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Dade recebe, para reunião técnica, equipe da Prefeitura de Guarujá, liderada pela Prefeita Maria Antonieta.

We took a ferry from Fort Desoto State Park to Egmont Key. It was abandoned in 1925 after most of the buildings burned down. The lighthouse, Fort Dade, and the streets and sidewalks are pretty much all that's left.

Melissa Love Design - www.melissalove.co.uk

The Tea Set - www.the-tea-set.co.uk

Proud Ballroom - www.brightonballroom.com

She Said Boutique - www.shesaidboutique.com

Joanne Fleming Design - www.joanneflemingdesign.com

Gresham Blake Tailors - www.greshamblake.com

Velvet Lifestyle Store - www.velvetstore.co.uk

Tigz Rice Burlesque Photographer - www.tigzrice.com

The Flash Centre - www.theflashcentre.com

Vintage Wedding Car - www.vintageweddingcar.com

Hey Day Honey Vintage Hair & Makeup - www.heydayhoney.com

Dade County Courthouse, Miami, Florida.

pic by Fabio Spalvieri

Live / Circolo degli Artisti @ Roma

Altre foto su: www.concertinalive.it

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Global Citizenship:

Ethics and Engagement

(February 26 to March 5, 2015)

 

Please credit: Salzburg Global Seminar/Ela Grieshaber

 

Participating institution: Miami Dade College, FL, USA

 

Tomorrow's leaders must think and act as global citizens in order to address the challenges facing humanity. Broadly defined, global citizens are people who are consciously prepared to live and work in the complex interdependent society of the 21st century and contribute to improving the common global welfare of our planet and its inhabitants. The program aims to engage participating students as global citizens, helping them develop the knowledge, skills, values, and commitment to:

 

Understand the nature of globalization, including its positive and negative impacts around the world, and realize how it is transforming human society;

 

Appreciate the diversity of humanity in all of its manifestations, from local to global, and interact with different groups of people to address common concerns;

 

Recognize the critical global challenges that are compromising humanity's future and see how their complexity and interconnections make solutions increasingly difficult; and

 

Collaborate with different sets of stakeholders, by thinking globally and acting locally, to resolve these critical challenges and build a more equitable and sustainable world.

 

The session format includes lectures and discussions with an international faculty as well as formal and informal work in small groups. Topics addressed in plenary lectures and discussions include globalization and global responsibility; the social, economic, and political aspects of migration; the historical legacy of the Holocaust, human rights, humanitarian intervention; sustainable development; and the implications of the United States' influence around the world.

 

Participants will consider how these issues relate to their current situations and future personal, educational, and professional plans. They will also have the opportunity to develop projects and activities related to the session topic that can be implemented at their colleges and universities, in their local communities, and beyond.

Miami Beach, FL (Miami-Dade County)

 

South Beach, also nicknamed SoBe, is a neighborhood in the city of Miami Beach, Florida, United States, located due east of Miami city proper between Biscayne Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. The area encompasses Miami Beach south of Dade Boulevard.

 

This area was the first section of Miami Beach to be developed, starting in the 1910s, due to the development efforts of Carl G. Fisher, the Lummus Brothers, and John S. Collins, the latter of whose construction of the Collins Bridge provided the first vital land link between mainland Miami and the beaches.

 

The area has gone through numerous artificial and natural changes over the years, including a booming regional economy, increased tourism, and the 1926 hurricane, which destroyed much of the area. As of 2010, 39,186 people lived in South Beach. (1)

 

References (1) Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Beach

12" x 12"

oil

2009 Jonathan Williams

This is one of the prettiest roads in my town. The big, old live oak trees (and other trees) grow over it in a lush, green canopy. I love driving on it.

 

Had to use the point & shoot, and took the photo while driving (kids, don't do this at home!), so this was the only one that wasn't seriously blurry.

A small city that thrived between 1889 to 1910 on Egmont Key. The town had electricity, telephones, movie theater, hospital,and a school. Today foundations and the red brick streets is all that survives.

camera: lomo fish eye 2

pellicola: fujichrome PROVIA 400X

SCANNER : CANOSCAN FS2710

softwear : vuescan

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