Student Resources
Please note: This title has recently been acquired by Taylor & Francis. Due to rights reasons, any multimedia resources will no longer be available.
Click on the tabs below, to view the resources for each chapter.
Learning Objectives
Chapter 1
After reading Chapter 1, you should:
- appreciate how profoundly globalization affects the contemporary human condition.
- be familiar with the major categories of globalization.
- understand how globalization can be both a blessing and a curse.
- understand the conflicting trends of Jihad versus McWorld.
- be familiar with the key global issues discussed in this chapter.
- be familiar with the content and methods of good global citizenship, and the role model set by Canada.
Chapter 2
After reading Chapter 2, you should:
- understand the historical, philosophical, and methodological foundations of the social sciences.
- understand the relationship between the three great bodies of knowledge: the natural sciences, the humanities, and the social sciences.
- be familiar with the intellectual history of the social sciences and related research methods.
- understand the philosophical debate involving social scientism and social humanism.
- be familiar with your textbook author's "synthesis" of social scientism and social humanism (the "roomy" social sciences).
Chapter 3
After reading Chapter 3, you should
- be able to use geography's spatial facts, concepts, and theories to explain the behavior of states and the confluence of ecological issues that are global in scope.
- be familiar with the history of the human mismanagement of the earth.
- be able to identify geography's origins.
- understand how to comprehend world affairs through geography.
- be familiar with the misuse of geographic theories.
- understand the relationship between geography and globalization's web.
Chapter 4
After reading Chapter 4, you should:
- understand how ecological issues like environment, population, food, and energy reflect the globalization process.
- be familiar with the core elements of the globalist outlook.
- be able to distinguish between ecological optimists and ecological pessimists
- be familiar with the major ecological challenges facing our planet.
- understand the dynamics of population, food, and energy.
Chapter 5
After reading Chapter 5, you should:
- be able to identify theoretical and practical solutions to the vexing array of ecological global problems.
- be able to identify the various institutions discussed in this chapter that are designed to facilitate global dialogue.
- understand the guiding policy principles identified in this chapter: deep ecology, minimalism, sustainable agriculture, creative science, grass-roots initiatives, female empowerment, environmentally intelligent architecture, think globally but act locally, multilateralism, democracy and devolution, green consumerism, green justice, environmental accounting, aggressive regulation, ecological policy dialogue, and a green plan.
- be familiar with the country of Brazil as a laboratory for sustainable development.
- understand global criticism of Brazilian policy.
- be familiar with the Earth Summit and the policy dilemmas confronting Brazilian government.
Chapter 6
After reading Chapter 6, you should:
- be able to conceptualize the main patterns of social identity competing for the hearts and minds of humanity.
- be able to identify and be familiar with the eight conceptions of social identity: national identity, regional identity, racial identity, ethnic identity, economic super-regions, and North (MDCs) versus South (LDCs), religious mega-cultures, and one global community.
- understand the significance of territoriality as a challenge to the vision of shared identity.
Chapter 7
After reading Chapter 7, you should:
- understand the major theories of human motivation and personality and their application to social discourse.
- be familiar with psychology's history and understand how the discipline adds unique elements to the social sciences.
- be acquainted with the text's discussion of psychology "on the world stage."
- be familiar with the cross-cultural perspective.
Chapter 8
After reading Chapter 8, you should:
- understand the ethical and humanitarian influences on human behavior.
- be familiar with the interface of ethics and the social sciences.
- understand the relationship between religion, ethics, and world affairs.
- be familiar with the major human rights issues discussed in the text.
Chapter 9
After reading Chapter 9, you should:
- be able to comprehend anthropology’s holistic and comparative contributions to the study of human behavior as resulting from both biological and cultural factors.
- be familiar with the various sub-fields of the discipline of anthropology.
- understand evolutionary theory.
- be familiar with the laws of heredity.
- understand the stages of evolution.
- be familiar with the contemporary issues in anthropology, as discussed in the text.
Chapter 10
After reading Chapter 10, you should:
- understand how society and culture represent the structure and content of human social activity.
- understand the sociological perspective.
- be familiar with the elements of culture.
- understand the process of socialization.
- be familiar with the elements of social structure.
- be familiar with the pivotal social institutions discussed in the text (marriage and the family, religion, education, the economy, and government).
- understand the sociological implications of social inequality.
Chapter 11
After reading Chapter 11, you should:
- appreciate the resiliency and flexibility of culture by comparing selected micro- and mega-level cultures.
- be familiar with Asian collectivist cultures (Japan, China).
- be familiar with semi-collectivist cultures (Russia, Brazil).
- be familiar with hunter-gatherer micro-cultures (the Arara tribe of Brazil, the Baka tribe of the Ituri River Forest.
- understand Islam as a mega-culture.
- be familiar with L. Robert Kohls adaptation of the Kluckhohn Model, with an emphasis on the five central questions that aim at the essence of any culture’s value system
- understand the distinction between ethnocentrism and cultural relativism.
Chapter 12
After reading Chapter 12, you should:
- understand and appreciate political science’s vision of what really matters (power) and how it relates to politics and government in various contexts.
- be familiar with the variety of political ideology.
- be able to classify governments using the techniques outlined in the text.
- understand comparative politics and government.
Chapter 13
After reading Chapter 13, you should:
- be familiar with the evolution of the state system, its devastating legacy of war, and recent challengers to the state for human loyalties
- be able to distinguish between the broad theories of realism and idealism
- be familiar with what the text calls the "nuclear dilemma"
- be able to evaluate what the text labels the "democratic peace"
Chapter 14
After reading Chapter 14, you should:
- be able to analyze the means of subsistence devised by societies to produce, distribute, and consume goods and services.
- be familiar with the basic concepts of economics.
- be able to trace the evolution of Western economies.
- understand the relationship between America and the global market.
- be familiar with the U.S. economic climate and related institutions.
Chapter 15
After reading Chapter 15, you should:
- understand the changing nature of the international economic system and the major theories concerning its behavior.
- be able to trace the evolution of the international economy.
- be familiar with the theory of international trade and finance.
- be acquainted with non-state threats to U.S. economic status.
- understand the polarization of north and south.
- be familiar with the different economic development strategies for impoverished countries.