Cultural Diversity
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About This Book
Cultural diversity is an abstract good, a moral form of biodiversity - and also a codeword for trade protectionism. How do these two motives interplay in the debate? Can they be reconciled? Are they alternatives? Is there common ground between the view of culture as a tradeable commodity and culture as the heart of national identity?
Our Review
This incisive examination of cultural diversity tackles the complex tension between culture as a priceless element of human identity and culture as a market commodity. Jean-Michel Baer dissects how the noble ideal of preserving global cultural variety often clashes with the economic realities of trade protectionism, framing this conflict as a central dilemma of our globalized era. The book moves beyond simple celebration to ask the difficult questions about whether cultural preservation and free-market exchange can ever truly coexist.
What makes this analysis particularly compelling is its refusal to offer easy answers, instead mapping the intricate battlefield where national identity and commercial interests collide. Readers interested in international relations, cultural policy, and global economics will find themselves constantly re-evaluating their assumptions about what we mean when we champion "cultural diversity." Baer's exploration ultimately reveals how this seemingly straightforward concept has become one of the most contested and politically charged ideas in contemporary global discourse.
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