Browsing: Activism

Over 80 different groups and individuals from Austria, Switzerland and Germany belong to the association – work is done on various fields of social reproduction such as domestic work, assistance, health, sexuality, care, housing or education.

“Celebrate disabled and crazy”-this is the motto under which the Pride Parade Berlin has been taking place since 2013, arising from an initiative of ak mob and the AK Psychatriekritik.

This abbreviation stands for the “Working Group with and without Disabilities”, a group of activists who have been developing events, workshops, parties, content positions and materials since 2007.

Workshop series, critical city walks, publications or research workshops – the registered association, which in its subtitle describes itself, refreshingly laconic, as “Just another Critical Geography Group”, works in various formats and is a free association of activists, geographers, social scientists and others.

Forensic Architecture is a research agency that works internationally on various forms of violent crime, human rights violations and armed conflicts.

This adbust was spotted on a highway sign in the context of the demonstration marking the 13th anniversary of Oury Jalloh’s death in Dessau on Jan. 7, 2018.

The free and open online platform reports independently on social struggles and democratic movements in India.

The campaign was initiated in 2016 at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) at the University of London by students and faculty.

Afrofuturist, filmmaker, and activist Amadine Gay’s documentary assembles the experiences of Francophone European Black women in the diaspora into a multi-layered collage about Blackness, art, racial discrimination, and the reappropriation of one’s own narrative.

The PENG! Collective writes on the website of their “Haunted Landlord” campaign to resist rent increases, gentrification and eviction: “With this action we want to make this area-wide, structural problem visible and audible through personal stories and confront those responsible directly with the voices of the displaced and the consequences of their actions.(…)”

Brooklyn artist KRTS’s music video addresses police violence in superimposed, fast-cut found footage images.