Abstract

Abstract An intermediate zone between the world's North and South is identified. In these global suburbs, informal and underground economies have prospered and movements of all kinds have multiplied. These suburbs are sites of both emigration and immigration. While some parts of the global suburbs are becoming richer and are growing rapidly, other pans are becoming impoverished. The prospects for the global suburbs contain both the possibility of integration and the risk of balkanisation. The interest of strategists of the North in the balkanisation of global suburbs is examined. It is concluded that the future of international relations is at stake in the global suburbs, out of which may arise new empires and centres of power.

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