Answer:
Abstract
Much of the literature about globalization exaggerates the degree of novelty. In this review, we concentrate on claims about what has changed about cities under late capitalism and globalization. Although we suggest that cities have long been influenced by global forces, we conclude that the roles of cities in the global system have changed considerably as a result of the time-space compression made possible by new transportation, communication, and organizational technologies. After discussing what the global perspective means within anthropology, and how it affects urban anthropological research, our review concentrates on three complex issues. First is whether the global factory and increasing knowledge-intensivity have decreased or increased the utility of the intermediary or brokerage roles that cities play. Second, we examine changes in how people live in globalizing cities. Third, we consider the implications of the construction and maintenance of relationships across borders for processes of citizenship, affiliation, and transnational social movements.
Publisher information
Annual Reviews was founded in 1932 as a nonprofit scientific publisher to help scientists cope with the ever-increasing volume of scientific research. Comprehensive, authoritative, and critical reviews written by the world's leading scientists are now published in twenty-six disciplines in the biological, physical, and social sciences. According to the "Impact Factor" rankings of the Institute for Scientific Information's Science Citation Index, each Annual Review ranks at or near the top of its respective subject category.
Answer:
excavation
Explanation:
Excavation retains its central role in field-work because it yields the most reliable evidence for human activities in the past and changes in those activities from period to period.
In archeology, excavation is the procedure by which archaeologists define, retrieve, and record cultural and biological remains found in the ground. It is an important archaeological tool for understanding the processes of the human past. Past activities leave traces in the form of house foundations, graves, artifacts, bones, seeds, and numerous other traces which are helpful in studying the way of life of the people who lived in that era. Excavation helps uncover this remains.
Answer: selective
Explanation:
She is trying to be selective ,to focus on one particular thing but distractions keep coming.
Answer:
Skimming the text,
Summarizing the text
Establishing purpose
Explanation:
Prereading strategies link the mind so as to prepare the mind in reading text or passages and these increase comprehension by giving the reader hints on what the reader will read. These non fiction prereading strategies are skimming, establishing the purpose and summarizing the text.
Skimming is reading or looking through the text rapidly in order to have a general information about the text. Once you have skim through, going back and looking through the book will supply more information about it.
Establishing purpose, is pinpoint and having full knowledge about the main idea and purpose of the text.
Summarizing is summing up and giving a general summary of what the text entails.