1.
Murray, W. E. Geographies of globalization. vol. Routledge contemporary human geography series (Routledge, 2014).
2.
Jones, A. Human geography: the basics. vol. Basics (Routledge, 2012).
3.
Cloke, P., Crang, P. & Goodwin, M. Introducing Human Geographies, Third Edition. (Taylor and Francis, 2008).
4.
Globalisation: a brief exploration of its challenging, contested and competing concepts.by Butt A (2017). http://librarysearch.le.ac.uk/primo_library/libweb/action/dlDisplay.do?vid=44UOLE_VU1&search_scope=default_scope&docId=TN_gale_ofa484460670&fn=permalink.
5.
Potter, Robert B. Geographies of development: an introduction to development studies. (Prentice Hall, 2008).
6.
Daniels, P. W. An introduction to human geography. (Pearson, 2012).
7.
Melgaço, L. Thinking Outside the Bubble of the Global North: Introducing Milton Santos and "The Active Role of Geography”. Antipode 49, 946–951 (2017).
8.
Dicken, Peter. Global shift: mapping the changing contours of the world economy. (Sage, 2010).
9.
Dicken, Peter. Global shift: mapping the changing contours of the world economy. (Sage, 2010).
10.
Herod, Andrew. Geographies of globalization: a critical introduction. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).
11.
Thomas, Alan, Allen, Tim, Open University, & Open University. Poverty and development into the 21st century. (Open University in association with Oxford University Press, 2000).
12.
Williams, Glyn, Meth, Paula, & Willis, Katie. Geographies of developing areas: the global South in a changing world. (Routledge, 2009).
13.
The United Nations Homepage. http://www.un.org/en/.
14.
The World Bank’s Homepage. http://www.worldbank.org/.
15.
The World Trade Organisation Homepage. http://www.wto.org/.
16.
One World. http://www.oneworld.org/.
17.
Oxfam. http://www.oxfam.org.
18.
Overton, J., Murray, W. E., & Banks, G. (2012). The Race to the Bottom of the Glass? Wine, Geography, and Globalization. Globalizations, 9(2), 273-287. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14747731.2012.658251.
19.
Sigler, T. & Wachsmuth, D. Transnational gentrification: Globalisation and neighbourhood change in Panamas Casco Antiguo. Urban Studies 53, 705–722 (2016).
20.
Mawdsley, E. Mawdsley, E. (2017). Development geography 1: Cooperation, competition and convergence between ‘North’and ‘South’. Progress in Human Geography, 41(1), 108-117. Progress in Human Geography 41, 108–117 (2017).
21.
Dicken, Peter. Global shift: mapping the changing contours of the world economy. (Sage, 2010).
22.
Murray, W. E. Geographies of globalization. vol. Routledge contemporary human geography series (Routledge, 2014).
23.
Daniels, P. W. An introduction to human geography. (Pearson, 2012).
24.
Potter, Robert B. Geographies of development: an introduction to development studies. (Prentice Hall, 2008).
25.
see rest of special issue on Special Issue: Global South to the Rescue: Emerging Humanitarian Superpowers and Globalizing Rescue Industries. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14747731.2012.657408.
26.
Herod, Andrew. Geographies of globalization: a critical introduction. (Wiley-Blackwell, 2009).
27.
Mawdsley, Emma. From recipients to donors: emerging powers and the changing development landscape. (Zed Books, 2012).
28.
Mawdsley, Emma. From recipients to donors: emerging powers and the changing development landscape. (Zed Books, 2012).
29.
Mawdsley, E. & McCann, G. The Elephant in the Corner? Reviewing India-Africa Relations in the New Millennium. Geography Compass 4, 81–93 (2010).
30.
McEwan, C. & Mawdsley, E. Trilateral Development Cooperation: Power and Politics in Emerging Aid Relationships. Development and Change 43, 1185–1209 (2012).
31.
Mohan, G. & Power, M. New African Choices? The Politics of Chinese Engagement. Review of African Political Economy 35, 23–42 (2008).
32.
Pieterse, J. N. Global Rebalancing: Crisis and the East-South Turn. Development and Change 42, 22–48 (2011).
33.
Sidaway, J. D. Geographies of Development: New Maps, New Visions? The Professional Geographer 64, 49–62 (2012).
34.
Six, C. The Rise of Postcolonial States as Donors: a challenge to the development paradigm? Third World Quarterly 30, 1103–1121 (2009).
35.
Listen to BBC Correspondents Look Ahead to 2017 as they give their predictions on what is likely to shape our world in 2017.
36.
Read predictions by OECD on the global economy in 2017.
37.
Coffee: Globalisation’s Drink of Choice.
38.
Listen to Robert Peston’s investigation  about the rise in financial inequality since the 1980s, and what can be done about it.
39.
