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Open world / Philippe Legrain
Titre : Open world : the truth about globalisation Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Philippe Legrain, Auteur Editeur : London : Abacus Année de publication : 2002 Importance : 374 p Note générale : 03 LEG Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Mondialisation Tags : Mondialisation Emploi Entreprises Environnement Index. décimale : 03 Commerce-Mondialisation Résumé : Globalisation is the most controversial topic in the world today. Our lives are increasingly intertwined with those of people across the globe. These links with distant places are not always new, but they are more pervasive than ever before.
Take football. A hundred years ago, it was a British working-class passion. Twenty years ago, it was still a predominantly European and South American working-class sport. Now it’s a huge global business. David Beckham is a global brand; five African teams are playing in the World Cup in Germany, as are such unlikely countries as Saudi Arabia, Iran, South Korea and Japan; Arsenal is managed by a Frenchman, and its squad includes five Frenchmen, three Spaniards, three players from Côte d’Ivoire, two Swedes, two Cameroonians, a Belarusan, a Brazilian, a Congolese, a Czech, a Dane, a Dutchman, an Estonian, a German, an Irish, an Italian, a Swiss and a Togolese player; Thai schoolboys sporting Liverpool tops (Steven Gerrard is a local favourite) play the beautiful game around Wat Saket, Bangkok’s Temple of the Golden Mount. Such cultural change – as well as the growing economic ties of trade and investment and the political links between countries grappling with global problems – is of the essence of 21st century globalisation.Open world : the truth about globalisation [texte imprimé] / Philippe Legrain, Auteur . - London : Abacus, 2002 . - 374 p.
03 LEG
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Mondialisation Tags : Mondialisation Emploi Entreprises Environnement Index. décimale : 03 Commerce-Mondialisation Résumé : Globalisation is the most controversial topic in the world today. Our lives are increasingly intertwined with those of people across the globe. These links with distant places are not always new, but they are more pervasive than ever before.
Take football. A hundred years ago, it was a British working-class passion. Twenty years ago, it was still a predominantly European and South American working-class sport. Now it’s a huge global business. David Beckham is a global brand; five African teams are playing in the World Cup in Germany, as are such unlikely countries as Saudi Arabia, Iran, South Korea and Japan; Arsenal is managed by a Frenchman, and its squad includes five Frenchmen, three Spaniards, three players from Côte d’Ivoire, two Swedes, two Cameroonians, a Belarusan, a Brazilian, a Congolese, a Czech, a Dane, a Dutchman, an Estonian, a German, an Irish, an Italian, a Swiss and a Togolese player; Thai schoolboys sporting Liverpool tops (Steven Gerrard is a local favourite) play the beautiful game around Wat Saket, Bangkok’s Temple of the Golden Mount. Such cultural change – as well as the growing economic ties of trade and investment and the political links between countries grappling with global problems – is of the essence of 21st century globalisation.