Use LEFT and RIGHT arrow keys to navigate between flashcards;
Use UP and DOWN arrow keys to flip the card;
H to show hint;
A reads text to speech;
27 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Global Interdependence
|
A state in which the social, political, financial, and cultural lives of people around the world are intertwined such that one country's problems-unemployment, drug abuse, environmental pollution, the searchj for national security,--are a part of a larger global situation
|
|
Globalization
|
The process of ever-increasing "cross border flow of goods, services, people, money, information, and culture"
|
|
Social Change
|
Any significant alteration, modification, or transformation in the organization and operation of social life.
|
|
Innovation
|
the invention of something new--an idea, a process, a practice, a device or tool
|
|
Basic innovation
|
Revolutionary, unprecedented, or ground-breaking, inventions that represent the cornerstone for a wide range of applications
|
|
Improving innovations
|
Modifications of basic inventions that improve upon the originals--that is make them smaller, faster, less complicated, or more efficient, attractive or portable
|
|
Hypertext
|
A technology that allows readers to pick and choose amoung highlighted keywords and follow links to related documents that are stored in computers around the world.
|
|
Dearth of Feedback
|
A situation in which not enough critical readers and listeners evaluate material before it is used by the popular media.
|
|
Cultural base
|
The number of exsisting inventions
|
|
Invention
|
A synthesis of exsisting inventions
|
|
Simulatneous-interdependent inventions
|
Situations in which the same invention is created by two or more persons working independently of one another at about the same time.
|
|
Adaptive culture
|
The portion of the nonmaterial culture (norms, values, and beliefs) that adjusts to material innovations
|
|
Cultural lag
|
A situation in which the adaptive culture fails to adjust in necessary ways to material innovation
|
|
Technological determinist
|
Someone who believes that human beings have no free will and are controlled entirely by their material innovations
|
|
Paradigms
|
The dominant and widely accepted theories and concepts in a particular field of study
|
|
Anomaly
|
An observation or observations that a paradigm cannot explain
|
|
Globalization-from-above
|
A term describing the Internet's ability to connect those people around the world with educational, economic, and political advantages, excluding those who are not so advantaged.
|
|
Globalization-from-below
|
Interdependence at the grassroots level that aims to protect the environment, enhance ordinary people's access to basic resources, democratize political institutions, and to ease tensions and prevent violent conflict between power centers and authority structures.
|
|
Social movement
|
A situation in which a substantial number of people organize to change, to resist change, or to undo change in some area of society
|
|
Regressive or reactionary movements
|
Social movements with the goal of turning back the hands of time to an earlier condition or state-of-being sometimes defined as a "golden era"
|
|
Reformist movements
|
Social movements that target some specific feature of society as needing change
|
|
Revolutionary movements
|
Social movements that seek braod, sweeping, and radical structural changes to a society's basic institutions or the the world order.
|
|
Counterrevolutionary movements
|
Social movements that seek to maintain a social order that reform and revolutionary movements are seeking to change
|
|
Objective deprivation
|
A condition that applies to those who are the worst off or most disadvantaged--people with the lowest incomes, the least education, the lowest social status, the fewest opportunites, and so on
|
|
Relative deprivation
|
A condition that is measured not by objective standards but rather by comparing one groups situation to the situations of those who are more advantaged.
|
|
Resource mobilization
|
A situation in which a core group of sophisticated strategists works to harness the disaffected energies, attract money and supporters, captuer the media's attention forge alliances with those in power and creat an organizational structure
|
|
Terrorism
|
Anxiety-inspiring and violent actions taken by a clandestine or semi-clandestine individual, group, or state supported actors for idiosncratic, criminal, or political reasons.
|