Paul Cloke, ,  Philip Crang, , and  Mark Goodwin. Introducing Human Geographies, Third Edition. (Taylor and Francis, 2013).
40.
Daniels, P. W. An introduction to human geography. (Pearson, 2012).
41.
Laterza, V. Resilient Labour: Workplace Regimes, Globalisation and Enclave Development in Swaziland. The Journal of Development Studies 52, 576–590 (2016).
42.
McGregor, J. ‘Joining the BBC (British Bottom Cleaners)’: Zimbabwean Migrants and the UK Care Industry. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 33, 801–824 (2007).
43.
Anwar, M. A. & Carmody, P. Bringing globalization to the countryside: Special Economic Zones in India. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 37, 121–138 (2016).
44.
Shaffer, M., Ferrato, G. & Jinnah, Z. Routes, locations, and social imaginary: a comparative study of the on-going production of geographies in Somali forced migration. African Geographical Review 1–13 (2017) doi:10.1080/19376812.2017.1354308.
45.
Padmanabhan, N. Globalisation Lived Locally: A Labour Geography Perspective on Control, Conflict and Response among Workers in Kerala. Antipode 44, 971–992 (2012).
46.
Wells, R., Cuenca, R., Blanco Ramirez, G. & Aragón, J. Geographic mobility and social inequality among Peruvian university students. Higher Education (2017) doi:10.1007/s10734-017-0149-6.
47.
Williams, Glyn, Meth, Paula, & Willis, Katie. Geographies of developing areas: the global South in a changing world. (Routledge, 2009).
48.
James A. Tyner. Globalization and the Geography of Labor Recruitment Firms in the Philippines. Geography Research Forum 23, 78–95 (2016).
49.
Beaverstock, J. V. Transnational elites in the city: British highly-skilled inter-company transferees in New York city’s financial district. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 31, 245–268 (2005).
50.
Conway, D. & Potter, R. B. Caribbean Transnational Return Migrants as Agents of Change. Geography Compass 1, 25–45 (2007).
51.
Datta, K. Transforming South-North Relations? International Migration and Development. Geography Compass 3, 108–134 (2009).
52.
Hein De Haas. International Migration, Remittances and Development: Myths and Facts. Third World Quarterly 26, 1269–1284.
53.
Faist, T. Migrants as transnational development agents: an inquiry into the newest round of the migration–development nexus. Population, Space and Place 14, 21–42 (2008).
54.
Lampert, B. Diaspora and development? Nigerian organizations in London and the transnational politics of belonging. Global Networks 9, 162–184 (2009).
55.
Doreen Massey. Geographies of Responsibility. Geografiska Annaler. Series B, Human Geography 86, 5–18.
56.
Mohan, G. & Power, M. Africa, China and the ‘new’ economic geography of development. Singapore Journal of Tropical Geography 30, 24–28 (2009).
57.
Power, M. & Mohan, G. Good Friends & Good Partners: The ‘New‘ Face of China-African Co-operation. Review of African Political Economy 35, 5–6 (2008).
58.
World Bank. Migration, remittances, and diaspora. http://www.worldbank.org/en/topic/migrationremittancesdiasporaissues/overview.
59.
International Organization for Migration. World migration report 2015. https://www.iom.int/world-migration-report-2015 (2015).
60.
Listen to egs of everyday lived realities of economic globalization from below in the informal sector and note the (circumscribed) agency of people from Delhi and Kampala. Consider your emotions.
61.
More on Gramacho rubbish dump in S America (Rio de Janeiro).
62.
Paul Cloke, ,  Philip Crang, , and  Mark Goodwin. Introducing Human Geographies, Third Edition. (Taylor and Francis, 2013).
63.
Murray, W. E. Geographies of globalization. vol. Routledge contemporary human geography series (Routledge, 2014).
64.
Daniels, P. W. An introduction to human geography. (Pearson, 2012).
65.
Brown, G. & Yaffe, H. Practices of Solidarity: Opposing Apartheid in the Centre of London. Antipode 46, 34–52 (2014).
66.
Madge, C. On the creative (re)turn to geography: poetry, politics and passion. Area 46, 178–185 (2014).
67.
by Gavin Brown, Anna Feigenbaum, Fabian Frenzel, Patrick McCurdy. Protest Camps in International Context: Spaces, Infrastructures and Media of ...
68.
Williams, Glyn, Meth, Paula, & Willis, Katie. Geographies of developing areas: the global South in a changing world. (Routledge, 2009).
69.
Special Issue: Social Movements, the Poor and the New Politics of the Americas. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14747731.2012.739351.
70.
Barnett, Clive, Robinson, Jennifer, Rose, Gillian, & Open University. Geographies of globalisation: a demanding world. (SAGE in association with the Open University, 2008).
71.
Guardian. See latest news on global economy/global trade etc i.e. trans-state governance from above: http://www.theguardian.com/world/wto.
