TCW FINALS

A captivating illustration depicting globalization and media interconnected, featuring symbols of communication like speech bubbles, digital screens, and maps across a globe.

Explore the World of Globalization and Media

Test your knowledge on globalization, media, and their intersection with society! This quiz dives deep into topics like the evolution of communication methods, the impact of media on our understanding of the world, and the role of technology in shaping social dynamics.

Whether you're a student, teacher, or simply curious about these concepts, this quiz offers:

  • 98 challenging questions
  • Insights into key theories and concepts
  • A fun way to learn more about globalization and media
98 Questions24 MinutesCreated by ConnectingIdeas42
Vague, opaque, and difficult word
GLOBALIZATION
GLOCALIZATION
IMPERIALISM
HAHAHA ATAYA SA IMPERIALISM
Globalization and Media: global imaginary of living in a global village
(McLuhan, 1962)
Arjun Appadurai(1996)
Nayan Chanda
Ronald loon 2023
Rupture within social life. Two diacritics: media and migration
(McLuhan, 1962)
Arjun Appadurai(1996)
Nayan Chanda
Casey 123
Globalization could not occur without media
True
False
Plural form of medium and Channel of communication
Media
Midea
Large (atay baged og kani imo answer)
Oldest and most enduring of all media
Print ni casey
Speech
Oral communication
Oral sa es17 haha
Practiced 200,000 years
Script
Research
Oral communication
Print ( atay naged)
Digital tech
Speech
Less than 7,000 years
Script
Oral communication
Print
Speech
Less than 600, years
Print
Oral communication
Bebe time with jowa ng iba
Speech
Less than 50 years
Print
Speech
Oral communication
Digital technology
Aid globalization through allowing humans to cooperate. Created first civilization Sumer in Middle East: Cradle of civilization –birthplace of wheel, plow, irrigation, and writing
Oral communication
Deontology HAHAHAH
Speech
Script
first civilization in middle east
Sumer
Cradle of civilization
€Firstwriting–allowedhumansto communicateandshareknowledgeand ideasovermuchlargerspacesandcross muchlongertimes •Evolution:cavepaintings,petroglyphs,and hieroglyphs.
Script
Tahimik lang ako sa umpisa
Oral communication
Print
Started the information revolution •Transformed market ,business, nations, schools, churches, governments, armies, and more.
Script
Oral communication
Print
Hi crush unta nagkaon naka
All of these are examples of Electronic Media except
Telegraph,
Telephone,
Television
Computers
€global imaginary ” the globe itself as imagined community.
Cosmopolitan
ManfredSteger(2008)
Nayan chanda
Citizens of the world–feature of modern life. People imagine themselves as part of the world
Cosmopolitan
Nayan chanda
Benedict Anderson (1991)
Origin of nations and nationalism.
ManfredSteger(2008)
Benedict Anderson (1991)
Prince laurencio
The global village would bring about utopia. Draws closely by media living in universal understanding and unity.
LewisManford(1970)
MarshallMcLuhan(1960s)
Contradicts the positive effect of media in witnessing its use in capitalism, militarism, profit, and power.
MarshallMcLuhan(1960s)
LewisManford(1970)
Pinaka cute sa abe
Kyle pitao
Kyle Pitao
It views religion as, among many other things, a means of boundary maintenance.
Globalization
Glocalization
Kaon na ayaw pagutom ha
Nationalism was closely associated with a particular religious beliefs.
The increasing personalized individual religiosity
The rise of religious nationalism
The proliferation of international terrorism
€The return of religion into the public life
Religion goes beyond administration of sacraments among Catholics.
The increasing personalized individual religiosity
The rise of religious nationalism
The proliferation of international terrorism
The return of religion into the public life
Extremists believe that to fulfill God’s will it is their duty to achieve this through violence.
The increasing personalized individual religiosity
The rise of religious nationalism
The proliferation of international terrorism
The return of religion into the public life
The holding of extreme political or religious views; fanaticism.
Extremism
Parochialism
A limited or narrow outlook, especially focused on a local area; narrowmindedness.
Extremism
Parochialism
Individual need to rely on a supreme being
The increasing personalized individual religiosity
The rise of religious nationalism
The return of religion into the public life
The proliferation of international terrorism
The increasing personalized individual religiosity
The goal is to help achieve peace by advancing poverty reduction and putting attention to economic equality
Humanitarian Assistance
Faith-Centered interventions
The efforts of religious organization to mediate understanding and peace
Humanitarian Assistance
Faith-Centered interventions
Persons responsible for global conflicts used
Religious doctrines
Dogmas
Even sacred books’ verses
Research
Toni fowler
According to _________ there are three phases of globalization
Jollibee
Mcdo
Kobe bryant
Christian mapayo
ThomasFriedman(2005)
That lasted from1492to 1800and“shranktheworldfromasizelarge to a size medium
Globalization 1.0
Globalization 2.0
Globalization 3.0
Talks about the age of Pax Britannica where Great Britain was the hegemonic power in terms of trade and economy, it is known as
Globalization 1.0
Globalization 2.0
Globalization 3.0
Occurred during the second half of the 20th century and this is also the age of Pax Americana where the United States of America was the hegemonic power in terms of security, trade and economy.
Globalization 1.0
Globalization 2.0
Globalization 3.0
The one who coined the idea of soft power
Joseph Nye(2004)
Sassen(1991)
Kevin arman
An attraction to shared values and the “justness ”and “duty of contributing ”to the achievement of those values.
Soft power
Hard power
Power tools
According to Sassen(1991) it is characterized by occupational and income polarization, with the highly paid professional class on one end and providers of low-paid services on the other.
Global Cities
Global economy
Multinational corporations (MNCs ) play a substantial part in the global economy and do enjoy a multitude of privileges such as unquestionable access to vast amounts of wealth they draw from their income.
True
False
To be able to imagine, observe, and define global city, one first needs to be able to imagine the world, the globe, as Five entities.
True
False
 
