• Schools put police-style body cameras on TEACHERS | Daily Mail Online
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7980389/Schools-police-style-body-cameras-TEACHERS.html

    Southfields Academy, South West London, said they helped in confrontations One school is using them to tackle anti-social behaviour by non-students One other unnamed secondary school is also trying out the body cameras Teachers are using body-worn cameras in an attempt to stamp out bad behaviour. One of three secondary schools trying the technology said cameras helped ‘de-escalate’ confrontations with pupils. Larry Davis, deputy head of Southfields Academy in South West London, said : ‘My (...)

    #camera #CCTV #vidéo-surveillance #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance #BigBrotherWatch

  • « Si l’on n’y prend garde, l’intelligence artificielle reproduira nos stéréotypes de genre »
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2020/02/07/si-l-on-n-y-prend-garde-l-intelligence-artificielle-reproduira-nos-stereotyp

    Isabelle Rauch, députée (LRM) de la Moselle appelle, dans une tribune au « Monde », à agir pour une intelligence artificielle inclusive, qui ne soit pas un vecteur supplémentaire de discriminations. Tribune. Les espoirs placés dans l’intelligence artificielle (IA) se sont multipliés ces dernières années. Des géants de la tech aux start-up, tous les acteurs du numérique se sont progressivement emparés de cette innovation et contribuent à son évolution exponentielle. Si le gouvernement s’attaque, à juste (...)

    #algorithme #racisme #sexisme #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #discrimination #enseignement (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##étudiants

  • Facial Recognition Moves Into a New Front : Schools - The New York Times
    https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/06/business/facial-recognition-schools.html

    A district in New York has adopted the technology in the name of safety. Opponents cite privacy and bias concerns. LOCKPORT, N.Y. — Jim Shultz tried everything he could think of to stop facial recognition technology from entering the public schools in Lockport, a small city 20 miles east of Niagara Falls. He posted about the issue in a Facebook group called Lockportians. He wrote an Op-Ed in The New York Times. He filed a petition with the superintendent of the district, where his daughter (...)

    #Clearview #algorithme #CCTV #biométrie #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #enseignement #étudiants (...)

    ##surveillance

  • Fuites d’eau et cafards : plongée dans un « ghetto » du #Crous

    Dans une résidence du Crous de #Villeneuve-d’Ascq, des étudiants sont logés dans des chambres infestées de cafards, mal isolées, aux sanitaires condamnés. Tous (ou presque) sont étrangers. Dans un enregistrement, le directeur du Crous concède « une forme de #ségrégation ».

    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/030220/fuites-d-eau-et-cafards-plongee-dans-un-ghetto-du-crous?onglet=full
    #précarité_étudiante #étudiants #logement #racisme #étudiants_étrangers

  • US colleges are trying to install location tracking apps on students’ phones - The Verge
    https://www.theverge.com/2020/1/28/21112456/spotteredu-degree-analytics-student-location-tracking-app-attendance

    Supposedly an easier way to track attendance Barely over a year ago, we pointed out how dystopian it seemed when Chinese schools added “smart uniforms” to track their students’ attendance. But US colleges are already testing out a similar tactic with a location tracking app, which students are now apparently expected to install on their phones. I say “apparently” because there’s some confusion over whether the schools are actually forcing this on their students. The Kansas City Star reported (...)

    #RFID #Bluetooth #WiFi #GPS #géolocalisation #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance

  • Les universités américaines cherchent à géolocaliser leurs étudiants
    https://usbeketrica.com/article/les-universites-americaines-cherchent-a-geolocaliser-leurs-etudiants

    De plus en plus d’universités américaines cherchent à surveiller les moindres faits et gestes de leurs étudiants, en leur demandant parfois accès à leurs données de géolocalisation. Jusqu’où ira la surveillance de masse ? Après avoir appris en 2018 que certains drones policiers américains pouvaient désormais pénétrer à l’intérieur-même des bâtiments et que le Pentagone teste, depuis 2019, des ballons expérimentaux pour surveiller les faits et gestes des citoyens dans six États, c’est une nouvelle tendance qui (...)

    #Bluetooth #smartphone #WiFi #GPS #géolocalisation #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance (...)

    ##notation

  • China arrested a US university student for mocking its president in tweets
    https://thenextweb.com/china/2020/01/23/china-arrested-a-us-university-student-for-mocking-its-president-in-twee

    Censorship in China never ceases to baffle us, and the country has taken yet another surprising step by arresting a University of Minnesota student for posting ‘offensive’ tweets while he was in the US. According to a report by Axios, Luo Daiqing, a 20-year-old freshman in Minnesota, was arrested in July 2019 for allegedly posting cartoons that resembled China‘s president, Xi Jinping. The publication obtained court documents that suggested Luo was detained from his hometown of Wuhan for (...)

    #Twitter #activisme #étudiants #surveillance

    https://img-cdn.tnwcdn.com/image/tnw

  • Des sociétés de paris britanniques détournent les données personnelles de 28 millions d’enfants
    https://www.clubic.com/pro/legislation-loi-internet/donnees-personnelles/actualite-883013-societes-paris-britanniques-detournent-donnees-personnelles

    Ces entreprises ont eu accès à un nombre de données tel que l’on peut parler de l’une des plus grandes violations de données jamais enregistrées outre-Manche. Plusieurs sociétés de paris en ligne ont eu accès aux données personnelles de 28 millions d’enfants et étudiants britanniques, provenant d’une base de données gouvernementale qui aurait été utilisée à mauvais escient pour faire gonfler le nombre de jeunes joueurs sur Internet, alors que 55 000 jeunes britanniques de 11 à 16 ans seraient dépendants au (...)

    #fraude #data #datamining #enfants #enseignement #étudiants #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##ICO-UK
    https://pic.clubic.com/v1/images/1771066/raw

  • La justice algorithmique n’est pas une question technique | Mais où va le Web
    http://maisouvaleweb.fr/la-justice-algorithmique-nest-pas-une-question-technique

    Dans une tribune à Boston Review, Annette Zimmermann, Elena di Rosa et Hochan Kim défendent l’idée selon laquelle nous avons besoin d’une surveillance plus démocratique du développement de l’intelligence artificielle, et que celle-ci devrait s’ouvrir aux citoyens plutôt qu’être cantonnée aux développeurs et aux designers. Résumé, critiques. Neutraliser les biais : ou comment réduire le débat Le grand récit à propos de l’intelligence artificielle verse souvent dans les clichés : on assimile son développement (...)

