2021 La fotógrafa Andrea Ortiz resultó ganadora en los premios National Awards 2021. By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sun, 24 Oct 2021 13:53:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Continúa el Festival Internacional de Música Sacra 2021 By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sun, 31 Oct 2021 23:00:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Llega el 53° Torneo Internacional del Joropo 2021 By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sat, 06 Nov 2021 17:08:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Llega el Festival de Cine por los Derechos Humanos en su edición 2021 By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Mon, 15 Nov 2021 14:20:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Caracol Radio recibió tres Premios de Periodismo Simón Bolívar 2021 By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Mon, 22 Nov 2021 01:09:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Colombia se hizo sentir en los Premios Grammy Latino 2021 By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Mon, 22 Nov 2021 01:31:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Chía se alista para el Festival de Gastronomía 2021 By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sat, 11 Dec 2021 15:33:00 +0000 Full Article
2021 Especiales de Navidad 2021: 2 de enero By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Sun, 02 Jan 2022 15:57:56 +0000 Full Article
2021 ¿Qué dejó el 2021 y qué viene para el ciclismo colombiano en el 2022? By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Thu, 06 Jan 2022 01:17:23 +0000 Full Article
2021 Montoya: "Estoy contento en Pereira, quieren mantener el proyecto del 2021" By www.spreaker.com Published On :: Wed, 12 Jan 2022 11:57:39 +0000 Full Article
2021 BET Awards 2021: See All The Colorful Red Carpet Fashion By www.bet.com Published On :: Mon, 24 May 2021 14:36:20 EDT Check out this list before you go summer shopping! Full Article BET Awards BET BUZZ
2021 NBA Draft 2021: Late Prospect Terrence Clarke Is Honored By www.bet.com Published On :: Fri, 30 Jul 2021 09:56:12 EDT The former college athlete died in a car accident in April. Full Article Sports News NBA Draft
2021 The 2021 NBA Draft: The Best of the Incoming Class By www.bet.com Published On :: Fri, 30 Jul 2021 14:54:54 EDT A new group of emerging superstars took center stage. Full Article NBA NBA Draft basketball Sports News
2021 Police Release 2021 Official Statistics Report By bernews.com Published On :: Wed, 06 Nov 2024 11:39:37 +0000 The police have released their 2021 Official Statistics Report, noting that “while total crime was reduced, the Covid-19 regulations that were in effect throughout the year, limited gatherings and social activities, and so impacted crime patterns.” Mr. Darrin Simons, Commissioner of Police said, “The Bermuda Police Service [BPS] has released its Official Statistics Report for […] Full Article All Crime News #BermudaPolice
2021 36 tweets by Darryl Cooper aka @MartyrMade on July 8 2021 on why Trump supporters believe the 2020 election was fraudulent By www.cpa-connecticut.com Published On :: Sat, 10 Jul 2021 02:54:18 +0000 Darryl Cooper, AKA @MartyrMade, is a podcaster who had a Twitter thread go viral with 13k retweets and 20k likes of the first Tweet alone. This one is 36-Tweets long. It makes very cogent arguments of not only why millions of Trump supporters believe the 2020 election was stolen, but also why we are justified to believe it. Continue reading → Full Article Accountants CPA Hartford Articles 36 tweets by Darryl Cooper aka @MartyrMade on July 8 2021 on why Trump supporters believe the 2020 election was fraudulent Big Tech Big Tech censorship censorship CNN collusion corporate press Darryl Cooper fraudulent election 2020 Hunter Biden July 8 2021 July 9 2021 mass political violence Media New York Post banned riots Steele dossier The corporate press is the propaganda arm of the Regime Time Mag Trump supporters Tucker Carlson Tucker Carlson Tonight July 9 2021
2021 September 2021 Site Update By www.bill-wilson.net Published On :: Wed, 22 Sep 2021 22:43:18 +0000 I've kind of been ignoring this blog for a while. That's nothing new... there have been multi-year periods with no posts. I'm still writing stuff... Full Article General/Random Stuff
2021 Toronto International Film Festival 2021 Capsule Reviews By robin-d-laws.blogspot.com Published On :: Mon, 20 Sep 2021 15:37:00 +0000 Another weird year, another weird TIFF. This year the festival brought back more in-person events while also running a version of their at-home streaming track. Valerie and I did the on-line version, which this time was restricted to a maximum of 20 titles.For years TIFF has been intentionally or otherwise making it incrementally more difficult to do the event diehard style, as we have always done. Often it announces changes that blindside longtime loyalists—sometimes, as this year, after they’ve purchased their expensive memberships and ticket packages. This time around they surprised us by taking a tier of titles that any other year would be available through the package we purchased and moving them into a premium package previously reserved for the most publicized Gala films. For good measure, they threw in a couple of other medium-sized irritants. To recreate something closer to our usual experience, we programmed another 25 titles already available on streaming platforms. Some actually played TIFF in the past; others were the types of movies that could have played the fest but didn’t. I’m glad that we did, because the TIFF titles we were allowed to choose from included