You are browsing the archive for 2019 May.

Reflections on the 2019 European parliamentary elections

- May 30, 2019 in News

With around 200 million people voting across Europe, the make-up of the new European Parliament for the next five years has been decided. While the centre-right European People’s Party (EPP) won the most seats, its contingent is down on the previous election. The traditional centre-left grouping of the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) – which I was a member of – has also been squeezed by the rise of populist parties. Anti-establishment parties won close to a third of seats, including the Brexit Party in the UK, and they head to Brussels to be destructive, not constructive.  But these parties are fragmented and will largely be snubbed by the majority of MEPs, meaning the Liberals and Greens elected will prove far more pivotal to Europe’s journey over the next five years. The two main groupings need to build coalitions, so horse-trading will be getting underway between pro-EU parties. The European Parliament needs to elect a new President, who normally comes from the largest group, then there is the selection of Vice Presidents, Quaestors, chairs of committees and vice chairs of committees, which will be divided up between the political groups dependent on individual delegation size. And what about the special candidate who leads the Commission? Will this happen like last time where the EPP with the largest number of elected MEPs got Jean Claude Juncker in for the top job? If history repeats itself that will be Manfred Weber, the German lead candidate, but opinions are split across Europe. The Member States will also choose who will be the head of the Council. Unlike the Commission position, the head of the Council is picked by the heads of the Member States. It is unclear how long the UK’s MEPs will be sitting in the parliament, which means they’re unlikely to find themselves in the running for these key positions, diluting the country’s influence before – or if – Brexit takes place. During the last parliamentary term, when I was an MEP for Scotland, much of my work was focused on proposed EU-wide copyright changes, and opposing what was originally known as Article 13 and later became Article 17. The changes are opposed by over five million people through a petition, but MEPs backed the changes earlier this year, as did the Council of the European Union – with six countries voting against: Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Poland, Finland and Sweden. Poland is now launching a legal challenge. If implemented, the changes are expected to lead to the introduction of ‘filters’ on sites such as YouTube, which will automatically remove content that could be copyrighted. While entertainment footage is most likely to be affected, academics fear it could also restrict the sharing of knowledge, and critics argue it will have a negative impact on freedom of speech and expression online. Despite the recent votes, this issue is likely to be a major issue for the new crop of MEPs, and the battle is not over. Green parties in particular have been vocal opponents of this crackdown, and they have been successful across Europe.  The more diverse make-up of the European Parliament should allow more voices to be heard, and I hope many MEPs choose to champion openness over the next five years. That includes supporting improved transparency measures at social media companies like Facebook to prevent the spread of disinformation and fake news and backing efforts to force governments and organisations to use established and recognised open licences when releasing data or content. Our mission is to create an open world, where all non-personal information is open, free for everyone to use, build on and share; and creators and innovators are fairly recognised and rewarded. I hope MEPs from across Europe will work with us to build a fair, free and open future.  

Bob’s Electrical Theatre (1906)

- May 29, 2019 in Uncategorized

Very early animation in which puppets get up to various routines, including wrestling, fencing, and what appears to be a short bout of bum smacking.

Bob’s Electrical Theatre (1906)

- May 29, 2019 in electricity, puppets, Segundo Chomón, theatre

Very early animation in which puppets get up to various routines, including wrestling, fencing, and what appears to be a short bout of bum smacking.

Walt Whitman in Russia: Three Love Affairs

- May 29, 2019 in Featured Articles, Konstantin Balmont, Kornei Chukovsky, Literature, poetry, russia, translation, Vera Ermolaeva, walt whitman, walt whitman reception in russia

Walt Whitman’s influence on the creative output of 20th-century Russia — particularly in the years surrounding the 1917 Revolution — was enormous. For the 200th anniversary of Whitman's birth, Nina Murray looks at the translators through which Russians experienced his work, not only in a literary sense — through the efforts of Konstantin Balmont and Kornei Chukovsky — but also artistic, in the avant-garde printmaking of Vera Ermolaeva.

Walt Whitman in Russia: Three Love Affairs

- May 29, 2019 in Featured Articles, Konstantin Balmont, Kornei Chukovsky, Literature, poetry, russia, translation, Vera Ermolaeva, walt whitman, walt whitman reception in russia

Walt Whitman’s influence on the creative output of 20th-century Russia — particularly in the years surrounding the 1917 Revolution — was enormous. For the 200th anniversary of Whitman's birth, Nina Murray looks at the translators through which Russians experienced his work, not only in a literary sense — through the efforts of Konstantin Balmont and Kornei Chukovsky — but also artistic, in the avant-garde printmaking of Vera Ermolaeva.

