EU’s AI Act Falls Short on Protecting Rights at Borders
Despite years of tireless advocacy by a coalition of civil society and academics (including the author), the European Union’s new law regulating artificial intelligence falls short on protecting the most vulnerable. Late in the night on Friday, Dec. 8, the European Parliament reached a landmark deal on its long-awaited Act to Govern Artificial Intelligence (AI Act). After years of meetings, lobbying, and hearings, the EU member states, Commission, and the Parliament agreed on the provisions of the act, awaiting technical meetings and formal approval before the final text of the legislation is released to the public. A so-called “global first” and racing ahead of the United States, the EU’s bill is the first ever regional attempt to create an omnibus AI legislation. Unfortunately, this bill once again does not sufficiently recognize the vast human rights risks of border technologies and should go much further protecting the rights of people on the move.
From surveillance drones patrolling the Mediterranean to vast databases collecting sensitive biometric information to experimental projects like robo-dogs and AI lie detectors, every step of a person’s migration journey is now impacted by risky and unregulated border technology projects. These technologies are fraught with privacy infringements, discriminatory decision-making, and even impact the life, liberty, and security of person seeking asylum. They also impact procedural rights, muddying responsibility over opaque and discretionary decisions and lacking clarity in mechanisms of redress when something goes wrong.
The EU’s AI Act could have been a landmark global standard for the protection of the rights of the most vulnerable. But once again, it does not provide the necessary safeguards around border technologies. For example, while recognizing that some border technologies could fall under the high-risk category, it is not yet clear what, if any, border tech projects will be included in the final high-risk category of projects that are subject to transparency obligations, human rights impact assessments, and greater scrutiny. The Act also has various carveouts and exemptions in place, for example for matters of national security, which can encapsulate technologies used in migration and border enforcement. And crucial discussions around bans on high-risk technologies in migration never even made it into the Parliament’s final deal terms at all. Even the bans which have been announced, for example around emotion recognition, are only in place in the workplace and education, not at the border. Moreover, what exactly is banned remains to be seen, and outstanding questions to be answered in the final text include the parameters around predictive policing as well as the exceptions to the ban on real-time biometric surveillance, still allowed in instances of a “threat of terrorism,” targeted search for victims, or the prosecution of serious crimes. It is also particularly troubling that the AI Act explicitly leaves room for technologies which are of particular appetite for Frontex, the EU’s border force. Frontex released its AI strategy on Nov. 9, signaling an appetite for predictive tools and situational analysis technology. These tools, which when used without safeguards, can facilitate illegal border interdiction operations, including “pushbacks,” in which the agency has been investigated. The Protect Not Surveil Coalition has been trying to influence European policy makers to ban predictive analytics used for the purposes of border enforcement. Unfortunately, no migration tech bans at all seem to be in the final Act.
The lack of bans and red lines under the high-risk uses of border technologies in the EU’s position is in opposition to years of academic research as well as international guidance, such as by then-U.N. Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, E. Tendayi Achiume. For example, a recently released report by the University of Essex and the UN’s Office of the Human Rights Commissioner (OHCHR), which I co-authored with Professor Lorna McGregor, argues for a human rights based approach to digital border technologies, including a moratorium on the most high risk border technologies such as border surveillance, which pushes people on the move into dangerous terrain and can even assist with illegal border enforcement operations such as forced interdictions, or “pushbacks.” The EU did not take even a fraction of this position on border technologies.
While it is promising to see strict regulation of high-risk AI systems such as self-driving cars or medical equipment, why are the risks of unregulated AI technologies at the border allowed to continue unabated? My work over the last six years spans borders from the U.S.-Mexico corridor to the fringes of Europe to East Africa and beyond, and I have witnessed time and again how technological border violence operates in an ecosystem replete with the criminalization of migration, anti-migrant sentiments, overreliance on the private sector in an increasingly lucrative border industrial complex, and deadly practices of border enforcement, leading to thousands of deaths at borders. From vast biometric data collected without consent in refugee camps, to algorithms replacing visa officers and making discriminatory decisions, to AI lie detectors used at borders to discern apparent liars, the roll out of unregulated technologies is ever-growing. The opaque and discretionary world of border enforcement and immigration decision-making is built on societal structures which are underpinned by intersecting systemic racism and historical discrimination against people migrating, allowing for high-risk technological experimentation to thrive at the border.