    #IBM #algorithme #biométrie #éthique #police #racisme #technologisme #criminalité #facial #prédiction #reconnaissance #sexisme (...)

    ##criminalité ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##discrimination ##enseignement ##étudiants ##GAFAM ##ACLU ##CNIL

  • Caroline Lequesne Roth : « L’encadrement des technologies de surveillance est une condition de la démocratie »
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2020/01/22/caroline-lequesne-roth-l-encadrement-des-technologies-de-surveillance-est-un

    La généralisation de la reconnaissance faciale à des fins de surveillance serait attentatoire aux libertés, estime, dans une tribune au « Monde », la juriste Caroline Lequesne Roth, qui plaide pour un large débat public afin de distinguer les usages acceptables ou non. Tribune. A l’ère des technologies de surveillance, où les scénarios dystopiques prennent forme dans l’espace public, l’actualité place la reconnaissance faciale au cœur des débats. Le déploiement accéléré de cette technologie constitue un (...)

    #Alicem #biométrie #éthique #facial #législation #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #étudiants #Islam #surveillance (...)

    ##CNIL

  • Puerto Rico Targeted Student Journalists’ Facebook Data
    https://theintercept.com/2020/01/19/puerto-rico-university-protests-facebook-surveillance

    As seven University of Puerto Rico students prepare to face trial in February for participating in a nonviolent protest more than two years ago, documents released to their defense attorneys reveal that Facebook granted the island’s Justice Department access to a trove of private information from student news publications. The department’s sweeping search warrant was part of a hunt for crimes committed by members of the youth anti-austerity movement, and it has raised fears among civil (...)

    #Facebook #activisme #data #étudiants #surveillance

  • Capturing the Classroom : How Google Sidestepped School Authorities to Push its Products into Schools
    https://www.googletransparencyproject.org/sites/default/files/Capturing-the-Classroom-January-2019.pdf

    Not long ago, school districts made decisions about major technology contracts—such as laptops for students—after a rigorous and competitive process that carefully weighed factors including cost, usefulness and safeguards onchildren’s privacy. In the past decade, Google has radically transformed that model by directly enlisting teachers to push their products into the classroom.By insinuating itself under the guise of so-called teacher professional training summits with catchy names like (...)

    #Google #enseignement #étudiants #lobbying

  • Colleges want freshmen to use mental health apps. But are they risking students’ privacy ?
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/12/27/colleges-want-freshmen-use-mental-health-apps-are-they-risking-stude

    As director of the University of Florida’s Counseling and Wellness Center, Sherry Benton could never keep up with the student demand for services. Adding three new positions bought the center only two waitlist-free weeks. Knowing the school could never hire its way out of the resource shortage, she and Bob Clark, a seasoned software developer and veteran health-care executive, created a wellness and mental health app for students. TAO Connect is just one of dozens of mental health apps (...)

    #algorithme #data #enseignement #étudiants #santé #surveillance

    ##santé

  • The Rise — And Rise — Of Mass Surveillance
    https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/meghara/mass-surveillance-2010s

    Eavesdropping bureaucrats have been replaced by algorithm-driven facial recognition technology. But the real impact of indiscriminate surveillance may be in our minds. We live in a world where school cameras monitor children’s emotions, countries collect people’s DNA en masse, and no digital communication seems truly private. In response, we use encrypted chat apps on our phones, wear masks during protests to combat facial recognition technology, and try vainly to hide our most personal (...)

    #Alibaba #Google #Hikvision #Microsoft #Palantir #SenseTime #Target #Verizon #WeChat #Alibaba.com #Amazon #Facebook #Twitter #algorithme #cryptage #robotique #Bluetooth #CCTV #smartphone #activisme #biométrie #censure #génétique #journalisme (...)

    ##racisme ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##émotions ##facial ##législation ##prédiction ##reconnaissance ##religion ##vidéo-surveillance ##comportement ##discrimination ##écoutes ##enfants ##santé ##enseignement ##étudiants ##Islam ##profiling ##SocialNetwork ##surveillance ##HumanRightsWatch

  • Colleges are turning students’ phones into surveillance machines, tracking the locations of hundreds of thousands
    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2019/12/24/colleges-are-turning-students-phones-into-surveillance-machines-trac

    When Syracuse University freshmen walk into professor Jeff Rubin’s Introduction to Information Technologies class, seven small Bluetooth beacons hidden around the Grant Auditorium lecture hall connect with an app on their smartphones and boost their “attendance points.” And when they skip class ? The SpotterEDU app sees that, too, logging their absence into a campus database that tracks them over time and can sink their grade. It also alerts Rubin, who later contacts students to ask where (...)

    #smartphone #WiFi #GPS #géolocalisation #écoutes #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance

  • « Big Brother » : quand les Chinois se rebiffent
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/12/27/big-brother-quand-les-chinois-se-rebiffent_6024144_3210.html

    L’annonce d’une prochaine mise en place d’un système de reconnaissance faciale dans le métro de Pékin a suscité un réel débat dans le pays, jusque dans la presse officielle. Trop, c’est trop. L’annonce d’une prochaine mise en place d’un système de reconnaissance faciale dans le métro de Pékin a fait sortir Lao Dongyan de ses gonds. Professeure de droit à l’université de Tsinghua, la plus prestigieuse du pays, cette juriste a, malgré les risques pour sa carrière, rédigé fin octobre un long article sur les (...)

    #algorithme #CCTV #biométrie #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance (...)

    ##_

  • In China’s Crackdown on Muslims, Children Have Not Been Spared
    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/28/world/asia/china-xinjiang-children-boarding-schools.html

    In Xinjiang the authorities have separated nearly half a million children from their families, aiming to instill loyalty to China and the Communist Party. HOTAN, China — The first grader was a good student and beloved by her classmates, but she was inconsolable, and it was no mystery to her teacher why. “The most heartbreaking thing is that the girl is often slumped over on the table alone and crying,” he wrote on his blog. “When I asked around, I learned that it was because she missed her (...)