all of the duds of a normal year and none of the surprise masterpieces. Granted, it was a miracle that any films got made this year, and those that did tended toward the sorts of modest chamber pieces that could be produced under COVID protocol conditions. This year crystallized a gradually growing realization we’ve been trying to suppress. So much has changed in the world of international cinema, from the festival’s position in their life cycle, to their subsequent availability, and even the style of the movies themselves, has completely changed since we started doing this in the mid 80s. We have always gone to the fest for great films that we could otherwise never see, and started doing it in the VHS era. We don’t care about seeing things before anyone else does, or seeing the stars wave at us from the stage beforehand, or hearing audience members ask directors rambling questions afterwards. Even the virtues of a big screen experience are blunted by a dirty secret — a packed TIFF venue is not actually an ideal place to see a movie. Talkers and smartphone screens abound in every screening, and the bigger venues they convert into movie theaters for ten days are universally terrible. You’d think that programming films from existing streaming platforms eliminates the other key part of fest-going, the surprise from out of nowhere. Except we got more of those with our alternate schedule than we did with the official titles this year. In other words, after 36 years we are retiring from our vacation. Next year we’ll be doing a fully alternate replica of TIFF as we think of it from the past. The old rodeo is dead. Long live the new rodeo. Here then is my final set of Toronto International Film Festival capsule reviews. (Capsules for the 2021 Robin and Valerie International Film Festival will drop over time in Ken and Robin Consume Media.) Recommended Murina (Croatia, Antoneta Alamat Kusijanović) Teen (Gracija Filipovic) chafes at the agitated authority of her command-barking father (Leon Lucev) as he hosts a rich, glamorous old friend (Cliff Curtis) to try to sell him on a resort proposal. Taut, superbly acted family drama set against the stunning yet slightly sinister beauty of the rocky Croatian coastline. Saloum (Senegal, Jean Luc Herbulot) Three gunslingers—the mastermind, the hard case, and the magic user—take an unscheduled pit stop at an eccentric communal resort, which harbors horrible secrets of both the man-made and supernatural varieties. Gorgeously shot, tightly edited contemporary horror western with political resonance and cool monster design. Compartment No. 6 (Finland, Juho Kuosmanen) Traveling alone on a trip she was supposed to take with her Muscovite professor girlfriend, a Finnish archaeology student finds herself sharing a compartment on the train to Murmansk with a loutish miner. Naturalistic light romantic drama of human connection overcoming barriers of class and personality. OUT OF SYNC (Spain, Juanjo Giménez Peña) Isolated sound mixer (Marta Nieto) is unnerved to suffer a strange delay in her hearing, which becomes all the more inexplicable as it worsens. Realist weird tale makes smart use of cinema’s relationship between sight and sound. Zalava (Iran, Arsalan Amiri) In pre-Revolutionary Iranian Kurdistan, a pig-headed police sergeant interferes with a djinn exorcism, sparking village hysteria. Tale of communal terror and its hazards generates suspense by skillfully modulating its pace. Vengeance is Mine, All Others Pay Cash (Indonesia, Edwin) After meeting cute by beating the crap out of each other at a construction site, two lovers navigate the vicissitudes of fidelity, vengeance, and impotence. A martial arts flick that isn’t an action movie, but rather an allegorical romantic drama with elements of satire and magic realism to go with its bruising 70s style fights. Hold Your Fire (US, Stefan Forbes) Documentary recreates the 1973 robbery-turned-hostage incident in which a group of young black Sunni men hoped to steal guns from a sporting goods shop to protect themselves from the Nation of Islam, in which the beginnings of hostage negotiation techniques were created and implemented on the fly. Archival footage and compelling retrospective interviews illuminate a complicated narrative with resonances into the present day. A Banquet (UK, Ruth Paxton) After her husband’s death, a brittle woman (Sienna Guillory) struggles with her eldest daughter’s (Jessica Alexander) visionary transformation, which has taken away her need to eat. Slow burn realist cosmic horror filters eating disorders, emotional control and female rage. Kicking Blood (Canada, Blaine Thurier) Vampire (Alanna Bale) connects with a detoxing alcoholic, prompting her to reconsider preying on humans. Frosty supernatural indie drama extends the vampire-as-addiction metaphor. Yuni (Indonesia, Kamila Andini) High schooler with a yen for purple chafes at the narrow expectations her religious school, family and village have for her. Observational social drama enlivened by a vivid color palette. Good The Daughter (Spain, Manuel Martín Cuenca) Teacher at a juvenile detention center helps a pregnant 14-year old escape so she can live secretly with him and his wife at their mountain home and give them the baby when it is born. Ultra-restrained domestic thriller could stand a notch or two less restraint. Dug Dug (India, Ritwik Pareek) A local saint cult springs up when a motorbike keeps mysteriously returning to the site of its owner’s death. Gentle satire of faith and religious merchandising shows the sort of color and verve that raises hopes for a fresh wave of Indian art cinema. Tug of War (Tanzania, Amil Shivji) A callow Marxist subversive falls for an Indian girl who has escaped her arranged marriage in British-controlled 1950s Zanzibar. Political romantic drama adopts the language of classic Hollywood glamor, albeit without the magnetic movie star performances the style depends on. Based on a classic Tanzanian novel. Okay Earwig (France, Lucile Hadžihalilović) In a creepy manor, an anxious loner (Paul Hilton) looks after a girl with teeth made of ice, at the behest of mysterious masters. The director’s first English language film pushes her dream narratives of childhood transformation into the far fringes of austerity. Not Recommended You Are Not My Mother (Ireland, Kate Dolan) A withdrawn teen’s depressed mother briefly disappears, prefiguring the revelation of a supernatural family secret. Contemporary folk horror with stronger direction than script, with extensive foreshadowing genre fans will be well ahead of and an inactive menace that doesn’t do enough to propel the story. Snakehead (US, Evan Jackson Leong) Smuggled immigrant (Shuya Chang) works off her debt by acting as the right hand to the matriarch (Jade Wu) of an NYC Chinatown crime family. Socially conscious gangland drama features the bane of longtime documentarians turning their hand to fiction: awkward, exposition-heavy scripting. Arthur Rambo (France, Laurent Cantet) Rising literary star (Rabah Nait Oufella) plummets when the hate-filled tweets of his old alter ego resurface. Refined, uncinematic debate film presents thesis, antithesis, and credits. Medusa (Brazil, Anita Rocha da Silveira) Member of AN ultra-right Christian school’s violent, pallid-masked theocratic girl gang goes undercover at a coma ward in search of a disfigured model. Overlong, unfocused political allegory references the horror genre, chiefly by adopting Dario Argento’s color palette. After Blue (Dirty Paradise) (France, Bertrand Mandico) On a psychedelic alien world, a young outcast (Paula Luna) frees the statuesque, wish-granting death-dealer Kate Bush and she must accompany her hairdresser mother (Elina Löwensohn) on a quest to hunt her down. Invokes the spirits of Jodorowsky and Barbarella for a sleepwalk trudge through an arbitrary sequence of dream-logic events. Like its influences it is perhaps intended for a chemically altered audience. La Soga 2 (US, Manny Perez) Dominican hitman (Perez) has gotten out and is living with a devoted new girlfriend, until a corrupt CIA officer pulls him back in. Scrappy microbudget crime flick is Dominican. Full Article
2021 CALL FOR NOMINATIONS: The 2021 rec.sport.pro-wrestling Awards (the Theszies) By mightygodking.com Published On :: Thu, 13 Jan 2022 09:07:28 +0000 This is the Call for Nominations for the 2021 Theszie Awards (the rec.sport.pro-wrestling Awards). (Look, I started a new job late last year and my December was slammed. Sorry for the delay.) To nominate candidates for all categories, you may use this form. Nominations are due by January 28, 2021. Finally, to see previous years’ […] Full Article Interactive Fun Time Party The RSPW Awards / The Theszies Wrestling
2021 CALL FOR VOTES: the 2021 rec.sport.pro-wrestling Awards By mightygodking.com Published On :: Mon, 02 May 2022 00:04:26 +0000 This is the Call for Votes for Wait wait wait wait wait. It’s May. You see, May first is International Workers’ Day, and wrestlers are workers, as we all know, so – Not buying that. Well, we were trying to build this new site, and then decided not to do it, and then someone’s work […] Full Article Interactive Fun Time Party The RSPW Awards / The Theszies Wrestling
2021 RSS Ground Changelog April 2021 By www.rssground.com Published On :: Wed, 05 May 2021 14:28:50 +0000 We are excited to share news about our latest updates and upcoming plans. A lot has been done to improve Personal Feeds functionality and interactions with the Facebook Platform. Personal feeds media files We have improved processing of media files in personal feeds. You can now see if your personal feed item contains media […] The post RSS Ground Changelog April 2021 appeared first on RSSground.com. Full Article RSS Ground News change log service improvements service updates
2021 RSS Ground Changelog May 2021 By www.rssground.com Published On :: Thu, 03 Jun 2021 14:39:29 +0000 We are glad to share our latest service updates with you. Some will require your closer attention, but others will just make you feel excited. Custom Categories In eBay Feeds Generator Now Custom category ID option is available for all eBay marketplaces. Find this option in the list with basic eBay categories. You can use […] The post RSS Ground Changelog May 2021 appeared first on RSSground.com. Full Article RSS Ground News affiliate program change log ebay feeds service improvements service updates
2021 RSS Ground Updates in July 2021 By www.rssground.com Published On :: Thu, 05 Aug 2021 23:40:59 +0000 In July, we have prepared a list of updates that will help you manage your automated posting campaigns much easier. Show If Feed Item Was Already Published. In posting campaign editor, you can use “Feed Preview” option [], and find out which feed items were already published in that posting campaign. If you use “Recycle” […] The post RSS Ground Updates in July 2021 appeared first on RSSground.com. Full Article RSS Ground News affiliate program change log ebay feeds service improvements service updates
2021 NOVA's top science education stories of 2021 By www.pbs.org Published On :: Thu, 23 Dec 2021 17:36:10 +0000 High school scientists dazzled us with their innovations—while new studies revealed insights about math mastery and how we can prepare young people for real-world challenges. Full Article
