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Listed
here are Research Centres, NGOs, Journals and Research Resources that
work in connected research areas, many of whom we are developing research ties with. More links can also be found on the
pages of The Globalism Institute
website.
Research Centres
Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies
University of California, Irvine, USA
http://www.socsci.uci.edu/gpacs/
The Center for Global Peace and Conflict Studies (CGPACS) is a multi-disciplinary
program dedicated to promoting scholarly, student, and public understanding
of international conflict and cooperation. Affiliated faculty currently
number over 40 and come from every school on campus except Fine Arts.
Both of UCI's Nobel Laureates, F. Sherwood Rowland and Frederick Reines,
were founding members. CGPACS sponsors a broad array of research projects,
as well as instructional and public outreach activities.
Center for Global and Political Economy
Simon Frazer University, Vancouver
www.sfu.ca/~cgpe/
This is just a single page interface.
Center for Global Security and Democracy
Rutgers University, USA
www.cgsd.rutgers.edu/
The Center for Global Security and Democracy promotes the study of
the complex relationship between the provision of individual and collective
security, and the building and maintenance of democratic political
institutions. The Center's goals are to enhance our understanding
of how secure, democratic societies and international systems are
created, and to develop practical initiatives for constructing and
deepening such democratic and security-producing arrangements on the
local and global level. The Center's activities marry theory building
with active fieldwork, bringing scholars, students, policy makers,
civic leaders, and ordinary citizens together in practical efforts
to analyze, design, and build functioning political institutions.
Center for Globalisation and Policy Research
University of California, Los Angeles, USA
www.sppsr.ucla.edu/cgpr
The Center was established in the autumn of 2000
in response to the growing need for informed research and debate on
all aspects of globalization, and, in particular, on the many difficult
policy questions that are being raised as globalization runs its course.
Center for Integrated Studies in Human Dimensions of Global Change
Carnegie Mellon University, USA
hdgc.epp.cmu.edu/
The Center is a coordinated research program by
47 Collaborators at 22 Institutions — thirteen Institutions in
the US, and nine in seven other countries — interested in interactions
of society and the environment. Our name reflects our philosophy: INTEGRATED
STUDY — we apply social and natural science to solve global environmental
problems; HUMAN DIMENSIONS — we study how people understand the
world and make decisions; GLOBAL CHANGE — and then, we follow
the patterns of those decisions and determine their global consequences.
Center for Peacemaking and Conflict Studies
Fresno Pacific University, USA
www.fresno.edu/pacs/
The Center for Peacemaking and Conflict Studies
(PACS) has been established at Fresno Pacific University: to promote
greater understanding of the dynamics of conflict; to train persons
in the theology, science and art of constructive conflict management;
and to promote and assist in the development of cooperative dispute
resolution and justice programs within the institutions of the church
and society.
Centre for Development Studies
University of the South Pacific, Fiji
Director: Prof. Robbie Robertson
www.usp.ac.fj
Main projects in globalisation and human security studies: (a) globalization
and social policy; (b) globalization and civil society; and (c)
globalization and regionalization in development strategies.
Centre for International Borders Research (CIBR)
Belfast, Ireland
www.qub.ac.uk/cibr/
The Centre for International Borders Research (CIBR)
is an interdisciplinary centre for empirical, comparative and theoretical
study of international borders and border regions. It initiates, supports
and publishes work on: relationships of state borders with ethnic and
cultural boundaries; frontier societies, border communities and cross-border
regions; cross-border co-operation, policy networks and governance and
the relationship of territorial management to alternative non-territorial
mechanisms of regulation.
Centre for Research on Ethnic Relations and Nationalism (CEREN)
University of Helsinki, Finland
sockom.helsinki.fi/ceren/
The aim of CEREN is to carry out research, to offer
documentation of research, to arrange postgraduate courses and seminars
with special reference to forming national and international networks
for research seminars. Racism, xenophobia and ethnic relations, concerning
both immigrants and native groups, are central themes for CEREN. Nation-building,
nationalism and questions in the field of ethnic relations connected
to the future of the nation state will also be dealt with.
