- School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
School of Culture and Communication - Research Publications
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ItemHow artists make climate change accessibleDe Beukelaer, C ; Breskvar, EJ ; Christoff, P ( 2021)
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ItemArtists are not at the negotiating table at COP26 but art is everywhere. What can they accomplish through their work?De Beukelaer, C ; Breskvar, EJ ; Christoff, P ( 2021)
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ItemGhana’s war on piracy: copyright and human rights in AfricaDe Beukelaer, C ; Fredriksson, M ( 2018-09)In this blogpost Christiaan De Beukelaer and Martin Fredriksson contribute to roape.net’s ongoing discussion on fraud, economic trickery and crime in Africa today by initiating a critical discussion about the war on piracy. Ghana’s economy might look like a success story with a continuously growing GDP, but the statistics actually hide growing inequalities which also creates stronger breeding grounds for informal markets of various kinds.
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ItemNo Preview AvailableWaarom Nederland meer dan ooit verdeeld is over Zwarte PietDe Beukelaer, C ( 2018-11)Het debat over de controversiële verschijning van zwarte piet is een symptoom van diepere verdeeldheid in de Nederlandse samenleving.
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ItemNo Preview AvailableWhy the Netherlands is more split on ‘Black Pete’ than everDe Beukelaer, C ( 2018-11)
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ItemNo Preview AvailableFESPACO: de crème van de Afrikaanse film?De Beukelaer, C ( 2013)Van 23 februari tot 2 maart presenteerde FESPACO, het grootste filmfestival van Afrika, maar liefst 101 geselecteerde films uit 755 inzendingen voor officiële competitie. Kwantiteit vormt hier in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, dus duidelijk geen probleem. Maar hoe zit het met de kwaliteit van deze best-of van de afgelopen twee jaar? Wat is het internationale potentieel van de hedendaagse Afrikaanse film? En welk verschil maakt hij voor Afrika zelf?
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ItemNo Preview AvailableIn the Stillness Between Two Waves of the SeaDe Beukelaer, C ; Corcoran, J ( 2020-05)A reflection on being at sea during the COVID-19 pandemic. Text by Christiaan De Beukelaer and Jennifer Corcoran. Photographs by Christiaan De Beukelaer.
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ItemFrom Locked Out to Locked InDe Beukelaer, C ( 2020-09)According to the International Maritime Organization, more than 200,000 seafarers are currently stranded at sea. They cannot return home at the end of their contracts on commercial vessels – including container ships, tankers, bulk carriers and cruise ships – which often have them at sea for months. Since countries around the world started closing their borders to contain the spread of COVID-19, crew change has been prohibited. As a result, the “Seafarers Happiness Index”, a quarterly survey published by the London-based Mission to Seafarers, indicates an unsurprising recent drop in “general happiness” levels.
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ItemCrew change crisis risks supply chains - and livesDe Beukelaer, C ( 2020-10)Some 400,000 seafarers are currently stuck on ships, past the end of their contracts, unable to go home.
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ItemOok Zeelieden Willen Naar HuisDe Beukelaer, C ( 2020-10)De honderdduizenden zeelieden die niet aan wal raken, zijn de onzichtbare slachtoffers van de corona-epidemie, stelt Christiaan De Beukelaer. Toch zijn de rederijen niet snel geneigd om hun bemanningen te wisselen. Daar moet verandering in komen.
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