Gestalte das Opendata.ch/2019 Forum als Helfer*in mit

- May 29, 2019 in Bern, Bildung, Daten, event

Das diesjährige Treffen zum Thema offene Daten am 4. Juli wird eine bereichernde Erfahrung für alle Teilnehmerinnen wie auch für uns Organisatorinnen. Unser Anspruch ist es, einen neuen Konferenz-Standard in der Schweiz zu setzen für Austausch und praktisches Handeln in einer grossen Gruppe. Um das Forum für alle Teilnehmerinnen zu einem Erfolg zu machen, benötigen wir deine Mithilfe. So kannst du unser Ziel als freiwillige Helferin unterstützen: am Vorabend (3. Juli)
  • mit dem Organisationsteam den Konferenzort einrichten
  • am gemeinsamen Abendessen die letzten Details besprechen
am Forumstag (4. Juli)
  • mit dem Organisationsteam dem Konferenzort den letzten, notwendigen Schliff geben
  • die Teilnehmer*innen begrüssen, über Örtlichkeiten und Abläufe orientieren
  • in den parallelen thematischen Sessions das Protokoll der Gruppendiskussion führen, um die Haupterkenntnisse festzuhalten und das Fundament für weiteres Handeln zu legen
  • den Ablauf der parallelen thematischen Sessions unterstützen
  • und unbedingt: Dich selbst am Forum mit deinen Fragen und Bedürfnissen einbringen!
Für deine Mithilfe können wir dir folgendes anbieten:
  • ein Gratisticket
  • Einblick in / Teilnahme an bis zu vier parallelen Gruppendiskussionen (à je 45 min.) zu den Fragen und Bedürfnissen, welche die Teilnehmer*innen am meisten beschäftigen
  • Erste Erfahrungen mit Liberating-Structures-Methoden (innovativen Kollaborationsstrukturen)
  • Zugang zu und Austausch mit Open Data Interessierten und Engagierten
  • Opendata.ch/2019 T-Shirt und Stickers ?
Interessiert? Melde dich bei uns via info@opendata.ch Alle Helferinnen sind eingeladen, uns am Vorabend am Konferenzort in Bern-Wankdorf beim Aufbau der Konferenz zu unterstützen und im Anschluss ein gemeinsames Abendessen zu geniessen. Für Protokollführerinnen und Session-Unterstützer*innen organisieren wir vorab einen ca. 2-stündigen Workshop, um dich auf deine Rolle vorzubereiten. Wir freuen uns auf deine Mitgestaltung des Opendata.ch/2019 Forums,
Nikki Böhler, Andreas Amsler und das Team

The Sum of Our Parts – Open Organisations

- May 29, 2019 in News

The “open” sector, encompassing organisations working on transparency, civic participation, and open data, has grown fast in many countries in the past decade, aided by political champions and a generous funding environment. Today, there is a sense of waning political interest amongst previous high-level advocates and an expected reduction in core funding to come. At the same time there are an emergent set of data-related issues connected to privacy, rights, automation and more, that merit new thinking and approaches. In this context, we, the CEOs of seven international open organisations – mySociety, the Sunlight Foundation, the Open Data Institute (ODI), the Open Data Charter (ODC), the Web Foundation, Open Knowledge Foundation (OKF) and the GovLab – got together to consider how to manage these shifts.

Photo by Jonas Svidras on Unsplash

We see an opportunity to achieve more impact by combining our efforts in the face of shared challenges. We share a commitment to scale and deepen the impact of our work and to communicate more clearly who we are and how we differ. Ultimately, we are looking for opportunities to become more than the sum of our parts.

As such, we undertook a process, supported by Oxford Insights and funded by the Transparency and Accountability Initiative donor collaborative, to review our current strategies and workstreams, analyse each of our organisation’s role and comparative advantages, identify areas for collaboration, and propose actions to make such collaboration a reality. What we mapped out and what we learned are cape captured in this report. We identified several areas ripe for enhanced collaboration. We categorized these under policy, advocacy, and campaigning; learning, training, and skills development; consultancy; technology and infrastructure; network and coordination; communications; and operations. Going forward, we will explore in-depth how to best collaborate on these fronts. For a guiding framework, OKF, ODI, and ODC will lead a process of defining an overarching Theory of Change for openness that articulates our strategic alignment. Finally, we also intend to collaborate more closely on joint opportunity development in both philanthropic and commercial funding, with a specific focus on how to develop joint projects with a sector-based approach. Sectors under consideration for aligned development include climate change, health and education. Funders can help here, too, by facilitating links to other funders and organisations in those fields. So far, we are already making progress on some of the report’s proposed recommendations. We have largely identified which organisations and people will lead on each proposed action item and created a spreadsheet to introduce those responsible for key areas to each other. We now have a WhatsApp group to more informally and easily share information. Work is underway by OKF and ODI on the overarching Theory of Change. Finally, our organisations are also beginning to engage each other in our strategy development process, including scheduling review sessions.  While there is still much work to do, we are making some early progress. We believe strongly that this collaboration will benefit not only our own organisations but also the broader open field. We invite other open organisations to reach out to us on any of the avenues of collaboration outlined above and join our efforts. We hope funders will take advantage of our group, too – engage us in thinking through data implications in other thematic programming. Protecting and further mainstreaming the open agenda will require many hands.  

Walt Whitman in Russia: Three Love Affairs

- May 29, 2019 in Uncategorized

Walt Whitman’s influence on the creative output of 20th-century Russia — particularly in the years surrounding the 1917 Revolution — was enormous. For the 200th anniversary of Whitman's birth, Nina Murray looks at the translators through which Russians experienced his work, not only in a literary sense — through the efforts of Konstantin Balmont and Kornei Chukovsky — but also artistic, in the avant-garde printmaking of Vera Ermolaeva.

Jan van Kessel’s Signature of Caterpillars and Snakes (1657)

- May 28, 2019 in Uncategorized

One of history's most idiosyncratic artist signatures, composed entirely of writhing creatures.

Jan van Kessel’s Signature of Caterpillars and Snakes (1657)

- May 28, 2019 in artist signature, caterpillars, insects, Jan van Kessel, signature, snakes, spiders, weirdest artist signature, writing

One of history's most idiosyncratic artist signatures, composed entirely of writhing creatures.