Saskia Sassen, la ville globale aujourd'hui
sociologie urbaine, économie urbaine, mégapole, ville globale, globalisation, mondialisation
Le 21e siècle sera urbain. Le phénomène considérable et massif de l'urbanisme fait de la question des mégapoles un des principaux enjeux de la planète. Si, dans la vieille Europe, l'accroissement des villes se lit dans une continuité lente, le phénomène est fulgurant et explosif dans les pays dits émergents ou "nouveaux pays industrialisés" (Brésil, Russie, Inde, Chine, Mexique).
En préambule à un grand cycle intitulé "La ville en question", qui débutera à l'automne 2009, avec les principaux spécialistes et acteurs des questions urbaines et architecturales dans le monde, la sortie en France de deux ouvrages de Saskia Sassen est l'occasion de donner la parole à l'une des meilleures spécialistes de la mondialisation et de la sociologie des grandes métropoles du monde.
Saskia Sassen
Centre Pompidou
2009-05-20
01:32:00
FR
Vidéo
http://www.dailymotion.com/user/centrepompidou/video/x9gx2g_saskia-sassen-la-ville-globale-aujo_creation
La ville globale
sociologie urbaine, ville globale, mondialisation, politique informelle, informalisation de l'Etat, acteurs, migrations, inégalités sociales, technologies de l'information
Une conférence donnée dans le cadre de l'Université de tous les savoirs.
Saskia Sassen est sociologue, Professeure à l'Université de Chicago, spécialiste de sociologie urbaine. Ses travaux portent sur les villes globales, mais également sur la question des migrations, du féminisme, des technologies de l'information ou des inégalités sociales.
Saskia Sassen est l'auteure de plusieurs ouvrages :
The Mobility of Labor and Capital, Cambridge University Press, 1988
The Global City: New York London Tokyo, Princeton University Press, 1991. Traduction française : La ville globale. New-York, Londres, Tokyo, Descartes, 1996
Globalization and Its Discontents : Selected Essays 1984-1998, New York, New Press, 1998
Guests and Aliens, New York, New Press, 1999
Global Networks/Linked Cities, (ed.) New York and London, Routledge, 2002
Denationalization : Economy and Polity in a Global Digital Age, Princeton University Press 2003
Saskia Sassen
UTLS
Canal U
2003-07-27
00:86:20
FR
Vidéo
http://www.canalu.tv/canalu/producteurs/universite_de_tous_les_savoirs/dossier_programmes/les_conferences_de_l_annee_2003/la_globalisation_du_globe_aux_effets_globaux/la_ville_globale
Peasants go to New York
New York, China, Chine, immigration, migrant, migration urbaine, global city, ville globale, Song Ping, capitalisme, travail
<div><b>Song Ping </b>is a Professor of Anthropology at Xiamen University, China.</div>
</div>
Song Ping
23 March 2010
http://www.ari.nus.edu.sg/publication_details.asp?pubtypeid=AU&pubid=1632
Food and public space in a global city
food, nourriture, alimentation, agriculture urbaine, espace urbain, aménagement de l'espace, jardin, ville globale, global city, London, Londres, ville durable, Parks Rosie, Steel Carolyn, Smyth Paul, Caraher Martin, Reynolds Ben
<div><b>Abstract from the distributor : </b></div>
</div>
The colloquium will be focused on one particular city – London – and will bring together the themes of food growing, ‘public’ space and the city to explore thought-provoking questions around food equity, access to public and semi-private space, and the ability of different socio-economic groups to establish their own interests in city planning and construction processes that have consequences for private and community-based food production and distribution (e.g. the provision and retention of community food growing spaces, the creation of productive and educative school grounds, the provision of housing with growing and food preparation spaces). The issue of food, food production and public spaces in cities is currently high on the political agenda. While urban agriculture has a long history, contemporary concerns over the environmental impacts of ‘food miles’ and our industrialised countryside, food security issues, together with growing recognition of the health, social and community benefits of gardening, are driving the issue of local urban food production up the political agenda. With waiting lists for allotments in Camden, for example, currently stretching to an estimated 40 years, and with the nation’s front gardens disappearing under tarmac car parking, attention is turning to the food growing potential of a multitude of overlooked and undervalued city sites.</div>
</div>
<b>Sessions :</b></div>
</div>
Rosie Parks - Introduction</div>
Carolyn Steel - Citopia : Thinking through food</div>
Paul Smyth - An urban farming experiment</div>
Martin Caraher - Food and urban space</div>
Ben Reynolds - Sustainable food matters</div>
</div>
</div>
Rosie Parks,
Carolyn Steel,
Paul Smyth,
Martin Caraher,
Ben Reynolds
21 May 2011
http://backdoorbroadcasting.net/2011/05/food-and-public-space-in-a-global-city/
Globopolis versus cosmopolis : Alternative paradigms for livable cities in Asia
, dynamiques urbaines, gouvernance, participation, néolibéralisme, mondialisation, cosmopolitisme, espace urbain, privatisation, ville globale, global city, urbanité, Asia, Asie, Douglass Mike
