This innovative introduction to international and global studies,
updated and revised in a new edition, offers instructors in the
social sciences and humanities a core textbook for teaching
undergraduates in this rapidly growing field. Encompassing the
latest scholarship in what is a markedly interdisciplinary
endeavor, Shawn Smallman and Kimberley Brown introduce key
concepts, themes, and issues and then examine each in lively
chapters on essential topics that include the history of
globalization; economic, political, and cultural globalization;
security, energy, and development; health; agriculture and food;
and the environment. Within these topics, the authors explore such
timely and pressing subjects as commodity chains, labor (including
present-day slavery), human rights, multinational corporations, and
the connections among them.
New to this edition:
* The latest research on debates over privacy rights and
surveillance since Edward Snowden's disclosures
* Updates on significant political and economic developments
throughout the world, including a new case study of European Union,
Icelandic, and Greek responses to the 2008 fiscal crisis
* The newest information about the rise of fracking, the Fukushima
nuclear disaster, the decline of the Peak Oil movement, and climate
change, including the latter's effects on the Arctic and
Antarctica
* A dedicated website with authors' blog and a teaching tab with
syllabi, class activities, and well-designed, classroom-tested
resources
* An updated teacher's manual available online, including sample
examination questions, additional resources for each chapter, and
special assistance for teaching ESL students
* Updated career advice for international studies majors