Shanghai Expo Newsletter No.10. October

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Shanghai Expo Newsletter No.10. October EXPOShanghai Newsletter Countdown: 550 days to go www.expo2010china.com Newsletter No.10 October 28 2008 F1, Masters Cup offer Expo bigger platform THE Expo Shanghai Organizer is promoting Expo 2010 during the Shanghai Formula One Grand Prix and the Tennis Masters Cup, under an agreement it signed with Juss Event, the local operator of these two international sports events. Expo promotions at both the F1 and Tennis Masters Cup events will continue through the end of the six-month Expo that opens in May 2010. The Expo Organizer said the F1 race has a worldwide TV audience of over 600 million, while the Mas- ters Cup draws 400 million viewers. They provide excellent platforms for Expo promotion. At the Shanghai International Circuit — the F1 Grand Prix venue — a vast World Expo landscape covers 11 stands featuring the Expo 2010 logo and mascot Haibao. It The giant logo of World Expo 2010 Shanghai China is seen on the stands of Shanghai International stands at one end of the track. Circuit, the Formule One China Grand Prix since 2004. At the venue entrance, an Expo tableau of three Haibao sculptures welcomes spectators. There is also an exhibition at the Sponsors in marketing drive grand stand showing pictures of dramatic Expo structures, such as SPONSORS of Expo of Shanghai World Expo prospect,” the official said. Mobile’s Shanghai World China Pavilion as well as the master Shanghai plan to launch Coordination. The campaign is expected Expo Commission. plan of the Expo site. Expo flags a global campaign on Corporate involvement to push the Expo fever to a The Expo’s 12 global can be seen throughout the stands. December 17 to mark the can help shield Expo 2010 new height, Hong said. partners include, among Juss Event also displays an Expo 500-day countdown to the from the global financial It is the first time all others, Coca Cola, Siemens, visual promotion along the F1 2010 event. crisis, Hong said. corporate sponsors joined China Eastern and China track. The campaign will “The crisis has not yet hands in a campaign. Mobile. Partners were at the When they’re not watching the include marketing Expo affected our preparation “China Mobile will spare top tier of the sponsorship race, spectators can watch a film registered products, said work. We are fully pre- no effort to contribute to system. Expo 2010 also has taking them on a virtual journey Hong Hao, Director- pared for the consequence the Expo,” pledged Wang 10 senior sponors and six through the Expo site. General of the Bureau of the uncertain financial Xiaojie, Director of China project Sponsors. Expo Fact So far 225 countries and international organizations have confi rmed their participation. 2 www.expo2010china.com Newsletter No. 10, October 28 2008 HK students learn about Expo Shanghai In Brief THE University of Hong Kong, the Architecture and Planning recently “Expo 2010 in Shanghai will oldest university in the territory made a presentation to UHK stu- become the most important event Beijing signs on to with 22,200 students, has shown dents and faculty. Wu said Expo for China after the successful host- keen interest in the World Expo in 2010 will center on achieving har- ing of the Beijing Olympics,” said Expo pavilion Shanghai. mony in urban living. Albert Chan, the university’s dean Wu Zhiqiang, chief planner of The presentation was part of the of student affairs. “The University BEIJING Municipality signed a the site of Expo 2010 and dean weeklong Expo promotion in Hong of Hong Kong has the responsibility participation contract on October of Tongji University’s College of Kong. of promoting the event.” 18, marking a full stop for all the participation of Chinese mainland’s 30 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions. The main- Officials examine land participants will show their the master plan uniqueness in a joint pavilion, of Shanghai Expo while separate pavilions will be site. They include created for Hong Kong, Macao and Kiyotaka Akasaka, Taiwan. UN Under-Secretary- General for Communications Muslim cuisine and Public The Expo Shanghai Organizer is Information, Sha making sure that Muslim visitors Zukang, UN Under- will feel at home with food that’s Secretary- General appropriate for their culture. Expo for Economic and venues will be prepared to dish up Social Affairs, and some 14,000 meals a day based Zhong Yanqun, on Muslim cuisine and as many Deputy Director of as 21,700 during peak periods. the 2010 World Expo “Fifty-five Islamic countries have Shanghai Executive Committee. confirmed their attendance at the Expo. A Muslim food service center will be built to cater to the need of Muslim visitors. Expo 2010 promotion Park-and-ride hubs SHANGHAI will set up 37 park- and-ride centers in the next two