<div><b>Abstract from the distributor : </b></div>
</div>
From the late 1980s the production of urban space in Asia has been proceeding under historically new dynamics that are rapidly transforming city life. One dimension of these dynamics is the emergence of a middle class that is pushing for political reform and greater participation in urban governance. At the same time, in an ascendant neoliberal policy era of diminishing scope for public policy, intensifying inter-city competition for global investment and status is turning the economy and political orientation of the city outward toward global accumulation and private management of urban space. As these dynamics interplay, a contest is emerging between two contrasting visions of the urban future. One is the idea of the city as an inclusive cosmopolis actively accommodating diversity and local production of urban space. The other is one of an extroverted globopolis of homogeneous spaces of consumption designed to protect those who are able to access them from the “chaos” of the city of the less wealthy and the poor. While democratization and the rise of civil society provide openings for more cosmopolitan outcomes, fragmentation of the city through mega-projects privatizing urban spaces on very large scales is steering the city toward a globopolis composed of zones of exclusion. The future of cities will depend on how the balance is struck between these two visions of a livable city.</div>
</div>
<b>Mike Douglass </b>is Professor and former Chair of the Department of Urban and Regional Planning and Executive Director of the Globalization Research Center at the University of Hawai'i.</div>
</div>
Mike Douglass
15 June 2010
http://www.ari.nus.edu.sg/publication_details.asp?pubtypeid=AU&pubid=1837
Ascenseur pour Coruscant
science-fiction, Coruscant, Musset Alain, ségrégation sociale, ville globale, Ouyed Ouiza, Crocq Matthieu
<div>Qu'elle soit réelle ou imaginaire, une ville suppose des immeubles, des transports, des quartiers riches et pauvres... Géographe passionné de science-fiction, fan de Star Wars, Alain Musset est aussi directeur d'études à l'Ecole des hautes études en sciences sociales et spécialiste des cités d'aujourd'hui. Il nous fait visiter Coruscant, la ville-planète de Star Wars, et dresse un parallèle entre ce monde imaginaire et le nôtre. <br />
<br />
<b>Réalisation</b>: Ouiza Ouyed et Matthieu Crocq</div>
</div>
Ouiza Ouyed,
Matthieu Crocq
Juin 2010
19'
http://www.arteradio.com/son.html?615854
Branding cities: Cosmopolitanism, parochialism, and social change
city branding, marketing, cosmopolitisme, culture urbaine, tourisme, économie, planification, ville globale, global city, film, mémoire, Donald Stephanie, Kofman Eleonore, Kevin Catherine
<div>
NC
Routledge
February 2012
192
Ouvrage
International handbook of globalization and world cities
world city, ville mondiale, global city, ville globale, mondialisation, réseaux, Derudder Ben, Hoyler Michael, Taylor Peter J., Witlox Frank
<div><b>Abstract from the publisher:</b></div> </div> This Handbook offers an unrivalled overview of current research into how globalization is affecting the external relations and internal structures of major cities in the world.<br /> <br /> By treating cities at a global scale, it focuses on the ‘stretching’ of urban functions beyond specific place locations, without losing sight of the multiple divisions in contemporary world cities. The book firmly bases city networks in their historical context, critically discusses contemporary concepts and key empirical measures, and analyses major issues relating to world city infrastructures, economies, governance and divisions. The variety of urban outcomes in contemporary globalization is explored through detailed case studies.<br /> <br /> Edited by leading scholars of the Globalization and World Cities (GaWC) Research Network and written by over 60 experts in the field, the Handbook is a unique resource for students, researchers and academics in urban and globalization studies as well as for city professionals in planning and policy.</div> </div> <b>Ben Derudder </b>is Professor of Human Geography at the University of Ghent and Associate Director of the Globalization and World Cities research network.</div> <b>Michael Hoyler </b>is Senior Lecturer in Human Geography at Loughborough University and the Associate Director of GaWC.</div> <b>Peter J. Taylor </b>is Emeritus Professor of Geography at Loughborough University and Director of GaWC.</div> <b>Frank Witlox </b>is Professor of Economic Geography at the University of Ghent and Associate Director of GaWC.</div> </div>
NC
Edward Elgar
December 2011
584
Ouvrage
Worlding cities : Asian experiments and the art of being global
Asie, Asia, culture urbaine, développement urbain, politique urbaine, urbanisation, ville mondiale, world city, ville globale, global city, forme urbaine, Roy Ananya, Ong Aihwa
