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Africans and Globalization: Linguistic, Literary, and Technological
Contents and Discontents considers the substance and
dissatisfactions of globalization on Africa and its Diaspora.
Although variously framed across disciplines, globalization has
generally entailed non-milieu bound interactions, which alters the
existence of its participants. The concerns about the impact of
globalization have been raised in relation to Africa and have
related to the helpful and deleterious effects. Increasingly,
industrialization (without consideration of environmental impacts)
and westernization (including erosion of indigenous values) are
perceived as synonymous with globalization. This multidisciplinary
collection contends that in theory, globalization linked Africa
with the world through trade and information sharing, thereby
increasing development. This collection provides reflections based
on contemporary research within the linguistic, literary, and
technological areas of study. It illustrates that globalization is
not a single process but rather a complex set of processes that
seemingly operate in an oppositional manner. The collected works
make for exciting appraisal as they highlight some of the contents
and discontents of globalization across multiple areas of human
endeavor in Africa and its diaspora.
This edited collection provides a window into Africa's diversity. A
wide-ranging body of authors offers a valuable glimpse into the
challenges and opportunities presented by globalization to the
youth in Africa and its diaspora, while issuing a stern call for
action to local governments to act now and tap into the energy of
Africa's burgeoning youth population. In doing so, the authors
expand extant literature on the continent's coping with
globalization in the context of young people in various African
nations. Featured in the collection are views on education,
language, agriculture, sport and technology, deeply interwoven into
the schooling, behavior, and health of youth. Specifically, these
practices are found in both formal and non-formal education,
agricultural production, and food nutrition, computer technology,
and sport's amelioration of health issues, throughout Africa.
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