CMT6420EN - Globalization, Digitalization and Culture

Course description

Individuals, organizations and countries are assimilating and melding at rates never before experienced in our history. This course will examine influences on globalized political climates, economies and cultures. Students will appraise these impacts and offer interpretation of their effects.

How this course benefits students

This is a course that aims to position students in the larger context of global systems – economic, cultural, and geopolitical. The primary objective is to increase understanding of the interdependent world in which we live – and the pervasive, unstoppable movement of globalization that characterizes it. The course also seeks to equip students with some of the necessary cultural knowledge and empathy required to operate in the increasingly dominant “monoculture,” and at the same time to navigate (and value) multicultural distinctiveness.

Why this course is important

Unequal distribution of power and economic resources are important issues in an increasingly globalized world. The cause and effect of the inequalities that have been produced by ever evolving globalized engagements are important to be able to identify and respond to at a heightened level of understanding and compassion. As one better understands the context and impacts of globalization within the country they are engaged, they can better identify with and value those individuals within those circumstances, while diminishing the possibility to “other” those of different cultures and contexts. This course extends the opportunity to analyze and assimilate these theories and practices for these purposes.

Credit hours
3 hours
Subject area
Community Transformation
Educational level
Master
Learning type
Instructional
Prerequisites
None
Upcoming terms
Pending
* Schedule subject to change. Please contact the Registrar's office with schedule questions.
Professor
Prof. Sublime Mabiala, Professor of International Development

How this course relates to missional core values

Biblically based

As the student reaches out to our global community with the message of Christ s/he will strive to meet them at their point of need and understanding. Understanding better how they have arrived at where they are by examining the positive and negative influences of globalization leads to that end. “For though I am free from all, I have made myself a servant to all, that I might win more of them. To the Jews I became as a Jew, in order to win Jews. To those under the law I became as one under the law (though not being myself under the law) that I might win those under the law. To those outside the law I became as one outside the law (not being outside the law of God but under the law of Christ) that I might win those outside the law. To the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some. I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share with them in its blessings.” 1 Corinthians 9:19-23

Missionally driven

As the student goes out among individuals from different backgrounds and understandings this course helps s/he to better grasp not only the new culture, but also helps the student to better understand the influences of an increasingly globalized world that were potentially impressed upon the receiving culture by the culture and society of our origin. Do we, coming from a globally strong country, have a positive or negative influence on where we are going and how does that potentially impact how we are received?

Contextually informed

The content of this course directly strengthens the cultural competence of the student to engage and work with increase knowledge and effectiveness in cross-cultural situations

Interculturally focused

As the course unpacks the impacts of an increasingly globalized world it reveals both positive and negative influences on population and society and examines the interaction between population dynamics and economic development, social changes and environment, and race and ethnicity factors.

Practically minded

This course offers a practical examination of the influences of globalization and how that effects the global north and the global south. This strengthens the student’s ability to critically analyze motivating factors and strengthen their impacts in their global setting.

Experientially transformed

Students will have the opportunity to examine their own real world situations to research, identify and report evidence and impact of various development theories and practices that is demonstrated in their own context.