01112nam0 2200277 450 00002874520220404141115.020120313d1965----km-y0itay50------baengGBy-------001yyCo-ordination of sea and inland transportproceedings of the 7. biennial technical conference of the International Cargo Handling Coordination Association, Paris- May 1965edited by John Hearthin conjunction with the central office of ICHCALondonFairplay Publications1965259 p.ill.23 cmProgress in Cargo Handlingn. 52001Progress in Cargo HandlingCo-ordination of sea and inland transport41158Trasporti marittimiCongressi38620Hearth,John634167International Cargo Handling Coordination AssociationITUNIPARTHENOPERICAUNIMARC000028745DEP II-0136 [V]16910NAVA42011Co-ordination of sea and inland transport41158UNIPARTHENOPE06935oam 2201129 c 450 991022002400332120260102090118.0978383763954438376395419783839439548383943954X10.14361/9783839439548(CKB)3800000000210675(DE-B1597)484741(OCoLC)1011446395(OCoLC)1013956173(OCoLC)992466145(OCoLC)992471936(DE-B1597)9783839439548(MiAaPQ)EBC5855129(Au-PeEL)EBL5855129(transcript Verlag)9783839439548(MiAaPQ)EBC6955957(Au-PeEL)EBL6955957(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/29028(ScCtBLL)0beadba9-3aec-465d-b74a-8823b9bcd845(Perlego)1463609(oapen)doab29028(EXLCZ)99380000000021067520260102d2017 uy 0engurm|#---|||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierShifting Baselines of EuropeNew Perspectives beyond Neoliberalism and NationalismEuropean Alternatives Limited, Daphne Büllesbach, Marta Cillero, Lukas Stolz1st ed.Bielefeldtranscript Verlag20171 online resource (215 pages) digital, PDF file(s)X-Texte zu Kultur und GesellschaftFrontmatter 1 Contents 5 Note from the editors 9 Shifting the baselines 15 Our European incapacity 18 Our European capacity. Which Europe do we want? Rediscovering Hannah Arendt's concept of integral federalism 26 Introduction 35 The magnet and the container. A transnational space of expression for "Cities of change" through Europe 37 The cities want them in. For a revised common European refugee policy to revive the European Union 42 Rebel cities are not utopia 45 Institutions mean inertia 49 Moment of confluence on the Atlantic coast 57 This is how you win an election 62 Forerunners of Italian municipalism 70 Don't let them d(r)own 74 Cities rejecting surveillance 78 Introduction 85 The Populist Challenge 2.0. How populism profits from social media 87 Contesting the shrinking media space in Slovakia 97 Fluid media landscapes 101 Networked protest for a populist age 105 Journalism in spite of everything Interview with Esther Alonso, eldiario.es 109 We are the newcomers Interview with Ramy Al-Asheq, Abwab 113 Our digitally mediated society 119 Introduction 131 A rigged economy in a rigged democracy 133 Breaking with the rules that ruin the Union 141 Social networks of influence in Europe - and beyond 147 Learning from Syriza 158 The commons as unifying political vision 167 Instructions for building a pan-European movement 174 Together means Razem 180 The birth of a new civic platform in Romania 185 The Rojava Revolution and the model of democracy without a state 189 Works by Democratic Self-Administration of Rojava and Studio Jonas Staal. New World Summit Rojava (2015-2017) 193 A revolution of life 200 Annex 205This book opens the often narrow discourse on the future of Europe and criticises the false dichotomy between nationalism on the one hand and a neoliberal version of Europe on the other. Existing emancipatory projects from across the continent are presented together with reflections on strategies to achieve a democratic Europe beyond the nation state: from the municipal level to the level of transnational media, from technology and counter-surveillance to the systemic change provided by the commons movement and more.The shift towards a new way of thinking and doing politics is possible!With contributions by Etienne Balibar, Ulrike Guérot, Gesine Schwan, Renata Avila, Barbara Spinelli, Andreas Karitzis, Lorenzo Marsili, Jonas Staal, among others, and interviews with city governors from Madrid to Naples.»This book is essential reading for anyone not just involved with European affairs, but concerned about the state of the EU and looking for the evidence that change is possible for the better.«»The book proves that a shift towards a new way of thinking and doing politics is not only possible, but actually already happening.«Besprochen in:Commons Network Newsletter, 7 (2017)https://www.uni-wh.de, 31.05.2017»In sum, what is particularly convincing about the theme of this publication is that it releases the reader from a dichotomous discursive straightjacket. Instead of reproducing the binary discourse of being for or against, respectively in our out of Europe, it opens up alternative spaces and pathways for more creative political practices.«Reviewed in:Commons Network Newsletter, 7 (2017)P2 Foundation, 23.06.2017, Stacco Troncosohttp://www.engagee.orgX-Texte zu Kultur und GesellschaftEuropean Alternatives et al. (eds.), Shifting Baselines of EuropeNew Perspectives beyond Neoliberalism and NationalismEuropean UnionEuropeFutureAlternative DemocracyNationalismNeoliberalismEconomics of CommonsRefugee PolicyCounter-SurveillanceEuropean AlternativesEmancipatory ProjectsCivil SocietyPoliticsEuropean PoliticsDemocracyUrban StudiesPolitical ScienceEuropean UnionEuropeFutureAlternative DemocracyNationalismNeoliberalismEconomics of CommonsRefugee PolicyCounter-SurveillanceEuropean AlternativesEmancipatory ProjectsCivil SocietyPoliticsEuropean PoliticsDemocracyUrban StudiesPolitical Science320MC 7100rvkBüllesbach Daphne<p>Daphne Büllesbach, Managing Director, European Alternatives</p>edtCillero Marta<p>Marta Cillero, Communication officer, European Alternatives</p>edtStolz Lukas<p>Lukas Stolz, Special Projects officer, European Alternatives</p>edtEuropean Alternatives LimitededtMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQNZ-WeVULBOOK9910220024003321Shifting Baselines of Europe4414072UNINA