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Assignment #2 (For Dept of English and Media study): Textual analysis project & Questions and exercises.

  Barriers of time and space have fallen because of the giant strides in technology.   Barriers to trade and investment that segmented the world economy have fallen as well because of government policies. These two mutually reinforcing developments over the past fifty years have in large part fashioned the world economy, fueling globalization that has become the mantra of this era and the multinational enterprise (MNE) its priest. A different paradigm is to be applied as capital and technology are becoming extremely mobile. In principle, then, borderless economy is a crucial issue with important implications for individual behavior as distinctive national attributes_ the most important, perhaps is home biasness_ are being eroded in Borderless World and Nation less business.      As the erosion of discontinuities inherent in globalization is likely to continue; locations and geography will cease to matter. Put succinctly, there is good reason to believe that the “home bias” will

Stealing knitted secrets By Professor Dr Sohail Ansari & Textual analysis by J Bainbridge

  Posting below _is the first one of the series_ is the consequence of the discussion with Tahir of English dept.   Plagiarism informs judgments by insulting it ·        Plagiarism is often viewed as a practice that steals secrets knitted together already.   ·        Intelligence is often viewed as a profession that steals secrets and then knits those secrets together for policymakers in order to inform their judgments. Michael Hayden Textual analysis by J Bainbridge   Textual analysis is a way for researchers to gather information about how other human beings make sense of the world . It is a methodology _ a data-gathering process_ for those researchers who want to understand the ways in which members of various cultures and subcultures make sense of who they are, and of how they fit into the world in which they live. Textual analysis is useful for researchers working in cultural studies, media studies, in mass communication , and perhaps even in sociology and