Using Berlin as an example, the data journalism project of the Protestant School of Journalism researches the often more than incomplete official figures and statistics on homelessness and strives for a vivid, graphic presentation.
Browsing: Archives & Material Collections
The project is a campaign by the U.S. nonprofit organization Witness Change and gathers stories from LGBTQI* people about discrimination and persecution, empowerment, pride, and living beyond life.
The Bremen-based association Trans Recht e.V. has produced a very informative, beautifully designed publication that is also free of charge. According to the authors, the “Information on Body, Sexuality and Relationship for Young Trans* People” is the most comprehensive publication on this topic in the German-speaking world to date.
Forensic Architecture is a research agency that works internationally on various forms of violent crime, human rights violations and armed conflicts.
The practice research project “Places of Memory. Forgotten and Interwoven Stories” takes many, sometimes new, looks at people, places and tours in Berlin. And addresses who and what has not been in focus until now, secures traces that have been hidden or forgotten.
The project of the artist Marina Naprushkina started in 2007 as an archive of political propaganda with a focus on Belarus.
The free and open online platform reports independently on social struggles and democratic movements in India.
The online magazine calls itself a “Network for local and global Sounds and Media Culture.” and writes about itself: “Norient searches worldwide for new music, sounds and noise. It discusses current viewpoints of the music world critically, from different perspectives and always close to the musicians and their networks.(…)”
The international online database for female, transgender and non-binary DJs, musicians, composers, producers, visual artists, journalists, researchers and facilitators in the field of electronic music and digital arts exists since 1998 and was founded by the Viennese Electric Indigo.
The Rosa Luxemburg Foundation’s online dossier deals with issues of housing, rising land prices and rents, and examples of resistance in (video) interviews, articles, studies, and further reading references.
This teaching module is aimed at students in grades 10 to 13 and can be used, for example, in the subjects of political education, German, history and ethics/religion.
The independent cooperative, based in London, has been working in the fields of critical reporting, research and education since 1996. The focus is on the question of what serious effects the capitalist management of large companies has on people and the environment.