years to ensure adequate parking makes a stop at UN during Expo 2010. By the end of 2007, there were more than A PHOTOGRAPHIC exhibi- Representative of the People’s Under-Secretary-General for 600,000 private cars in the city. To tion about Expo Shanghai was Republic of China to the UN, Communications and Public speed up road travel, a new elec- unveiled recently at the United said the exhibition was rich in Information. Zhong Yanqun, tronic toll collection system will Nations Headquarters in New content and enhanced visitors’ Deputy Director-General of the start next month along highways in York as part of the Organizer’s understanding and knowledge of World Expo 2010 Shanghai Ex- the Yangtze River Delta. Shanghai overseas promotional drive. Shanghai and the 2010 event. ecutive Committee, briefed UN will set up 100 ETC machines at The show, which ran until The opening of the exhibi- officials on the latest progress toll stations under its jurisdiction. October 17, featured a virtual tion coincided with the World in the Expo 2010 preparations Drivers using the ETC system can tour of the Expo site as well as Habitat Day. This year’s theme and noted that the event would configure a swipe card to the wind- boards and pictures regarding of “Harmonious Cities” also provide a platform for discus- shield of their vehicles. the UN’s participation in past embodied the concept “Bet- sions on how urban construction Expos. ter City, Better Life,” said and development would contrib- Zhang Yesui, the Permanent Kiyotaka Akasaka, UN’s ute to a better lifestyle. Design competition THE Expo Organizer has urged uni- versity students to contribute ideas What is Expo Online? and designs for Expo registered products. A global competition HK forum discusses rich experience in hosting interna- Expo Shanghai Online will be was launched in August to collect Expo Online tional conferences and exhibitions. a virtual counterpart to the real innovative designs. Participants can “It would be of great help if the thing. Visitors can “walk around” send their entries with a participa- THE Shanghai World Expo Or- Expo 2010 Organizer can draw the 3D site and interact by playing tion form, a letter of commitment, ganizer invited more than 100 on that knowledge,” Zhu Yonglei, games, chat with pavilion chiefs and a DVD to the Shanghai Expo Internet and digital science experts Deputy Director-General of the and even plan a future city in keep- Bureau at 3588 Pudong Road S. to a forum in Hong Kong on Octo- Bureau of Shanghai World Expo ing with the theme of livable cities Entries close on November 16 and ber 13 to discuss Expo Shanghai Coordination, said at the forum. and innovation. the results will be announced in Online. Zhu said the online version The Organizer expects 15 to 30 mid-December. Licensed products The “Path to World Expo” forum was one of the highlights of Expo million people per day to visit Expo range from garments, toys, statio- was intended to tap Hong Kong’s 2010. Shanghai Online. nery, bags, to sports equipment. Expo Fact World Expo 2010 Shanghai expects to host 20,000 performances at 35 venues. Newsletter No.10, October 28 2008 www.expo2010china.com 3 JV to run Expo show venue IT’S all systems go for the NBA’s huge fan base in World Expo 2010 Shanghai China was announced in China Performance Center, mid-October and could take with basketball expected decades to complete. to eventually hold center However, the Shang- court. hai arena, which will seat The Shanghai Oriental 18,000 spectators, must be Pearl Group, the United ready for the 2010 Expo. States AEG Corporation Shanghai deserves to and NBA China formally have a center “as iconic as set up a joint venture on Madison Square Garden in October 14 to operate the New York,” AEG President center, which will host most and CEO Timothy J. Lei- of the performances during weke said at the ceremony. the World Expo. Heidi Ueberroth, The company will be president of NBA global in charge of the daily op- marketing partnerships and erations of the center and international business op- manage the ticketing and erations, said officials were performance promotions. thrilled to be able to bring The deal was announced regular NBA games back to amid great fanfare on the Shanghai, the hometown of banks of the Huangpu NBA superstar Yao Ming. River. American NBA legend Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, escorted by a Chinese hostess, Other cities for the Chi- The company will turn attends the Shanghai Oriental Pearl Group, AEG and NBA China partnership deal na-arena project are still the center into a “hot announcement in Shanghai. under negotiation, but the venue” encompassing list is expected to extend Being one of the five cultural and entertain- and the Staples Center in performances, art exhibi- beyond the mainland, the permanent constructions at ment company formed in Los Angeles.
