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Cover for: Dead or alive

The Schrödinger’s Cat thought experiment, when applied to human rights, suggests a world of deteriorating accountability. Can the United Nations and other overseeing bodies rectify the paradox of international law’s existence yet the frequent disregard for its edicts?

Tourist figurines on a map of Europe

How do tourists experience life in places that they make unliveable? Discussing overtourism on today’s episode of the Standard Time talk show with a Mallorcan activist, a Central European architect and an English marketing expert.

Cover for: Points of resistance

Points of resistance

Turkish media through the window of an independent journalism platform

State control of the Turkish media is exercised through subordinate and heavily concentrated ownership structures. With barely room left for independent outlets, digital platforms have become a means for journalists in Turkey to continue to provide reliable information.

Cover for: Sustaining journalism

Sustaining journalism

The 32nd European Meeting of Cultural Journals

How can independent media in Europe survive in an increasingly difficult public sphere? The Eurozine network gathered in Warsaw from 11–13 October to discuss how media consumption shifts and political changes are affecting cultural journalists and audiences today.

Siren-Com, CC BY 4.0 , via Wikimedia Commons

Republic transformed

Politics and media in France

The successful campaign of the Republican Front against the mainstreaming of the far-right proved that France’s ultra-conservative media, though on the ascendant, are still not hegemonic.

Cover for: Spirals of radicalization

Hamas’s act of terror a year ago and Israel’s devastating military response have triggered a series of epochal shifts. Globally, the West is losing support; while socially, the escalation in the Middle East is causing an ever-sharper polarization.

Cover for: Burning down the house

Across Europe, forest fires are intensifying year upon year. Climate change, droughts, falling biodiversity and Eucalyptus trees are all factors that fuel the blazes. So how do we avoid fanning the flames? Tune into our next Standard Time Episode to find some answers!

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How can independent journalism compete in a sector facing heightened reporting time pressures and diminishing financial returns? How can it entice writers to remain true to earning an honest living when on the brink of insolvency? An established indie in southern Italy, where political pressures are intense, shares its resilient approach.

Cover for: Who’s afraid of gender?

Writing a trade book about the ‘anti-gender ideology movement’, feminist scholar Judith Butler takes on anti-intellectualism in form and content. Fear of gender diversity is confessional, they write: declaring cisgender rights under threat revokes those of all others. In contrast, gender studies opens up potential for the material and the social to be seen as one.

Ben Garrat / unsplash

For a strong start into the second season, we talk about corruption in the EU. In the basement of the European Parliament we talk Italian mafia, Orbán’s son-in-law, and the misuse of public funding in member states with MEPs.

Cover for: A map without guarantees

Israel has imposed different forms of settler colonialism across the map of historic Palestine, but nothing can be taken for granted. The refugee camp is itself a spatialization of a political demand, a space of waiting for an eventual return.

Cover for: A race against time and fraud

Billions in grants intended to help member states after COVID-19 emanate from the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility. But potentially fraudulent use of funds and concerns about transparency bring the integrity of the RRF – and the EU itself – into question.

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