<div><b>Abstract from the publisher : </b></div> </div> Worlding Cities is the first serious examination of Asian urbanism to highlight the connections between different Asian models and practices of urbanization. It includes important contributions from a respected group of scholars across a range of generations, disciplines, and sites of study.<br /> <br /> - Describes the new theoretical framework of ‘worlding’<br /> - Substantially expands and updates the themes of capital and culture<br /> - Includes a unique collection of authors across generations, disciplines, and sites of study<br /> - Demonstrates how references to Asian power, success, and hegemony make possible urban development and limit urban politics</div> </div> <b>Contents :</b></div> </div> Preface</div> Aihwa Ong - Introduction : Worlding cities, or the art of being global<br /> <br /> Part I Modeling<br /> Chua Ben - Singapore as model : Planning innovations, knowledge experts</div> Lisa Hoffman - Urban modeling and contemporary technologies of city-building in China : The production of regimes of green urbanisms</div> Gavin Shatking - Planning privatopolis : Representation and contestation in the development of urban integrated mega-projects</div> </div> Part II Inter-referencing</div> Helen F. Siu - Retuning a provincialized middle class in Asia's urban postmodern : The case of Hong Kong</div> Chad Haines - Cracks in the façade : Landscapes of hope and desire in Dubai</div> Glen Lowry and Eugene McCann - Asia in the mix : Urban form and global mobilities - Hong Kong, Vancouver, Dubai</div> Aihwa Ong - Hyperbuilding : Spectacle, speculation, and the hyperspace of sovereignty</div> </div> Part III New solidarities</div> Michael Goldman - Speculating on the next world city</div> Ananya Roy - The blockade of the world-class city : Dialectical images of Indian urbanism</div> D. Asher Ghertner - Rule by aesthetics : World-class city making in Delhi</div> Ananya Roy - Conclusion : Postcolonial urbanism : Speed, hysteria, mass dreams</div> </div> <b>Ananya Roy </b>is Professor of City and Regional Planning and Co-Director of Global Metropolitan Studies at the University of California, Berkeley</div> <b>Aihwa Ong </b>is Professor of Socio-cultural Anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley</div> </div>
Ananya Roy Aihwa Ong
Wiley-Blackwell
July 2011
376
Ouvrage
City of extremes : The spatial politics of Johannesburg
Johannesburg, aménagement de l'espace, gated communities, exclusion, ségrégation résidentielle, ségrégation urbaine, ségrégation sociale, analyse spatiale, global city, ville globale, Murray Martin J.
<div><b>Abstract from the publisher : </b></div> </div> City of Extremes is a powerful critique of urban development in greater Johannesburg since the end of apartheid in 1994. Martin J. Murray describes how a loose alliance of city builders—including real estate developers, large-scale property owners, municipal officials, and security specialists—has sought to remake Johannesburg in the upbeat image of a world-class city. By creating new sites of sequestered luxury catering to the comfort, safety, and security of affluent urban residents, they have produced a new spatial dynamic of social exclusion, effectively barricading the mostly black urban poor from full participation in the mainstream of urban life. This partitioning of the cityscape is enabled by an urban planning environment of limited regulation or intervention into the prerogatives of real estate capital.<br /> <br /> Combining insights from urban studies, cultural geography, and urban sociology with extensive research in South Africa, Murray reflects on the implications of Johannesburg’s dual character as a city of fortified enclaves that proudly displays the ostentatious symbols of global integration and the celebrated “enterprise culture” of neoliberal design, and as the “miasmal city” composed of residual, peripheral, and stigmatized zones characterized by signs of a new kind of marginality. He suggests that the “global cities” paradigm is inadequate to understanding the historical specificity of cities in the Global South, including the colonial mining town turned postcolonial megacity of Johannesburg.</div> </div> <b>Martin J. Murray </b>is Professor of Urban Planning at the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning and Adjunct Professor at the Center for African and African-American Studies at the University of Michigan.</div> </div>
Martin J. Murray
Duke University Press
2011
464
Ouvrage
The Urban Condition
Ghent Urban Studies Team, métropole, urbanisation, aménagement urbain, métropolisation, ville globale, gentrification, vingtième siècle, disneyfication
Quatrième de couverture :
What does the Western city at the end of the twentieth century look like? How did the modern metropolis of congestion and density turn into a posturban or even postsuburban cityscape ? What are edge cities and technoburbs ? How has the social com­position of cities changed in the postwar era ? What do gated communities tell us about social fragmentation ? Is public space in the contemporary city being privatized and militarized ? How can the urban self still be defined ? What role does consumer aestheticism have to play in this ?