In early 1990s, there were only three identified global cities:
Tokyo
London
New york
Butuan lezgo rcl
that change this composition: birth, death, unions, migration, etc
Dynamic life-course processes
the size and composition
Relationships
According to Japanese Mori Foundation’s Global City Power Index (2011), the global power of cities is measured by a combination of six criteria:
Economy
Research and development
Cultural interaction
liveability
Environment
Accessibility
Health
People
Global Cities thusly represent cities around the world that are exemplifying these characteristics of a city better than other cities.
True
False
Global Cities are also perceived as sources of economic growth and a real so economic powerhouses themselves, coupled with being industry leaders and regional hubs.
True
False
The 21st century era brought the countries together into global competition and the connections of the people are being closely sinking and sinking.
True
False
Of populations according to diverse criteria: age, ethnicity, sex, union (marital or cohabiting) status, educational attainment, spatial distribution
The size and composition
Dynamic life-course processes
Relationships
Population composition and change, and the broader social and physical environment in which they exist.
The size and composition
Dynamic life-course processes
Relationships
Defined as a group of individuals of the same species living and interbreeding within a given area. Rely on the same resources, are subject to similar environmental constraints, and depend on the availability of other members to persist over time
Population
Slab
Society
Number of live births per 1000 population a given year
Birthrate (Crude birthrate)
Total Fertility Rate (FTR)
Death rate (crude death rate):
Average number of children born alive to any
Birthrate (Crude birthrate)
Total Fertility Rate (FTR)
Death rate (crude death rate):
Number of deaths per 1000 population in a given year.
Birthrate (Crude birthrate)
Death rate (crude death rate):
Total Fertility Rate (FTR)
The median number of years a person can be expected to live under current mortality conditions.
Life expectancy
Growth rate
The difference between birth rates and deaths, plus the difference between immigrants and emigrants.
Growth rate
Life expectancy
€the mathematical knowledge of populations, their general movements, and their physical, civil, intellectual and moral state”
Demography
Population
Institution
A yearly report of events that deal with an individual’s life from birth to death and those in between, e.g. marriage, annulments, adoptions, separations, and other events and changes in his/her status.
Census
Sample surveys
Vital statistics report
Sources of Demographic Data
Census
Vital Statistics Report
Sample Surveys:
Social media
A population count where the demographic, economic, and social data of every individual of a given time are collected, tabulated, compiled, and published.
Census
Sample surveys
Vital statistics Report
Conducted by private and public institutions to obtain data and information on matters not covered by the census or the vital statistics system.
Census
Vital Statistics Report
Sample surveys
comparative percentage of individuals at different age levels influencing the economic and social structures of society.
Age Composition
Sex Composition
Differences which is determined by sex (proportion of males over females per 100 population) and is affected by births, deaths and migration incidences.
Age Composition
Sex Composition
During the Cold War, leaders all over the globe agreed to classify the world into three (3) categories:
True
False
It is defined as the diffusion of power from states to other actors. Fareed Zakaria(2008),
Post-American world
Pre- American world
Are the westerners and those countries that are part of the north western hemisphere.
Developed countries
Developing countries
Are the states which has low income rate. The latter are the countries from the region of Africa and Asia.
Developed countries
Developing countries
In the book of ________ The Clash of the Civilization ,global civilizations are determined into eight (8)categories.
SamuelHuntington(1996)
nayan chanda
Lebron james
In a broader sense, this includes not only refugees and asylum-seekers (people who move across borders in search of protection) but also people forced to move by environmental catastrophes or development projects (such as factories, roads or dams).
Forced Migration
Voluntary Economic Migration
Refugees
The eight(8) global civilization are the: TheWesterns; •TheLatinAmericans; •Islamiccivilization; •TheSinicortheChinesecivilization; •TheHindus; •Orthodox; •Japanese;and •TheAfricans.
