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  1. Globalization: The Human Consequences.Zygmunt Bauman - 1998 - Columbia University Press.
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  • The Consequences of Modernity.Anthony Giddens - 1990
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  • Global Modernities.Mike Featherstone, Scott Lash & Roland Robertson (eds.) - 1995 - Sage Publications.
    Global Modernities is a sustained commentary on the international character of the most microcosmic practices. It demonstrates how the global increasingly informs the regional, so deconstructing ideas like the `nation-state' and `national sovereignty'. The spatialization of social theory, hybridization and bio-politics are among the critical issues discussed.
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  • Staying Alive: Women, Ecology and Development.Vandana Shiva - 1991 - Hypatia 6 (1):206-214.
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  • Time and the Other: How Anthropology Makes Its Object.Johannes Fabian - 2002
    Johannes Fabian takes an historical look at anthropology to demonstrate the emergence, transformation, and differentiation of uses of Time. Anthropological theory, from its beginnings in philosophy and linguistics, has provided Western thought and politics with deep-rooted images and convictions amounting to a kind of political cosmology. The anthropologists are 'here and now, ' the objects of their discourse are 'there and then, ' and the existence of the 'other'-- the 'savage', 'the 'primitive, ' the 'underdeveloped' world -- in the same (...)
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  • Red Earth, White Lies: Native Americans and the Myth of Scientific Fact.Vine Deloria (ed.) - 1997 - Fulcrum Publishing.
    Vine Deloria, Jr., leading Native American scholar and author of the best-selling God is Red, addresses the conflict between mainstream scientific theory about our world and the ancestral worldview of Native Americans. Claiming that science has created a largely fictional scenario for American Indians in prehistoric North America, Deloria offers an alternative view of the continent's history as seen through the eyes and memories of Native Americans. Further, he warns future generations of scientists not to repeat the ethnocentric omissions and (...)
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