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Paperback Global Inc.: An Atlas of the Multinational Corporation Book

ISBN: 156584727X

ISBN13: 9781565847279

Global Inc.: An Atlas of the Multinational Corporation

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

Of the hundred largest economies in the world, forty-nine are corporations. A handful of corporate giants control most of the world's energy, technology, food, banks, industry, and media. Yet despite... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

First Rate Visualization, Can Be Applied to Everything

I was trained in the 1970's, and did my undergraduate thesis on "Multinational Corporations: Home and Country Issues." I could have used this stellar book back then. It does for multinational corporations what "Global Reach" by Richard Barnett did, in the 1970's, but with a powerful method adapted from "State of the World" atlases. This book could easily be converted into an online interactive serious game for change useful not only to students, but to governments. The book not only charts where and how much the multinationals are doing, but it goes into direct impacts (both benefits and external diseconomies), concluding with an absolutely brilliant section on effects of both governments and multinational corporations across the economic, health, environment, technology, culture, education, and law sectors. The graphics are in a class by themselves, the notes are effective and to the point (if you're over 50 as I am, you may need granny glasses for some of the fine print), the overall layout is very well done, and the sources as well as the index are top-notch. One of the principal authors of this book, Medard Gabel, was associated with Buckminster Fuller when they conceptualized the World Game, which today is still an analog gtame with cards, token, and hard-copy maps. The author has moved on to found BigPictureSmallWorld, producing serious games on hunger and other topics, and he points with great respect to Real Lives, by his friend and colleague Bob Runyan, which can be downloaded such that your teen-ager can experience the real life of a Bangladeshi girl or an Iraqi teen-ager before the US invasion. Not only is this book tremendous on substance, I believe it is, along with State of the World Atlas and other similar books that I have reviewed in the past, the first view of what a real-time live online Earth Game will look like, where individuals can "game" and learn and act at the zip code level, the state/province level, the national level, and the global levels, first setting their social values, then interacting with the ten high level threats, the twelve policies, and the eight major players other than the EU and the US. From such a game will come informed engaged citizens who will demand moral capitalism and honest democracy. I don't want to over-sell this book, so take the following with a grain of salf: this book is to serious games as the printing press was to the democratization of knowledge. The next big leap for mankind is going to be the use of serious games for change to help individuals at every socio-economic level and in every ideo-cultural milieu, "make sense" of all information in all languages all the time. We are now ready for the Earth Game that will allow the people to complete with elites in publicly solving global problems, and it is my view, and I believe also the view of at least one of the authors of this book, that the people working within an open global game will soundly defeat the elites who have r

Huh?

Um, sure....if your students are up to reading 500-1000 page UN reports (and I think you mean UNCTAD.ORG), then by all means, send them straight to the source. If, on the other hand, you need a reasonable distillation of a fairly massive amount of data for use in, say, an undergrad level business or social science course, then this book is first-rate.

It's about time...

It's about time someone came up with a book like this. After reading George Melloan's column in the Wall St. Journal I picked up the book that he cited; one Global Inc. This modest gem of a book packs a real wallop, distilling and dividing thousands of otherwise arcane facts and figures into a tangible(and worrisome) source that pretty much confirms one's worst fears when it comes to globalization. A must have for both my high school and college econ. students.
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