2021 NOVA's top 5 science stories of 2021 By www.pbs.org Published On :: Thu, 30 Dec 2021 04:52:00 +0000 Scientific advancements helped humans push through both the pandemic and the atmosphere this year, and a long-awaited visit from some underground insects set the country abuzz. Full Article
2021 Western monarch populations grew over 100-fold in 2021. Why? By www.pbs.org Published On :: Tue, 25 Jan 2022 19:00:00 +0000 The beloved butterflies had fallen to critical levels in recent years. Experts weigh in on what might be causing their remarkable return. Full Article
2021 NOVA Science Studio Alumni (2020—2021) By www.pbs.org Published On :: Thu, 13 Oct 2022 18:05:00 +0000 We are proud to introduce the 2020—2021 NOVA Science Studio student-producers who covered a wide variety of science stories including fast fashion and sneaker sustainability, as well as the effects of food insecurity and its outsized impact on youth. Full Article
2021 Newsroom: TikTok surpassed YouTube as the third-most-popular influencer platform among US marketers in 2021 By www.emarketer.com Published On :: Mon, 24 Jan 2022 04:01:00 GMT TikTok will have more US users than Snapchat and Pinterest in 2022   January 24, 2022 (New York, NY) – YouTube is the “OG†of influencer marketing platforms, and it’s […] Full Article
2021 The Critical Transition: China’s Priorities for 2021 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 31 Jan 2017 12:29:13 +0000 The Critical Transition: China’s Priorities for 2021 Research paper sysadmin 31 January 2017 This paper sets out the core issues for the Xi leadership, and focuses on what these might mean for the UK, particularly in the post-Brexit world and with the election of Donald Trump as US president. — The Great Hall of the People during the closing ceremony of China’s National People’s Congress on 15 March 2015 in Beijing, China. Photo via Getty Images. In 2017 Xi Jinping will complete his first full five-year term as China’s leader. Towards the end of the year, in autumn, the country is due to hold its 19th Party Congress. This major meeting usually marks the moment when the Communist Party of China (CPC) assesses its performance over the previous five years, sets out political goals for the coming five-year period and makes new appointments. Xi Jinping’s leadership has been characterized by a number of significant domestic and international policy strategies. China’s economic growth rate is slowing, and the country’s economy is undergoing major restructuring. Export-led manufacturing growth and capital investment in fixed assets are now being replaced by consumer-led and service-dominated expansion. Meanwhile, the role of the CPC has been rearticulated with a major anti-corruption struggle since 2013 that has sought to clear away a raft of different networks and senior officials and connected business people. Xi has proved a more communicative, more populist and more nationalistic leader than his predecessors. He is also crafting an image of himself as a more visionary leader. Internationally, China is striving for a relevance and role that it has never had before. Its reach is felt in international organizations, regionally, and through its economic and resource needs. It has a role in global affairs that embraces places once considered on its periphery, such as Latin America, the Arctic and Antarctic Circles, and the Middle East. Its impact in Asia is particularly striking, marked by activity in the South China Sea, and a new kind of relationship with Russia, India and the US. The major Belt and Road Initiative, in particular, has started to outline a new expansiveness in China’s relations with the outside world, despite the largely abstract nature of its overall shape and form at the moment. The themes and viewpoints in this collection of essays are particularly geared towards those with an interest in policy engagement with China. While setting out the core issues for the Xi leadership, it also focuses on what these might mean for the UK, particularly in the post-Brexit world and with the election of Donald Trump as US president. As the UK seeks a new kind of relationship with a rapidly changing China, this group of expert opinions maps out the key markers in the run up to 2021, when China is due to celebrate achieving the first of its centennial goals: the delivery of middle-income status and a moderately prosperous society. 2017-02-02-critical-transition-china-priorities-2021-brown (PDF) Full Article
2021 Forecasting forum 2021 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 21 Jan 2021 14:34:17 +0000 Forecasting forum 2021 28 January 2021 — 12:30PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 21 January 2021 Online Speakers explore the dynamics that will likely affect fossil fuel demand, energy investments and markets in the year ahead. The Forecasting Forum 2021 presents the latest thinking from the Energy, Environment and Resources Programme’s senior research team and colleagues on the dynamics that will likely affect fossil fuel demand, energy investments and markets in the year ahead. Focus is given to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, the first 100 days of the new Biden administration in the US, and the run-up to COP26. The extraordinary developments over the last year have demonstrated the need consider and discuss a wide range of possible futures and the factors that affect them to help improve system resilience and increase stability, whilst achieving sustainability. For the first time, this annual event was run online and consisted of a panel discussion on what the year ahead might hold. Full Article
