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Cultural Policy Timelines CONNECTCP CANADA: THE CANADIAN WHO'S WHO OF CULTURAL POLICY, PLANNING AND RESEARCH
Home Research Themes Cultural Policy Trade

Globalization and Cultural Diplomacy

"Culture can be the glue that binds civil societies; it can provide for the common assumptions which undergird markets, laws and regulations. Conversely, cultural divisions can tear a society apart, and make its markets, laws and regulations unworkable, at least in part."
  
  
    
Prev Studies & Reports 15 of 23 Next
"Cultural products and services are increasingly important to American competitiveness, as national and global economies are more and more based on information and the means of its exchange. This issue paper focuses on the significance of globalization and its policy implications for education, the regulation of intellectual property and monopolies, and the financing of new creative enterprises.

The nation states of the world have moved from the bi-polar system of the Cold War to a global system -- integrating markets, nation states, and technologies to a degree never witnessed before. Globalization has stimulated world-wide growth, and for some, incomes are rising at unprecedented rates. But there is a backlash from those who have been, or think they have been, left behind. For some people, local, regional, or national cultures seem to be eroding under the pressure of global markets."

Creator(s) Harvey B. Feigenbaum
Source Location International
Date Published
2001-11
Language English
URL http://www.culturalpolicy.org/pdf/globalization.pdf
Copyright Holder Center for Arts and Culture

Le texte suivant provient d'un organisme qui n'est pas assujetti à la Loi sur les langues officielles et il est mis à la disposition du public dans la langue d'origine.

The following material originates with an organization not subject to the Official Languages Act and is available on this site in the language in which it was written.

 

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