generated fierce
competition for resources and production means, further burdening the
env