Instituto de Estudios sobre Desarrollo y Cooperación Internacional
Nazioarteko Lankidetza eta Garapenari Buruzko Ikasketa Institutua
Instituto de Estudios sobre Desarrollo y Cooperación Internacional
Nazioarteko Lankidetza eta Garapenari Buruzko Ikasketa Institutua
EDITORIAL
Alimentación y vida en el caos climático
AMASANDO LA REALIDAD
DE UN VISTAZO Y MUCHAS ARISTAS
EN PIE DE ESPIGA
VISITAS DE CAMPO
PALABRA DE CAMPO
Whether this is the "age of crises", polycrisis or permacrisis, the idea that we are living in an unprecedented period of instability and uncertainty has become a common way of understanding our times. At the time of writing these lines, the future of humanitarian action and human solidarity appears even more precarious, as the erosion of multilateralism, cuts in public development aid and the global rise of the far right increasingly challenge the very notion of international cooperation.
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Articles
Book Reviews
Introduction
Research ARticles
Resources
Book Reviews
Restrictions on freedom of association are a too often neglected marker of the shift of a political regime towards authoritarianism, or even dictatorship. Russia is a case in point. When historians write the narrative of the period leading up to the war against Ukraine, they must not fail to mention that ten years earlier, in 2012, the Duma (the Russian Parliament) had adopted legislation – unique in its kind at the time – introducing the concept of “foreign agent”, which was applied to certain civic actors. Inspired by the Soviet language, this concept – with its vague and ever-expanding contours – has since been used to describe Russian civil society organisations (CSOs) which receive external funding and are therefore suspected of being accomplices of foreign powers, or even spies.
Del editorial del nº20. Leer más aquí.