    #enfants #étudiants #Islam #surveillance

  • La vidéosurveillance – vidéoprotection dans les établissements scolaires
    https://www.cnil.fr/fr/la-videosurveillance-videoprotection-dans-les-etablissements-scolaires

    Pour sécuriser les accès et éviter les incidents, des caméras sont installées dans les établissements scolaires pour filmer les couloirs, les halls d’entrées, mais aussi la rue. Ces dispositifs doivent respecter différentes règles afin de ne pas porter atteinte à la vie privée des personnes filmées. Quelles sont ces règles ? Quelles précautions prendre ? Des caméras peuvent être installées à l’intérieur d’un établissement à des fins de sécurité des biens et des personnes (lutte contre les violences entre (...)

    #algorithme #CCTV #vidéo-surveillance #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance #CNIL

  • Vidéo-surveillance : la Cnil rappelle les écoles à leurs obligations
    https://www.mediapart.fr/journal/france/181219/video-surveillance-la-cnil-rappelle-les-ecoles-leurs-obligations

    La Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés a adressé des mises en demeure à trois établissements ayant installé des dispositifs de surveillance permettant de filmer de façon quasi continue élèves et enseignants. La Commission nationale de l’information et des libertés (Cnil) a annoncé, mercredi 18 décembre, avoir adressé des mises en demeure à trois établissements scolaires ayant installé des dispositifs de vidéosurveillance à l’intérieur de leurs locaux. Le communiqué de la commission (...)

    #algorithme #CCTV #vidéo-surveillance #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance #CNIL

  • Vidéosurveillance : la CNIL épingle plusieurs établissements scolaires
    https://www.lemonde.fr/pixels/article/2019/12/18/videosurveillance-la-cnil-epingle-plusieurs-etablissements-scolaires_6023325

    Après vingt-cinq plaintes reçues en 2018, le gendarme des données personnelles a constaté plusieurs manquements dans plusieurs écoles françaises, où élèves et enseignants sont parfois filmés en continu. Ce dossier figurait parmi les priorités 2019 de Marie-Laure Denis, la nouvelle présidente de la Commission nationale de l’informatique et des libertés (CNIL), comme elle l’expliquait au Monde en avril. « Nous contrôlerons le respect des nouveaux droits des mineurs, notamment (…) la vidéosurveillance dans (...)

    #CCTV #vidéo-surveillance #enseignement #étudiants #surveillance #travailleurs #CNIL #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_

  • Gand : des élèves paieront bientôt leur sandwich avec leurs empreintes digitales
    https://www.rtbf.be/info/societe/detail_gand-des-eleves-paieront-bientot-leur-sandwich-avec-leurs-empreintes-dig

    L’école secondaire Sint-Bavo de Gand testera dès le mois d’octobre le paiement des sandwichs, des ticket-repas à l’aide de leurs empreintes digitales. « Nous sommes la première école à effectuer des paiements avec des données biométriques », a déclaré la directrice, Hilde Allaert, à nos collègues de la VRT. Sur base de ces empreintes digitales, les parents recevront un décompte des consommations et une facture en ligne. L’école a averti les parents par e-mail. D’ici quelques semaines, les empreintes de tous (...)

    #algorithme #scanner #biométrie #reconnaissance #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #étudiants #empreintes #surveillance (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##technologisme

  • From Zagreb to Bihać (Video): Croatian Police Kidnapped Nigerian Students and Transferred them to BiH!

    On November 12, two Nigerian students arrived in Pula to participate in the World Intercollegiate Championship. After the competition, on November 17, they arrived in Zagreb. They were stopped on the street and arrested by the police. Then they were taken to a forest near Velika Kladuša and under threat of weapons, forced to cross into the territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

    Eighteen-year-old student Abia Uchenna Alexandro from Nigeria arrived in Croatia on November 12 this year to participate in the fifth World Intercollegiate Championship in Pula. He represented the Federal University of Technology Owerri in a table tennis competition. After completing the competition, together with four other colleagues, he returned to Zagreb from where he was scheduled to fly to Istanbul on November 18.

    After arriving in Zagreb, with his colleague Eboh Kenneth Chinedu, he settled into a hostel and went out for a walk in the city.

    – On entering the tram we were stopped by the police. They took us to the police station. We tried to explain who we were and that our documents were in the hostel. They did not pay attention to what we were saying, Kenneth Chinedu told Eboh Žurnal.

    WALK, OR I’LL SHOOT

    – We don’t know what time it was, but it was dark ... They took us out of the station and put us in a van. They drove us to an unknown place. Two police officers told us ‘you are going to Bosnia’. I’ve never been to Bosnia. I came by plane to Zagreb, I told them I didn’t know Bosnia. They told us no, you are going to Bosnia. After a while, the van stopped and we were pushed into the bushes. I refused to go into the woods, then the cop told me if I didn’t move he was going to shoot me, says Eboha Kenneth.

    In an interview with Žurnal, Nigerian students said they were scared and did not know what to do. The migrants, who were forced by Croatian police, together with them, to cross over to the territory of BiH through the forest, took them to a camp in Velika Kladuša.

    – Our passports and all belongings remained in Zagreb. I managed to call a colleague from the camp, who was with us in the competition, to send us passports. We don’t know what to do, the visa for Croatia expires today, says Kenneth Chinedu.

    The Miral Camp is managed by the International Organization for Migration (IOM). Žurnal was briefly explained that, following the confirmation from the competition organizers that they were indeed students with duly issued visas, they had informed the organization “Your Rights” in Sarajevo which would take over their case.

    The organization did not respond to calls from the Žurnal’s journalists.

    FILMED BY CROATIAN TV

    The Inter-University Sports Committee, the organizer of the Pula World Cup, says it has been informed of the case. Speaking to Žurnal, Committee Representative Alberto Tanghetti said that there were a total of five participants from Nigeria, four students and a professor, and that they all had regularly isdued visas.

