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User:JosebaAbaitua/sandbox/References/HDum1920/VÁZQUEZ CACHO, Eva

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User:JosebaAbaitua/sandbox/References/HDum1920

Political philosophers are concerned with the effects of these policies on human well-being. Proponents of globalization claim that economic liberalization has enabled many people throughout the world to move out of conditions of dire poverty. Open markets, they argue, have increased employment and productivity within developing countries, raising the standard of living and enhancing the well-being of the people living within [1]. Critics point out that neoliberal policies have created the widest gap between the very rich and very poor in history, with unprecedented wealth for the rich and poverty and destitution for millions of the global poor.[2] On the whole, they argue, globalization has benefitted the world's wealthiest people—both citizens of the global North and the elite in developing countries—without substantially benefitting the majority of the world's population. Feminist philosophers insist that economic globalization must also be understood in terms of the effects it has had on women, who make up a disproportionate percentage of the global poor. Most agree that these effects have been primarily negative. “Rather than peace, they have created conditions for war and increased militarism; rather than prosperity and social justice, they have increased the gulf between the rich and the poor; rather than environmental protection, they have led to the privatization and destruction of publicly-owned natural resources; and rather than eliminating racist, ethnocentric, and sexist barriers, globalization has been, ultimately, “a system hostile or antagonistic to women”[3].

  1. ^ Diamandis, P. and Kotler, S (2012). Abundance: The Future Is Better Than You Think. New York: Free Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ Nikkiforuk, A. (2012). Pandemonium: How Globalization and Trade are Putting the World at Risk. Australia: University of Queensland Press.
  3. ^ Jaggar, Alison M. (2001). "Is Globalization Good for Women?". Comparative Literature. 53: 298–314.