17 articles
The emergence of a new Ukraine offers an opportunity to reinvigorate the European project and reaffirm its ideals of union, solidarity, democracy and peace. A strong, successful Ukraine protects against a democratic backslide in the east of the continent. With this in mind, Eurozine is coordinating a media exchange project in partnership with the Open Society Initiative for Europe, OSIFE, that links independent media in Ukraine with “alternative” media in five countries in western Europe: Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and Greece. The aim is to promote critical, informed and nuanced voices that counter the dominant discourse of crisis concerning Ukraine.
The project raises awareness among media professionals and journalists of social, political and cultural debates in Ukraine, and supports them in providing a multifaceted and diverse image of Ukraine to readers and viewers. By facilitating the exchange of media products (articles, TV-reports) between Ukrainian media and media outlets in the target countries, the project introduces an international public to debates in Ukraine on topics such as human rights, the environment, the refugee crisis (both within and outside Ukraine’s borders), labour law and union rights, austerity politics, cultural policy and LGBT rights.
Through a journalists’ exchange programme, journalists will have a unique opportunity to produce reportage, make contact with their Ukrainian colleagues and gain insight into the topics and debates most relevant to them. In the long run, the project is geared toward establishing strong and reliable relationships between journalists and media in Ukraine and European countries that result in long-term media co-operations and widely disseminated reportage about developments in Ukraine beyond crisis communication and the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
First a pro-EU revolution, now war with Russophile separatists and economic crisis, both ongoing: but what’s next for Ukraine? Sophia Christoforidou of the Greek media outlet “Inside Story” arrives in Kyiv to speak to people from many walks of life about their hopes and fears for the country’s future.
"Take your kids and go away"
Interview with Refat Chubarov, leader of the Crimean Tatar National movement
Four thousand people are fleeing conflict in eastern Ukraine and Crimea, which has been annexed by Russia, towards other parts of the country. They are scraping by on next to nothing in Kyiv and other cities in the hope that the war will come to an end.
Caught in the geopolitical crossfire
Ukraine and the new Cold War
The new Cold War is a dead end in the labyrinth of world history, writes Achim Engelberg. It cannot resolve current contradictions in Russia, Ukraine or elsewhere. So what are the alternatives for upholding democracy, an independent Ukraine and peace in Europe?
Leaving the Square
Stories from Ukraine
Thousands of Ukrainians tired of corruption, insecurity and lack of opportunities took to the streets during the Revolution of Dignity in 2014. That same year, Putin invaded the east and annexed the Crimean peninsula. Activists and reformists today try to keep the spirit of the Maidan, but face an ultraconservative political class and the threat of open warfare with Russia.
En Ucrania surgió Femen, un fértil movimiento de protesta que utiliza el sexo y la desnudez como armas arrojadizas contra la misoginia, el autoritarismo o la homofobia. Y a Ucrania nos fuimos a conocer a la madres del invento.
This is an attempt to give a portrait of Ukrainian youth, with all the limitations implied when one sets out to analyse something that is living, heterogeneous and in a state of continuous transformation. More than two years after the revolution of the Euromaidan, what are the main goals of the new generations? And what are their aspirations?
Life in Kyiv three years after Maidan
A radio report by Marina Lalovic
From a distance it isn’t visible, but talking with local residents, you can feel it: something is changing. Ukrainian novelist and poet Serhii Zhadan reports from Starobelsk, a town in the Luhansk region near the ceasefire line, held by the Ukrainian government.
For 5 weeks Radio Bullets will broadcast “Postcards from Kyiv”, a programme produced by Cecilia Ferrara as part of the “Beyond conflict stories” project coordinated by Eurozine. To listen to the programme tune in to www.radiobullets.com
El espíritu de la Revolución de la Dignidad de 2014 no ha perdido aún su fuerza, pero los reformistas salidos de la plaza de Maidán corren el riesgo de pensar que Ucrania son solo sus fans de Facebook.
El mayor gimnasio al aire libre del mundo, el Kachalka de Kiev (Ucrania) está formado por cientos de máquinas deportivas construidas a partir de materiales de desecho.
Amor eslavo a la carta: por qué triunfan las agencias matrimoniales de Ucrania
1,4 millones de mujeres más que hombres
En Kiev triunfan los negocios que se ofrecen a poner en contacto a personas que quieren casarse, por lo general mujeres ucranianas y hombres extranjeros. Las razones son multiples.
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