Centre for the Study of Global Governance
London School of Economics, UK
www.lse.ac.uk/Depts/global/
We understand global governance not as government
but as a minimum framework of rules necessary to tackle global problems
guaranteed by a set of institutions including both international organisations
and national governments. Our mission is: to inquire into the origins
and nature of urgent problems facing the globe, be they poverty, environmental
degradation or human rights violations, which are amenable to multinational
co operative, solutions and to advance such solution with a view; to
inform by way of public lectures, seminars and discussion papers, the
interested public, so as to encourage a debate and dialogue about the
problems and their positive solutions, so as; to Influence agencies
and organisations engaged in seeking and implementing solutions to these
urgent problems.
The Environmental Change and Human Security Project
wwics.si.edu/index.cfm?fuseaction=topics.home&topic_id=1413
Fernand Braudel Center for the Study of Economies, Historical Systems,
and Civilizations
Binghamton University, State University of New
York, USA
fbc.binghamton.edu/
The Fernand Braudel Center was founded in September
1976 to engage in the analysis of large-scale social change over long
periods of historical time.
Global and International Studies Program
University of California, Santa Barbara, USA
www.global.ucsb.edu/
The Global and International Studies (G&IS) Program sponsors interdisciplinary
academic programs in global studies, international studies, and area
studies, and provides a coordinating center for programs related to
international studies throughout the campus.
Globalisation and Policy Research
University of Sussex, UK
www.gapresearch.org/
This three-year programme of research starts from
two premises. First, the impact of globalisation processes is uneven.
There are winners and losers. Secondly, policy interventions can make
a difference to the way globalisation processes impact on the poor.
National policies and global rule-setting can, together, contribute
to globalisation becoming a solution to global poverty. There are fourteen
projects grouped under three themes: production, trade and labour markets;
capital flows, investment and debt; and global governance and institutions.
Globalisation and Social Exclusion Unit
Liverpool
www.gseu.org.uk/
The Globalisation and Social Exclusion Unit (GSEU)
was set up in 1999 at the University of Liverpool as a network of researchers
with overlapping interests in these two areas. We are committed to an
interdisciplinary approach to the social, spatial and political aspects
of globalisation and social exclusion. We also feel it is necessary
to critically draw out the policy implications of research in this area.
The GSEU has a variable configuration which allows us to put together
research teams on different topics as necessity demands. It is also
part of a broad international network of researchers and policy makers.
Globalism and Social Policy Program (GASPP)
Helsinki, Finland
www.stakes.fi/gaspp/
GASPP is concerned with: the globalisation of social
policy and the social content of global politics; the impact on the
making of national social policy of supranational organisations such
as the IMF, World Bank and WTO, the UN agencies (WHO, ILO, UNDP etc)
and regional organisations (EU, NAFTA, ASEAN, Council of Europe etc;
The field of policy making that embraces global social redistribution,
global social health and labour regulation, and global social provision
and empowerment; and the role of international civil society (transnational
social movements and international NGOs) and that of the business world
in shaping a global discourse on social policy and in contributing to
the making of social policy in general and in particular in developing,
crisis-ridden, war-torn, and post-communist societies.
GlobAsia
www.globasia.dk
The overall aim of the three-year research programme
(1999-2001) is to determine how globalisation and associated change
processes have impacted upon developing countries in selected areas.
The main focus is on the impact upon (a) developing country states,
their economic, human resource development and environmental policies
as well as their capabilities and capacities for implementing policies
in these areas; (b) industrial development patterns; and (c) environment
protection and pollution control. The research programme further aims
at revealing the wider implications for socio-economic and human development
in the countries selected for study. Special attention will also be
given to the implications for political development as a result of external
influences on the mode of functioning of the concerned states and the
possible weakening of their autonomy.
Hiroshima City University Hiroshima Peace Institute
serv.peace.hiroshima-cu.ac.jp/English/
Institute for Global Studies
John Hopkins University, USA
www.jhu.edu/igscph/
The purpose of this Institute is to stimulate dialogue,
reflection and research that links these two global moments, their limits,
continuities and disjunctures -- as these affect Culture, Power and
History at the local level. The experience of globality is always that
of historically situated individuals with specific resources and limits.
The Institute's emphasis is thus on the local level seen in a global
context; on the impact of these two moments of globality on groups and
individuals, especially in the non-West; on the resources they use to
cope or to conform, to accommodate or to resist.
Institute of Conflict Analysis and Resolution
George Mason University, USA
web.gmu.edu/departments/ICAR/
At the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
(ICAR), faculty and students are committed to the development of theory,
research, and practice that interrupt cycles of violence. ICAR is an
innovative academic resource for people and institutions worldwide.
