Chapter 20 — Globalisation and Hybrid Civilisations: Convergence, Fragmentation and Digital Identity

PART VI — FEEDBACK LOOPS AND CIVILISATIONAL DYNAMICS


20.1 Introduction

Globalisation has intensified the interaction between religion, culture, politics and economics across national boundaries. Migration, digital communication, transnational markets and supranational governance structures have weakened the isolation of civilisations. Rather than producing uniform convergence, globalisation has generated both hybridisation and fragmentation (Appadurai, 1996; Castells, 1996).

This chapter analyses how globalisation reshapes civilisational dynamics through:

  1. Cultural convergence and diffusion
  2. Hybrid religious forms
  3. Transnational political networks
  4. Digital identity formation
  5. Fragmentation and backlash

The central claim is that globalisation does not dissolve difference; it reorganises it.


20.2 Cultural Convergence and Diffusion

Economic integration spreads:

  • Consumer brands
  • Media formats
  • Educational models
  • Legal frameworks

This diffusion can create superficial convergence in lifestyle.

However, convergence at the material level often coexists with persistent cultural divergence in values (Inglehart and Welzel, 2005).

Reality Case 1: Global Consumer Brands

Major cities across Asia, Africa and Europe share similar commercial environments—international retail chains, fast-food franchises and digital platforms. Yet local cultural practices continue to shape consumption patterns.


20.3 Hybrid Religious Forms

Globalisation enables cross-cultural religious exchange.

Examples include:

  • Pentecostal Christianity spreading from Africa to Europe.
  • Buddhist mindfulness integrated into Western psychotherapy.
  • Islamic scholarship transmitted through global digital networks.

Levitt (2007) describes “transnational religious fields” where religious communities maintain simultaneous connections across countries.

Reality Case 2: African Pentecostal Churches in London

Congregations established by Nigerian migrants in the United Kingdom blend African worship styles with British legal frameworks. Hybrid identity emerges within diaspora contexts.


20.4 Transnational Political Networks

Globalisation reshapes political authority.

Supranational institutions (e.g., European Union), international law and global advocacy networks influence domestic politics.

Religious movements also operate transnationally, sharing ideology and funding.

This creates layered political identity:

  • Local
  • National
  • Global

20.5 Digital Identity and Network Society

Castells (1996) argued that the network society restructures power around information flows.

Digital platforms:

  • Amplify minority voices
  • Facilitate rapid mobilisation
  • Enable identity-based communities beyond geography

Religious and political discourse now circulates globally in real time.

Reality Case 3: Social Media and Protest Movements

Digital networks have facilitated political mobilisation across regions, from the Arab Spring to youth climate activism. Identity formation increasingly occurs online rather than solely within traditional institutions.


20.6 Fragmentation and Cultural Backlash

While globalisation encourages exchange, it can also provoke resistance.

Appadurai (1996) notes that global flows generate anxiety about cultural dilution.

Backlash may manifest as:

  • Nationalism
  • Religious revival
  • Protectionist economic policy
  • Anti-immigration politics

Polanyi’s (1944) double movement framework applies: disembedded markets provoke protective counter-movements.

Reality Case 4: Populist Political Movements

In several Western democracies, populist parties have mobilised around perceived threats to national identity posed by globalisation.

Economic integration thus generates cultural contestation.


20.7 Migration and Multi-Layered Identity

Migration produces individuals with overlapping identities:

  • Ethnic heritage
  • Religious affiliation
  • National citizenship
  • Global digital participation

This multi-layered identity challenges traditional majority–minority distinctions.

Reality Case 5: Second-Generation Immigrants in Europe

Second-generation migrants often blend parental cultural heritage with host-country civic norms. Religious practice may become identity marker rather than inherited routine.


20.8 Economic Interdependence and Political Constraint

Global trade limits unilateral political action. Economic interdependence constrains nationalist policy choices.

However, economic shocks (financial crises, pandemics) expose vulnerabilities and reassert state authority.

Globalisation thus oscillates between integration and retrenchment.


20.9 Civilisational Convergence or Persistent Difference?

Huntington (1996) predicted enduring civilisational divisions, while other scholars emphasise convergence through economic development.

Empirical evidence suggests partial convergence in material standards but persistent divergence in moral and political values (Inglehart and Welzel, 2005).

Globalisation multiplies contact but does not erase civilisational memory.


20.10 Religious Pluralism and Secular Negotiation

In global cities, religious pluralism intensifies.

Public institutions must navigate:

  • Competing moral frameworks
  • Diverse ritual calendars
  • Varied dietary and dress norms

Political systems mediate pluralism through secular law, yet cultural negotiation remains ongoing.


20.11 The Paradox of Globalisation

Globalisation simultaneously:

  • Connects societies
  • Amplifies difference
  • Encourages hybrid identity
  • Triggers defensive retrenchment

Civilisational boundaries become more visible precisely because they interact more frequently.


20.12 Conclusion

Globalisation produces hybrid civilisations shaped by migration, digital communication and economic interdependence. It generates both convergence in material culture and fragmentation in moral and political identity.

The interplay of religion, culture, politics and economics now operates on global scale. Identity formation increasingly transcends national boundaries, yet local cultural memory remains powerful.

The next chapter addresses a forward-looking question:

Chapter 21 — Which Force Dominates in the 21st Century? Religion, Economics or Political Ideology?


References (Chapter 20)

Appadurai, A. (1996) Modernity at Large. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.

Castells, M. (1996) The Rise of the Network Society. Oxford: Blackwell.

Huntington, S.P. (1996) The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Inglehart, R. and Welzel, C. (2005) Modernization, Cultural Change, and Democracy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Levitt, P. (2007) God Needs No Passport. New York: New Press.

Polanyi, K. (1944) The Great Transformation. Boston: Beacon Press.