    – These two students were in the competition, they had a Croatian visa, return plane tickets from Zagreb to Istanbul and from Istanbul to Lagos. So they had a visa to come to the competition, they had their return tickets ... At the competition, they were filmed by Croatian television. On Sunday 17/11, they traveled to Zagreb because they had a flight to Istanbul on Monday. Seven days later, I received a call from the camp, informing me that they have two Nigerian students taken by the Croatian police to BiH. I don’t understand how it happened because the police in Pula were informed that they were here, Thanghetti says.

    They said that they will call the University of Pula, inform the Croatian MUP and see how they can help students.

    Vidéo:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvFYJAZK8Lk&feature=emb_logo

    https://zurnal.info/novost/22588/croatian-police-kidnapped-nigerian-students-and-transferred-them-to-bih
    #migrerrance #migrations #Croatie #Bosnie #étudiants #université #études #renvois #expulsions

    • Croatia ’wrongly deports’ Nigerian table tennis players to Bosnia

      Two students visiting Croatia say they were wrongly suspected of undocumented migration and kicked out of the country.

      Croatian police have deported two Nigerian table-tennis players to Bosnia and Herzegovina, claiming they were in the country illegally, despite the pair having arrived in Croatia with valid visas.

      Abie Uchenna Alexandra and Kenneth Chinedu, students from Owerri Technical University in Nigeria, arrived in Zagreb on November 12 to participate in the sport’s World University Championships in Pula, according to Hina, the government-owned national news agency.

      https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/12/croatia-wrongly-deports-nigerian-table-tennis-players-bosnia-191204183710

    • Hrvatska policija kidnapovala nigerijske studente i prebacila ih u BiH!

      Dvojica studenata iz Nigerije 12. novembra doputovali su u Pulu kako bi učestvovali na Svjetskom međusveučilišnom prvenstvu. Nakon završetka takmičenja, 17. novembra, doputovali su u Zagreb. Na ulici ih je zaustavila i privela policija. Odvezli su ih u šumu u blizini Velike Kladuše i pod prijetnjom oružjem natjerali da pređu na teritoriju Bosne i Hercegovine.

      Osamnaestogodišnji student Abia Uchenna Alexandro iz Nigerije doputovao je 12. novembra ove godine u Hrvatsku da bi učestvovao na petom Svjetskom međusveučilišnom prvenstvu u Puli. Predstavljao je Federalni univerzitet tehnologija Owerri na takmičenju iz stonog tenisa. Nakon završetka takmičenja, zajedno sa jos četiri kolege, vratio se u Zagreb odakle je trebao 18. novembra letjeti za Istanbul.

      Nakon dolaska u Zagreb, sa kolegom Eboh Kenneth Chinedu, smjestio se u hostel i izašao u šetnju gradom.

      – Na ulasku u tramvaj zaustavila nas je policija. Odvezli su nas u policijsku stanicu. Pokušali smo im objasniti ko smo i da su nam dokumenti u hostelu. Nisu obraćali pažnju na ono što govorimo, kaže za Žurnal Eboh Kenneth Chinedu.

      HODAJ ILI ĆU PUCATI

      – Ne znamo koliko je sati bilo, ali bio je mrak... Izveli su nas iz stanice i stavili u kombi. Odvezli su nas na nepoznato mjesto. Dvojica policajaca su nam rekli idete u Bosnu. Ja nikada nisam bio u Bosni. Došao sam avionom u Zagreb, rekao sam im da ne znam Bosnu. Rekli su nam ne, vi idete u Bosnu. Nakon nekog vremena kombi je stao i gurnuli su nas u žbunje. Odbio sam ići u šumu, onda mi je policajac rekao ako se ne pomjerim da će me upucati, kaže Eboha Kenneth.

      U razgovoru za Žurnal nigerijski studenti kazu da su bili preplašeni i da nisu znali šta da rade. Migranti, koje je Hrvatska policija zajedno s njima natjerala da kroz šumu pređu na teritoriju BiH, su ih odveli u kamp u Velikoj Kladuši.

      – Naši pasoši i sve stvari su ostale u Zagrebu. Uspio sam iz kampa pozvati kolegu koji je zajedno sa nama bio na takmičenju da nam pošalje pasoše. Ne znamo šta da radimo, viza za Hrvatsku nam ističe danas, kaže Kenneth Chinedu.

      Kampom Miral upravlja Međunarodna organizacija za migracije IOM. Za Žurnal su samo kratko rekli da su o slučaju nigerijskih studenata, nakon što su dobili potvrdu od organizatora takmičenja da su oni stvarno studenti sa uredno izdatim vizama, obavijestili organizaciju Vaša prava iz Sarajeva koja će preuzeti njihov slučaj.

      Iz ove organizacije nisu odgovarali na pozive iz redakcije Žurnala.

      SNIMALA IH HRVATSKA TELEVIZIJA

      Iz Međusveučilišnog sportskog komiteta, organizatora svjetskog prvenstva u Puli, tvrde da su obaviješteni o slučaju. U razgovoru za Žurnal predstavnik Komiteta Alberto Tanghetti kaže da je bilo ukupno pet učesnika iz Nigerije, četiri studenta i profesor, te da su svi imali uredne vize.

      – Ta dva studenta su bila na takmičenju, imali su hrvatsku vizu, povratne avionske karte iz Zagreba za Istanbul i iz Istanbula za Lagos. Znači, imali su vizu da dođu na takmičenje, imali su povratne karte... Na takmičenju ih je snimala hrvatska televizija. U nedjelju 17. 11 putovali su u Zagreb jer su u ponedjeljak imali let za istanbul. Sedam dana kasnije primio sam poziv iz kampa da se kod njih nalaze dvojica studenata iz Nigerije koje je hrvatska policija odvela u BiH. Ne razumijem kako se to desilo jer je policija u Puli bila obaviještena da su tu, kaže Thanghetti.

