Economy & Trade

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A teen girl's dream!

Candy Pop, teen store in Kobe Japan, summer 2010

I don't know what to say! I am fascinated by the juxtaposition of modern and traditional cultures in Japan. What can be more modern than a store devoted exclusively to the fashion needs of the tween and teen girl crowd?

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Akashi Fish Market Japan, neat and orderly presentation of fresh fish

Akashi Fish Market, Akashi Japan

Akashi Fish Market merchants invest in the neat, orderly, and visually appealing display of their product. Similar care is visible throughout Japan and especially in the food industry.

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Akashi Fish Market Storefront, Akashi Japan by Tim Jekel

Akashi Fish Market Storefront, Akashi Japan by Tim Jekel

Japanese store owners compete for customers. Many advertise in eye catching ways, such as this vendor in the Akashi Fish Market in Akashi, Japan.

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Along the Silk Road

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Along the Silk Road, Ma, Yo-Yo, and Elizabeth Ten Grotenhuis. University of Washington Press.
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Along the Silk Road

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Along the Silk Road, . Stanford Program on International and Cross-Cultural Education.

The term "Silk Road" refers to an ancient network of trails and trading routes connecting East Asia to the Mediterranean. In some ways, the Silk Road was the first real conduit of globalization, as it connected vast lands into a trade network that spread goods, beliefs, and technologies far from their areas of origin. Trade along the Silk Road began around 200 BCE and continued on a significant scale until the sixteenth century CE.

Contributed Material

ANPO-teaching-ideas

From the Spring 2012 issue of Rethinking Schools (vol.26 no. 3), this article by Moe Yonamine sheds light on the oft forgotten controversy that surrounds the Okinawan military bases that are part of the American military. Acting more as a repressive and neo-imperalist presence in Okinawa than liberators, the American military and their supporters within the Japanese government have made life uncomfortable and frustrating for many Okinawans to this day.

Contributed Material

Around China in Ten Weeks: An Overview Utilizing All Five Social Studies Disciplines

Students will be able to incorporate the five fields of Social Studies (geography, history, government, economics, and culture) in their learning about China. Each week students will focus on a theme and produce a project to show their understanding of that theme in respect to China. Each week will also focus on a different learning modality.

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