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<rss version="2.0"><channel><title>HADES</title><link>http://en.hades-presse.com/</link><description>Multilingual magazine</description><language>en</language><managingEditor>guillaume.roussel@hades-presse.com</managingEditor><webMaster>webmestre@hades-presse.com</webMaster><pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:33:52 GMT</pubDate><lastBuildDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:37:31 GMT</lastBuildDate><item><title>Tourism, the cultivation of the future?</title><link>http://en.hades-presse.com/n1.9999/tourist-cultivation.shtml</link><description>For poor countries, tourism has become an important source of currency. To such a degree, that their societies are reorganising themselves around that new economic object; the tourist. Here is a manna, from which not everyone profits. A report, in South America.</description><guid isPermaLink="false">{a1c8fe6-7070-2208-3fdb-faab48a270a5}</guid><pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:37:31 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Slippery terrain</title><link>http://en.hades-presse.com/n1.9999/slippery-terrain.shtml</link><description>Hades continues its journey around South America: tourism, having become one of the main pillars of the South American economy, does not just have positive effects. Let's start with the environmental consequences of the human influx into the fragile region. A report on the site of Machu Picchu, an example of humanity's endangered world heritage.</description><guid isPermaLink="false">{df0adab5-9981-87ed-112c-926ceacb7140}</guid><pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:37:04 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Selective survival</title><link>http://en.hades-presse.com/n1.999/catadores.shtml</link><description>In Brazil the catadores earn thanks to the rubbish of their contemporaries. Battling to survive, and for their place in the town. Their mere existence demonstrates how unjust and unequal this country can be.</description><guid isPermaLink="false">{e68dd94a-8662-4c3d-1a3f-b8572204be65}</guid><pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:36:32 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Do you speak Bolivarian?</title><link>http://en.hades-presse.com/n1.9999/bolivar.shtml</link><description>El Libertador (1783 -1830), a Venezuelan hero of the battle against the Spanish, remains a myth for the entire South American continent. From political theory to commercial signs, including Venezuelan money, many locations and public buildings and even cigars, his name is in everyone's mouth, between homage to a founder and paroxysmal demagogy.</description><guid isPermaLink="false">{3774c79c-9ab7-b6c5-3faa-8832f354747}</guid><pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:35:48 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Plurality of cultures, diversity of thought</title><link>http://en.hades-presse.com/n1.9/cultural-diversity.shtml</link><description>Our young magazine HADES aims to illustrate that multitude of cultures and points of view, examining the relationship of man with his main surroundings; nature, work, power, the economic world or the individual himself.</description><guid isPermaLink="false">{bc1ace-bb02-1e46-7ece-2a46e9213ed4}</guid><pubDate>Sun, 01 Jun 2008 21:35:17 GMT</pubDate></item></channel></rss>