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Published in: openDemocracyUKToo much asked, too much given: the unsustainable position of the BBC
Too much is expected of the BBC, and, in consequence, it does too much. Such a position is unsustainable, argues David Graham
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Published in: oDRSiberian Shamans Come in From the Cold (part 2)
After decades of repression, Siberia’s shamans are re-emerging. Ken Hyder is a musician who performs with a Tuvan...
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Published in: openDemocracyUKCivil society and the media: findings from the Inquiry into the Future of Civil Society in the UK and Ireland.
Erin van der Maas outlines the role civil society needs to play to ensure public service media
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Published in: HomeChina’s seasonal politics
The changing shape of China’s cultural calendar raises sensitive questions of politics, class and ethnicity that its...
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Published in: openDemocracyUKReinventing public service communication
Petros Iosifidis outlines the looming challenges to national public service broadcasters in Europe
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Published in: HomeIdentity drag
Identity has emerged as one of the most pressing questions of our time. Travis Jeppesen looks at how the Berlin...
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Published in: HomeTaking YouTube seriously
A group of anthropologists describe their participant observations on YouTube
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Published in: HomeSiberian Shamans Come in From the Cold
After decades of repression, Siberia’s shamans are re-emerging. Ken Hyder is a musician who performs with a Tuvan...
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Published in: oDRPsychotherapy returns to Russia
The return of psychotherapy to Russia after Stalin’s ban has had to overcome many obstacles, including Russian...
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Published in: openSecurityUnprecedented protests in Lebanon call for secularism
Lebanese protestors demand secularism. Thai PM rejects protestors’ offer as counter-movements gain strength. Clashes...
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Published in: openDemocracyUKGetting over our public service broadcasting addiction
Adam Singer asks whether institutional preservation is stifling innovation
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Published in: openDemocracyUKEngland's Henry Moore: The sculptures of "the greatest Englishman"
A new major exhibition of the man who was England's greatest sculpture ignores, yet borrows from, the controversial...
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Published in: openDemocracyUKThe Shape of Labour (Art Monthly 1986)
An archive article published in Art Monthly in November 1986)
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Published in: openDemocracyUKHenry Moore and the Price of Fame (1988)
This is a review article published in the Time Literary Supplement of 5-11 August 1988
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Published in: oDRParroting history
History teaching has fallen victim to politics in Russia. Educational standards are falling and children are not...
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Published in: HomeIn our hands – the human right to water
If you wanted to raise the issue of water privatisation and its effect on the human right to water, you might turn...
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Published in: openDemocracyUKFor Welsh language media to flourish, S4C needs popular support
Ron Jones responds to criticism of the Welsh broadcaster S4C with an analysis of its prospects
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Published in: HomeA movie Gordon Brown might not like to watch
The Ghost Writer, Roman Polanski’s latest movie is a well-crafted and well-acted thriller adapted from a book by...
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Published in: openDemocracyUKDon't mention the war. Grow up.
The Liberal Democrat leader wrote this article for the Guardian in 2002. It is now being used against him by a...