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Capital Versus Labour: Globalisation, Marginalised and Crisis of Governance.

The process of globalisation essentially operates in the asymmetrical real world fragmented into developed and developing regions/states; core and periphery; rich and poor people; and privileged and the marginalised groups. Given such a wide range of heterogeneities, its impact on all of them cannot...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ronki Ram
Format: Journal Article
Published: MAN AND DEVELOPMENT 2007
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100 |a Ronki Ram   |9 49186 
245 |a Capital Versus Labour: Globalisation, Marginalised and Crisis of Governance. 
260 |c 2007  |a MAN AND DEVELOPMENT 
300 |b Volume 29, No.2 June 2007  
520 |a The process of globalisation essentially operates in the asymmetrical real world fragmented into developed and developing regions/states; core and periphery; rich and poor people; and privileged and the marginalised groups. Given such a wide range of heterogeneities, its impact on all of them cannot be uniform. Its impact in different contexts and on different social and economic categories, matters differently. It is generally perceived that the impact of the process of globalisation is inversely proportional to one’s placement in the socio-economic scale. This study attempts to explore how and in what way the process of globalisation affects the marginal sections of the society and its consequent impact on the crisis of governance.  
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