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http://witcombe.sbc.edu/ARTHLinks.html
Art History Resources on the Web: Created and maintained by Professor Christopher Witcombe of Sweet Briar College, Virginia, this is one of the first Web sites of its kind. Arguably the best and most comprehensive compilation of art and art history content on the Internet, the site provides a massive gateway to just about everything that you need to get started, from the general to the specific. The site includes a section on art outside of European traditions, as well as a very informative section on research resources in art history. One could spend months on this site alone and still would not have turned over all of its stones.
Art History Resources on the Web: Created and maintained by Professor Christopher Witcombe of Sweet Briar College, Virginia, this is one of the first Web sites of its kind. Arguably the best and most comprehensive compilation of art and art history content on the Internet, the site provides a massive gateway to just about everything that you need to get started, from the general to the specific. The site includes a section on art outside of European traditions, as well as a very informative section on research resources in art history. One could spend months on this site alone and still would not have turned over all of its stones.
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Lisa Dennis, Shanssa Brock, Lilla Martin
www.globalenvision.org
This website uses the Western free market system as a starting point to reduce world poverty by supporting ecomonic development. Also contains links to opposing viewpoints regarding why globalization and expansion by international trade and financial institutions is unjust and even criminal.
www.coopamerica.org
This website gives information about the background about why there are sweatshops. For example, a survey that says the average consumer had been found to pay up to 28% more for an item if she knew it wasn't made in a sweatshop. Also gives information about the workers and child workers trapped in a cycle of exploitation that rarely improves their economic situation.
www.workersrights.org
The Workers Rights Consortium works with labor rights exports in the U.S. and around the world to investigate factory conditions. Their reports are made public and available on this site. They work with corporations, local workers, and organizations to correct problems and improve conditions. They also supply many links to various other sites worldwide that are unionizing and addressing labor practices in different countries.
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