It comprises a community of scholars, graduate students, alumni, practitioners,
and organizations in the field of peace making and conflict resolution.
ICAR is a Commonwealth Center for Excellence, recognized for its leadership
in the field and its world-renowned faculty.
Institute on Conflict Resolution
Cornell University, USA
www.ilr.cornell.edu/icr
The School of Industrial and Labor Relations at
Cornell University is the preeminent educational institution devoted
to workplace and organizational studies. ILR also maintains the largest
concentration of faculty in the related fields of conflict and dispute
resolution and problem solving of any university. Our faculty's expertise
and broad experience in working with all types of organizations, combined
with access to an expansive research network, ensures the high quality
of our conflict and dispute resolution services.
Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation
University of California, San Diego, USA
www-igcc.ucsd.edu/
IGCC was founded in 1983, as a multi-campus research
unit (MRU) serving the entire University of California (UC) system,
to study the causes of international conflict and help devise options
for resolving it through international cooperation. IGCC's unique structure
enables research teams to be drawn from all nine UC campuses and the
UC-managed Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos National Laboratories,
providing broad-based links to the U.S. government, foreign governments,
and foreign policy institutes from around the globe. Main offices are
located at UC San Diego's La Jolla campus.
Institute for Development Studies—Globalisation Team
University of Sussex, UK
www.ids.ac.uk/ids/global/index.html
Growing anxiety in developed and developing countries
over the dangers of rising inequalities threaten the sustainability
of global processes. There is thus increasing recognition that available
policy instruments are inadequate to meeting the challenges posed by
globalisation. At the same time it is also evident that suitable policy
responses will need to be grounded on rigorous research. The work of
the IDS Globalisation Team illuminates these issues by exploring: how
global processes work; who gains and who loses from global processes;
and what policy instruments are available to provide for an outcome
which is more equitable, which provides for sustainable growth and which
do not harm the environment.
International Conflict Research (INCORE)
University of Ulster, UK
www.incore.ulst.ac.uk/
INCORE (International Conflict Research) was set
up in 1993 by the University of Ulster and the United Nations University
to undertake research and policy work that is useful to the resolution
of ethnic, political and religious conflicts.
International Peace and Conflict Resolution (IPCR)
American University, USA
http://www.american.edu/academics/fieldofstudy/ipcr.htm
The multi-disciplinary International Peace and
Conflict Resolution Division (IPCR), housed in the School of International
Service at American University, is designed for students and faculty
concerned with understanding the causes of war and organized violence
and constructing conditions for peace. Peace, in this context, includes
justice, political pluralism, cultural diversity, ecological balance,
and nonviolent conflict resolution. IPCR is rooted in the belief that
while change and conflict are inevitable, war and organized violence
can be made obsolete.
Monash Institute for the Study of Global Movements
Monash University
www.globalmovements.monash.edu.au
The Monash Institute for the Study of Global Movements (MISGM) seeks to advance knowledge of global movements in their diverse economic, social, political and cultural dimensions. It undertakes high-quality research, fosters public discussion and offers expert advice.
New Global History
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
www.newglobalhistory.org
New Global History (NGH) employs conceptual thinking
and empirical research, utilizing an historical perspective, to advance
understanding of the multi-faceted dimensions of globalization processes.
Observatory of Globalisation
University of Barcelona, Spain
www.ub.es/obsglob/indexing.html
The Observatory of Globalisation of the University
of Barcelona (U.B.), integrated in the Scientific Park of Barcelona,
intends to provide an articulated and coherent overview of the international
instruments that create the framework of the globalisation process,
covering all the aspects of this process (commercial, financial and
monetary fields) and focusing on the relation between the more specifically
economic aspects and the social and political ones (effects on the different
sectorial policies). This overview will therefore be inter-disciplinary
and will integrate the political, economic and legal approaches.
Peace Studies Program
Cornell University, USA
www.einaudi.cornell.edu/PeaceProgram/
The Peace Studies Program is an interdisciplinary
program devoted to research and teaching on the problems of war and
peace, arms control and disarmament, and more generally, instances of
collective violence.
Refugee Studies Centre
Oxford University, UK
www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/
The RSC carries out multidisciplinary research
including policy relevant work on the causes and consequences of forced
migration with an emphasis on understanding the experiences of those
affected. Research at the RSC is currently organised around three broad
areas of investigation which include a variety of disciplinary approaches,
special interests and geographical foci.