The EU’s weak governance on border technologies will allow for more and more experimental projects to proliferate, setting a global standard on how governments will approach migration technologies. The United States is no exception, and in an upcoming election year where migration will once again be in the spotlight, there does not seem to be much incentive to regulate technologies at the border. The Biden administration’s recently released Executive Order on the Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence does not offer a regulatory framework for these high-risk technologies, nor does it discuss the impacts of border technologies on people migrating, including taking a human rights based approach to the vast impacts of these projects on people migrating. Unfortunately, the EU often sets a precedent for how other countries govern technology. With the weak protections offered by the EU AI act on border technologies, it is no surprise that the U.S. government is emboldened to do as little as possible to protect people on the move from harmful technologies.
But real people already are at the centre of border technologies. People like Mr. Alvarado, a young husband and father from Latin America in his early 30s who perished mere kilometers away from a major highway in Arizona, in search of a better life. I visited his memorial site after hours of trekking through the beautiful yet deadly Sonora desert with a search-and-rescue group. For my upcoming book, The Walls have Eyes: Surviving Migration in the Age of Artificial Intelligence, I was documenting the growing surveillance dragnet of the so-called smart border that pushes people to take increasingly dangerous routes, leading to increasing loss of life at the U.S.-Mexico border. Border technologies as a deterrent simply do not work. People desperate for safety – and exercising their internationally protected right to asylum – will not stop coming. They will instead more circuitous routes, and scholars like Geoffrey Boyce and Samuel Chambers have already documented a threefold increase in deaths at the U.S.-Mexico frontier as the so-called smart border expands. In the not so distant future, will people like Mr. Alvarado be pursued by the Department of Homeland Security’s recently announced robo-dogs, a military grade technology that is sometimes armed?
It is no accident that more robust governance around migration technologies is not forthcoming. Border spaces increasingly serve as testing grounds for new technologies, places where regulation is deliberately limited and where an “anything goes” frontier attitude informs the development and deployment of surveillance at the expense of people’s lives. There is also big money to be made in developing and selling high risk technologies. Why does the private sector get to time and again determine what we innovate on and why, in often problematic public-private partnerships which states are increasingly keen to make in today’s global AI arms race? For example, whose priorities really matter when we choose to create violent sound cannons or AI-powered lie detectors at the border instead of using AI to identify racist border guards? Technology replicates power structures in society. Unfortunately, the viewpoints of those most affected are routinely excluded from the discussion, particularly around areas of no-go-zones or ethically fraught usages of technology.
Seventy-seven border walls and counting are now cutting across the landscape of the world. They are both physical and digital, justifying broader surveillance under the guise of detecting illegal migrants and catching terrorists, creating suitable enemies we can all rally around. The use of military, or quasi-military, autonomous technology bolsters the connection between immigration and national security. None of these technologies, projects, and sets of decisions are neutral. All technological choices – choices about what to count, who counts, and why – have an inherently political dimension and replicate biases that render certain communities at risk of being harmed, communities that are already under-resourced, discriminated against, and vulnerable to the sharpening of borders all around the world.
As is once again clear with the EU’s AI Act and the direction of U.S. policy on AI so far, the impacts on real people seems to have been forgotten. Kowtowing to industry and making concessions for the private sector not to stifle innovation does not protect people, especially those most marginalized. Human rights standards and norms are the bare minimum in the growing panopticon of border technologies. More robust and enforceable governance mechanisms are needed to regulate the high-risk experiments at borders and migration management, including a moratorium on violent technologies and red lines under military-grade technologies, polygraph machines, and predictive analytics used for border interdictions, at the very least. These laws and governance mechanisms must also include efforts at local, regional, and international levels, as well as global co-operation and commitment to a human-rights based approach to the development and deployment of border technologies. However, in order for more robust policy making on border technologies to actually affect change, people with lived experiences of migration must also be in the driver’s seat when interrogating both the negative impacts of technology as well as the creative solutions that innovation can bring to the complex stories of human movement.
