Filtre par catégorie 'Burma' contenant 19 postes menuTrouver des sujets par mot-clés Academia (2)Access (18)Africa (9)Anonymity (8)Antisemitism (1)Arab Spring (5)Art (14)Article 19 (2)Atheism (1)Australia (4)Blasphemy (16)Blogger (4)Books (2)Brazil (4)Buddhism (1)Burma (2)Canada (2)Celebrity (5)Censorship (33)Charlie Hebdo (2)Child abuse (1)China (10)Christianity (13)Civility (33)Colonialism (1)Copyright (10)Corruption (3)Defamation (27)Democracy (27)Denialism (3)Denmark (2)Discrimination (9)Education (19)Egypt (1)Europe (5)Exclusion (1)Facebook (4)Film (1)Finland (1)France (8)Freedom (44)Genocide (7)Germany (10)Google (5)Governance (10)Hate speech (22)Hinduism (1)History (19)Homosexuality (4)Humour (2)Hungary (1)Hunger strike (1)India (10)Internet (43)Internet companies (1)Islam (17)Israel (1)Japan (2)Journalism (25)Kenya (3)Knowledge (30)Language (8)Latin America (5)Law (59)Lese majesty (1)Liberalism (14)Libya (2)Literature (3)Media (49)Memory laws (3)Middle East (8)Minorities (5)Money (10)Morality (9)Multiculturalism (9)National security (38)Net neutrality (14)Netherlands (2)Norway (1)Nudity (5)Occupy movement (1)Pakistan (4)Palestine (1)Philippines (1)Piracy (2)Poland (2)Politics (59)Pornography (7)Power (60)Privacy (23)Protest (25)Public Morality (26)Race (1)Radio (3)Regulation (10)Religion (28)Reputation (17)Right to information (57)Russia (2)Rwanda (1)Satire (13)Saudi Arabia (2)Science (9)Scientology (1)Secrecy (1)Singapore (2)Social media (14)South Africa (5)Southeast Asia (3)Surveillance (1)Syria (1)Technology (22)Terrorism (5)Thailand (1)Tunisia (1)Turkey (9)Twitter (9)Ukraine (1)United Kingdom (14)United States (20)Violence (30)Whistleblowing (3)Wikileaks (1)Wikipedia (2)YouTube (1) What did the Buddha mean by ‘right speech’? Matthew Walton explores the deeper Buddhist context of right speech – and soul-searching on Buddhist internet message boards. What is right speech and why is it important? Leslie Green argues that Buddhist ideas about avoiding divisive, abusive and false speech can help us live together well in free societies What does George Orwell mean to people in Burma? At the 2013 Irrawaddy Literary Festival, Burmese writers including Pascal Khoo Thwe and blogpoet Pandora talk about George Orwell in the country where he was once an imperial policeman. The three George Orwells and the three Burmas Timothy Garton Ash delivers the Orwell Lecture at an unprecedented literary festival in Rangoon. He talks about three Orwells and three Burmas. Le retour de la censure en Birmanie? En dépit de son discours sur la liberté de la presse, le Gouvernement birman a présenté un nouveau projet de loi qui contient des dispositions étonnantes par rapport à l’oppression du Conseil de presse qu’il avait créé auparavant. Un rapport d’Ellen Wiles. La pratique de liberté Le combat pour la liberté commence par la liberté d’expression, nous explique l’icône de la démocratie en Birmanie, Aung San Suu Kyi.
What did the Buddha mean by ‘right speech’? Matthew Walton explores the deeper Buddhist context of right speech – and soul-searching on Buddhist internet message boards.
What is right speech and why is it important? Leslie Green argues that Buddhist ideas about avoiding divisive, abusive and false speech can help us live together well in free societies
What does George Orwell mean to people in Burma? At the 2013 Irrawaddy Literary Festival, Burmese writers including Pascal Khoo Thwe and blogpoet Pandora talk about George Orwell in the country where he was once an imperial policeman.
The three George Orwells and the three Burmas Timothy Garton Ash delivers the Orwell Lecture at an unprecedented literary festival in Rangoon. He talks about three Orwells and three Burmas.
Le retour de la censure en Birmanie? En dépit de son discours sur la liberté de la presse, le Gouvernement birman a présenté un nouveau projet de loi qui contient des dispositions étonnantes par rapport à l’oppression du Conseil de presse qu’il avait créé auparavant. Un rapport d’Ellen Wiles.
La pratique de liberté Le combat pour la liberté commence par la liberté d’expression, nous explique l’icône de la démocratie en Birmanie, Aung San Suu Kyi.