Transnational Communities Programme
Oxford University, UK
www.transcomm.ox.ac.uk/
A national research programme to look into the
human dimensions of globalisation and aspects of emerging transnationalism,
1997-2003. Both individually and collectively, the projects will broaden
our understanding of the new and increasingly significant place of globe-spanning
social networks in labour, business and commodity markets, political
movements and cultural flows. The programme concentrates on an actor-directed
view of globalisation -- ‘globalisation from below’.

NGOs
Australian Centre for Human Rights
www.ahrcentre.org/
The Australian Human Rights Centre is a Research
Institute based in the Faculty of Law at the University of New South
Wales established to: increase public awareness about human rights procedures,
standards and issues within the Asia-Pacific region; provide accessible
information on human rights to the general public, NGOs, government
departments, human rights advocates, community legal centres, journalists,
educators, researchers and students; undertake human rights research
on matters of national and regional interest; and maintain a comprehensive
collection of human rights documentation, provide an on-line database
service, undertake research and prepare publications, organise human
rights educational activities and, within available resources, respond
to requests for advice in the area of human rights.
Australian Strategic Policy Institute
http://www.aspi.org.au/
ASPI has been set up to help Australians understand
the critical strategic choices which our country will face over the
coming years, and to help Government make better-informed decisions.
This is important. Defence is one of the key functions of Government,
and a major area of national expenditure. But it remains a difficult
and arcane area of public policy - beset by technicalities, obscured
by jargon and wreathed in tradition.
Catholic Commission for Justice, Development and Peace
http://www.melbourne.catholic.org.au/ccjdp
The Catholic Commission for Justice, Development
and Peace Melbourne (CCJDP) is the social justice agency of the Catholic
Archdiocese of Melbourne. The Commission aims to help educate and give
leadership to the Catholic and wider community in the gospel message
of justice and in the social teachings of the Church.
Centre for Global Development
Washington, DC, USA
www.cgdev.org/
A Washington DC based centre is dedicated to reducing
global poverty and inequality through policy-oriented research and active
engagement on development issues with the policy community and the public.
Ecumenical Migration Centre
http://www.bsl.org.au/main.asp?PageId=25&iMainMenuPageId=25
The Ecumenical Migration Centre is a non-profit,
non-denominational community-based agency working with the most marginalised
and disadvantaged ethnic groups, particularly new and recently arrived
migrants and refugees.
The Environment and Security Site
The International Institute for Sustainable Development
www.iisd.org/natres/security/
Global Development Network
www.gdnet.org/
The Global Development Network (GDN) is a global
network of research and policy institutes working together to address
the problems of national and regional development. GDN: supports multidisciplinary
research in social sciences; promotes the generation of local knowledge
in developing and transition countries; produces policy relevant knowledge
on a global scale; builds research capacity to advance development and
alleviate poverty; facilitates knowledge sharing among researchers and
policymakers; disseminates development knowledge to the public and policymakers.
The Global Environmental Change and Human Security Project
http://www.gechs.uci.edu
Global Inclusion Program, Rockefeller Foundation
www.rockfound.org
Objective: The Rockefeller Foundation is committed to achieving lasting improvements in the lives of poor and excluded people. We create and fund projects that fall within four themes: Food Security, Health Equity, Culture and Creativity and Working Communities. The Global Inclusion unit, is a cross-thematic program that addresses global issues that create particular opportunities and barriers in our work in agriculture, food security, health, education, employment and culture. While the Foundation takes a global perspective, we work intensively in Eastern and Southern Africa, Southeast Asia and North America.
Globalization Research Network
www.globalgrn.org/
The Globalization Research Network was established
in Spring 2001 as a result of a congressionally directed grant. The
Network brings together the University of Hawaii at Manoa, the University
of South Florida, the University of California at Los Angeles, and the
George Washington University into a collective arrangement that permits
each to pursue globalization research while pursuing a particularized
area expertise
International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
President: Ms. Maureen O'Neil
www.idrc.ca
Objectives: IDRC's mandate, as stated in the International
Development Research Centre Act, is: To initiate, encourage,
support, and conduct research into the problems of the developing
regions of the world and into the means for applying and adapting
scientific, technical, and other knowledge to the economic and
social advancement of those regions. In doing so, the Centre helps
developing countries use science and knowledge to find practical,
long-term solutions to the social, economic, and environmental problems
they face. Main projects in globalisation studies: Research on
globalization is undertaken by several program initiatives in IDRC,
notably those which fall under the Social and Economic Equity program area.