These and many more questions are addressed by this unique­ly conceived multidisciplinary study, which offers two books in one.
The first part consists of a synthesizing theoretical de­scription of the contemporary urban condition as It Is being represented today within the various subdisciplines of urban studies.
The second part complements abstract speculations by concrete examples : 18 International case studies substanti­ate and deepen the findings presented in the theoretical part. Thus, a dialectic is developed whereby detail and generalization stand to each other in a relation of productive tension.
The Urban Condition seeks to interfere In current debates over the future and Interpretation of our urban landscapes by reunit­ing studies of the city as a physical and material phenomenon and as a cultural and mental (arte)fact.
Ghent Urban Studies Team (GUST)
010 Publishers
1999
447
Ouvrage
http://books.google.fr/books?id=-vbTkMuU9NkC
The city and the world: New York's global future
New York, global city, ville globale, économie, délinquance, immigration, démographie, éducation, religion, culture urbaine, identité, gouvernance, Crahan Margaret E., Vourvoulias-Bush Alberto
<div><b>Abstract from the publisher:</b></div> </div> At first glance a study on cities and foreign policy may seem a bold leap into the future of international relations, but it represents, rather, a giant step into the present--into what is already taking place across this country and around the world. Cities have become actors in international affairs; and American cities have not only been players on the world scene but have been deeply transformed on the process as well. Over the last four years, the Council on Foreign Relations has been studying new actors in international affairs: business, nongovernmental organizations (particularly on such issues as the environment, human rights, and humanitarian relief and aid), and certain regions and localities that now orient their "foreign" policy or actions somewhat independently from that of their central governments. Of these new global actors, cities have drawn the least attention within policymaking circles and among the public. Although this volume looks at New York City, the United States' largest and most prominent international center, the issues and processes discussed--the economic restructuring of the economy, immigration, and internationalization of crime, the changing demands on, and functions of, social and civic institutions, the technological innovations that are revolutionizing how we live, do business, and form communities--represent fundamental challenges faced by cities and communities across the country; particularly at a time when many of the traditional functions of the central government are being privatized or decentralized. This is a volume of intellectual rigor--briskly written and clear-headed. It provides a model that will be emulated in the analysis of other global cities.</div> </div> <b>Contents:</b></div> </div> Robert D. Hormats - Foreword: New York's global future</div> Kenneth Maxwell - Acknowledgements</div> Margaret E. Crahan with Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush - Introduction: The city and the world</div> Carol O'Cléireacain - The private economy and the public budget of New York City</div> Rae D. Rosen with Reagan Murray - Opening doors: Access to the global market for financial sectors</div> Edward Mozley Roche - "Cyberopolis" : The cybernetic city faces the global economy</div> Clifford Krauss - The Cali cartel and the globalization of crime in New York City</div> Peter Andress - Policing the clandestine side of economic integration</div> Joseph J. Salvo and Arun Peter Lobo - Immigration and the changing demographic profile of New York</div> Robert C. Smith - Transnational migration, assimilation, and political community</div> Josh DeWing - Educating the children of immigrants in New York's restructured economy</div> Anthony M. Stevens-Arroyo - Building a new public realm: Moral responsibility and religious commitment in the city</div> Jay Kaplan - Rooting for a logo: Culture, identity, and civic experience in the global city</div> Saskia Sassen - Cities, foreign policy, and the global economy</div> </div> <b>Margaret E. Crahan </b>is Dorothy Epstein Professor in Latin American History at Hunter College.</div> <b>Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush </b>is Research Associate for Latin America at the Council on Foreign Relations and a doctoral candidate in politics at Yale University.</div> </div>