Recommended publications
  • Doing Business in China: a Country Commercial Guide for U.S
    Doing Business In China: A Country Commercial Guide for U.S. Companies INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT, U.S. & FOREIGN COMMERCIAL SERVICE AND U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE, 2006. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES. • Chapter 1: Doing Business In China • Chapter 2: Political and Economic Environment • Chapter 3: Selling U.S. Products and Services • Chapter 4: Leading Sectors for U.S. Export and Investment • Chapter 5: Trade Regulations and Standards • Chapter 6: Investment Climate • Chapter 7: Trade and Project Financing • Chapter 8: Business Travel • Chapter 9: Contacts, Market Research and Trade Events • Chapter 10: Guide to Our Services 1/27 /2006 1 Return to table of contents Chapter 1: Doing Business In China • Market Overview • Market Challenges • Market Opportunities • Market Entry Strategy Market Overview Return to top • China acceded to the WTO five years ago and is currently in the process of completing a seven -year transitional period. Overall, the Chinese economy has shown exceptional economic growth over the last five years, closely associated with China’s increased integration with the global economy. Many American companies have benefited from Chinese economic growth, as evidenced by rapid and sustained increases in U.S. exports to China. U.S. exports to China increased 28, 22 percent and an estimated 19 percent in 03, 04 and 05, respectively. In 2005, China surpassed the U.K. to become our fourth largest export market. • Meanwhile, China's macro economy continues to grow robustly. According to China’s National Bureau of Statistics, China’s economy increased by 9.8 percent in 2005. Total retail sales rose 13 percent last year and are expected to continue to rise rapidly in 2006 as a result of increased consumer credit, expansion of the retai l sector and increased income in rural areas.
    [Show full text]
  • The Social Role of Shanghainese in Shanghai
    Robert D. Angus California State University, Fullerton Prestige and the local dialect: 1 The social role of Shanghainese in Shanghai Abstract. Shanghai lies in the Wu dialect area in east central China. Whereas Modern Standard Chinese is the prescribed national standard in instruction, broadcasting, and commerce, a specific variety that descended from Wu is the native language of the city. We are accustomed to finding that local varieties experience a diminution of prestige in such circumstances. The social and historical circumstances of Shanghai, however, uniquely create a situation in which this is not the case. In this paper I will briefly discuss the history of the city and its development, trace social attitudes (and ideas of prestige) on the part of its natives, show how the use of the local variety indexes social status and prestige among residents of the city, and provide evidence that the use of the native dialect of Shanghai is neither transitional nor restricted to the spheres heretofore considered Low in the typical diglossia situation. Introduction When a local, minority language is used alongside a national variety, especially when the national language is upheld as a standard, the local variety is generally seen to suffer in prestige. In a diglossia situation, as outlined by Ferguson in his groundbreaking article, the two varieties are complementarily distributed among social situations, and the prestige variety is identified as the one used in all AHigh@ circumstances. Most familiar, writes Ferguson, is the situation in California Linguistic Notes Volume XXVII No. 2 Fall, 2002 2 which “many speakers speak their local dialect at home or among family or friends of the same dialect area but use the standard language in communicating with speakers of other dialects or on public occasions” (1959:325).
