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Global California: Rising to the Cosmopolitan Challenge

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California is at the cutting edge of technological change, demographic transformation, and international engagement. It has the country's largest population, and is its biggest producer of agricultural and manufactured goods, its main exporter and importer, and a leading center for higher education, research, the media, and philanthropy. Its population is the most international; more than a quarter of the state's residents were born in another country. But habits of thought and structures date from the mid-twentieth century, when California was turned inward. California today lacks ideas, institutions, and policies commensurate with its global stakes and clout. Global California addresses an important how the citizens of a state with the dimensions and power of a nation are affected by international trends, and what they can do to identify and promote their own interests in a rapidly changing world. In this fresh, well-informed, and balanced analysis, Abraham Lowenthal deals with numerous thorny issues―from globalization, trade, and infrastructure to immigration, environmental pollution, climate change, and California's ties with neighboring Mexico and the dynamic Asian economies. A recognized authority on foreign affairs, Lowenthal argues that the real choices are not whether to cheer globalization or condemn it. Rather, Californians need to think strategically and act effectively to gain as much as possible from international engagement while managing its risks and costs. They need to build "cosmopolitan capacity" to understand and respond to global challenges and opportunities. Too much is at stake for California―its citizens, government, firms and non-governmental organizations―to leave thinking and acting on international affairs to the federal government and to East Coast think tank experts. This volume shows Californians how to succeed in an ever more interconnected world.

240 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2009

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About the author

Abraham F. Lowenthal

52 books2 followers
is Professor Emeritus of International Relations at the University of Southern California and President Emeritus of the Pacific Council on International Policy; an adjunct professor (research) at Brown’s Watson Institute and a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution. He was the founding director of both the Latin American Program of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and of the Inter-American Dialogue, and served as a Ford Foundation official in Latin America, as director of studies at the Council on Foreign Relations, and on numerous editorial and governance boards. His AB, MPA and PhD are all from Harvard University.

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Profile Image for Jarrod.
36 reviews4 followers
August 22, 2009
This is a short book and could be even shorter if an editor would have cut out the repetition of facts in chapter 2 that were stated in chapter 1.

The other problem about the book is it fails to consider if the experiences of California are replicable anywhere else. Would the successes of California work in North Dakota? Nor does the book completely qualify the success of California and why they should be continued. By failing in this manner the book leaves the reader wondering if the plans in the book are sustainable or in their last moments before a new dynamic emerges, thus rending the book pointless.
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