Advertising and Global Culture | Cultural Survival - 0 views
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Author Janus Noreen No one can travel to Africa, Asia, or Latin America and not be struck by the Western elements of urban life. The symbols of transnational culture - automobiles, advertising, supermarkets, shopping centers, hotels, fast food chains, credit cards, and Hollywood movies - give the, feeling of being at home. Behind these tangible symbols are a corresponding set of values and attitudes about time, consumption, work relations, etc. Some believe global culture has resulted from gradual spontaneous processes that depended solely on technological innovations - increased international trade, global mass communications, jet travel. Recent studies show that the processes are anything but spontaneous; that they are the result of tremendous investments of time, energy and money by transnational corporations. This "transnational culture" is a direct outcome of the internationalization of production and accumulation promoted through standardized development models and cultural forms.
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The common theme of transnational culture is consumption. Advertising expresses this ideology of consumption in its most synthetic and visual form.
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Kayapo Courage - 0 views
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five officially demarcated tracts of contiguous land that in sum make up an area about the size of Kentucky. T
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9,000 indigenous people, most of whom can’t read or write and who still follow a largely subsistence way of life in 44 villages linked only by rivers and all-but-invisible trails.
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Kendjam,
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This (Illegal) American Life - Watch Free Documentary Online - 0 views
Bold steps: Japan's remedy for a rapidly aging society - The Globe and Mail - 0 views
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Ms. Shimamura worked part-time in a hotel for years, and at the age of 65 began working full-time as a janitor – retiring only when she was 85.
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long-term-care insurance program
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Here, she has food, shelter, scheduled activities and the attentive care of a Filipino health care worker.
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South Korea's inequality paradox: long life, good health and poverty | Inequality | The... - 0 views
Last of the Amazon - National Geographic Magazine - 0 views
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Brazil’s dilemma: Allow widespread—and profitable—destruction of the rain forest to continue, or intensify conservation efforts.
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The market forces of globalization are invading the Amazon, hastening the demise of the forest and thwarting its most committed stewards.
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n the past three decades, hundreds of people have died in land wars; countless others endure fear and uncertainty, their lives threatened by those who profit from the theft of timber and land. In this Wild West frontier of guns, chain saws, and bulldozers, government agents are often corrupt and ineffective—or ill-equipped and outmatched. Now, industrial-scale soybean producers are joining loggers and cattle ranchers in the land grab, speeding up destruction and further fragmenting the great Brazilian wilderness.
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Europe needs many more babies to avert a population disaster | World news | The Guardian - 0 views
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“We have provinces in Spain where for every baby born, more than two people die. And the ratio is moving closer to one to three.”
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Spain has one of the lowest fertility rates in the EU, with an average of 1.27 children born for every woman of childbearing age, compared to the EU average of 1.55.
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hundreds of thousands of Spaniards and migrants leave in the hope of finding jobs abroad.
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