Margaret E. Crahan Alberto Vourvoulias-Bush
Council on Foreign Relations
1997
202
Ouvrage
http://books.google.com/books?id=uJQFm1ciG3gC&printsec=frontcover
Re-inventing global cities: CUPEM 20th anniversary international conference
ville mondiale, ville globale, world city, global city, économie, renouvellement urbain, développement urbain, aménagement urbain, planification, Asie, Asia
<div>
University of Hong Kong. Centre of Urban Planning and Environmental Management
University of Hong Kong. Centre of Urban Planning and Environmental Management
11 November 2000
199
Autre
La ville équitable - Les apories de la ville durable, 2
ville durable, ville viable, ville globale, développement durable, intégration urbaine, équité urbaine, logement équitable, équité territoriale, politique publique
<div><b>Présentation par l'éditeur :</b></div>
</div>
ville autosuffisante</a>, et avant de s’intéresser à la ville démocratique, La Vie des Idées propose, en partenariat avec Métropolitiques, de revenir sur les enjeux de la ville équitable. Les questions posées par les politiques urbaines, le partage de la valeur ajoutée à l’échelle des grandes conurbations urbaines, l’accès équitable au logement ou encore les inégalités territoriales face aux risques, invitent à réfléchir aux conditions d’un modèle de développement urbain équitable.</div>
</div>
<b>Sommaire :</b><br />
<br />
<i>Mégarégions et villes globales. De nouvelles configurations spatiales pour l’intégration urbaine</i>, par Saskia Sassen, La Vie des idées.<br />
<br />
<i>L’équité urbaine : un choix politique. Entretien avec Claude Dilain</i>, par Claude Dilain & Stéphane Füzesséry & Nathalie Roseau, Métropolitiques.<br />
<br />
<i>Les défis du logement équitable. Entretien avec Vincent Renard</i>, par Stéphane Füzesséry et Nathalie Roseau, La Vie des idées.<br />
<br />
<i>Comment favoriser l’équité territoriale face aux risques ?</i>, par Valérie November, Métropolitiques.</div>
</div>
Stéphane Füzesséry et Nathalie Roseau (dir.)
La Vie des idées
Mai 2012
Autre
http://www.laviedesidees.fr/La-ville-equitable.html
Global cities conference : Max Planck Institute
ville globale, ville mondiale, global city, world city, mondialisation, religion, politique urbaine, société urbaine, gouvernance, urbanité, culture urbaine, Asia, Asie, ethnicité, ethnicity
<div>
Multiple authors
Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity
9-12 August 2009
Autre
Les mégapoles à l'assaut de la planète
mégapole, société urbaine, urbanisation, économie, étalement urbain, quartier populaire, ville globale, mobilité
<div><b>Présentation par l'éditeur :</b><br />
<br />
C’est un basculement silencieux survenu autour de l’année 2007 : plus de la moitié de la population humaine réside à présent en ville. Depuis l’origine des cités, le processus d’urbanisation fut intermittent, mais toujours lié à la division du travail et à la formation des classes, à la concentration du pouvoir et du savoir. Centres urbains pensés comme des centres de profits, les métropoles s’affrontent pour intercepter les flux de capitaux, de marchandises et de populations solvables. Faisant gonfler bulles immobilières et colères populaires.<br />
<br />
<b>Sommaire du dossier :</b><br />
<br />
<b>• Les capitales du capital</b><br />
par Jean-Pierre Garnier<br />
<br />
De Bombay à Paris, la restructuration urbaine par "destruction créatrice" a acquis une dimension planétaire : des quartiers populaires bien situés sont réaménagés pour laisser place à un habitat "de standing". C’est sur le mode du séparatisme que les clivages de classe se manifestent aujourd’hui dans l’espace urbain.<br />
<br />
<b>• A Hanoï, les gratte-ciel dévorent les rizières</b><br />
par Xavier Monthéard<br />
<br />
