Globalization is not a new word to most of us. It has been popular for several years. The biggest winners could be developing countries. On the other hand, developed countries also benefit from globalization as they attract a large number of talented people to work for them. However, everything has two sides. Globalization has a negative influence on many countries. At this time, the sustainable development of globalization comes to people's minds. Human beings hope that sustainable development will make globalization work well for all countries and people, reduce losses and avoid negative impacts. From this survey we will know the definition of sustainable development and the reasons why we should support sustainable development. What is sustainable development? Sustainable development, in fact, has various characteristics: balance between the natural system and the anthropic system; address the immigration issue well; balancing the richest and the poorest; finally, oil and gas producers have a future. In the article “Is ethics the missing link?”, Yolanda Kakabadse argues that sustainable development is due to the fact that both natural and artificial systems are well developed and humans could benefit from them in many ways. you wait for a long time. Kakabadse, an environmentalist from Ecuador, also says that economic globalization on the one hand brings benefits to most nations, but on the other the benefits are unbalanced. At the same time, international trade and markets have destroyed the environment. From the Pew Global Attitudes Project, we are given the characteristic of sustainable development in the economic sphere: addressing the issue of immigration well. In the article “Global audiences welcome global trade – but not immigration,” it is found in… midway through the document… Sources (2nd ed., pp. 186-189). Boston, MA: Heinle/Cengage Learning.Kakabadse, Y. (2002). Is ethics the missing link? In N. Dollahite and J. Haun (Eds.), Sourcework: Academic Writing from Sources (2nd ed., pp. 186-189). Boston, MA:Heinle/Cengage Learning.Knickerbocker, B. (2004, January 22). If the poor get richer, does the world see progress? In N. Dollahite and J. Haun (Eds.), Sourcework: Academic Writing from Sources (2nd ed., pp. 186-189). Boston, MA: Heinle/Cengage Learning.Williams, B. (2002). WPC: Faithfulness to sustainable development is fundamental to the future of oil. Oil & Gas Journal, pp. 34. Global public opinion welcomes global trade, but not immigration. (2007, October 4). Pew GlobalAttitudes Project. In N. Dollahite and J. Haun (Eds.), Sourcework: Academic Writing from Sources (2nd ed., pp. 177-178). Boston, MA: Heinle/Cengage Learning.
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