Reference no: EM131366430
Impacts of a Borderless Society
You now live in a world where geographic boundaries cease to exist when it comes to goods, services, and even food. Most people think nothing of having freshly squeezed Florida orange juice or New Zealand kiwis for breakfast; even those who live in New York City with 10-inches of snow on the ground in the middle of January. In this day and age, everything and anything is available for consumption year-round at a local grocery store if you have the financial means.
Although it may be an "unintended consequence," these conveniences can come with potentially major ecological and economic impacts that are both positive and negative. For example, the coffee you drink may come from beans imported from Columbia, the sugar you use may come from India, or the steaks you sear on the grill may have come from Argentina. How much fuel was spent transporting these products across land and ocean? Were any pesticides used? If so, was it done in a sustainable fashion? Were forests cleared to make room for grazing herds or larger agricultural fields? These are just a few of the many questions that should be considered when making selections at the grocery store.
Using the Internet, your textbook or the library, conduct your own research to learn more about the variety of ways in which foods can be acquired:
- Carolyn, C. (2007). 100 miles and counting. Retrieved from https://www.bizlink.com/foodfiles/PDFs/apr2007/editorial.pdf
- Jonathan, K. (2010). Eat Green: Our everyday food choices affect global warming and the environment. Retrieved from https://www.nrdc.org/globalWarming/files/eatgreenfs_feb2010.pdf
- Think Global, Buy Local: A new study looks at the impact of buying local produce on local economies. (2014). Retrieved from https://foodtank.com/news/2014/04/think-global-buy-local-a-new-study-looks-at-the-impact-of-buying-local-prod
- Local & Regional Food Systems. (2015). Retrieved from https://www.sustainabletable.org/254/local-regional-food-systems
For this Assignment, you will write a 1000-word essay in which you analyze a single meal you eat. Please be sure the meal has a minimum of four components. For example:
1. Beef steak, baked potato, butter, and 2% milk.
2. Eggs scrambled with cheese, strawberries, and coffee.
3. Peanut butter, grape jam, white bread, and potato chips.
Address the following questions as you write your Assignment:
1. Meal analysis: Discuss the events and methods of production that allow major grocery chain stores to carry these items.
- Source identification: If you were to purchase each item at a major grocery chain store, where would these items be sourced? For example, where were the fruits or vegetables grown, or meats raised immediately prior to sale? Do not discuss the history or origin of the item (e.g., corn or maize originated in Mexico around 2500 BC.), but instead, the corn was grown and harvested from a central New Jersey farm.
- Farming and labor practices: What farming methods were likely used to grow these items, and how do these methods impact the environment around the farms as well as the employees who work within these establishments?
- Packaging, processing and shipping: Were the items grown and shipped in from another country? What types of processing and packaging must take place in order for you to be able to purchase the product?
2. Economic and ecological analysis of food choice: Discuss the ecological and economic advantages and disadvantages of purchasing food items that are locally sourced versus those shipped from other areas of the country and from around the world. Use your assigned Reading for this unit, as well as supplemental sources, to explore the impacts our food purchases may have on the environment and economy and how these choices influence multiculturalism and diversity around the globe.
3. Applying food choice to Think Globally, Act Locally: The food choices people make have the potential to generate both local and global impacts and potentially serve as solutions to some of the challenges discussed so far. This concept can be summarized in the phrase "Think Globally, Act Locally." Discuss:
- How you would interpret this phrase based upon your meal analysis. For example, if you were to follow the suggestions shared within the articles provided above, where could you obtain the items (name specific local places within your community)? If a food item is not available locally, is there an alternative that you could use as a substitute?
- How can your individual actions and the choices you make when planning and buying meals serve as a possible solution, and how they may possibly change in the future?
- How your choices, when combined with those of others, can have a global impact.
Visit a museum or gallery exhibition
: Visit a museum or gallery exhibition or attend a theater or musical performance. The activity should have content that fits our course well.- Write a report that describes your experience.
|
Bipartisan campaign reform act of 2002 banned
: The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 banned both corporations and labor unions from using general treasury funds to make contributions to candidates and from using independent expenditures for "electioneering communications."
|
Write a paper detailing how erm is similar and different
: Enterprise risk management (ERM) is used in many different business settings to evaluate and continuously improve processes.The chief operating officer (COO) of your health care organization was recently hired from outside of health care and has us..
|
Should all businesses have the opt-in statement
: Should all businesses/organizations have the opt-in statement? Or should they only have an opt-out statement ?in which you are automatically enrolled unless you accept/check the out-out statement?
|
Discuss the events and methods of production
: Meal analysis: Discuss the events and methods of production that allow major grocery chain stores to carry these items. Source identification: If you were to purchase each item at a major grocery chain store, where would these items be sourced
|
Business communication essentials
: Select a product or service for this assignment in which you believe your organization should invest capital resources to develop for sale in a global environment. Review Ch. 4 of Business Communication Essentials.
|
Identify which leaders were involved in the communication
: Explain how change was communicated. Identify which leaders were involved in the communication. Identify change model.Format your assignment consistent with APA guidelines, with a reference page and corresponding in-text citations.
|
Give the answer of muliple choice question
: Historical research is chiefly concerned with:To a historical researcher studying the lives of women pioneers in the late 1880s, letters written by Rebecca Adams, a pioneer woman on the Nebraska plains, to her sister in Philadelphia would be:
|
Define restriction fragment length polymorphism
: Define restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis. The information generated from RFLP is useful in criminal investigations. Suppose some DNA samples are taken from a crime scene, suspect, and the victim. The samples are amplified..
|