22 Llceranmcme1
22 Llceranmcme1
22 Llceranmcme1
SESSION 2022
LANGUES, LITTÉRATURES
ET
CULTURES ÉTRANGÈRES ET RÉGIONALES
Dès que ce sujet vous est remis, assurez-vous qu’il est complet.
Ce sujet comporte 10 pages numérotées de 1/10 à 10/10.
Synthèse 16 points
Taking into account their specificities, explain what the documents say about the
influence of Ireland worldwide. Pay particular attention to the Irish diaspora and recent
migration movements, the evolution of Ireland’s image, and the political strategies to
reinforce Ireland’s position on the international stage.
Partie 2 (4 points)
So what does the diaspora mean to modern Ireland today? Personal contact between
emigrants and family and friends in Ireland is of course the most tangible connection
between Ireland and its emigrants. In one respect, the consciousness of a diaspora is
found in the many relationships that now cross oceans and national borders. For the
“lost generation” who have left since 2008, keeping in touch with home is a vital activity
while living abroad.
1 Prime Minister
2 people affected by the financial crisis
Taking into account their specificities and viewpoints, say what the documents show
about green space management in and around London. You will pay particular
attention to:
- inequalities of access to green space,
- the function of the Green Belt and green space,
- the challenges that London faces.
Partie 2 (4 pts)
A radical overhaul of planning rules that would make green space as vital as access
to water or energy is being considered by London's mayor.
Sadiq Khan has signalled he will support the scheme to make it easier for all residents
of the capital to enjoy areas away from buildings and traffic if he secures a second term
in City Hall.
A fifth of London is more than a kilometre from areas of nature, despite the fact that
green space accounts for nearly half of the city (47 per cent).
____________
1
the spread of a city into the area surrounding it, often without planning
Developers could be forced to provide all future homes with green space under
plan being considered by London mayor
A radical overhaul1 of planning rules that would make green space as vital as access
to water or energy is being considered by London's mayor.
Sadiq Khan2 has signalled he will support the scheme to make it easier for all residents
of the capital to enjoy areas away from buildings and traffic if he secures a second term
5 in City Hall.
A fifth of London is more than a kilometre from areas of nature, despite the fact that
green space accounts for nearly half of the city (47 per cent), according to a report by
the Fabian Society3, which will be published on Friday.
It says that future developments should guarantee that every resident is no more than
10 1,000m away from a patch of land that is not covered in concrete or tarmac.
The mayor of London has thrown his weight behind the initiative, which calls for
housing estates with poor access to nature to be flagged for future enhancements in
recommendations outlined by wildlife activist David Lindo.
Mr Lindo, an urban ornithologist, wrote of how he felt shut out of nature as a young
15 black man growing up in inner-city London in the 1970s.
He said: “It was often about saving spaces in leafier areas, rather than improving the
run-down spaces of inner urban neighbourhoods.”
“Camley Street Natural Park in run-down King’s Cross, saved in 1982 and then re-
imagined as a wildlife oasis, was one of the exceptions, but I never felt that addressing
20 the environmental injustices of communities living in poorer, rougher, more polluted
neighbourhoods were fully embedded in much of this work.” […]
Mr Lindo added: “We need to be less protective, bolder and braver to reimagine how
London should look and sound. We must be ‘greener’ rather than ‘greyer’.”
Speaking ahead of publication, Mr Khan said: “Access to nature should be available to
25 all Londoners regardless of wealth or background.”
1 re-examination
2 mayor of London
3 British left-leaning think-tank and pressure group which focuses on public policy
1 places of residence
2 (here) belt
Planning a Greener Future: How WATG’s ‘Green Block’ can help make London
the world’s first National Park City
Wimberly, Allison, Tong & Go, www.watg.com (architectural firm), 10 October 2017