Global features and trends in the volume and pattern of international trade and investment associated with globalisation. Trading relationships and patterns between large, highly developed economies such as the United States, the European Union, emerging major economies such as China and India and smaller, less developed economies such as those in sub-Saharan Africa, southern Asia and Latin America.
Differential access to markets associated with levels of economic development and trading agreements and its impacts on economic and societal well-being.
The nature and role of transnational corporations (TNCs), including their spatial organisation, production, linkages, trading and marketing patterns, with a detailed reference to a specified TNC and its impacts on those countries in which it operates.
World trade in at least one food commodity or one manufacturing product.
Analysis and assessment of the geographical consequences of global systems to specifically consider how international trade and variable access to markets underly and impacts on students' and other people's lives across the globe.