Filtrar por categoria 'Ukraine' contendo 2 posts menuProcure tópicos por palavra-chave Academia (2)Access (22)Africa (9)Anonymity (10)Antisemitism (2)Arab Spring (9)Art (15)Article 19 (3)Atheism (2)Australia (4)Blasphemy (16)Blogger (5)Books (1)Brazil (4)Buddhism (2)Burma (3)Canada (2)Celebrity (4)Censorship (38)Charlie Hebdo (2)Child abuse (1)China (12)Christianity (13)Civility (40)Colonialism (1)Copyright (11)Corruption (3)Defamation (28)Democracy (28)Denialism (2)Denmark (1)Discrimination (9)Education (21)Egypt (4)Europe (6)Exclusion (1)Facebook (5)Film (1)Finland (1)France (8)Freedom (51)Gaza conflict (1)Genocide (6)Germany (9)Google (6)Governance (9)Hate speech (24)Hinduism (1)History (20)Homosexuality (5)Humour (2)Hungary (1)Hunger strike (1)India (12)Internet (51)Internet companies (1)Islam (21)Israel (2)Japan (2)Journalism (26)Kenya (2)Knowledge (32)Language (11)Latin America (6)Law (66)Lese majesty (1)Liberalism (14)Libya (2)Literature (6)Media (52)Memory laws (3)Middle East (11)Minorities (5)Money (12)Morality (9)Multiculturalism (12)National security (38)Net neutrality (18)Netherlands (2)Norway (1)Nudity (5)Occupy movement (1)Open source (2)Pakistan (2)Palestine (2)Philippines (1)Piracy (2)Poland (2)Politics (59)Pornography (10)Power (65)Privacy (27)Protest (24)Public Morality (33)Race (1)Radio (3)Regulation (10)Religion (33)Reputation (18)Right to information (61)Russia (2)Rwanda (1)Satire (11)Saudi Arabia (2)Science (10)Scientology (1)Secrecy (1)Singapore (2)Social media (17)South Africa (4)Southeast Asia (3)Sport (1)Surveillance (2)Syria (1)Technology (29)Terrorism (4)Thailand (1)Tunisia (1)Turkey (9)Twitter (9)Ukraine (1)United Kingdom (19)United States (18)Violence (32)Whistleblowing (2)Wikipedia (3)YouTube (1) ‘Lenin-fall’: free speech and the politics of memory in Ukraine O.T. Jones argues that the Ukrainian state should not restrict open historical debate but use its ‘expressive’ powers to foster a nuanced understanding of the past. Ucrânia: um estado de invasores Os jornais culturais ucranianos se tornaram alvo de “invasores” — grupos obscuros que trabalham defendendo interesses de poderosos que usam títulos de propriedade falsos para fechar empresas, afirma Mykola Riabchuk.
‘Lenin-fall’: free speech and the politics of memory in Ukraine O.T. Jones argues that the Ukrainian state should not restrict open historical debate but use its ‘expressive’ powers to foster a nuanced understanding of the past.
Ucrânia: um estado de invasores Os jornais culturais ucranianos se tornaram alvo de “invasores” — grupos obscuros que trabalham defendendo interesses de poderosos que usam títulos de propriedade falsos para fechar empresas, afirma Mykola Riabchuk.