
Cléa Fache
Articles
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Jan 7, 2025 |
dialnet.unirioja.es | Cléa Fache |Hugo Chirol |Léa Legras
Ayuda Buscar en la ayuda Buscar en la ayuda La lluita contra l'orbanisme a Budapest Autores: Cléa Fache, Hugo Chirol, Léa Legras Localización: Nous Horitzons, ISSN 0213-1366, Nº. 225, 2024, págs. 60-65 Idioma: catalán Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...) Resumen Traducció de l'article publicat a la Green European Journal el 6 d'octubre de 2023
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Sep 24, 2024 |
greeneuropeanjournal.eu | Attila Mráz |Cléa Fache |Hugo Chirol |Léa Legras
With extreme right-wing forces gaining ground across Europe, cultural events and institutions represent an essential tool for democratic resistance. Since taking over as artistic director of the popular Vienna Festival last year, Milo Rau has been a prominent voice against the rise of the far-right FPÖ in Austrian politics, setting up spaces for public participation and mobilising people against Europe’s new authoritarians.
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Jul 19, 2024 |
greeneuropeanjournal.eu | Judit Takacs |Kata Benedek |Konrad Bleyer-Simon |Cléa Fache
In recent years, the suppression of LGBTQ+ rights in Hungary has placed Victor Orbán’s government on a collision course with European institutions. At the centre of the controversy is a 2021 law known as the “Child Protection” act. The bill has attracted international condemnation for enabling the subjugation of the rights of sexual minorities, but that is not the full story. Analysing the effects of the law shows how its complex nature has led to a stifling atmosphere of uncertainty.
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Jul 2, 2024 |
greeneuropeanjournal.eu | Alain Coulombel |Madeleine Sallustio |Cléa Fache |Orestes Kolokouris
The agriculture sector is one of the biggest emitters of greenhouse gases in the EU. As the world gets hotter and droughts become more common, it is necessary to make farming practices more ecologically sustainable. In Catalonia, a community-driven initiative has produced a successful case of ecologically aware agriculture, centred around the principles of degrowth. At the sound of the bell, forty people set aside their seeds and tools to mount the dirt slope to a shaded garden.
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Jun 12, 2024 |
greeneuropeanjournal.eu | Chris Vrettos |Cléa Fache |Hugo Chirol |Léa Legras
The importance of an energy transition from fossil fuels to renewables is now accepted as a fact and seen as a guarantee for decades of green growth. But the plausibility of energy transitions stems from a false history, argues historian of science Jean-Baptiste Fressoz: rather than being simply in competition with each other, different energy sources are also in symbiosis. How did the notion of energy transition come about, and what risks does it pose for meaningful climate action?
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