Am zweiten Tag interessierten mich diese Vorträge:
- Die Wiederentdeckung der Langsamkeit – Tim Pritlove
- Social Media And The Arab Uprisings – Fadi Salem, Zeynep Tufekci
- Citizen empowerment against brutality in Syria – Leila Nachawati
- Threats to free expression in the middle east and north africa – Jillian C. York
- From dissent to disillusionment? – Panel
- Media ecology and the Occupy movement – Sasha Costanza-Chock, Christine Schweidler
- How sharism is unleashing liberty – Isaac Mao
- The borders of the global village – Shahidul Alam
- The end and the beginning: Cambodia
Die Wiederentdeckung der Langsamkeit – Tim Pritlove
Warum Podcasts funktionieren
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
Social Media And The Arab Uprisings – Fadi Salem, Zeynep Tufekci
Some answers- more questions
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
Citizen empowerment against brutality in Syria – Leila Nachawati
Over the last months, Syrians have struggled against a 41-year-old wall of fear.
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
Threats to free expression in the middle east and north africa – Jillian C. York
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
From dissent to disillusionment? – Panel
Syria, Egypt, Tunesia – a critical assessment of the media landscape after the arab spring
Leila Nachawati, Claire Ulrich, Tarek Amr, Zulfikar Abbany
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
Media ecology and the Occupy movement – Sasha Costanza-Chock, Christine Schweidler
The world has watched the Arab Spring unfold, watched social networks and the ways in which they are censored in China and Iran. But what about regions that fall under the international media’s gaze less often, where the Internet is still in its infancy? And now for something completely different. You’ll need only one screen for the next 50 minutes. Why? Because we believe that the re:publica has room for this as well: On April 17, 1975, the Khmer Rouge entered Phnom Penh. The war was over but instead of celebrating the end of the conflict, all citizens of the capital were ordered to evacuate from their homes within days. Life was perilous. Sophal Ear was only a little baby when his father died and it was up to his mother to save five children and herself under the most difficult of circumstances. Catch Sophal’s compelling story of his family’s harrowing escape from Cambodia under the rule of the Khmer Rouge in “The End/ Beginning: Cambodia”. What a inspirational day at #rp12
re:volt – from Egypt to Syria, Bangladesh, China and Cambodia. ACT!ON. #humanrightslogo — rugydp (@rugydp) May 3, 2012
How sharism is unleashing liberty – Isaac Mao
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
The borders of the global village – Shahidul Alam
Link zum Beitrag auf der re:publica 2012 Seite
The end and the beginning: Cambodia