      Iz ove organizacije kazu da ce nazvati Univerzitet u Puli, obavijestiti MUP Hrvatske i vidjeti kako mogu pomoći studentima.

      https://zurnal.info/novost/22587/hrvatska-policija-kidnapovala-nigerijske-studente-i-prebacila-ih-u-bih

  • « Une allocation d’autonomie pour les étudiants n’aurait rien d’une utopie budgétaire »
    https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2019/11/27/une-allocation-d-autonomie-pour-les-etudiants-n-aurait-rien-d-une-utopie-bud

    Dans une tribune au « Monde », Tom Chevalier, politiste et chercheur au CNRS, souligne que le « salaire étudiant », également appelé allocation d’autonomie, est un dispositif déjà présent dans les pays nordiques, où il joue un grand rôle au service de l’égalité des chances.

    « Au Danemark, chaque étudiant peut bénéficier d’une allocation mensuelle d’environ 700 euros pendant six ans » (Illustration : trouver un logement est une étape difficile pour un étudiant sur trois, selon une étude de l’Observatoire de la vie étudiante). Tribes of the city (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

    Tribune. La tentative de suicide d’un étudiant qui s’est immolé par le feu à Lyon (Rhône) le 8 novembre a mis à l’agenda l’enjeu de la précarité étudiante. Selon l’Observatoire national de la vie étudiante, 22,70 % des étudiants déclarent en effet avoir été confrontés à d’importantes difficultés financières durant l’année 2016, et moins de la moitié (45 %) déclare avoir assez d’argent pour couvrir ses besoins mensuels. L’événement dramatique de Lyon a réactivé, pour lutter contre cette précarité, la revendication d’un « salaire étudiant ».
    Lire aussi Quand l’UNEF se dotait d’une charte
    Cette question est ancienne puisqu’elle provient de la charte de Grenoble de 1946, fondatrice du syndicalisme étudiant et qui reconnaissait l’étudiant comme un « jeune travailleur intellectuel ». L’idée de « salaire étudiant » s’est ensuite progressivement confondue avec celle d’« allocation d’autonomie », même si les appellations diffèrent. Cette idée s’est largement diffusée hors des cercles syndicaux, notamment dans les années 2000, avec la publication de nombreux rapports sur le sujet.

    Mesure réalisable
    A cet égard, on peut notamment citer les rapports du Commissariat général du plan « Jeunesse, le devoir d’avenir », issu en 2001 d’une commission présidée par Dominique Charvet, et « Pour une autonomie responsable et solidaire », de Jean-Baptiste de Foucauld et Nicole Roth, en 2002. Il y eut aussi, en 2007, le rapport sur « Les dotations en capital pour les jeunes », du Centre d’analyse stratégique ; en 2009, le « Livre vert de la Commission sur la politique de la jeunesse », présidée par Martin Hirsch ; en 2017, « Arrêtons de les mettre dans des cases ! », rapport au premier ministre de Célia Vérot et Antoine Dulin.
    Plusieurs chercheurs ont aussi souligné l’effet positif de la mise en place d’un tel dispositif, qu’il s’agisse de sociologues, comme Camille Peugny, dans Le Destin au berceau (Seuil, 2013), ou d’économistes, comme Thomas Piketty, dans Capital et Idéologie (Seuil, 2019). Cette mesure est réalisable puisqu’elle existe déjà dans les pays nordiques, où elle accompagne le droit à la formation tout au long de la vie ainsi que l’individualisation de la citoyenneté sociale.

    Ces rapports et travaux proposent la mise en place d’une allocation d’autonomie sous la forme d’un « droit de tirage pour la formation » : chaque étudiant aurait le droit de bénéficier d’une allocation mensuelle lui permettant de poursuivre des études. Certains considèrent qu’une telle allocation relève de l’impossible, notamment en raison de son coût. Il n’en est rien : tous les pays nordiques l’ont mise en place, alors même que la poursuite d’études supérieures y est gratuite, afin de promouvoir l’égalité des chances. Au Danemark, chaque étudiant peut bénéficier d’une allocation mensuelle d’environ 700 euros pendant six ans.
    Le Haut Conseil de la famille (HCF) a publié en 2016 un rapport sur les jeunes de 18 à 24 ans où il présentait les enjeux de la mise en place d’une telle allocation d’autonomie en France. Pour une allocation d’un montant du revenu minimum (environ 462 euros mensuels en 2016), qui est aussi environ le montant de la bourse la plus élevée, lissé sur douze mois, le HCF nous dit que la mesure coûterait environ 12 milliards d’euros.

    En rien une utopie budgétaire
    Il faut toutefois également prendre en compte tous les autres dispositifs d’aides aux étudiants dont les budgets seraient réalloués à cette nouvelle allocation, comme les bourses, les exonérations actuelles qui leur sont liées, les dépenses fiscales aux familles, et les prestations familiales allouées aux parents des étudiants de 18 à 20-21 ans – ce qui revient à environ 7,7 milliards d’euros. Le besoin de financement s’élève donc en fin de compte à 5,3 milliards d’euros.
    A titre de comparaison, le crédit d’impôt pour la compétitivité et l’emploi, dont l’efficacité en termes de créations d’emplois a été fortement critiquée, a coûté 21 milliards d’euros en 2018, tandis que la suppression de la taxe d’habitation coûterait environ 17,6 milliards : la mise en place d’une allocation d’autonomie n’a donc rien d’une utopie budgétaire.

    Si la mise en place d’une allocation d’autonomie est possible pour lutter contre la précarité étudiante et promouvoir l’égalité des chances, elle s’insère dans un contexte spécifique. D’abord, elle accompagne le droit à la formation tout au long de la vie promu dans les pays nordiques, se traduisant par deux caractéristiques de leur enseignement supérieur.
    D’un côté, le système éducatif en général y est faiblement inégalitaire, tandis que le système éducatif français, très élitiste, produit au contraire de fortes inégalités, avec un enseignement supérieur très segmenté, notamment en raison de la dualité historique entre universités et grandes écoles.

