Caso Mediatec
Enviado por chercoles21 • 25 de Abril de 2012 • 599 Palabras (3 Páginas) • 460 Visitas
MALAYSIA AND BRITAIN ENTER INTO A TRADE
DISPUTE
Sergi chercoles
International marketing
Swot
Straits:
No racism
there have been no race riots since 1969
democratic country
Malaysia is a successful example of democratic Islamic country
Witnesses;
privileged population due to its constitution
represents 50% of the total, has a
privileged position in society according to the constitution
Internal Security Act
which enables detention without trial - has been used by the government in various
times to quell riots
Opportunities;
the new Govern
has found a way to create an agenda
reform to strengthen the peace
trades;
Ethnic tension i
s a problem because ethnic tension is present and can explode at any moment
Introducción
A country in Southeast Asia its strategic geographic position made it a point of convergence of commercial and international influencesMalaysian history is also intertwined with that of its neighbors, Indonesia, Singapore, Philippines, Brunei and Thailand. These influences result of trade and exogenous cultures provided a wealth and diversity of Malaysia, but also were vectors of domination and colonialism.
Malaysia's history is marked by successive waves of foreign influence, followed by independence from colonial rule that gets in the mid-twentieth century. Hindu and Buddhist cultures imported from India dominated the early history of Malaysia. This culture reached its peak in the Sumatran civilization, whose influence spread through Sumatra, Java and the Malay Peninsula and much of Borneo between the seventh and fourteenth. was a country in western Europe from the year 1707 to 1801. It was created from the union of the crowns of Scotland and England under the Act of Union 1707 that had been generated in order to achieve a single state on the island of Great Britain. The new parliament and government of the kingdom, was settled in Westminster, London. The 2 ancient kingdoms shared since in 1603 King James VI of Scotland were to become James I of England.
In 1707 both monarchies coexist stopped, leaving only standing the Crown of Great Britain. Ceased to exist also the Scottish Parliament and the Parliament of England, which were unified in
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