72.
Read about the latest from the world economic forum.
73.
And see contesting politics from below, such as ‘Global Justice Now’  campaigns to end global poverty here .
74.
Find more examples of regional/local resistance movements, such Resistance and repression in Venezuela  .
75.
A global sense of place by Doreen Massey.
76.
Daniels, P. W. An introduction to human geography. (Pearson, 2012).
77.
Paul Cloke, ,  Philip Crang, , and  Mark Goodwin. Introducing Human Geographies, Third Edition. (Taylor and Francis, 2013).
78.
Neal, S., Bennett, K., Cochrane, A., & Mohan, G. (2013). Living multiculture: understanding the new spatial and social relations of ethnicity and multiculture in England. Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy, 31(2), 308-323. http://www.envplan.com/abstract.cgi?id=c11263r.
79.
Bachmann, V. & Sidaway, J. D. Brexit geopolitics. Geoforum 77, 47–50 (2016).
80.
Murray, W. E. Geographies of globalization. vol. Routledge contemporary human geography series (Routledge, 2014).
81.
Eshun, G. & Madge, C. Poetic world-writing in a pluriversal world: a provocation to the creative (re)turn in geography. Social & Cultural Geography 17, 778–785 (2016).
82.
Bartolini, N., Raghuram, P. & Revill, G. Provocations of the present: what culture for what geography? Social & Cultural Geography 17, 745–752 (2016).
83.
Darling, J. A city of sanctuary: the relational re-imagining of Sheffield’s asylum politics. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 35, 125–140 (2010).
84.
Blunt, Alison & McEwan, Cheryl. Postcolonial geographies. vol. Writing past colonialism (Continuum, 2003).
85.
Massey, Doreen B. Space, place and gender. (Polity Press, 1994).
86.
Bird, Jon. Mapping the futures: local cultures, global change. vol. Futures : new perspectives for cultural analysis (Routledge, 1993).
87.
Jon May. Globalization and the Politics of Place: Place and Identity in an Inner London Neighbourhood. Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 21, 194–215.
88.
Barnett, Clive, Robinson, Jennifer, Rose, Gillian, & Open University. Geographies of globalisation: a demanding world. (SAGE in association with the Open University, 2008).
89.
Williams, Glyn, Meth, Paula, & Willis, Katie. Geographies of developing areas: the global South in a changing world. (Routledge, 2009).
90.
Listen to some of the following radio programs and reflect on the globalization of your identity:
91.
Watch the following. Consider these examples in relation to a progressive sense of place? (or not?).
92.
Reflect upon your own culture. How does this condition your ideas about global, national and local cultures? Consider whether a progressive sense of place important in your life? Why or why not?
93.
Page, M. The first global village: how Portugal changed the world. (Casa Das Letras, 2008).
94.
Aguilar, R. & Goldstein, A. The Chinisation of Africa: The Case of Angola. World Economy 32, 1543–1562 (2009).
95.
Emigration from Portugal: Old Wine in New Bottles? | migrationpolicy.org. http://www.migrationpolicy.org/research/emigration-portugal-old-wine-new-bottles.
96.
Barros, C. P., Damásio, B. & Faria, J. R. Reverse FDI in Europe: An Analysis of Angola’s FDI in Portugal. African Development Review 26, 160–171 (2014).
97.
The Lusophone World. http://www.sussex-academic.com/sa/titles/SS_Portuguese/Ashby.htm.
98.
de Sousa Santos, B. & Arriscado Nunes, J. Introduction: Democracy, Participation and Grassroots Movements in Contemporary Portugal. South European Society and Politics 9, 1–15 (2004).
99.
Ferguson, J. Global shadows: Africa in the neoliberal world order. (Duke University Press, 2006).
100.
An Ever-Shadowed Past? Citizens’ Attitudes towards the Dictatorship in Twenty-First Century Portugal.
101.
Teperoglou, E., Freire, A., Andreadis, I. & Leite Viegas, J. M. Elites’ and Voters’ Attitudes towards Austerity Policies and their Consequences in Greece and Portugal. South European Society and Politics 19, 457–476 (2014).
102.
Kerlin, M. D. New Agents of Socio-Economic Development: Guinea-Bissauan Hometown Associations in Portugal. South European Society and Politics 5, 33–55 (2000).
103.
Norrie Macqueen. Belated Decolonization and UN Politics against the Backdrop of the Cold War: Portugal, Britain, and Guinea-Bissau’s Proclamation of Independence, 1973-1974. Journal of Cold War Studies 8, 29–56 (2006).
104.
VINES, A. Continuity and change in Angola: insights from modern history. International Affairs 92, 1229–1237 (2016).
105.
Gastrow, C. Aesthetic Dissent: Urban Redevelopment and Political Belonging in Luanda, Angola. Antipode 49, 377–396 (2017).