AkindeleS. T., GidadoT. O., & OlaopoO. R. (2002, Winter). Globalisation's problems and consequences for the states in Africa.Globalization,2(1). Retrieved September 16, 2002, from http://65.107.211.206/post/africa/akindelel.html.
2.
AstizM. F., WisemanA. W., & BakerD. P. (2002). Slouching towards decentralization: Consequences of globalization for curricular control in national education systems.Comparative Education Review,46(1), 66–88.
3.
BarmeG. R. (1999). In the red: Contemporary Chinese culture.New York: Columbia University Press.
4.
BloomB. S. (1956). Taxonomy of educational objectives, the classification of educational goals.New York: David McKay.
CarnoyM., & RhotenD. (2002). What does globalization mean for educational change? A comparative approach.Comparative Education Review,46(1), 1–9.
7.
Castro RuzF. (2001, April 5). Speech given at the plenary session of the 105th conference of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, Havana. Electronically received from the Cuban Interests Section, Washington, DC, on April 25, 2001: cubaofia@prodigy.net.
CogburnD. L. (1999). Globalization, knowledge, education, and training in the information age. Paper presented at the UNESCO Infoethics 1999 International Congress. Retrieved September 1, 2001, from http://www.unesco.org/webworld/infoethics2/eng/papers.
10.
CoxJ. (2001, October 5). Pakistan's loyalty may rest on its economy.USA Today, pp. 1–2B.
11.
DaleR. (2000, Fall). Globalization and education: Demonstrating a “common world educational culture” or locating a “globally structured educational agenda”? A comparative approach.Educational Theory,50(4), 21–43.
12.
FriedmanT. L. (2000). The Lexus and the olive tree.New York: Anchor Books.
13.
Globalization—The 21st century version of colonialism [Electronic version].The Daily Monitor (Addis Ababa). Retrieved February 6, 2001, from http://allafrica.com/stories/200102060080.html.
14.
GorostiagaX. (1998). Nicaragua: Struggling to survive in the global marketplace. In ButwellA., OgleK., & WrightS. (Eds.), The globalization of hope: Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean in the new millennium (pp. 61–66). Washington, DC: Ecumenical Program on Central America and the Caribbean.
15.
GriecoM., & HolmesL. (1999, October). Tele options for community business: An opportunity for economic growth in Africa.Africa Notes, 1–3.
16.
GuptaP. B. (2000, April 10). The G7's hot date in Havana.Newsweek International, p. 56.
17.
HausmannR. (2001, January/February). Prisoners of geography.Foreign Policy,122, 45–53.
InkelesA., & SmithD. H. (1998). Becoming modern. In SeligsonM. A, & Passe-SmithJ. T. (Eds.), Development and underdevelopment: The political economy of global inequality (pp. 209–218). Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers.
20.
JilbertoA. E., & MommenA. (1998). Regionalization and globalization in the modem world economy: Perspectives on the third world and transitional economies.New York: Routledge.
21.
KaewdangR. (2000, December). Indigenous knowledge for a learning society. Paper presented at the sixth Asia-Pacific Centre of Educational Innovation for Development (ACEID) Conference, in Bangkok, Thailand. Retrieved September 16, 2002, from http://www.unescobkk.org/education/aceid/conference/con_papers.htm.
LucasK. (2000). Primary education in Ecuador's Chota Valley: Reflections on education and social reproduction in the development era. USA. (Purchased in hard copy through http://www.dissertation.eom/library/1121024.htm.)
MenchúR. (1998). The earth holds our memory: Mayan faith and resistance. In ButwellA., OgleK., & WrightS. (Eds.), The globalization of hope: Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean in the new millennium (pp. 83–86). Washington, DC: Ecumenical Program on Central America and the Caribbean.
26.
MittlemanJ. H., & PashnaM. K. (1997). Out from underdevelopment revisited: Changing global structures and the remaking of the Third World.New York: St. Martin's Press.
27.
MowlanaH. (1998). Globalisation of mass media: Opportunities and challenges for the societies.Cooperation South,2, 22–39.
28.
OhiorhenuanJ. F. E. (1998). The south in an era of globalisation.Cooperation South,2, 6–15.
29.
OwensJ. (1998). Neoliberalism intensifies the struggle for land in Honduras. In ButwellA., OgleK., & WrightS. (Eds.), The globalization of hope: Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean in the new millennium (pp. 71–76). Washington, DC: Ecumenical Program on Central America and the Caribbean.
30.
OyejideT. A. (1998). African trade prospects in a globalising era.Cooperation South,2, 107–117.
31.
PetrellaR. (1996). Globalization and internationalization: The dynamics of the emerging world order. In BoyerR., & DracheD. (Eds.), States against markets: The limits of globalization (pp. 62–83). London: Routledge.
SmithA. (1967 [1776]). An inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations.Chicago: H. Regnery.
34.
ThamanK. H. (2000, December). Interfacing global and indigenous knowledge for improved learning. Paper presented at the sixth Asia-Pacific Centre of Educational Innovation for Development (ACEID) Conference in Bangkok, Thailand. Retrieved September 16, 2002, from http://www.unescobkk.org/education/aceid/conference/Panel_2/thaman.doc.
35.
WallersteinJ. (1998). The present state of the debate on world inequality. In SeligsonM. A., & Passe-SmithJ. T. (Eds.), Development and underdevelopment: The political economy of global inequality (pp. 277–290). Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner Publishers.
36.
World Bank. (2002). Debt relief for sustainable development. Retrieved November 15, 2002, from http://www.worldbank.org.hipc.
37.
WrightS. (1998). The globalization of hope. In ButwellA., OgleK., & WrightS. (Eds.), The globalization of hope: Central America, Mexico, and the Caribbean in the new millennium (pp. 13–32). Washington, DC: Ecumenical Program on Central America and the Caribbean.