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Cover for: Why here?

Why here?

A first-hand account of the COVID-19 losses from Bergamo, Italy

Not only the infected are in danger, hospitals don’t have capacity to deal with other emergencies either. Caskets are piling up as the cemetery cannot keep up with the number of deaths every day. From social workers to friars to cleaning staff, everyone who serves the sick are at risk at the epicentre of the contagion in Bergamo province.

Cover for: Operetta wars on a pandemic

Decades of cuts to public health are now exposed as the spread of the coronavirus overwhelms the system. Europe has been lucky to observe hurricanes, floods and plagues of the past decades from afar, but geography or wealth doesn’t safeguard us from epidemics. How we treat our least powerful now will be telling about what we can hope for.

Cover for: Gone viral

Gone viral

COVID-19 in the disinformation ecosystem

From genocidal accusations to alleged cures, the coronavirus pandemic is accompanied by a swathe of conspiracy theories. These are perpetrated not only by clickbait websites but also authoritarian regimes who exploit the scare for political purposes and try to shift the blame from their failing responses. An international survey and a detailed case study.

Cover for: Eine andere Medienordnung ist möglich

Eine andere Medienordnung ist möglich

Von der liberalen Öffentlichkeit zur Information als Gemeingut

Unter politischen Druck geraten, geben digitale Plattformen ihre Laissez-faire-Haltung gegenüber den von ihnen angebotenen Inhalten auf und verbünden sich mit klassischen Medien, um „vertrauenswürdige“ Nachrichten und Informationen zu liefern. Dies ist jedoch der falsche Weg, um Bedingungen zu schaffen, unter denen Desinformation bekämpfbar wird.

Cover for: Modernus melavimo menas

Ne meluodamas, o pagautas meluojant politikas šiandien gali tvirtinti metantis iššūkį status quo. Kodėl šiuolaikinis politinis gyvenimas, kaip jį apibūdino Hannah Arendt, dabar veikia tik kaip savęs dekonstrukcija.

Cover for: The climate-migration-industrial complex

Rightwing nationalists push for keeping migrants out of their countries, even though their economies are sustained by the cheap and desperate labour force, created by the climate crisis. To defuse this paradox, Thomas Nail proposes to turn the model on its feet instead of its head by acknowledging that mobility has always been the reality of both people and nature.

Cover for: Zine renaissance and hyperlocal news

Zine renaissance and hyperlocal news

Eurozine podcast part 2: Local journalism in the digital age

Globalization was supposed to connect people but instead ended up connecting the powerful. Local news is rapidly disappearing, a side-effect of digitalization and the ownership concentration in media markets. In an age of technological changes and political pressure, niche publications and a renaissance of zines lead the quest for new, sustainable models in publishing.

Cover for: We’re not Beauvoirians, but...

We’re not Beauvoirians, but...

Conservative intellectuals and Simone de Beauvoir

Simone de Beauvoir seems impossible to avoid when discussing feminism, even to this day. Seventy years after ‘The Second Sex’ was published, Eve Gianoncelli reviews French new conservative authors who set out to forget about Beauvoir, only to be found captured by her most influential legacy.

Cover for: Big Tech: The law of power?

The technoliberationism that accompanied the early days of the web now belongs to myth. Deleting Facebook is the new rebellion. Surveillance capitalism is the buzzword. Regulating is radical. Introducing the new Eurozine focal point ‘Big Tech: The law of power?’

Cover for: The end of anonymity

The increasing use of facial recognition software by security services introduces a new era of surveillance. With it, public anonymity can be eliminated in a stroke. So why does the recent EU white paper on AI make no reference to the democratic risks posed by the new technology?

Cover for: A computer is all you need

A computer is all you need

How Big Tech – especially Digital Health – is eroding the social contract

Big Tech and its applications are often hailed as a way of democratizing healthcare. But who is really benefitting from Big Tech’s increasing involvement in public services such as health? And does a focus on the privacy implications of the Big Tech revolution cause us to overlook its social impacts?

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