Football and Democracy Published: 6 June 2014 The Brazilian Congress and the authorities approved numerous exceptions to important democratic rules in the last five years to favor private interests. It is good that the Brazilian people defend themselves against it. Even if it is to protect football. By Barbara Unmüßig
The End of a Success Story? The FIFA World Cup and Protests in Brazil Published: 6 June 2014 According to the National Movement of the Popular Committees of the Cup 170,000 people are affected by evictions and lost their homes. Despite international standards for forced removals which are recognized in the Brazlian law, a majority of the affected will not be compensated adequately. By Dawid Danilo Bartelt
Sporting Homeless Published: 17 June 2014 Brazilian athletes and activists choose sport trainings as a form of creative protest. They want to call attention to the dismal training conditions for the mega-event and they demonstrate: sport is more than a commercial spectacle. By Andreas Behn
The Owners of Rio Published: 6 June 2014 The Four Sisters, Brazils largest construction companies, are the big donors to political campaigns. And also they are the big winners, as a study showed: for every dollar donated the companies recieved 6.5 half dollars back in public works contracts. By Adriano Belsário, João Roberto Lopes Pinto and Rafael Rezende
The World Cup Must Be Sustainable – But This Is Mostly Rhetoric Published: 17 June 2014 The Brazilian government has planned a "sustainable World Cup". Great distances for the visitors and participants, and the immense construction works make it difficult to comply with the green agenda. Moreover: civil society actors have been largely ignored by the government initiative. By Julia Ziesche
Legal Actions or Unlawful Interventions? Published: 6 June 2014 The burden for Brazil's costly stadiums is mainly carried by the habitants of the poorest neighborhoods, the favelas. That the habitants generally had little or no formal education and were insufficiently informed of their rights was exploited by the authorities. By Lando Dämmer and Mara Natterer
Transformations of the Ecology Movement. From the 'Limits to Growth' to the Rio Conference Published: 29 April 2014 Call for Papers: Transformations of the Ecology Movement. From the 'Limits to Growth' to the Rio Conference. Deadline is the 15th June 2014
U.S. Military Advantages and the Future of Nuclear Arms Control Published: 10 October 2013 The United States and Russia are implementing the New START Treaty, which requires that each side reduce to 1550 deployed strategic warheads on 700 deployed strategic missiles and bombers by 2018. The Obama administration would like to go further. Doing so, however, will require that Washington address several related issues, first and foremost missile defense. By Steven Pifer
”Tolerant? We’re Tolerant” – A Cinematic Intervention Published: 29 April 2014 Who tolerates whom? Who is "we" and who are "the others"? How private or public can/must love be lived? A Cinematic Intervention by director Angelina Maccarone and writer Carolin Emcke on equal rights for LGBTI.
Hungary: What can we expect from the next Orbán government? Published: 23 April 2014 On 6 April, Fidesz obtained another two-thirds majority in the Hungarian parliament. What will Viktor Orbán want to do with his supermajority, and what are the next four years likely to bring in Hungarian politics and society? By Kristóf Szombati