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ENVIRONMENT, POLLUTION, DEVELOPMENT: THE CASE OF UZBEKISTAN
However, ever fewer languages are
used on intercontinental
flights, mobile telephones and the Internet. If fast-food restaurants
and supermarkets take over the market of corner shops and small
cafés, is this a road to sustainability?
Is the road of sustainable
development secured if we all speak, although some difficulty, one
language and eat the same food (with minor local differences)?
The metaphor of the ‘patchwork quilt’
is based on the idea that
all countries around the Baltic Sea have
been historically closely
inter connected and their application
of the local knowledge has
ensured their centuries-long success. They
are not afraid or shy to be
distinctive and different. The preservation of local peculiarities and
cultural diversity in a dynamic and unevenly
changing world could
be an important feature of sustainable development
in the Baltic Sea
Region.
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