In other words, as Ohuabunwa, (1999: 20) once opined: Globalization can be seen as an evolution which is systematically restructuring interactive phases among nations by breaking down barriers in the areas of culture, commerce, communication and several other fields of endeavour. .
Looking at all these definitions closely it will be said that globalisation is the coming together or the interaction of economies of countries together to form one through standardisation of capital, technology, goods and services all over the world and most of the entire internet.
2.1.1. GLOBALISATION AND A DEVELOPING COUNTRY .
Globalisation, according to Ohiorhenuan (Ibid), is the broadening and deepening linkages of national economies into a worldwide market for goods and services, especially capital. As Tandon (1998B: 2) once opined, globalisation seeks to remove all national barriers to the free movement of international capital and this process is accelerated and facilitated by the supersonic transformation in information technology. It is principally aimed at the universal homogenisation of ideas, cultures, values and even life styles (Ohiorhenuan 1998: 6) as well as, at the deterritorialisation and villagization of the world. Expanding this argument, (Gordimer 1998), argued, that it is principally concerned with the expansion of trade over the oceans and airspace, beyond traditional alliances which were restricted by old political spheres of influence. Thus, it presupposes the "making or remaking- of the world (Diagne and Ossebi. 1996) by creating "a basic change in the way in which major actors think and operate across the globe- (Biersterker, 1998). In other words, it connotes "the rapid expansion through giant multinational companies of capitalism and their "blood sapping principles- of "liberalisation-, "commercialisation-, privatisation- and "undemocratic and property-based democratisation- to several areas of the world including where it had hitherto been resisted or put in check- (Madunagu, 1999, 53).