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Dubai Photos Website provide good photos about the night life (bars restaurants, ...), the Hotels, Shopping and Fashion Girls.
Golf is also a very nice activity in Dubai and the wheather is very nice

Rosewood Hotels is expanding its empire to Dubai. Or Dubai is expanding its empire to Rosewood Hotels. We’re not quite sure which commercial giant is exploiting which. Either way, a group of investors announced
in a press conference yesterday plans to build the Rosewood Dubai International Financial Centre.
The hotel will have 157 deluxe rooms, 36 suites and a Royal Suite. It will also offer fine dining in two outlets, a gala ballroom, a
business center, and the Rosewood Spa with rooftop pool and fitness center.
The Rosewood franchise already owns The Carlyle in NYC, a few other five-star joints in Texas and California, and several others in Latin America, the
Caribbean, and the Middle East.
Doors will open in late 2009. Until then, we’re fairly certain most traveling businessman already know Dubai restaurants don’t serve alcohol, but most Dubai hotels do. Don’t say we never did anything for
you.
Dubai
The Rinker School of Business presents its annual Spring Business and Culture Trip for the 2010 school year - Explore the United Arab Emirates with trips to Dubai and AbuDhabi for the courses entitled, "Regional
Business Environments" (BUI 3003), for undergraduate students, and "Global Business Environments" (BUS 5203), for MBA students.
The trip is scheduled for May 10th - May 22nd, and includes seven business visits as well as
many cultural visits. The cultural visits include tours of both cities, visits to Jumeriah Mosque with personal escorts by Arab families, visits to Emirate Palace, Heritage Village, Dhow cruises and much more.
The cost is $3,825, which
includes roundtrip airfare, transportation and most meals.
Although the deadline for application has passed, you may contact Dr. Ann Langlois for more information regarding this trip or future business trips, at ann_langlois@pba.edu.


The Dubai Towers.
Dubai, a province of the United Arab Emirates, has been described as the ideal dream world of neo-liberalism, the place where capitalism is allowed to flourish without the least
impediment by government regulation. Those who celebrate corporate capitalism certainly love Dubai, and wish the rest of the world could follow its example.
Take Donna Wiesner Keene, a fellow of the Independent Women’s Forum, a
rightwing anti-feminist think tank. Recently in a letter to the New York Times she wrote: “Madrick’s statement, quoted by the reviewer, that ‘there really is no example of small government among rich nations,’ is unsupported nonsense.
Think Dubai, free and rich.”
Matthew Yglesias has already pointed out that Dubai is better described as a petrodictatorship rather than a free country. Even under the recently departed Bush administration, the U.S. State Department has
been critical of Dubai’s human rights record.
And today the New York Times ran an eye-opening report on what life is like in the capitalist utopia of Dubai. The article can be found here.
An excerpt:
Laid-Off Foreigners Flee as Dubai Spirals Down
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