    [Show full text]
  • Download Here
    ISABEL SUN CHAO AND CLAIRE CHAO REMEMBERING SHANGHAI A Memoir of Socialites, Scholars and Scoundrels PRAISE FOR REMEMBERING SHANGHAI “Highly enjoyable . an engaging and entertaining saga.” —Fionnuala McHugh, writer, South China Morning Post “Absolutely gorgeous—so beautifully done.” —Martin Alexander, editor in chief, the Asia Literary Review “Mesmerizing stories . magnificent language.” —Betty Peh-T’i Wei, PhD, author, Old Shanghai “The authors’ writing is masterful.” —Nicholas von Sternberg, cinematographer “Unforgettable . a unique point of view.” —Hugues Martin, writer, shanghailander.net “Absorbing—an amazing family history.” —Nelly Fung, author, Beneath the Banyan Tree “Engaging characters, richly detailed descriptions and exquisite illustrations.” —Debra Lee Baldwin, photojournalist and author “The facts are so dramatic they read like fiction.” —Heather Diamond, author, American Aloha 1968 2016 Isabel Sun Chao and Claire Chao, Hong Kong To those who preceded us . and those who will follow — Claire Chao (daughter) — Isabel Sun Chao (mother) ISABEL SUN CHAO AND CLAIRE CHAO REMEMBERING SHANGHAI A Memoir of Socialites, Scholars and Scoundrels A magnificent illustration of Nanjing Road in the 1930s, with Wing On and Sincere department stores at the left and the right of the street. Road Road ld ld SU SU d fie fie d ZH ZH a a O O ss ss U U o 1 Je Je o C C R 2 R R R r Je Je r E E u s s u E E o s s ISABEL’SISABEL’S o fie fie K K d d d d m JESSFIELD JESSFIELDPARK PARK m a a l l a a y d d y o o o o d d e R R e R R R R a a S S d d SHANGHAISHANGHAI
    [Show full text]
  • Shanghai Italian Center CONTENTS
    Shanghai Italian Center CONTENTS • GENERAL INFORMATION • THE EXHIBITIONS • THE EVENTS • OTHER ACTIVITIES GENERAL INFORMATION The development of the Expo Area The 5.3 kmq site laying on the 2 banks of the Huangpu River, that hosted the Shanghai World Expo 2010, is now the new pole of urban development of the city. Zone D Zone E Cultural Creative Zone Industries Zone C Zone B Zone A Riverside Convention Business development & Exhibition area area Center Zone B – Conventions and exhibitions facilities Expo Stage Mercedes Benz Arena Expo Park music performances, big events concerts green area Shanghai Expo Center convention center Spanish Pav. M Hotels M Moon Boat Offices (2015) (former Saudi (exp. 2014-2015) 5* luxury The River Mall Arabia Pav.) 30 Chinese State- commercial area Owned enterprises Shanghai World Expo Exhibition & China Art Convention Center Museum M D E Facilities under Operating Subway stations C B A construction facilities M Zone C – Entertaining and Culture Former French Pav.: Former Spanish contemporary art Pav.: performances center and cultural (2014 - tbc) activities Shanghai (2014 - tbc) Expo-Mart Shanghai Italian Center M Chocolate Happy Land Energy Park Offices (exp. 2014-2015) 30 Chinese State- Owned enterprises Aviation Park Olympic Sports Park (tbc) D E Facilities under Operating Subway stations C B A construction facilities M Shanghai Italian Center - Overview Italian Pavilion: Former Luxemburg Pavilion: Netherlands Pavilion new buildings: . Exhibitions . Event location . Commercial spaces (to be started) . Auditorium . Commercial spaces (to be started) . Offices . Event venues . Corporate showrooms . Ticket Office Square Parking lot It’S Gift Shop The Shanghai Italian Center The Italian Pavilion, visited by more than 7.3 million visitors during the Shanghai World Expo 2010, was donated by the Italian Government to the Municipality of Shanghai.
    [Show full text]
  • Making Urban Sustainability Reality at Shanghai Expo?