For example, the Trade, Employment and Competitiveness (TEC) program
initiative has emphasized projects on emerging issues in international
trade relations (such as trade and the environment, investment codes, and
trade in services), and domestic or regional policy responses to
globalization. IDRC's Peacebuilding and Reconstruction program initiative
is currently undergoing an exploration on Globalization, Violent Conflict
and Peacebuilding with a research competition in this area soon to be
launched.
International Forum on Globalization
San Francisco, USA
www.ifg.org/
The goal of the IFG, therefore, is twofold: (1)
Expose the multiple effects of economic globalization in order to stimulate
debate, and (2) Seek to reverse the globalization process by encouraging
ideas and activities which revitalize local economies and communities,
and ensure long term ecological stability.
Metropolis
www.metropolis.net/
An international forum for research and policy
on migration, diversity and changing cities. The International Metropolis
Project is a set of co-ordinated activities carried out by a membership
of research and policy organizations who share a vision of strengthened
immigration policy by means of applied academic research.
One World Trust
Director: Simon Burall
www.oneworldtrust.org
Objectives: To make changes in global organisations so that they are answerable to
the people they affect, and international laws are strengthened and applied
equally to all. Main projects in globalisation studies: research on indicators
of accountability for inter-governmental organisations, non-government organisations
and transnational corporations, global governance of climate change
issues/reduction of emissions, peace and security (International Criminal Court).
Oxfam/Community Aid Abroad
www.oxfam.org/
Oxfam International is a confederation of 12 organizations
working together in more than 100 countries to find lasting solutions
to poverty, suffering and injustice.
Refugee Council of Australia
http://www.refugeecouncil.org.au/
The Refugee Council of Australia is a non-profit
peak organisation. It provides information on and advocacy for refugees
and humanitarian entrants in Australia on behalf of its 90 organisational
members and many individual members. It is not a part of the Australian
Government.
Research Initiative on International Activism
international.activism.hss.uts.edu.au/
A key focus for the Initiative is on activism,
social movements, social change, and the politics of globalisation,
and the fluidities and contestations that characterise their interactions.
The field of social movement research is exceptionally fertile. It is
a key site of engagement between pluralists stressing the political
process, post-Marxists focusing on "new" social movements,
and neo-Marxists debating the developing logic of class struggle.
The South Centre
www.southcentre.org/
The South Centre works to assist in developing
points of view of the South on major policy issues, and to generate
ideas and action-oriented proposals for consideration by the collectivity
of South governments, institutions of South-South co-operation, inter-governmental
organizations of the South, and non-governmental organizations and the
community at large.
Sustainable Development Policy Institute
Director: Dr. Saba Gul Khattak
www.sdpi.org
Objectives: To catalyse the transition towards sustainable development,
defined as the enhancement of peace, social justice and well-being,
within and across generations. The Sustainable Development Policy
Institute provides the global sustainable development community with
representation from Pakistan as well as South Asia as a whole.
Main projects in globalisation and human security studies: Impact of
various agreements under the WTO on (a) the sustainability of agriculture
and food security, (b) on environmental sustainability and poverty, and
(c) on gender equality. Besides, work has been going on the effects of
(d) agreements with International Financial Institutions on poverty,
environmental sustainability, and gender equality.
Third World Network
www.twnside.org.sg
Main projects in globalisation and human security studies: the publication
of the daily SUNS (South - North Develoment Monitor) bulletin from Geneva,
Switzerland, the fortnightly Third World Economics and the monthly Third
World Resurgence; the publication of Third World Network Features; the
publication of books on environment and economic issues; the organizing
of various seminars and workshops; and participation in international processes
such as UNCED and the World Bank - NGO Committee.
The TWN's international secretariat is based in Penang, Malaysia. It has offices
in Delhi, India; Montevideo, Uruguay (for South America); Geneva; and Accra,
Ghana. The Third World Network has affiliated organizations in several Third
World countries, including India, the Philippines, Thailand, Brazil, Bangladesh,
Malaysia, Peru, Ethiopia, Uruguay, Mexico, Ghana, South Africa and Senegal.
It also cooperates with several organizations in the North.