2021 Belarusians’ views on the political crisis - April 2021 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 11 Jun 2021 11:27:11 +0000 Belarusians’ views on the political crisis - April 2021 Other resource NCapeling 11 June 2021 Results of a public opinion poll conducted between 20 and 30 April 2021. Chatham House surveyed a total of 937 respondents between 20 and 30 April 2021. Our survey sample corresponds to the general structure of Belarus’s urban population and is corrected and weighted by gender, age, size of respondents’ town of residence and education level. Summary After Lukashenka, the most known political figures in Belarus are pro-protest politicians: Tsikhanouskaya, Babaryka, Tsikhanouski, Kalesnikava, Tsapkala and Latushka. Viktar Babaryka is the most popular presidential candidate among Belarusian urban citizens, and Lukashenka comes second to him. State organizations and bodies are still mistrusted by more than half the population, while the army is slightly more popular than other bodies. Independent media, labour unions and human rights organizations are trusted far more than state ones. Russia leads when it comes to positive attitudes to foreign states: one in three Belarusians feel very positive about their neighbour and 79 per cent feel positive in general. 71 per cent Belarusians feel positive about China, which is the next highest indicator. Despite propaganda efforts, Ukraine, Lithuania, Poland and EU states in general are still perceived positively by more than 60 per cent of Belarusians, with fewer than 20 per cent feeling negative about them. The position on Russian interference in the Belarusian political crisis is consolidated enough: 58 per cent think that Russia should remain neutral. The rest are almost equally divided between those who think Russia should support the protest movement (19 per cent) and those who think Russia should support Lukashenka (23 per cent). 40 per cent have changed their attitude to the Russian government since it supported Lukashenka in the crisis, and 73 per cent are sure that Russia is his sole support. While 32 per cent of Belarusians see union with Russia as the most appropriate foreign policy, 46 per cent would like to be in a union with both Russia and the EU simultaneously. Almost half the population thinks that Belarusian foreign policy in the event of a pro-protest government coming to power would be oriented toward friendship and cooperation with both Russia and the West, which correlates with how the majority thinks it should be. Although 42 per cent expect foreign policy would lean toward the EU in that situation, which is less acceptable: only 25 per cent think it ‘should’. The proportion of respondents who think Belarus should remain in the Collective Security Treaty Organization is 58 per cent, while 35 per cent would like to see Belarus not belonging to any military bloc and a small share (seven per cent) would prefer Belarus to join NATO. Almost half of the population considers Lukashenka to be the major obstacle for political stability and economic development and is sure he does not care about, and in fact is a threat to, independence. In general, most Belarusians have a consolidated opinion that the authorities should start negotiating with opponents and free all political prisoners. More than half of Belarusians think that Lukashenka must leave immediately or before the end of 2021, while 27 per cent think he should leave when his term ends in 2025. The opinion that Lukashenka should rule for another term beginning in 2025 is marginal – only ten per cent support this. Expectations are not so optimistic though: only 26 per cent believe he will leave office this year. One in three thinks he will leave in 2025; a further 19 per cent say that he will stay on for further terms in office. If Lukashenka doesn’t leave, people expect an increase in emigration and unemployment, the continuation of repression in all areas of life, falling exchange rates and the tightening of dependency on Russia. Opinion on abortions is still consolidated, with only 19 per cent thinking they should be banned in most or all cases. The same applies to Lukashenka’s infamous statement that society in Belarus is not ready to have a female president: only 20 per cent agree with the opinion. 52 per cent don’t think there is a problem of wage inequality between men and women in Belarus, while 37 per cent do see an issue. Download a presentation of the survey’s main findings Belarusians’ views on the political crisis (PDF) Взгляды белорусов на политический кризис (PDF) Full Article
2021 Belarusians’ views on the political crisis - Nov 2021 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 20 Jan 2022 10:21:52 +0000 Belarusians’ views on the political crisis - Nov 2021 Other resource NCapeling 20 January 2022 Results of a public opinion poll conducted between 1 and 10 November 2021. Chatham House surveyed a total of 767 respondents between 1 and 10 November 2021. Our survey sample corresponds to the general structure of Belarus’s urban population and is adjusted by gender, age, education level and the size of respondents’ place of residence. Summary After Aliaksandr Lukashenka, the most well-known political figures in Belarus are the protest leaders: Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, Viktar Babaryka, Siarhei Tsikhanouski, Valery Tsapkala, Marya Kalesnikava and Pavel Latushka. Lukashenka and Babaryka have the highest popularity ratings among Belarus’s urban population. At the same time, Lukashenka has a high negative rating: half of the city residents surveyed