    Malmö’s Eco-branding to the Chinese Public: a Shanghai Expo case Yu-rong Chang Master of Applied Cultural Analysis Supervisors Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences Tom O’Dell TKAM 01 – Spring 2011 Jessica Enevold Malmö’s eco-branding to the Chinese public i Abstract Malmö’s Eco-branding to the Chinese Public: a Case from Shanghai Expo Yu-rong Chang This thesis is a documentation as well as a reflection on the participation of Sweden‘s third most populous municipality, Malmö, in Shanghai‘s World Exposition (Expo) during summer 2010. Based on my own involvement as a staff member for 1.5 months, in the thesis I wish to explore eco-branding at Malmö‘s official showcase (Malmö Case). I want to look at Malmö‘s eco-branding in an overseas context, in terms of how the thematic experience was produced and consumed by regular Chinese visitors at the showcase, through theoretical conceptualizations on space- and experience production. By identifying problems and limitations that may have occurred during Malmö‘s exhibition, this thesis opens up a discussion on how they could possibly be minimized and transformed, shedding light on how Malmö‘s eco-branding could be better facilitated to the vast Chinese public in the future. I argue the form of Malmö Case as of an art gallery put the city in a relatively disadvantaged position at the Expo in competing for public attention and understanding. Thus it is firstly, strongly suggested that tourism mediators could be more developed on the basis of social and cultural context, both to establish the preconceptions of regular visitors and to be more entertaining and informative.
    [Show full text]
  • Pudong and Putonghua: Sound Change and Language Shift in Shanghai
    Pudong and Putonghua: Sound Change and Language Shift in Shanghai Laura Wellman 乙:“他的普通话怎么样?” 甲: “他的浦东话很好。” First speaker: “How’s his Putonghua?” Second speaker: “Well, his Pudong-ese is very good…”i Advisors: Stephen Anderson & Joseph Errington Submitted to the faculty of the Department of Linguistics in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts Yale University May 1, 2013 1 Table of Contents Abstract ................................................................................................................................................ 3 Introduction .............................................................................................................................. 4 A Brief History of Shanghai & Shanghainese ............................................................................ 6 Existing Literature on Shanghainese .......................................................................................... 9 Important considerations about methodology and available data ......................................... 10 Models of Language Shift ............................................................................................................. 12 Part I: Social Evidence for Language Shift in Shanghai ............................................ 15 Language Planning ......................................................................................................................... 16 Urban DevelopMent and Dissolution of Speaker CoMMunities ....................................
    [Show full text]
  • Doing Business in China: Country Commercial Guide for US Companies
    Doing Business in China: Country Commercial Guide for U.S. Companies INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT, U.S. & FOREIGN COMMERCIAL SERVICE AND U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE, 2013. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES. • Chapter 1: Doing Business In China • Chapter 2: Political and Economic Environment • Chapter 3: Selling U.S. Products and Services • Chapter 4: Leading Sectors for U.S. Export and Investment • Chapter 5: Trade Regulations, Customs and Standards • Chapter 6: Investment Climate • Chapter 7: Trade and Project Financing • Chapter 8: Business Travel • Chapter 9: Contacts, Market Research and Trade Events • Chapter 10: Guide to Our Services Return to table of contents Chapter 1: Doing Business in China • Market Overview • Market Challenges • Market Opportunities • Market Entry Strategy • Fact Sheet Market Overview Return to top The biggest news in China in 2012 was the leadership transition as Xi Jinping took over as President from Hu Jintao, and Li Keqiang took over as Premier from Wen Jiabao. What impact they will have on economic governance remains to be determined. The International Monetary Fund estimates that China's 2013 GDP growth will be 7.8%. The Chinese government’s new leadership has acknowledged that the country’s economic growth will slow going forward due to a number of internal and external factors, likely to the range of 7-7.5% in the short- to mid-term, but has not reacted with stimulus measures through the first half of 2013.= Despite slowing GDP growth, which in 2012 was at the lowest level in 13 years, employment has remained stable, but weak profitability in certain sectors and continued external headwinds affecting export-oriented manufacturing may be cause for concern going forward.
