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Spring 2008 Events to be announced Center for Critical Human Survival Issues Roundtable: Living in Different Worlds: From the Universal to the Global November 15th, 2007 • Brooks Hall Library
• 4:00-6:00PM In
this roundtable, participants will present, reflect and retrace the recent,
epochal shifts on the global scale after the end of cold war in order to
assess the meaning of "globalization" for us today. “From the Universal to the
Global: A Philosophical Perspective”: Volker Kaiser I
would like to draw on the distinction between the concept of the
"general" and the "particular" and how it translates into
the arena of the political discussion today, ultimately pointing to the
shifts in the structures and conditions which the new techno-scientific and
economic media have imposed on the notion of a globalized world. My cognitive
interest here is to elaborate to what extent we can recall the European
enlightenment tradition in order to make sure that this transformation serves
the democratic ideals of a self-critical enlightenment. “History and the Post-Cold
War World”: Manuela Achilles Francis
Fukuyama famously argued in 1989 that liberal democracy, having vanquished
its major ideological antagonist – communism – was the ultimate
form of human government. Suggested
readings:
Francis Fukuyama, “Has History Restarted Since September
11?”(available online) “On Kant's Cosmopolitan
Hopes”: This
section will consider how the concept of the universal functions
in Immanuel Kant's essay "Idea for Universal History from a
Cosmopolitan Point of View." Of particular interest will be Kant's
suggestion that a 'cosmopolitan' history is a project for a future to come. Suggested readings: Immanuel Kant, “Idea for Universal
History.” “The Return of Yiddish in
the Twenty-First Century”: Jeffrey Grossman “Yiddish has been dying for a thousand years, and
I’m sure it will go on dying for a thousand more.” --- I. B. Singer, Yiddish writer and winner
of the Nobel Prize for Literature, (reputedly) when asked about writing in a
dying language. Suggested
“What
Globalization?”: Peter Debaere For economists, the term globalization has very specific
meanings. Globalization refers most generally to the integration of goods
markets, capital markets and labor markets. Hence, to answer the question
what the effects of globalization are, economists study the specific (and
different) effects of trade liberalizations, capital liberalizations and
migration and see whether these bear out the predicted consequences of the
economic theories (and there is large and growing literature on this).
International Economists have been flattered by the attention that the public
debate about globalization has given to their field. However, some of us are
increasingly frustrated by the vagueness of the public debate, where
globalization is a term that seems to encompass almost anything. My call
would be one for precision and transparency. More specifically, it would be
important to qualify what aspects of globalization we are debating. The precision of the discussion may move us beyond a
debate for or against globalization – as if one could stop
globalization – to one about how to best manage globalization. There
are obvious gains from economic integration that relate to a more efficient
allocation of resources. These gains are why economists will (continue to)
support integration. The real challenge is to address some well-known effects
that come with integration: what to do with the winners/and losers of trade
liberalizations; what to do with short-term capital liberalizations, labor standards,
etc. Suggested
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