Charité Published: 8 July 2015 Malika and Fatima are waiting for me by the entrance to the women’s clinic at the Charité. The women are very quiet; I try to strike up a conversation. I ask them how they lived in Chechnya... An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Marina Naprushkina
Spoon Justice: An allegory of ownership Published: 8 July 2015 It does not help to turn the world around. It does not help to shake the Law as hard as one can. Justice refuses to function in a recognizable manner. An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Hilde Susan Jægtnes
The EU and the Migrant Crisis: Not Much More Than a Point Defense Published: 2 June 2015 At the southern border of “Fortress Europe”, the Mediterranean has turned into a graveyard. The current migrant crisis in Europe is about more than a risk to the EU’s reputation. It strikes at the core of the EU’s founding values. A continuation of its half-hearted response to the migration crisis is out of question. By Charlotte Beck
Dossier: Coal Atlas - Facts and figures on a fossil fuel Published: 18 November 2015 Dossier Coal does not just kill the climate. In coal mines, terrible working conditions are rife. Accidents are commonplace. Still, EU member states subsidize coal related business with almost 10 billion euros per year. Our dossier with all the articles and infographics from our Coal Atlas.
Hungary’s hypocritical migration policy Published: 29 May 2015 "We’d like to retain Hungary as Hungary", says Victor Orbán in January 2015. Xenophobia is significant in his country. How a multicultural and multi-ethnic society became a mono-ethnic and closed one. By Boldizsár Nagy
Youth in Transition Published: 21 January 2015 Why leaving Afghanistan might be the preferred choice for the young and restless. By Susanne Schmeidl
Just a tiny contribution Published: 9 February 2015 Wei Chen dropped out of school and embarked to work at a construction site in Inner Mongolia. He stayed there for eight years: It was like living in a black-and-white film, he says – no colors, only desert.
Brides for India’s North Published: 18 February 2015 Declining sex ratios due to decades of discrimination against women in certain parts of India have left many men unmarried. An interview about cross-regional marriage migration with Ravinder Kaur. By Caroline Bertram
At Home in Homelessness Published: 29 December 2014 “We were born to the world to be at home in it somewhere,” wrote the Hungarian author Áron Tamási. Yet not only the feeling of being at home, but also that of homelessness may be a common denominator among people who live in the same space – in the same cyberspace. By Anna Frenyó
The Right to the City and Forced Evictions Published: 13 June 2014 In this interview professor Orlando Alves dos Santos Júnior (Research Institute of Urban and Regional Planning at Rio de Janeiro University), talks about the violations against citizen's rights that are happening in Brazil. By Manoela Vianna