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Human rights worldwide

Globalization Liberates

Ronald Bailey | From the May 2011 issue

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Is globalization good for freedom? Classical liberals argue that it is, but critics respond with a less attractive story in which elites repress their restive subjects so rapacious multinational corporations can exploit natural resources and labor. 

A recent study by Indra de Soysa, a political scientist at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, and Krishna Chaitanya Vadlamannati, an economist at the Georg-August University in Germany, supports the rosier view. The paper, published in the January edition of the social science journal Kyklos, uses a measure of globalization that includes not just economic policies but social factors such as access to foreign information and political factors such as a country's participation in international organizations.

Applying their measure to 118 countries, De Soysa and Vadlamannati find that the more globalized a country, the less likely its government is to engage in torture, extrajudicial killing, political imprisonment, and disappearances. "Our results are clear," they conclude. "Globalization seems to liberate, not suffocate." 

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Ronald Bailey is science correspondent at Reason.

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  1. chris_is_in   14 years ago

    This couldn't be more wrong. Do we honestly want a world full of freedom and liberty? A world where citizens of one country have to compete with those of another? NO! BRING BACK ISOLATIONISM! hehe.

  2. xiingguan   13 years ago

    This movie has some nike sb skunk dunks for sale of the same flaws I saw in another attempt at a faithful adaptation of a work of fantastic literature long thought unfilmable, Zach Snyder's 2009 version of Watchmen...That is, it kobe 7 for sale struck me as a series of filmed recreations of scenes from the famous novel

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