United Nations Foundation
www.unfoundation.org
Objectives: The United Nations Foundation promotes a more peaceful, prosperous
, and just world through the support of the United Nations and its Charter.
Through our grantmaking and by building new and innovative public-private
partnerships, the United Nations Foundation acts to meet the most pressing
health, humanitarian, socioeconomic, and environmental challenges of the
21st century.
World Social Forum
www.wsfindia.org/
The World Social Forum (WSF) was created to provide
an open platform to discuss strategies of resistance to the model for
globalisation formulated at the annual World Economic Forum at Davos
by large multinational corporations, national governments, IMF, the
World Bank and the WTO, which are the foot soldiers of these corporations.
The fourth World Social Forum is taking place in Mumbai, India, in January
2004.

Related Australian Government Sites
Australian Federal Parliament: Watching Brief on the War on Terrorism
http://www.aph.gov.au/house/committee/jfadt/terrorism/wotindex.htm
On 15 May 2002 the Joint Standing Committee on
Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade resolved to conduct a Watching Brief
on Australia's involvement in the War on Terrorism and in related actions
in response to terrorism. In its initial phase, the Watching Brief involved
regular private briefings from government, non-government and international
experts on:- the nature and extent of Australia’s current commitment to the
International Coalition Against Terrorism;
- the nature of the terrorist threat at home and
abroad; and
- the measures in place, domestically and internationally,
to counter the threat of terrorism.

United Nations Agencies
All of these United Nations Agencies’ areas of responsibility
are self-explanatory.
ECOSOC—Economic and Social Council
www.un.org/esa/coordination/ecosoc/
Commission on Social Development
www.un.org/esa/socdev/csd/
Commission on Human Rights
www.unhchr.ch/
Commission on the Status of Women
www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw
Commission on Population and Development
www.un.org/esa/population/unpop.htm
Department of Economic and Social Affairs
www.un.org/esa/desa.htm
UNFPA—United Nations Population Fund
www.unfpa.org/
UNICEF—United Nations Children’s Fund
www.unicef.org/
UNAIDS—Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS
www.unaids.org/
UNCTAD—United Nations Commission for Trade and Development
www.unctad.org/
UNDP—United Nations Development Programme
www.undp.org/
UNIFEM—United Nations Development Fund for Women
www.unifem.undp.org/
UNRISD—United Nations Research Institute for Social Development
www.unrisd.org/
UNPAN—United Nations Online Network in Public Administration
and Finance
www.unpan.org/

Journals
Arena Journal
Melbourne, Australia
www.arena.org.au
Arena Journal concerns itself with the possibilities
for a renewed critical practice in an era of rapid transformation. The
intensification of globalisation means much more than just a change
in politics of economics (although these remain vital questions), but
cuts deep into every aspect of our being. Previously taken-for-granted
elements in social life, even the nature of the social itself have become
rapidly destabilised as every institution and cultural setting is potentially
drawn into the framework of commodity circulation, and the social is
increasingly constituted through the media and the image. Arena
Journal hopes to encourage discussion around key aspects of this transformation:
in particular the changing nature of the economy; the structure and
experience of the self; the re-constitution of class politics, state
structures, and modes of artistic expression, and the significance of
feminist, ecological and other social movements.
Diaspora
www.utpjournals.com/jour.ihtml?lp=diaspora/diaspora.html
Diaspora is dedicated to the multidisciplinary
study of the history, culture, social structure, politics and economics
of both the traditional diasporas – Armenian, Greek, and Jewish – and
those transnational dispersions which in the past three decades have
chosen to identify themselves as ‘diasporas.’ These encompass
groups ranging from the African-American to the Ukrainian-Canadian,
from the Caribbean-British to the new East and South Asian diasporas.
Global Networks
www.globalnetworksjournal.com/default.htm
Global Networks publishes high quality, refereed
articles on global networks, transnational affairs and practices and
their relation to wider theories of globalization. The journal provides
a forum for discussion, debate and the refinement of key ideas in this
emerging field. It includes World View essays designed to elicit discussion
and Book Review essays on major publications.
Global Society
www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/13600826.asp
Global Society covers the new agenda in international
relations and encourages innovative approaches to the study of international
issues from a range of disciplines. It promotes the analysis of international
transactions at multiple levels, and in particular, the way in which
these transactions blur the distinction between the sub-national, national
and transnational levels.
