Globalization: A Research Guide to Resources in the
Princeton University Library
Internet Sources on Globalization
The Internet.
The Web is a place often hostile to the concept of Globalization.
Especially with a topic which can invoke strong passions, it is of
critical
importance to pay attention to authors and publishers, and to study
carefully
the makeup and goals of groups which post globalization
materials.
A good check on the breadth and validity of net, or traditional
library,
resources, is to talk with subject and reference librarians at
Princeton
who continue to provide support for scholarly research including the
new
technologies. Check the list of Subjects
and Specialists from the library staff on the library homepage, or
found as the entire back page of the Library broadsheet publication
Getting
Started available at any reference desk. We look forward to
working
with you.
Internet searching can rely on a number of good search
engines.
Some of the most useful sites for Globalization include:
- Center for
Globalization
and Information
Techynology, from Berkeley
- Core
Labour Standartds
and Globalization, from the Asian Development Bank
- Documents
on
Globalization, broad gathering from Mt. Holyoke
- Globalisation Guide - from
Monash University in Melbourne.
Australia.
- Globalization,
portal from the Refugee Law Center, advocate body for refugees and
immigrants
- Globalization,
defining essays from the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
- Globalization
and Law
in Muslim Societies, from the Library of Congress
- Globalizaton
and the Economics of Child Labour, key Dartmouth study
- Globalization and
World Cities,
network and resources
- Globalization:
Building an Inclusive World Economy, from the World Bank
- Globalization:
Governments, Organizations,
Trade, Australian portal to numerous sites
- Globalization in Asia: Getting the Breeze Without the Bugs - Asian Conference on Globalization
- Globalization
Project, University of Chicago, exploring its cultural dimensions
- International
Network Archives,
an open source project of Princeton's Sociology Department
- World
History
of Globalization, Quick Guide from University of Pennsylvania
- Yale Center for the
Study
of Globalization
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