    [Show full text]
  • Shanghai: Pudong Expo Area
    Singapore: Hotel Market Market Report - March 2019 MARKET REPORT Shanghai: Pudong Expo Area JULY 2019 Shanghai: Pudong Expo Area Market Report - July 2019 1 4 5 6 2 3 7 Introduction The main purpose of this study is to review the historical Upper-Upscale Hotel Market market performance, identify the demand segmentation Opening/ Room No. Hotel dynamics and finally draw an overall evaluation for the Renovation Count upper-upscale and upper-midscale hotels in Pudong Expo Sheraton Grand area. We have selected the following hotels from the 1 Shanghai Pudong Hotel 2007 525 market for our study. & Residences InterContinental 2 2010 384 Shanghai Expo Shanghai Marriott Hotel 3 2011 295 Riverside Total 1,204 Upper-Midscale Hotel Market DoubleTree by Hilton 4 2001 850 Hotel Shanghai, Pudong Four Points by Sheraton 5 2006 326 Shanghai, Pudong Holiday Inn Shanghai 6 2007/2009 261 Pudong Nanpu Holiday Inn Shanghai 7 2009 319 Jinxiu Total 1,756 www.horwathhtl.com 2 Shanghai: Pudong Expo Area Market Report - July 2019 Historical Supply & Demand: Pudong Expo Area Historical Market Performance: Pudong Expo Area 3500 80% 800 744 758 80% 702 712 727 74% 700 74% 2960 2960 2960 2960 71% 2960 73% 2960 70% 700 71% 73% 70% 3000 68% 68% 65% 65% 60% 600 546 559 60% 2500 58% 58% 519 2113 2170 2184 487 2027 50% 500 456 50% 1926 408 2000 1727 40% 400 40% 1500 30% 300 30% 1000 20% 200 20% 100 10% 500 10% 0 0% 0 0% 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 YTD 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 YTD ADR Re vPAR OCC Rate Room Night Available Room Night Demand OCC Rate Source: Horwath HTL Source: Horwath HTL *Note: ADR before 2016 includes service charge and business tax, but excludes breakfast; ADR after 2016 includes service charge, but excludes value-added tax Historical Performance • The opening of National Exhibition and Convention Center enhanced Shanghai’s image as an international 2013: MICE destination.
    [Show full text]
  • China Expands Its Courtesy: Saying “Hello” to Strangers
    The Journal of Asian Studies Vol. 67, No. 2 (May) 2008: 621–652. © 2008 Association of Asian Studies Inc. doi: 10.1017/S0021911808000715 China Expands Its Courtesy: Saying “Hello” to Strangers MARY S. ERBAUGH Courtesy reveals fundamental judgments about who merits respect. Traditional Chinese courtesy rests on lifelong hierarchical bonds that are too clear to require constant verbal reinforcement. But strangers, women, peasants, migrant workers, and others often do not merit face work because they lack status, fall outside the network of insiders, or are politically taboo. Until very recently, European-style equivalents of “hello,”“please,”“thanks,”“sorry,” or “goodbye” existed only in impersonal-sounding translations restricted to brief contacts with foreigners. As Beijing steps back from the socialist revolution, it is promoting these “five courteous phrases” (ni hao, qing, dui bu qi, xiexie, zai jian) to expand courtesy to universal, reciprocal greetings. Popular acceptance of this “verbal hygiene” is spreading via rapid, urban service encounters in which one’s connections are unknown. In this way, China’s self-identity as an “advanced civilization” is being retooled in international terms. RADITIONAL CHINESE COURTESY GREETS people by rank and title, often as an Thonorary family member. People greet an elderly man as “paternal grand- father” (yeye) or a young woman as “older sister” (jiejie). Until recently, Chinese had no equivalent to uniform, Western-style greetings such as “hello,” other than impersonal-sounding translations. Yet since the early 1980s, imported courtesies have become so popular that people even teach them to babies. In remote southwestern Fujian, for example, a grandfather in a traditional Hakka circular fortress held up his two-month-old grandchild, waving its hand in a “hello” (ni hao) to visitors from the city (visit to Fujian’s Nanjing, December 10, 1989).
