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Chapter Five

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Third World: Cold War term for Global South ... 1880s: final burst colonizes most of Africa. China divided into spheres of influence ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Five


1
Chapter Five
  • The Global South
  • in a World of Powers

2
Some Definitions
  • Global South less-developed countries
  • Global North wealthy industrialized countries
  • Third World Cold War term for Global South
  • First World Cold War term for Global North
    democracies
  • Second World Cold War term for Soviet Union and
    other communist countries
  • Fourth World indigenous peoples

3
Map 5.1 The Global North and Global South
4
Global North
  • democratic
  • technologically inventive
  • wealthy
  • aging populations
  • low population growth

5
Global South
  • most states
  • not democratic
  • low technology use
  • poor
  • rapid population growth
  • overstrained social and ecological systems
  • 80 percent global population
  • 15 percent global wealth

6
Map 5.2 The Great North-South Divide in Wealth
and Population
7
Map 5.3 Global Imperialism, 1914
8
Imperialism
  • late 1400s Europe used transportation and
    military technology to conquer colonies
  • mercantilism trade should increase state wealth
    increase exports, decrease imports used to take
    advantage of colonies
  • 1880s final burst colonizes most of Africa
  • China divided into spheres of influence

9
Explaining Imperialism
  • Marxists capitalists need overseas outlets for
    surplus capital
  • World-system theory capitalist core and
    dependent periphery
  • Hobson competition for power and prestige among
    European states

10
Imperialism Declines 20th Century
  • self-determination Woodrow Wilson
  • League of Nations mandates
  • World War Two saps strength of colonial powers,
    demonstrates that colonial powers can be defeated
  • decolonization from 1947-1960s
  • neocolonialism continued domination of the
    Global South by the Global North through economic
    means

11
Table 5.1Two Worlds of Development An
International Class Divide
12
Modernization Theory
  • Global South must
  • create conditions for efficient production, free
    enterprise, and free trade
  • pass through stages of development and reach
    take off
  • historical conditions that allowed the North to
    do this in the 19th century do not exist now

13
Dependency Theory
  • Global North keeps Global South poor through
  • terms of trade and finance
  • exploitation by multinational corporations
  • dualism--rural impoverished sector and urban
    modernizing sector

14
World-Systems Theory
  • core advanced capitalist states specializes in
    producing advanced goods
  • periphery developing states specializes in
    producing commodities and low-technology goods
  • semiperiphery states either advancing toward
    core or descending to periphery dependent
    development under control of the core

15
The Global Souths Prospects
  • NIEs newly industrialized countries
  • Asian Tigers South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore,
    Hong Kong
  • Nonaligned Movement
  • failed states
  • nonstate nations
  • external military intervention

16
The Search for Wealth
  • import-substitution industrialization
  • export-led industrialization
  • New International Economic Order (1974)
  • pushed by Group of 77
  • called for changes in the international economic
    system that would benefit development in the
    Global South and redistribute some global wealth
    to it

17
Regional Trade Regimes
  • NAFTA North American Free Trade Agreement
  • Mercosur Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay
  • APEC Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation
  • ASEAN Association of Southeast Asian Nations
  • SADC Southern African Development Community

18
Trade, Aid, Investment, Debt Relief
  • official development assistance
  • foreign direct investment
  • multinational corporations
  • heavily indebted poor countries
  • debt relief

19
Figure 5.1 Ranking the Biggest Official Aid
Donors Net Official Foreign Aid (billion) at
percent of GDP
20
Figure 5.2 Foreign Direct Investments in the
Global South
21
Discussion
  • What factors explain European imperialism?
  • What legacies of colonialism remain and how have
    they shaped the gap between the Global North and
    the Global South?
  • What characteristics do newly industrialized
    economies share with the Global North?

22
Discussion, continued
  • What are the root causes of underdevelopment?
  • What changes in the international economic system
    would benefit the Global South?
  • What does the future likely hold for the Global
    South?
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