Globalization, Societies and Education
www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/14767724.asp
Globalisation, Societies and Education aims to
fill the gap between the study of education and broader social, economic
and political forces by analysing the complexities of globalisation.
The journal will thereby seek to provide means for affecting, as well
as reflecting the experiences, distribution, contributions and outcomes
of education at all levels and in all settings.
Globalization
globalization.icaap.org/
Globalization is a peer-reviewed journal devoted
to the examination of social, political, economic, and technological
globalization. Authors are invited to submit articles on virtually any
topic that attends to the issue of globalization. First issue: Fall
2001.
Globalizations
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/titles/14747731.asp
Globalizations will seek to publish the best work
exploring new meanings of globalization, bringing fresh ideas to the
concept, broadening its scope, and contributing to shaping the debates
of the future.
Forced Migration Review
www.fmreview.org/
FMR provides the humanitarian community with a
practice-oriented forum for debate on issues facing refugees and internally
displaced people in order to improve policy and practice and to involve
refugees and IDPs in programme design and implementation.
Journal of Refugee Studies
www.oup.co.uk/jnls/list/refuge/
The Journal of Refugee Studies provides a major
focus for refugee research, reflects the diverse range of perspectives
on refugee issues - the content is multidisciplinary, promotes the theoretical
development of refugee studies, innovative, analytical or methodological
approaches, reappraisals of current concepts, policies and practice,
encourages the voice of refugees to be represented by analysis of their
experiences as well as publishing articles by host-country practitioners
and researchers, welcomes contributions from field practitioners to
the development of new perspectives on refugee populations.
New Internationalist
www.newint.org/
New Internationalist produces magazines designed
to bring the voices and experiences of the South (or the 'developing'
world) into the homes of our 75,000 subscribers in the North (Australia,
New Zealand, England, Canada, and New Zealand). It is produced by a
self-supporting international co-operative that pays its 30 staff a
living wage. The magazine has a standing brief to critique the effects
of globalization on economic and human development. The relationship
between them, which began with the sharing of information and ideas,
has now expanded into a series of reciprocal arrangements spanning teaching,
research, publishing and jointly sponsoring public forums.
openDemocracy
www.opendemocracy.net/home/index.jsp
openDemocracy.net is an online global magazine
of politics and culture. We publish clarifying debates which help people
make up their own minds. We seek the finest writing, the strongest arguments,
the most compelling views and truthful voices on key issues, great and
small. We use the web’s potential to build and map intelligent
discussions which we accumulate and index in our back pages which now
include over 1,500 articles. Written by and for people across the world,
from South and North, from the powerless to the influential, we seek
to bring together those who are not well-known with writers and thinkers
of international repute.

Resource Sites
The Globalization Website
Emory University, USA
www.emory.edu/SOC/globalization/
This website welcomes anyone interested in globalization — students
taking courses on the subject, scholars engaged in research, members
of groups involved in global activism, and the general public. Run by
Frank Lechner, co-editor of The Globalization Reader (Blackwell, 2000).
Global Transformations
www.polity.co.uk/global/summary.htm
Devised by David Held and Anthony McGrew
On these pages you will find a whole host of information
on globalization, including: researching globalization; globalization;
interviews; links to sites of related interest; an executive summary
of the key features of globalization; and more information on the ground-breaking
textbook Global Transformations and the accompanying The Global
Transformations Reader.
The Global Site
www.theglobalsite.ac.uk/index.html
Critical Gateway to World Politics, Society and
Culture, run by the University of Sussex
Globalisation Guide
www.globalisationguide.org/
Resource site put together by the Australian Apec
Study Centre, and arguing for the merits of globalisation.
OneWorld
www.oneworld.net/
OneWorld is a civil society network online, supporting
people’s media to help build a more just global society. OneWorld
has a vision of equitable and sustainable distribution of wealth amongst
the world's population, underpinned by global attainment and protection
of human rights and by governance structures which permit local communities
control over their own affairs. OneWorld is dedicated to harnessing
the democratic potential of the internet to promote human rights and
sustainable development.
Yale Global Online
yaleglobal.yale.edu/index.jsp
YaleGlobal Online is the flagship publication of
the Yale Center for the Study of Globalization. The magazine explores
the implications of the growing interconnectedness of the world by drawing
on the rich intellectual resources of the Yale University community,
scholars from other universities, and public- and private-sector experts
from around the world.
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