True
False
A person’s choice to relocate to an opportunity instead of an encroaching fear for safety.
Voluntary Economic Migration
Forced Migration
Refugees
At present ,people from these global civilizations tried to move from one place to another just to have an economic stability, good life ,and democratic freedom that his /her country don’t have.
True
False
Literally means the adherence or belief in the ‘world state’. This idea began its journey when globalizationcameintopowerinthe1950s.
Cosmopolitanism
POkemon Unite
These are the people residing outside their country of nationality, who are unable or unwilling to return because of e “well-founded” fear of persecution on account race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.
Refugees
Forced migration
Voluntary Economic Migration
According to the analysis of Pogge (2008) ,there three(3)main elements of Cosmopolitanism, and these are the following: •Individualism; •Universality; •Generality
True
False
Defined as the form of social behavior that both shapes and is shaped by broader social and economic structure and processes of transformation
Migration
Immigration
Refers to the manner or means of a modern society to organize itself in response to the risks.
Risk Society
Kana nang isa ang answer oi kapoy na hunahuna unsay lain choices . Waman gale ko pilia, pilia nana
In the definition of Boswell(2002)however migration is not just economic gain but rather it is more political.
True
False
Factors Why People Migrate
Social Inequality
Economic Depression
Freedom Deprivation
Way signal dres pinas yw
People are moving in and out of the countries. According to Henry Nau(2009),the present world has its transnational relations because countries trade with one another, and populations move across state boundaries.
True
False
Firmness in position ,permanence and resistance to change, especially in disruptive way.
Stability
Sustainability
Economy is stable means that the system is in one calm phase of business cycle neither heading towards q boom nor depression.
True
False
Stable environments somehow lack the element of resiliency that sustainable environments possess because it is far easier for a stable environment to become unstable again in comparison to an already sustainable environment which finds it difficult to become “unsustainable”.
True
False
Should be seen as different from stability. •It considers the long-term capacities of a system to exist.
Stability
Sustainability
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs (World Commission on Environment and Development,1987).It is a bout responsible use of resources.
True
False
Sustainability leads to stability, however stability alone may not necessarily lead to sustainability.
True
False
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” Ross (2009)
Sustainable
Sustainable development
Stability
Agenda 21 advocates education to disseminate information regarding sustainable development (Jickling,1994).
True
False
Diagram shows three interlocking circles with the triangle of environmental (conservation), economic (growth), and social (equity) dimensions. Sustainable development is modeled on these bearable equitable three pillars.
Dimensions of Sustainable Development
Prism of Sustainable Development by Spangenberg and Valentin 1999
The 3 pillars of dimensions of sustainable development are environmental (conservation), economic (growth), and social (equity)
True
False
These are the four dimensions of prism of sustainable development stipulates four dimensions: economic dimension (man-made capital), environmental dimension (natural capital), and social dimension (human capital) as the base for institutional dimension ; (social capital).
True
False
Early 21st Century ; food proudtion enough to feed 7 billion .870 million suffer from hunger
True
False
By 2050, climate change impacts could increase the risk of food insecurity by up to 20 percent.
True
False
Catches of the world's most relied-upon fish are expected to decrease by up to 60 percent by 2050
True
False
To adequately feed the global population in 2050, crop production would have to double.
True
False
Livestock contributes almost 80 percent of agricultural methane emissions, and about 66 percent of greenhouse gas emissions.
True
False
Food loss or waste generates about 8 percent of annual greenhouse emissions.
True
False
78 percent of the world's food-insecure people rely on agriculture for their livelihoods.
True
False
FOOD SECURITY – IS THE AVAILABILTY AT ALL TIMES OF ADEQUATE FOOD SUPPLIES OF BASIC FOOD STUFFS TO SUSTAIN A STEADY EXPANSION OF FOOD CONDUMPTIONS
True
False
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