Introduction to the QM35 issue by Maria-Àngels Roque, Editor-in-Chief of the journal.
En Marruecos, se celebran festivales, se crean emisoras, pero no existe una verdadera industria musical que permita hablar de la ‘Nayda’ como algo más que una moda.
En Argelia, el ocio es problemático, provocador de fracturas, que interroga al Estado sobre su legitimidad para definirlo y a la sociedad sobre su deseo de compartirlo.
Fenómeno de moda, el uso de la Red es cada vez mayor entre la juventud. Son necesarios control, regulación y gobernanza.
TV, deporte, cafés, principales aficiones de una juventud que se debate entre la exigencia de arraigo a su cultura de origen y el atractivo de la vida moderna.
“La violencia extremista se erradicará cuando se desincentive la industria del odio, creando industrias alternativas para que la juventud desarrolle su talento y aspiraciones”.
Ten years on from their last meeting, Ministers of Culture of the Euro-Mediterranean Partnership convened again in Athens on 29-30 May 2008, under the Slovenian Presidency.
The struggle for freedom of expression in the Arab world, in the media and other domains, takes place against two sets of control: state control and religious control.
Unemployment rates are especially high among young people and women. These groups have hardly benefited from the increased job creation the region saw from 2002 to 2007, a period of strong economic growth.
In Granada in October 2008, the Madrid Islamic Culture Foundation presented the first international seminar of experts in the framework of the project “MEDOMED.
The Balkans are renowned for poor management of diversity rather than for the coexistence of its peoples, although both form part of its history.