Hungary’s Last Chance to Say No to the Olympics
I do not want Hungary to host the Olympics, neither in 2024 nor in 2028, despite my love for sports.
Network 4 Debate is a collaborative project of four newsrooms from the Visegrad countries. Between January and June 2017, A2larm, in cooperation with its partners Krytyka Polityczna (Poland), Pole Blog (Slovakia) and Kettős Mérce (Hungary), produced a series of thematic texts and videos in English revolving around three core topics that we feel resonate within the V4 neighbourhood: work and labour; education and educational policy; and engaged art and artivism.
Our aim was to invite the Visegrad countries to debate and discuss these topics through engaged citizen journalism. With Network for Debate, our goal was to amplify and promote a common voice against social injustice and radical nationalism, a voice of a progressive and tolerant Visegrad region. What are the common problems faced by Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary and Slovakia, what is their wider context and are there solutions? These are the questions contributors from the four participating newsrooms tackled.
You can read and view all texts and videos created as part of the project below. All content is offered for free-to-use syndication to international media outlets, bringing regional concerns to a broader European context.
Project outputs are also available for free download in conveniently pacaked thematic ebooks!
This project is kindly supported by the International Visegrad Fund.
I do not want Hungary to host the Olympics, neither in 2024 nor in 2028, despite my love for sports.
We do not know where this road will lead us; we only know that it will be difficult to follow.
Almost one fifth of employees in the Czech Republic lives in poverty, while business managers possess especially high incomes. But everyone comes cheap compared to the rest of the EU.
Art schools can oppose the current educational system with its focus on competitiveness by meticulously cultivating uselessness.
Despite it not being immediately obvious, the terrible social conditions of the people living on the streets are interconnected with environmental injustice.
It goes without saying that not using Facebook in the era of Facebook is very different from doing so before Facebook has been created.
The demonization of ‘gender ideology’ has become a key rhetorical tool in the construction of a new conception of ‘common sense’ for a wide audience.