International organizations
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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- | {{Template}} | + | #REDIRECT [[International organization]] |
- | '''Global politics''' is the discipline that studies the political and economical patterns of the world. It studies the relationships between cities, [[nation-states]], shell-states, [[multinational corporations]], [[non-governmental organizations]] and [[international organizations]]. | + | |
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- | It has been argued that global politics should be distinguished from the field of [[international politics]], which seeks to understand political relations between nation-states, and thus has a narrower scope. Similarly, [[international relations]], which seeks to understand general economic and political relations between nation-states, is a narrower field than global politics. | + | |
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- | Current areas of discussion include national and [[ethnic]] conflict regulation, [[democracy]] and the politics of national [[self-determination]], [[globalization]] and its relationship to democracy, conflict and peace studies, [[comparative politics]], [[political economy]], and the [[international political economy]] of the environment. | + | |
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- | == History == | + | |
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- | Beginning in the late 1800s, several groups have extended the definition of the political community beyond nation-states to include much, if not all, of humanity. These "internationalists" include [[Marxists]], human rights advocates, environmentalists, peace activists, [[feminists]], and [[dalits]] | + | |
- | ==Jung on global politics== | + | |
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- | Jung saw the neuroses of individuals reflected in the [[neurotic]] nature of [[global politics]], and vice versa. | + | |
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- | <blockquote> | + | |
- | If, for a moment, we regard [[mankind]] as one individual, we see that the human race is like a person carried away by [[unconscious]] powers; and the human race also likes to keep certain problems tucked away in separate drawers . . . | + | |
- | Our world is, so to speak, dissociated like a neurotic, with the Iron Curtain making a symbolic line of division. . . . It is the face of his own evil [[shadow (psychology)|shadow]] that grins at Western man from the other side of the Iron Curtain (Jung, 1964:85). | + | |
- | </blockquote> | + | |
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Current revision
- REDIRECT International organization