say that they would never vote for him. Babaryka has one of the lowest negative ratings in the country. The popularity ratings of pro-government politicians are low, and their negative ratings remain extremely high, although the latter have decreased slightly in comparison with July 2021. The popularity ratings of protest leaders are significantly higher than those of politicians who support the current government. Trust in state and independent organizations is polarized along political lines. Thus, respondents classed as hardcore protesters do not trust state structures and do trust independent ones, while Lukashenka’s supporters hold the opposite positions. Belarusians’ geopolitical orientations remain stable. The most widely preferred option for a geopolitical union is simultaneous integration with the EU and Russia. Belarusians have become increasingly negative about the possibility that Russian airbases could be established on Belarusian territory (48 per cent in November 2021, compared to 39 per cent in July 2021). Belarusians are now feeling more strongly that the situation concerning the COVID-19 pandemic has worsened: in November, more than half were beginning to respond that Belarus is unable to cope with the spread of coronavirus. Sanctions against Lukashenka and those around him are supported more widely than sanctions against state enterprises. Belarusians feel there is acute social tension in their country: almost everyone surveyed states that social tension exists, while one in every five respondents considers the situation catastrophic. A perception that there is social tension is closely related to many factors, with the strongest of all being a sense of a lack of personal safety. Only one-third of Belarusians are prepared to call the state built under Lukashenka their own. Most of the survey respondents do not trust this state to some degree, and do not believe that the state protects the interests of Belarusian citizens. Download a presentation of the survey’s main findings • Belarusians’ views on the political crisis (PDF) • Взгляды белорусов на политический кризис (PDF) Full Article
2021 Annual Review 2021–22 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Jul 2022 10:56:39 +0000 Annual Review 2021–22 Other resource NCapeling 11 July 2022 Explore highlights from our work over the past year, including research, events, and next generation initiatives. Chair’s statement The past 12 months have seen new levels of instability injected into international affairs. The consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic, the continued fracturing of the international system and Russia’s war on Ukraine, which triggered the largest movement of refugees since the Second World War, have had severe impacts on trade, prices and people around the world. Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia Programme and its Ukraine Forum have advised allied governments on their response to the war on Ukraine, and secured the participation of Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the most watched event of the institute’s history. The challenge now is to ensure Chatham House can bring together its diverse areas of research and offer influential ideas on how to respond to the uncertain future. Council has supported the push to define clear priorities for the institute’s work, and the launch of two new research centres covering sustainability and global governance. Drawing out the best from the institute’s expertise in the changed geopolitical landscape will be a top priority for Bronwen Maddox when she takes over as director at the end of August. Council is delighted to have found such a worthy successor to Robin Niblett. Robin’s 15 years of inspiring leadership have seen the institute more than triple in size of staff and budget. New areas of research under his tenure include cyber policy, digital governance, global health, the US and the Americas, and the UK in the world post-Brexit. Robin also launched the Queen Elizabeth II Academy for Leadership in International Affairs, providing the base for many initiatives to engage the next generation. He also leaves the institute with a rebuilt balance sheet after securing some major long-term gifts; expanded and renovated premises; and a strong communications and digital infrastructure that has raised the profile of Chatham House with our audiences. Council places on record the institute’s debt to Robin and to his wife, Trisha de Borchgrave. Chatham House’s supporters around the world were delighted to see Robin awarded a knighthood in HM The Queen’s Birthday Honours 2022. I pay tribute also to my predecessor, Jim O’Neill, and I am grateful to Simon Fraser, deputy chair, and to the other four retiring members of Council (Mimi Ajibadé, Heide Baumann, Kenneth Cukier and Tim Willasey-Wilsey) for their dedication and counsel. Council will continue to focus on strengthening the impact of the institute’s work and on improving governance, as well as providing continuity during the leadership transition. We will act as a strategic partner for Bronwen as she takes Chatham House forward. Central to this will be implementing the institute’s plan to strengthen equality, diversity and inclusion across the board. Finally, I thank the staff for their commitment through this period of transformation. Sir Nigel Sheinwald GCMG Annual Review 2021–22 (PDF) Full Article
