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Globalization and the New World Order

9781626007321
336 pages
Marquette University Press

$25.00

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Overview
In the face of recent economic shocks, the interconnected world developed by the hegemonic structures of post–World War II globalism is forced to adapt. But how will it react to uncertainties resulting from changes to the structure of free trade, disruptions to supply chains and just-in-time inventories, and increasing national calls that question the benefits of migration? Will there be a united response to check financial crises, climate disruptions, and structural imbalances in world trade as people seek to better their lives outside of their birthplace? Or will the responses intensify the conflicts and crises surrounding immigration policies today?

Written by scholars who take interdisciplinary approaches to these challenges, the essays in this volume explore what a new international economic order could look like. Bringing together philosophical, spiritual, sociological, theological, and ethical treatments of the issues, the chapters address how globalization either supports or destroys life; how we measure income and understand structures that will either perpetuate or overcome the systems exacerbating inequality; and, finally, how, with philosophical grounding, we can better understand globalization from the perspectives of history, ethics, and regional development studies.

Essays have been contributed by Humphrey Ani, Andrew Blosser, Thiago Garcia, Kenneth Himes, Léocadie Lushombo, Taylor Nutter, Joseph Ogbonnaya, Nicholas Olkovich, Paul St. Amour and Andrea Vicini.

Author Bio
Joseph Ogbonnaya is associate professor of Theology at Marquette University, Milwaukee, WI. He is the director of the Marquette Lonergan Project and the International Institute for Method in Theology. He is the author of several books, including, most recently, Under the Shade Tree: Reading the Bible in Africa (2025), and has edited and co-edited several collections of essays. Léocadie Lushombo is an assistant professor of Christian Theological Ethics at the Jesuit School of Theology at Santa Clara University. She is a consecrated member of the Teresian Association. She earned her PhD in Theological Ethics and a Sacred Theology Licentiate Degree from the School of Theology and Ministry from Boston College. She is the author of Ecological Sustainability for ‘Life on Land’: Wellspring of Indigenous Knowledge” (2025) and Religious Women Teachers of Synodality: The ‘Abundant Catch’ of the Peripheries (2025).