    Des étudiants vus comme des adultes
    D’un autre côté, les études supérieures n’y sont pas considérées comme un seul prolongement du secondaire. Autrement dit, non seulement le cumul emploi-études y est plus aisé, mais les allers-retours entre emploi et études sont possibles et encouragés tout au long de la vie : le destin scolaire et professionnel n’est ainsi pas fixé à 23 ans sans possibilité de réflexion ou de seconde chance pour les jeunes, comme c’est le cas en France.
    Une allocation d’autonomie suppose par ailleurs de reconnaître le statut d’adulte des jeunes, et en l’occurrence des jeunes adultes scolarisés, en individualisant la citoyenneté sociale. En France, la citoyenneté sociale est familialisée dans la mesure où les jeunes adultes sont considéré·es comme de « grands enfants » : il revient aux parents de s’occuper de leurs enfants, même majeurs, a fortiori lorsqu’ils ou elles sont scolarisé·es, comme l’a bien montré le film d’Etienne Chatiliez Tanguy (2001).

    D’où l’importance de la politique familiale dans les aides aux étudiants et le fait que les bourses dépendent du revenu des parents. Or, dans les pays nordiques, les jeunes peuvent bénéficier en leur nom propre des prestations sociales en général, et de l’allocation d’autonomie en particulier, puisqu’ils sont vus comme des adultes qui ne dépendent plus nécessairement de leurs parents sur le plan financier.
    Cette reconnaissance du statut d’adulte des jeunes que permet une telle individualisation renforce en retour leur niveau de confiance dans les institutions. A l’opposé, ces niveaux sont particulièrement bas dans le cas français, la familialisation étant perçue comme une infantilisation, et donc comme une forme de défiance de la part de l’Etat vis-à-vis de sa jeunesse.

    #étudiants #allocation-d’autonomie #revenu

    • Je mets en exergue cet extrait qui montre bien qu’on saurait où trouver de l’argent.

      Il faut toutefois également prendre en compte tous les autres dispositifs d’aides aux étudiants dont les budgets seraient réalloués à cette nouvelle allocation, comme les bourses, les exonérations actuelles qui leur sont liées, les dépenses fiscales aux familles, et les prestations familiales allouées aux parents des étudiants de 18 à 20-21 ans – ce qui revient à environ 7,7 milliards d’euros. Le besoin de financement s’élève donc en fin de compte à 5,3 milliards d’euros.
      A titre de comparaison, le crédit d’impôt pour la compétitivité et l’emploi, dont l’efficacité en termes de créations d’emplois a été fortement critiquée, a coûté 21 milliards d’euros en 2018, tandis que la suppression de la taxe d’habitation coûterait environ 17,6 milliards : la mise en place d’une allocation d’autonomie n’a donc rien d’une utopie budgétaire.

  • More academics and students have mental health problems than ever before

    In the past few years, a lot of attention has been devoted to mental health on university campuses. Primarily explored from the perspective of students, poor mental health has been reported widely all around the world – it seems university students are not mentally well.

    Studies show a large proportion of students experience high levels of depressive symptoms. In the UK, the All Party Parliamentary Group on Students – a forum established for MPs and their peers to discuss issues that affect students in higher education – found 33% of students had experienced suicidal thoughts in the past academic year.

    Poor mental health at university is a big problem, not only because it affects how students learn, but because it also impacts whether they actually finish their degrees. Ultimately, symptoms of poor mental health affect the career potential and overall lives of students greatly.

    Most research has pointed to challenges caused by the transition from high school to university life, coursework deadlines, exams and financial difficulties.
    Helping students

    Recent research in the UK has shown that university students have a limited understanding of mental health issues and are hesitant to seek support. Administrators have noted the high prevalence of poor mental health and low levels of mental health literacy of students.

    Across the UK, universities have taken different approaches to raising awareness of mental health disorders and addressing stigma associated with poor mental health.

    Posters, websites and apps have sprung up in an effort to get students to seek care, and to encourage them to visit campus well-being clinics.
    What about academics?

    But it seems the poor mental health of academics has received comparatively little attention. This is concerning because research has shown that many academic staff are stressed and at risk of burnout. Like students, academics are not mentally well.

    One recent survey found that 43% of academic staff exhibited symptoms of at least a mild mental disorder. This is nearly twice the prevalence of mental disorders compared with the general population. Primarily to blame are the increased workloads of academics and demands to publish and obtain external revenue.

    High levels of poor mental health have a profound impact on the professional competence and productivity of academics, affecting administrative, teaching and research quality – as well as impairing communication and work relationships among staff. Of course, poor mental health also affects the personal lives of these individuals.
    Silent stigma

    But academic staff have far fewer options for well-being support than students. Most universities will offer their staff the chance to see an occupational health nurse or contact an employee assistance program by telephone – but information about both services is limited and often difficult to find. And both options direct staff to services outside the university campus.

    With limited, hard to find services and the stigma that surrounds poor mental health, it is unsurprising that only 6.7% of UK academic staff have ever disclosed a mental health condition. In a sense then, a culture of “silence of mental health issues within university environments” exists.

    It is clear that more must be done to help address the poor mental health of academics. Meaningful structural changes are needed to address the underlying factors associated with poor mental health, like job security, workload and pay. Though these changes will not be easy or come quickly. Unfortunately, in the current political climate, and with the high costs of education, governments are under pressure to satisfy students and their parents with rubrics of excellence – putting further stress on academics.
    Changing attitudes

    Improving mental health literacy among academics – including symptom identification, self-care practices (such as engaging in physical activity), and knowing where to seek support – is one potential strategy. Like the work being done with students, academics need information about mental health and help to change their attitudes towards seeking care.

    One study found that academics who were more physically active and meeting the recommended guidelines of 150 minutes of moderate or vigorous intensity activity every week, were more likely to report higher levels of well-being and lower levels of distress.

    But telling academics about physical activity is not enough and changes to the university environment are needed to support behaviour change.

    The creation of physical activity options for staff, including social walking groups, free exercise facilities, and heavily subsidised cycle to work schemes, may help. Using physical activity to connect people around mental health, similar to England Athletics’ Mental Health Ambassador Programme, may further provide support. And increased physical activity isn’t something that would only help academics, everyone on campus could benefit.

