( ISSN 2277 - 9809 (online) ISSN 2348 - 9359 (Print) ) New DOI : 10.32804/IRJMSH

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THE CITIZENSHIP PROBLÉMATIQUEAND GLOBALIZATION

    1 Author(s):  KASTURI CHATTERJEE

Vol -  8, Issue- 6 ,         Page(s) : 157 - 168  (2017 ) DOI : https://doi.org/10.32804/IRJMSH

Abstract

When one identifies “globalization” as the “buzzword” of our times, what one does not very much risk is being accused of making an overstatement. A cursory glance at titles of books, articles, debates or talk inside and outside of the academia can make a strong case with comparative ease against skeptics if not convince them altogether. Everyone seems to be talking about globalization everywhere. At the same time, this ubiquity of the concept renders it a certain degree of woolliness which makes arriving at neat definitions an impossibility. Susan Strange referred to this problem when she declared in her now-famous words that globalization is “a term which can refer to anything from the Internet to a hamburger” (Strange, 1996: xiii). Essentially, this also means that it is not easy to talk about globalization in general terms. The context, in effect, determines all.

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