
Contents
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7.1 Introduction 7.1 Introduction
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7.2 Origins and Dynamics 7.2 Origins and Dynamics
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7.2.1 Antecedents 7.2.1 Antecedents
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7.2.2 The First Global Economy 7.2.2 The First Global Economy
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7.2.3 The Disintegration of the First Global Economy 7.2.3 The Disintegration of the First Global Economy
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7.2.4 The Origins of the Second Global Economy 7.2.4 The Origins of the Second Global Economy
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7.2.5 The Second Global Economy 7.2.5 The Second Global Economy
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7.3 Organization of Global Firms 7.3 Organization of Global Firms
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7.4 Public Policy and Global Business 7.4 Public Policy and Global Business
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7.5 Global Firms and Global Welfare 7.5 Global Firms and Global Welfare
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7.6 Conclusions 7.6 Conclusions
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References References
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7 Globalization
Get accessGeoffrey Jones, Harvard University
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Published:02 September 2009
Cite
Abstract
Globalization is a central issue in business history. The radical shrinking of distance that began in the nineteenth century, but which had a much-longer history, transformed the business of firms and entrepreneurs, and the world in which they operated. By the twenty-first century, few firms anywhere in the world, even small enterprises, were unaffected by some aspect of globalization, while large corporations were at the heart of the process. Until recently, much of the business-history literature on globalization was focused on the history of multinationals. There are many literature reviews on this domain. This literature is now being explicitly integrated within the history of globalization. This article extends this approach by focusing on the contribution of business historians to understanding the history of globalization. It suggests that as global perspectives progressively replace national ones, new research agendas and methodologies will need to be employed.
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