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Observing that nations with strong trading links don't make war on each other, New York Times columnist Friedman argues that if our societies can adapt quickly enough, globalisation promises a brave new era of cooperation, with India and China leading a boom in the East.
Hailed by some as brilliantly forward-thinking, The World Is Flat: A brief history of the 21st century has been criticised by others for ignoring global trade's reliance on cheap labour. Either way, the chapter in which Friedman traces the origins of a Dell computer's components, and how far and fast they have travelled, is bravura stuff.
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Fear: A Cultural History »
The World Is Flat
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