2021 Angola Forum 2021: Policy options to support economic recovery in Angola By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 22 Sep 2021 15:44:41 +0000 Angola Forum 2021: Policy options to support economic recovery in Angola 7 October 2021 — 2:00PM TO 5:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 22 September 2021 Online Speakers discuss policy options to support economic recovery in Angola as the country transitions away from a state-led oil economy to a private-sector-led growth model. The government of Angola has made some progress on a range of policies targeting macroeconomic stability and structural reform. However, the country has been suffering from a recurring economic recession for six consecutive years, with the last positive annual GDP growth rate posted in 2015 at 0.9 per cent. The national budget remains dependent on oil revenue, leaving the country highly exposed to volatile oil prices particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic. While revenues collapsed, increased spending was needed to respond to the health crisis and estimates of Angola’s debt spike range from 130 to 150 per cent of its GDP by the close of 2020. At this virtual Angola Forum, speakers discuss policy options to support economic recovery in Angola as the country transitions away from a state-led oil economy to a private-sector-led growth model. The Forum launches the English translation of the Angola Economic Report 2019-20 by the Centro de Estudos de Investigação (CEIC) of the Catholic University of Angola in partnership with the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung (KAS), and the findings of Afrobarometer’s first ever survey in Angola, Ovilongwa – Estudos de Opinião Pública, which interviewed 2,400 adult Angolans and sampled individual perceptions on democracy and economic reform in Angola. This event will be held in English and Portuguese with simultaneous interpretation. The Forum will also be broadcast live on the Africa Programme Facebook page. (German) Agenda (PDF) (Portuguese) Agenda (PDF) (English) Agenda (PDF) Full Article
2021 Europe's strategic choices 2021 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 21 Sep 2021 10:44:41 +0000 Europe's strategic choices 2021 4 November 2021 TO 5 November 2021 — 8:00AM TO 5:30PM Anonymous (not verified) 21 September 2021 Ritz Carlton Berlin The 2021 conference will consider how Europe can navigate its political, economic and security challenges, in the context of the lasting effects of the coronavirus pandemic and an increasingly competitive geopolitical environment. Registration is a two step process and you will receive a link to register on the conference virtually in advance. Please email if you wish to attend in-person. The Eighth Annual Europe’s Strategic Choices conference, jointly developed and hosted by Chatham House, the Institute for Security Policy at the University of Kiel and the Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung, aims to understand the complex set of challenges facing Europe in the areas of security, economic competitiveness, trade, technology, and global influence. Set against the backdrop of a Europe emerging gradually from the COVID-19 pandemic, this annual forum brings together policymakers, and representatives from business, civil society and academia, to explore how European countries can best respond, individually and collectively to their common challenges in an increasingly competitive geopolitical environment. The conference will be hosted in hybrid format to enable speakers and participants to join in person and allow others to engage virtually via the Conference Plus digital platform. This format ensures we can connect with a geographically diverse audience whilst incorporating important elements of in person engagement in accordance with German Federal government guidelines. Full Article
2021 Invitation for the launch event: The impact of disasters and crises on agriculture and food security, 2021 By www.fao.org Published On :: Fri, 12 Mar 2021 00:00:00 GMT Understanding and managing disaster risks in global agriculture: Better data for ambitious action Full Article
2021 Global Dialogue and High-level Segment on the Role of Food and Agriculture in the Global Biodiversity Framework 6-7 July 2021 By www.fao.org Published On :: Fri, 18 Jun 2021 00:00:00 GMT The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), in collaboration with the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), will hold a Global Dialogue on the [...] Full Article
2021 The Pre-Summit of the UN Food Systems Summit, 26-28 July 2021, Rome By www.fao.org Published On :: Mon, 26 Jul 2021 00:00:00 GMT Delivering the latest evidence-based and scientific approaches, launching new commitments for food systems transformation. Full Article
2021 Join us: International Conference on Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems 2021 By www.fao.org Published On :: Mon, 15 Nov 2021 00:00:00 GMT The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), through the Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems (GIAHS) Programme, is organizing the International Conference on Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems 2021 [...] Full Article
2021 Annual Report on Private Sector Engagement, 2021 By www.fao.org Published On :: Tue, 31 May 2022 00:00:00 GMT This newly-released report highlights the progress made since FAO’s Strategy for Private Sector Engagement 2021-2025 was approved during the 165th session of the Council in December 2020. It discusses important [...] Full Article
2021 Global consultation on the implementation of the UN Decade of Family Farming (UNDFF) in 2021-2022 By www.fao.org Published On :: Tue, 21 Feb 2023 00:00:00 GMT In December 2017, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed the UN Decade of Family Farming 2019-2028 (UNDFF) to serve as a framework for developing public policies and investments to support family [...] Full Article
