In this interview, Ashanti Collavini (2017-2019), an Euroculture alumnus tells us about her experience and gives some insights into her thesis writing process.
Author: Euroculturer Magazine
The Covid-19 health crisis has created the perfect atmosphere for fake-news and disinformation. People, but also countries and heads of governments use hoaxes for political purposes in the midst of this unprecedented situation.
Why are conspiracy theories spreading so easily in times of crisis? And what do they say about our societies and our democracies? These are the questions Nemanja Milosevic is trying to answer in this article.
Christabel Fernandez gives us an insight into the increasingly important role small states play in the world governance and the international scene.
In this article, Johanna Pieper shows us how a developing country like Peru has been handling the current Covid-19 pandemic.
We were not expecting this. We were not prepared for this. By the end of the 1990s the threat was a computer bug that would disable everything. Now every system is running smoothly, but nothing really works. And people’s lives collapse.
Over the years the aim of going for a walk in the city has shifted from breathing some fresh air to shopping. In pre-corona times, taking a round at indoors malls had become a Sunday family activity.
The recent Covid-19 outbreak and confinement measures will give us plenty of time to reflect on the consequences it will have on our societies. When the crisis is over, populist parties will probably push even harder to reestablish border control or exit the Schengen Area. Besides, the financial system of the EU will have to be rethought.
In these trying times, many are the initiatives through which Italians have tried and reinvented togetherness, in order to cope with the disruption of our daily routines and social life – from “balcony flash mobs” to live Instagram “concerts from home” and free access to a variety of digital services and products (streaming platforms, ebooks, etc.). It is in this spontaneous framework of grassroots and top-down solidarities that La radio per l’Italia places itself, also as an unprecedented event in the (Italian) history of communication.
Gianluca Michieletto (2018-2020) tells us about his research track at Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis, United States.