    [Show full text]
  • A Case Study of Shanghai World Expo 2010∗
    Journal of US-China Public Administration, ISSN 1548-6591 D November 2012, Vol. 9, No. 11, 1283-1293 DAVID PUBLISHING Mega-events and City Branding: A Case Study of Shanghai World Expo 2010∗ Huachun Wang, Maerhaba Xiaokaiti, Yue Zhou, Yi Yang, Yingmei Liu, Rui Zhao Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China City branding strategies are widely adopted by many cities in the context of intensified urban competition. Based on an analysis of official branding strategies through Shanghai World Expo 2010 and an attitudinal survey of the participants’ understanding of Shanghai, this paper studies the effectiveness of Shanghai branding by mega-events. Shanghai World Expo 2010 has some active impacts on the city branding; however, there exists a mismatch between the identity as branded by the municipal government and the realities as experienced by residents and tourists, and Shanghai World Expo could have limited impacts on the city branding in the long run. Resident- and tourist-oriented contents should be the core value of “Better City, Better Life”. Establishing issue-based institutional mechanisms for wider public participation and collaboration in city branding is necessary. Keywords: city branding, World Expo, mega-events, identity, Shanghai Globalization has intensified the competition among cities for markets, investments, businesses as well as tourists. City branding is widely recognized as an effective strategy to enhance a city’s comparative advantages. In a highly competitive market, cities have to shape a positive image and differentiate themselves. Marketing the city’s unique culture, history, comfortable living, and lifestyle is widely practiced to attract more resources in a competitive environment (Evans, 2003; Kneesel, Baloglu, & Millar, 2010; Morgan, Pritchard, & Pride, 2004).
    [Show full text]
  • 2018 Year Book.Pdf
    2018 Contents Preface / P_05> Overview / P_07> SICA Profile / P_15> Cultural Performances and Exhibitions, 2018 / P_19> Foreign Exchange, 2018 / P_43> Academic Conferences, 2018 / P_65> Summary of Cultural Exchanges and Visits, 2018 / P_77> 「Spring Full of Peach Blossom Water」(detail) by ZHENG Xiaotong 2018 Shanghai-Hong Kong-Macau-Taiwan Joint Painting Exhibition Preface Culture has a power to mirror a time most truthfully, and to lead the fashion most effectively. As a messenger and an advocate of cultural exchange, the SICA has been shouldering the responsibility of inheriting the Chinese culture, developing cultural brands, and facilitating cultural exchanges between Shanghai and the world in the past 30 years. It has also been bringing in excellent international culture and spreading the Chinese culture around the world, so as to make contributions to building Shanghai into an international cultural metropolis. On behalf of the entire staff of the SICA, I hereby would like to extend our sincere gratitude for the concern and support offered by various levels of government departments, partner agencies and cultural institutions, people from all circles of life, and friends from both home and abroad. “What’s past is prologue.” To sum up our work in the year 2018, we share in this booklet a collection of illustrated reports on the programs in which we have been involved in the past year. As we are looking forward at the coming year, we would like to join hands with our friends from all walks of life around the world in strengthening international communications, embracing various cultures, promoting cultural exchanges between China and other countries or regions, and boosting the efforts to build Shanghai into an international cultural metropolis.
    [Show full text]
  • Soft Power and Tourism: a Study of Chinese Outbound Tourism to Africa
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Open Access Journals at Aalborg University Yu-Wen Chen & Niall Duggan JCIR: VOL. 4, No. 1 (2016) Soft Power and Tourism: A Study of Chinese Outbound Tourism to Africa Yu-Wen Chen & Niall Duggan1 Abstract: The increase of Sino-African interactions in trade, aid and investments has attracted Chinese tourists to Africa. The Beijing Action Plan of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) outlines China‟s cultural diplomacy in Africa, delineating a number of areas of cultural cooperation: education; press, publishing and media; and tourism and people- to-people exchange programs in academia and think tanks among young people, women and athletes. Though scholars of International relations (IR) have detected that tourism is one way of manifesting soft power, they do not feel comfortable nor ready to place the promotion of tourism into standard IR discourse. This is in contrast to scholars of tourism studies who have recognized the political nature of China‟s outbound tourism, particularly to less-developed areas such as Africa. In this paper, we have argued that the Chinese government uses outbound tourism to perform its perceived relationship with African countries; that is, Beijing aspires to be seen as a benign rising power willing to help weaker countries develop and establish harmonious ties. It is hard to separate the economic and cultural functions of outbound tourism, each of which reinforces the other, although not without limits. We find that not all African countries‟ national tourism policies are capable of, or willing to prioritize, attracting Chinese tourists.
    [Show full text]