Economic Inequality
Homework: 3rd Year Week Beginning 30th March 2020
Look at the next 2 slides. Copy notes from first slide and ans short Qs on the first slide
Look at the next 2 slides. Copy notes from first slide and ans short Qs on the first slide
Homework: 3rd Year Week Beginning 30th March 2020
Look at these 3 categories for development. Make a table in your copies and give each category one of the following headings: NIC, MDC, LDC
First you will need to work out which one is a Newly Industrial Country (NIC), More Economically Developed (MED/MDC) or Less Economically Developed. Summarise the notes under each heading.
Students should also look at the Human Development Index below and ans questions (a)-(d).
Look at these 3 categories for development. Make a table in your copies and give each category one of the following headings: NIC, MDC, LDC
First you will need to work out which one is a Newly Industrial Country (NIC), More Economically Developed (MED/MDC) or Less Economically Developed. Summarise the notes under each heading.
Students should also look at the Human Development Index below and ans questions (a)-(d).
People As Commodities Activity
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Blood Sweat and Luxuries- BBC Doc on the true cost of Luxury Goods
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Globalisation
Homework
*Image taken from New Compete Geography textbook
https://player.vimeo.com/video/178464378
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"We’ve all heard John Lennon’s Imagine, U2’s Sunday Bloody Sunday, Bob Marley’s Redemption Song and Bob Dylan’s Masters of War. There are plenty of revolutionary songs out there that immediately jump to mind. However, here are some of the, perhaps, lesser known protest or ‘social consciousness’ songs. Sometimes, we don’t even realise what the story is behind the ‘feel-good song of the summer’ and sometimes its undeniably explicit. Either way, in no particular order, here are some of my faves…
A song which many claim to be Bragg’s most memorable, the great leap forward touches on a number of topics from inequality, to apathy, to Bragg’s own struggles with his form of political activism through music. It is a song that carries a real sense of revolution, hope and change in both the lyrics and the music, beginning with a humble piano and guitar duet before gradually evolving to include drums which all carry the fantastic lyrics to the famous last line ‘the revolution is just a t-shirt away!‘. To hear this live (or any of Bragg’s anthems) is something else. Should the opportunity be presented to you, grab it with both hands." Read the rest of this blog post at http://www.developmenteducation.ie/blog/2016/12/songs-of-protest-the-man-dont-give-a-f/ |