Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for Global South. Search instead for Parkway South .

Global South

American  
[gloh-buhl south] / ˈgloʊ bəl ˈsaʊθ /
Or global south

noun

  1. the low- or middle-income countries located in Latin America, Africa, Asia, and Oceania; Third World.

    The article argues that poverty in the Global South stems from European exploitation of its natural resources.


Etymology

Origin of Global South

First recorded in 1965–70; not literally referring to the Southern Hemisphere, but continuing the 20th century contrasts between the wealthy industrial north and the poverty-stricken agricultural south, and probably beginning with Antonio Gramsci’s essay “The Southern Question” (1926), in which he argued southern Italy had, in effect, been colonized by capitalists from northern Italy

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Reggaeton is the backbeat of the Global South and thrills the North; “Tropicoqueta” was a gift of the music she adored growing up with, it belongs to the world now too.

From Los Angeles Times

Carney -- whose country this year holds the G7 presidency, to be taken up by France next year -- also said that "the centre of gravity in the global economy is shifting", implying that the G20 needed to take greater note of emerging economies and the global South.

From Barron's

Professor Melanie Austen, Professor of Ocean and Society at the University of Plymouth and lead of the Blue Communities programme, added: "This study is a powerful example of strong collaboration between researchers from the Global South and Global North. Its aim, and that of the entire programme, has been to provide much needed analysis and information to help coastal communities live within the environmental limits of the natural marine resources."

From Science Daily

This is an offence to the demands of the global south.

From BBC

Countries in the Global South will continue to bear the greatest burden of the plastic crisis.

From Science Daily