    Poor mental health among academics has serious consequences in terms of the future of universities. And if nothing is done to promote good mental health, we will continue to lose academics because of burnout. This could lead to a decrease in the standards of teaching and research – at a time when the UK arguably needs them most.

    https://theconversation.com/more-academics-and-students-have-mental-health-problems-than-ever-b
    #université #étudiants #santé_mentale #santé #travail #universitaires

    v. aussi:
    https://seenthis.net/messages/601011

    • How academics can improve their quality of life

      At a time when stress and mental health issues are endemic within universities, Erin K. Wilson considers the small steps she is determined to take in order to be part of the solution.

      Two years ago, I acknowledged that my academic work was seriously affecting my health. Indeed, I had to. I had no choice.

      In 2012, I relocated from Australia to the Netherlands to take up a position as the founding director of a research centre. This role involved transitioning from politics and international relations to a Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies. I worked intensely for five years, researching, presenting at conferences and teaching; designing new educational and research programmes; organising seminars and workshops; taking on policy work with supra-national European institutions and foreign ministries. I spent my evenings, weekends and holidays writing grant applications, book chapters, journal articles; preparing course guides; editing books and journal issues. In 2017, I moved directly from this role to head of department. This, in hindsight, was a mistake.

      The signs were there well before I eventually admitted it. For six months, I had not been sleeping. For over 12 months, I would wake in the middle of the night sweating, my heart pounding, hands shaking, teeth grinding, for no apparent reason. I became irritable, snapping at friends, colleagues and loved ones. I knew I was overreacting to inconsequential things yet was unable to stop myself. I couldn’t find joy or fulfilment in anything. Colleagues and friends were deeply worried about me but felt powerless to do anything.

      In the end, the acknowledgement that I was not OK came in the middle of an impromptu, informal conversation with my dean. He came to speak to me about arranging additional administrative assistance for all heads of department. In order to organise it, he asked me for a list of tasks that the assistant would undertake. That short list, which would not have taken more than 10 minutes to put together, and would have resulted in additional support, was the proverbial last straw.

      “It’s just one more thing I have to do,” I said, as I began to cry, uncontrollably, overwhelmed by the seemingly insurmountable expectations and demands of academic life.

      I am privileged to be in a supportive workplace, and immediately received the assistance I needed to rest and recover from years of working myself into the ground. Many others are nowhere near so fortunate.

      My story is in no way unique. I’ve encountered this never-ending work pressure in both Australia and the Netherlands. Colleagues in the US, the UK and elsewhere also recognise it. This culture is taking a severe toll on people’s physical and mental health, from students to established senior scholars. It is discouraging many of the brightest and most talented thinkers and researchers from pursuing academic careers.

      That academia requires total commitment is in essence taken for granted. Examples from many different disciplines highlight the same stresses as contributors to this relentless work culture:

      · Constant pressure to publish

      · Increasing instability and insecurity of academic positions. I spent the first seven years of my academic career on temporary contracts, after a protracted and traumatic PhD experience. Many colleagues have spent far longer in unstable employment

      · The demand that we be academic superheroes, able to do everything from teaching to marketing, despite little if any training in anything except research

      · The pressure put on families and relationships by one partner having to live in another city, country or continent in order to have meaningful and relatively stable work (frequently with consequences that more detrimentally affect women)

      · The constant grant application cycle, with deadlines at the end of vacation periods, meaning researchers use their holidays to write proposals, instead of taking an actual break.

      These pressures are familiar to most academics, yet there is no doubt that they are systemic and there seems little prospect of relief any time soon.

      In the Netherlands, following advice from the Commissie van Rijn, funding will be redirected to technical universities from general research universities, reducing staff capacity and undermining the quality of education. This funding reallocation takes place alongside planned 2020 budget cuts to the Dutch education sector of nearly €150 million (£130 million). At a cross-continental level, the new European Commission does not have a commissioner for research and education. These areas have been subsumed under the broader portfolio of “innovation and youth”. In the draft EU 2020 budget, more than €400 million have been cut from Horizon 2020, with the European Research Council alone losing almost €200 million from its annual budget. Meanwhile, back in my native Australia, the government announced that it would be cutting almost A$350 million (£188 million) over the next three years from university research funding.

      In this ever-widening climate of financial scarcity and job insecurity, it’s no wonder that early and mid-career researchers are working themselves to the bone just to have a fighting chance of staying in the game. Many scholars are giving up and walking away entirely – and that should worry us. Impoverishing research and education damages our societies and weakens our democracies.

      Huge structural shifts are certainly required to address these broader constraints. At the same time, I wonder whether we are also somewhat complicit in these pressures. Academia is shrouded in prestige and mystique, more like a vocation than a career. Yet endowing it with an almost sacred quality contributes to sustaining unhealthy working cultures: if you aren’t prepared to devote your evenings, weekends and holidays to writing and research, then maybe you should reconsider whether you are cut out to be an academic. It is these cultural dynamics internal to academia that we have some power to change.

      I have spent a lot of time thinking about how to navigate these pressures as I transition back into full-time work. It’s an issue that’s recently become more urgent, since I accepted the position of faculty vice-dean and director of teaching. One of my main priorities is to avoid reproducing the cultures and behaviours that made me ill in the first place. It’s not easy. These behaviours and cultures are deeply entrenched. Financial pressures on universities can make it impossible to implement change.

      Sometimes, though, it is not about what is possible. It is about who we are, who we want to be, what we want our universities to be, holding fast to what we value, even (especially) when those values are under threat or entirely absent. I want to go home at the end of each day knowing that, regardless of the outcome, I have done what I can to create an environment where people feel secure, protected and valued. In my view, this can only enhance the quality of our research and our education.

      I don’t pretend to have the answers for how to do this without broader systemic reforms as well. Nonetheless, I do have some steps that I am trying in places and spaces where I do have some control and influence:

      1. Resist the 24/7 work culture. I try as far as possible not to work evenings or weekends. If for some reason I have to, I take time off during the week to compensate. I encourage my colleagues and students to do the same. Rest and relaxation are as important for good scholarship as time spent actually working.

