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Globalization. “I’ve got the whole world in my Hands”. Canada’s Contribution. CIDA = Canadian International Development Agency CIDA’s aim: reduce poverty, promote human rights, and support sustainable development
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Globalization “I’ve got the whole world in my Hands”
Canada’s Contribution • CIDA = Canadian International Development Agency • CIDA’s aim: reduce poverty, promote human rights, and support sustainable development • Priorities: reduce poverty, democracy, business development, health, education, equality between women and men, and environmental sustainability
Who have we helped? • Sub-Saharan Africa: $1.3 billion – 46.74% • North Africa and the Middle East: $129 million – 4.6% • Americas: $459 million – 16.5% • Asia: $780 million – 28.1% • Eastern Europe: $114 million – 4.1%
Why do we bother? • people living in extreme poverty went from 1.25 billion to 980 million • 6.8 million more children are in school in a number of African countries ) • 61,000 people now have access to running water and sanitation in Honduras
What makes a country developed? • High standard of living • Industrialized • Lots of parts to the economy • Democracy • Lack of corruption • Example: north America
What makes a country developing? • Low standard of living • Lots of people working in primary industries (farming) • Low education, healthcare, life expectancy • Example: sub-saharan africa
How do we know which we are? • Human Development Index (HDI) • Calculator for development • Look at: income per capita (GDP), life expectancy, birth rate, death rate, literacy (ability to read & write)
Famously and Firstly Canadian • Canadian John McIntosh discovered McIntosh apples in 1811 growing along the St. Lawrence River Valley • The first recorded baseball game was played in Beachville, Ontario in 1838 • Montreal Professor Thomas Sterry Hunt developed special green ink to produce American bills ‘greenbacks’ that couldn’t be forged in 1862 • The world’s second most popular sport ‘basketball’ was the idea of Canadian James Naismith in 1892
Famously and Firstly Canadian • Tom Ryan became the father of five-pin bowling, by developing the game in Toronto in 1909 • Torontonian William Knapp developed the yucky-tasting Buckley’s Mixture in 1919 • In 1948 Harry Galley received his patented for his stainless steel kitchen sink • Montreal Canadian goalie Jacques Plante became the first goalie to start wearing a mask • Instant mashed potatoes were patented by Edward Asselbergs in 1961
Famously and Firstly Canadian • Muskol the world’s most effective bug repellent is the creation of Charlie Coll (1970) • Leslie McFarlane penned the famous Hardy Boys series as Franklin W. Dixon • Torontonian Alex Tilley created the nearly indestructible ‘Tilley Hat’ in 1980 • Winnipeg was the first city in the world to develop the emergency ‘911’ system • Canadian Deanna Brasseaur & Jane Foster became the world’s first female jet fighter pilots in 1989
Famously and Firstly Canadian • Tim Collins of B.C. developed the Viewer Chip for parents to block offensive television programs • In 1998, the ‘Sam Bat’ a maple baseball bat made by Ottawa carpenter Sam Holman was approved for use in professional baseball leagues • In 1999 Ontario became the first place in the world to protect the skyscape from light pollution by designating a dark-sky park south of Lake Muskoka • Canadians have developed – Trivial Pursuit, Balderdash, Mind Trap, Pictionary and A Question of Scruples
Famously and Firstly Canadian • Canada is home to the world’s… • Oldest chain store business is Canada’s Hudson Bay Company founded in 1670 • Longest highway, the Trans Canada highway - 7,821 km • Longest street, Yonge Street - 1,900 km • Longest bridge – Confederation Bridge linking P.E.I. to N.B. – 12.9 km • Longest skating rink – 7.8 km Rideau Canal in Ottawa • Longest recreational trail – Trans Canada Trail will be over 16,000 km long
Greatest Canadian Invention • Of all these great Canadian ideas, which ones are the “greatest”? • CBC asked Canadians to vote for the Greatest Canadian Invention and showed us the results in early 2007. • www.cbc.ca/inventions
Greatest Canadian Invention #10 • Poutine
Greatest Canadian Invention #9 • Electric Wheelchair
Greatest Canadian Invention #8 • Zipper
Greatest Canadian Invention #7 • Robertson Screw
Greatest Canadian Invention #6 • Pacemaker
Greatest Canadian Invention #5 • Wonderbra
Greatest Canadian Invention #4 • Five Pin Bowling
Greatest Canadian Invention #3 • Light bulb
Greatest Canadian Invention #2 • Telephone
Greatest Canadian Invention #1 • Insulin
Fair Trade • Coffee from Kenya, textiles from India, tea from Sri Lanka, nuts from El Salvador, ceramics from Mexico, and chocolate from Ghana… • Many of the things we buy are grown or made in developing countries. • But do the people who produce these goods get a fair price for them, and what are their working conditions like?
Fair Trade • For most workers, wages are low, there is no job security, and working conditions are often unhealthy and unsafe. • Fair trade is an international system of doing business based on dialogue, transparency, and respect.
Fair Trade • What is your role? • Churches, communities, school, unions, businesses and consumer groups are pushing to move Fair Trade products into mainstream grocery stores • The demand must increase, so more workers will benefit • Demand products will superior quality • Become a player in the solution to global trade inequalities
Globalization • Globalization is a trend towards greater interconnectedness of the world’s financial, economic, technological, political, cultural, sociological, ecological and geographical systems.
Globalization • Positive Impacts of Globalization • Living conditions have improved • Increased understanding of different cultures • More jobs • Reduce costs of goods
Globalization • Negative Impacts of Globalization • Focus is often on short-term gains only • Rich are richer, poor are poorer • destruction of the environment • neglect of human rights
Globalization • Global Village Institutions • United Nations • World Bank • NATO • International Court • We are all part of the global village, but do we all share it equally?
Transnational Corporations • A transnational corporation (TNC) is a company that exists in multiple nations • Headquarters are in one country, but branch plants are in several other countries. • Can you think of some examples of large TNCs?
Child Labour • What is Child Labour? • Children under the age of 12 that are working • Worst forms of child labour • enslaved, forcibly recruited, prostituted, trafficked, forced into illegal activities and exposed to hazardous work. • Can children work? • Yes, as long as it does not negatively affect their health and development or interfere with education
Convention on the Rights of Child • Most universal international agreement • Ensures children's rights • Has been ratified by 190 countries • Only two countries have not ratified: the United States & Somalia, however they have signaled their intention to ratify by signing the convention.
Convention on the Rights of Child • The Convention on the Rights of the Child…. • Reinforces fundamental human dignity. • Highlights and defends the family's role in children's lives • Seeks respect for children – but not at the expense of the human rights or responsibilities of others. • Endorses the principle of non-discrimination • Establishes clear obligations