La cité qui résista aux bombardiers américains pendant la guerre du Vietnam s’ouvre aux promoteurs immobiliers et à leurs projets pharaoniques.<br />
<br />
<b>• Utopies dégénérées</b><br />
Louis Marin<br />
<br />
Contraindre l’espace pour structurer les flux et organiser la vie des sociétés sédentarisées : il suffit d’énoncer ces quelques finalités pour entrevoir tout ce que l’architecture urbaine recèle de potentialités émancipatrices ou, au contraire, aliénantes. Des cités précolombiennes à la Cité interdite, de Vitruve à Vauban, de Le Corbusier à Oscar Niemeyer, la ville matérialise une contradiction entre l’utopie des bâtisseurs et la pesanteur des rapports sociaux.<br />
<br />
<b>• Dans le chaudron africain</b><br />
Jean-Christophe Servant<br />
<br />
Continent le plus rural de la planète, l’Afrique n’en est pas moins celui où l’on note la plus forte croissance urbaine : près de 7 % par an ; 40 % de la population vit aujourd’hui en ville... contre 3 % en 1900<br />
<br />
<br />
<b>• Des cités-Etats à la ville globale</b><br />
par Philip S. Golub<br />
<br />
Le mouvement d’urbanisation du monde, entamé dès le Néolithique, se transforme en lame de fond avec la révolution industrielle : la ville devient alors le levier d’une restructuration des rapports sociaux.<br />
<br />
<b>• "Veut-on singapouriser la Flandre ?"</b><br />
par Vincent Doumayrou<br />
<br />
Installés au carrefour de flux autoroutiers, industriels, ferroviaires et fluviaux, les habitants d’Anvers expérimentent au quotidien l’idéologie de la mobilité.</div>
</div>
Collectif
Le Monde Diplomatique
Avril 2010
Autre
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2010/04/A/19039
Villes mondiales. Les nouveaux lieux de pouvoir
villes mondiales, mondialisation, capitale, ville globale, politique planétaire, culture, ptrimoine, religion
<div><b>Table des matières du numéro 17 des <i>Grands Dossiers des Sciences Humaines</i><b> </b>:</b></div>
</div>
<b>Les nouvelles capitales du monde</b><br />
Dossier coordonné par Xavier de la Vega en collaboration avec René-Éric Dagorn<br />
<br />
Les villes à la conquête du monde, Xavier de la Vega<br />
<br />
<b>Les capitales économiques de la mondialisation</b><br />
L'archipel des villes globales, Saskia Sassen<br />
Londres - The place to be, Kathy Pain<br />
Points de repères : Les villes globales<br />
Shangai - Le grand bon en avant, Thierry Sanjuan<br />
Sydney - La métropole des antipodes, Fabrice Argounès<br />
Mumbay - Une mondialisation indienne, Philippe Cadène<br />
Johannesburg - L'or et les ghettos, Philippe Gervais-Lambony<br />
Mexico - Imposant phoenix, Jaime Sobrino<br />
Houston - Carrefour de l'or noir, George Baker<br />
Ryad, le pouvoir de dire non, Pascal Ménoret<br />
<br />
<b>Les nouveaux pôles de la politique planétaire</b><br />
Des villes citadelles aux villes réseau, René-Éric Dagorn<br />
Points de repères : Émergence d'un monde multipolaire<br />
Washington - La "capitale du monde", Patrick Sabatier<br />
Bruxelles - Capitale écartelée, Olivier Baisnée et Sylvain Laurens<br />
Pékin - Ville impériale, ville olympique, François Gipouloux<br />
Moscou - Après l'empire, Marie Mendras<br />
Tôkyô - Le pouvoir centralisé, Jean-François Sabouret<br />
Brasilia - Marque imposée de l'État brésilien, Frédéric Louault et Ernesto Seidl<br />
New Delhi - De la capitale coloniale au G20, Stéphanie Tawa Lama-Rewal<br />
Téhéran - La percée diplomatique, Faribah Abdelkhah<br />
<br />
<b>Métropoles de culture (patrimoine, religions, recherche, musique, cinéma, tourisme)</b><br />
Paris - Le passé a un avenir, Martine Fournier<br />
Jérusalem - Une sainte poudrière, Christophe Rymarski<br />
La Mecque - Capitale de l'islam, Christophe Rymarski<br />
Boston - Cambridge - La prospérité de la matière grise, Martine Fournier<br />
Bangalore - La silicon Valley indienne, Martine Fournier<br />
Berlin - Du clubbing à l'opéra, Xavier de la Vega<br />
Los Angeles - Capitale mondiale du cinéma, René-Éric Dagorn<br />
Hong Kong - De Bruce Lee à Wong Kar-Waï, Xavier de la Vega<br />
Dubaï - Jeu, luxe et volupté, René-Éric Dagorn<br />
Las Vegas - Fabulous !, René-Éric Dagorn</div>
</div>
NC
Revue Sciences Humaines
Décembre 2009/janvier-février 2010
Autre