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EU Enlargement and Anti-Globalization: New Paradox or Old Paradigm
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Irene Finel-Honigman
Published/Copyright:
October 13, 2004
This article will examine the dilemma which the European Union faces as it tries to reconcile expansion which is intrinsically Westernization under capitalism and democratization and the impact of US imposed globalization perceived as a potential loss of national and historic traditions and cultures. It will examine the equation of globalization and American acculturation, the EU anti-globalization movement's ambivalent positions against the WTO, multilateral organizations and EU multinationals and the rationale behind dialectics of anti-globalization at a time of EU enlargement.
Published Online: 2004-10-13
©2011 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Editor's Introduction
- Editor's Introduction
- Article
- Globalization, Comparative Advantage, and Europe's Double Competitive Squeeze
- EU Enlargement and Anti-Globalization: New Paradox or Old Paradigm
- The U.S. Textile and Apparel Industry in the Age of Globalization
- Reducing the Cost of Distance: Technological Change and the Globalization of New Zealand, 1960-2000
- Impact of Globalization on International Trade between ASEAN-5 and China: Opportunities and Challenges
- The Hegelian Dialectic and Evolutionary Economic Change