2021 The FBI Recovers an Andy Warhol Print Worth $175,000 That Vanished From a Private Home in 2021 By www.smithsonianmag.com Published On :: Tue, 08 Oct 2024 21:25:28 +0000 A man is expected to plead guilty for trafficking the print, which reappeared at a Dallas auction house shortly after it went missing from a California residence Full Article
2021 Investor Expectations for 2021 By www.cmegroup.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Jan 2021 05:00:00 -0600 Investor pricing reveals expectations for rates, dividends, and inflation. Full Article [DO_NOT_USE] CME Research Article Options English (EN) Institutional Equity Index Retail Insights Featured Article Economic Reports The Economist Perspective Economic Events Interest Rates Video CME Group Both Erik Norland
2021 2021 Economic Outlook Webinar By www.cmegroup.com Published On :: Mon, 22 Feb 2021 17:20:00 -0600 Join CME Group Chief Economist Blu Putnam for an in-depth 2021 Economic Outlook Webinar covering the role of the US dollar, emerging market FX, US Treasuries, and much more. Full Article Market Commentary Agriculture Blu Putnam English (EN) Equity Index Insights Economic Events Interest Rates Video CME Group Webinar Both Energy
2021 Downtown Development Districts Program Achieves Record Housing And Community Development In 2021 By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Fri, 25 Feb 2022 20:15:53 +0000 Over $12 Million In State Investments Highlighted In Annual Report And Interactive Story Map The Downtown Development Districts (DDD) program, administered by the Delaware State Housing Authority (DSHA), recently released its Fiscal Year 2021 (FY2021) Annual Report and Story Map. During FY2021 and amid a global pandemic, 60 development projects throughout the state were […] Full Article Delaware State Housing Authority
2021 Ferris School Recognized as 2021 Finalist for National Juvenile Justice Award By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Wed, 02 Jun 2021 16:08:15 +0000 WILMINGTON – Delaware’s Ferris School has been selected as finalist for the 2021 PbS Barbara Allen-Hagen Award in the juvenile correction program category. This prestigious annual award, through the national continuous improvement program Performance-based Standards (PbS), is given in three categories: correction, detention, and community residential programs. Programs are recognized based on practices that exemplify […] Full Article Department of Services for Children Youth and their Families Division of Youth Rehabilitative Services News
2021 Ferris School Lacrosse Team Hosts 2021 Season By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Thu, 10 Jun 2021 21:09:24 +0000 WILMINGTON – After a one-year hiatus due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Ferris School lacrosse team finished their Spring season strong. “It has been an incredible experience to see the youth not only in some cases learn a new sport, but also learn about themselves,” said Tanya Banks, Superintendent of Ferris School. “Lacrosse brings together […] Full Article Department of Services for Children Youth and their Families Division of Youth Rehabilitative Services
2021 Dec. 15 Last Day to Sign Up for 2021 Coverage on Delaware’s Health Insurance Marketplace By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Mon, 14 Dec 2020 17:34:19 +0000 For those who enroll by the deadline and pay their first premium, coverage will begin Jan. 1, 2021. Full Article Delaware Health and Social Services Insurance Commissioner News ACA Affordable Care Act (ACA) Coronavirus Delaware Health Insurance Marketplace Health Insurance
2021 Enrollment on Delaware’s Health Insurance Marketplace Increases More Than 5% For Coverage in 2021 By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Wed, 23 Dec 2020 16:01:46 +0000 NEW CASTLE (Dec. 23, 2020) – Enrollment on Delaware’s Health Insurance Marketplace increased more than 5% during the open enrollment period that ended Dec. 15. From Nov. 1 through Dec. 15, a total of 25,260 Delawareans signed up for 2021 coverage through the marketplace, an increase of 5.3% over last year’s open enrollment period, when […] Full Article Delaware Health and Social Services Insurance Commissioner News Office of the Governor Affordable Care Act (ACA) Delaware Health Insurance Marketplace Health Insurance
2021 Department of Insurance 2021 Data Shows over $21M in Consumer Savings By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Mon, 07 Feb 2022 15:07:47 +0000 Successes in serving residents continue The Delaware Department of Insurance (DOI) today published performance and productivity data for 2021. While the pandemic necessitated continued operational adjustments, staff continued to focus efforts on consumer services and saw great success. The department also released an infographic of key statistics. “Year after year, our DOI team delivers for […] Full Article Captive Captive Insurance Insurance Commissioner ACA captive insurance Commissioner Navarro Department of Insurance DMAB DOI Health Insurance insurance Insurance Department Medicare Assistance Trinidad Navarro workers comp
2021 Four Virtual Programs at State Museums in January 2021 By news.delaware.gov Published On :: Mon, 21 Dec 2020 15:15:30 +0000 Cross-stitching, the wreck of the DeBraak, artist Francis Barraud and forgotten presidents to be explored. Full Article Historical and Cultural Affairs Kent County New Castle County News activities arts beaches children events family First State Heritage Park free admission history museums remote program virtual program