      2. Promote and value diversity. I would like to see diversity sensitivity and implicit bias training introduced throughout my university, and indeed the sector as a whole. Yet even now, when hiring or promoting people, for example, we can make sure we consider the whole picture. What is their life outside work like? What caring responsibilities do they have? What circumstances, including discriminatory structures and practices, may have affected their ability to write, apply for grants, hold demanding leadership roles?

      3. Advocate for greater security and stability in employment contracts. A colleague of mine, who has been on short-term contracts for many years, was recently offered a permanent job. When the faculty concerned offered it to her, they honestly admitted that they had funding secured for only the first two and a half years, but they felt that offering her a permanent role was “the ethical thing to do”, and they would figure out how to make up the shortfall. They chose to do what was right for the person, not for the budget.

      4. Allow people to choose their own priorities in research, teaching and social engagement. As far as possible, don’t insist that people teach subjects they know nothing about or apply for grants before they’re ready. There are, of course, times when we all have to do things we don’t want to do. Yet such efforts and sacrifices should be acknowledged, honoured and compensated in some way, not just expected and taken for granted.

      5. Promote transparency and open communication.Decision-making in higher education can be opaque and exclusionary. While this is intended to shield staff from worries about broader political and economic trends, it can leave them feeling disempowered. Involving all staff in discussions about present and future challenges can generate energy, community and solidarity to work together to address them.

      6. Get involved with political actions to support academia and other social and political causes. Academia can feel like a solitary environment. Joining action groups, or even just wearing symbols of solidarity at work, can remind us that we are part of a global community of scholars committed to resisting unrealistic work pressure while upholding quality education and research. One such symbol is the red felt square, which first appeared as part of student demonstrations against tuition fee increases in Montreal and has since become a central component of protests against funding cuts, workforce casualisation, mounting workloads and commercialisation in Dutch academia.

      7. Build relationships and support networks with colleagues. I am lucky to have a wonderful group of supportive colleagues. We discuss ideas about research and teaching, share life struggles, talk about issues that really matter to us.

      8. Ask for help. I use these support networks when I am struggling, and support others when they are. We need to remove the taboos that prevent people from acknowledging that they are not OK, ask each other how we’re doing and get help when we need it.

      9. Take time to look after ourselves and our families. I try to exercise every day, have a healthy diet and get enough sleep. I try to spend regular quality time with my husband. I started singing lessons. We need to make time for the people and things we love and that give us joy.

      These are small measures and not always easy to carry out. Yet they can make a real difference in themselves and lay the groundwork for the systemic changes we would like to see. It is, after all, in the small places and spaces that our work and our lives happen. That is where we have power for change and where, I believe, the most necessary and most revolutionary change can occur.

      https://www.timeshighereducation.com/features/how-academics-can-improve-their-quality-life

    • @freakonometrics a twitter ce dernier article :


      https://twitter.com/freakonometrics/status/1199646026879176704

      J’ai réagi ainsi :

      Merci d’avoir ht ce texte. Je ne l’ai pas commenté sur seenthis, mais je trouve le titre problématique : ça met l’accent sur les actions individuelles des chercheur·es pour améliorer leur qualité de la vie au lieu de pointer du doigt les responsabilités institutionnelles.
      La première cause de la dégradation de la qualité de vie des chercheur·es = diminution des ressources et la gestion néo-libérale des #universités.

      Et j’ai reçu, d’une collègue aux Pays-Bas, une réponse qui ressemble fortement à ce que j’ai écrit... Non pas en réaction à l’article ci-dessus, mais en réaction à la mise en place, à l’Université d’Amsterdam, d’une « semaine anti-stress ». Le texte est simplement parfait, je me permets donc de le reproduire ici, sans mentionner l’auteur à qui je n’ai pas demandé si je pouvais le diffuser :

      "The week of 11th of November is the week of work stress. It is the week where the university brings out its petting puppies, makes you bikeblend your smoothie, and has you beat a few djembe tunes to let go of your stress. Some might argue that it is a nice gesture of the employer, but we of the FNV in the OR find it a slap in the face of the employee. It adds insult to injury.

      This waste of money again shows that the faculty is not taking work pressure seriously. We said it last year, and we said it again this year: “stop monkeying around and actually deal with the causes of work pressure”. Work pressure is not that difficult. There are either too many tasks for the number of people, or there are not enough people for the number of tasks. So the answers are also simple. If an organization is financially healthy, you hire more people. If the organization is financially unhealthy, you are stuck with reducing the tasks. There is no rocket science involved.

      Yet as you can see in this week of work stress, the faculty seems keen to responsiblize the individual for the work pressure he or she is experiencing. This leads to offers such as time management (we just received an email that there are two spots still available), yoga, and mindfulness. But these are just bandaids ("lapjes voor het bloeden" as the Dutch expression goes) that obscure the structural faults of the system. There are too many administration processes. There is too much institutional distrust that you are not doing your work correctly leading to for instance to ’jaargesprekken’ being moments where you defend yourself instead of discussing how you would like to grow as an professional. There are criteria for promotion that seem to change during the process. We have to accept budget cuts in our teaching programme while at the same time the faculty wants to start new programmes that make new claims on budget and staff.

      Recently, our support staff at EOSS was confronted with a report that was framed as research about the high work pressure they are experiencing. Yet it actually placed all the blame at the staff of EOSS and suggested their so-called inefficient work and non-conformance to instructions from management was the cause of their work pressure. Another signal that work pressure is not taking seriously by management and the individual employee is again responsibilized for his or her work’ stress’.The Works Council will keep pushing the Faculty and the UvA to make meaningful structural changes that address work pressure instead of blaming the victim. Namaste"

      #stress #anti-stress #stress-management #yoga

    • ça me met mal à l’aise ce genre de semaine... oui, ça reconnaît un problème, mais ça reste du maquillage ! c’est comme l’université qui dit d’un côté qu’il faut avoir une pensée écologique, mais que de l’autre imprime des stocks énormes de brochures sur papier glacé pour les portes ouvertes, ou qui te refuse des subventions si tu ne fais pas venir des stars à un colloque qui viennent du bout du monde pour 2 jours ! « The Works Council will keep pushing the Faculty and the UvA to make meaningful structural changes that address work pressure instead of blaming the victim » oui, entièrement d’accord... et après ?