▻https://www.justsecurity.org/90763/eus-ai-act-falls-short-on-protecting-rights-at-borders
#droits #frontières #AI #IA #intelligence_artificielle #Artificial_Intelligence_Act #AI_act #UE #EU #drones #Méditerranée #mer_Méditerranée #droits_humains #technologie #risques #surveillance #discrimination #transparence #contrôles_migratoires #Frontex #push-backs #refoulements #privatisation #business #complexe_militaro-industriel #morts_aux_frontières #biométrie #données #racisme #racisme_systémique #expérimentation #smart_borders #frontières_intelligentes #pouvoir #murs #barrières_frontalières #terrorisme
]]>Are You Syrious Daily Digest 6/4/20
▻https://medium.com/are-you-syrious/ays-daily-digest-6-4-20-riot-police-violently-raids-a-detention-centre-in-gr
70members of the riot police stormed a detention centre and were beating the confined people confined with batons. Reportedly, there are five people in a critical condition, many were injured and people had not been given food for a long time, according to the first reports that AYS and other groups received.
The most comprehensive report of the incident reads: The government and the Minister of Civil Protection are responsible for the barbaric crackdown on migrant protests over food in the midst of the corona pandemic. Not only are they cynically indifferent to the human lives of the 450 migrants held in the PRO.KE.K.A (Pre-removal Detention Centre), but they are endangering their health with bad food and that of poor nutrition quality.
On April 3, when the food arrived, they found that it was not eatable, and refused to eat it. This kind of food was simply “not for humans”.
Officials have promised that this will change, which did not happen, however.
Then, starting with a large group of Arab protesters came out of the cells, almost everybody went to the rooftop and started a hunger strike. This was followed by an attack of the police in full battle gear. The police took them out of the cells, hitting them with batons, while they also used electric tasers, as the people complained. Dozens of people were beaten for taking part while lying in the yard, it is reported.
They smashed the cameras on their phones so they can’t take pictures of the injuries. And they haven’t given them food since then. According to police sources, a man was taken to the hospital in critical condition.
Underlying racism in official reporting
There is underlying racism in the way Greece reports about COVID-19, separating the report on the general number of infected people and the number of infected people inside the camps. It is clear that if COVID-19 is present in the camps, it came from outside the camps. These types of reports leave room for interpretations, and all kinds of conclusions and conspiracy theories that connect people on the move currently trapped in the camps with COVID-19. In this way they spread a dehumanizing rhetoric very present in governmental reporting, but also within the bureaucratic reports of the big organisations following their lead.
Illegal Deportations and Pushbacks to Turkey, Ordered by the Greek Government, Executed by the Greek Coast Guard
Aegean Boat Report reports:
“While the eyes of the world are occupied with the COVID-19 pandemic, Greek government seems to be taking advantage of the situation, a new tactic to tackle flows towards the Greek Aegean islands has been implemented.
In the last weeks at least nine incidents of people being found drifting in the sea, in life rafts without propellant, has been reported by Turkish coast guard. This could easily have been disregarded as Turkish propaganda, if it hadn’t been for the evidence from Samos.
April 1th at 08.00 a boat landed on Mourtia Beach, Samos east, carrying approximately 25 people. There where several people on the beach this morning witnessing the landing, pictures, and videos was taken. Port police were called by a person on-site, later port police denied having received any information on such incident, and that no new arrivals had been reported on Samos.
Witnesses report that two boats from HCG arrived in Mourtia bay after the landing, the refugees were taken on one of the boats from port police, a boat took off heading southeast. A picture taken by a local journalist shows that two boats from HCG were in fact in Mourtia bay this morning, but port police deny that any of their vessels were in the area this morning.
The last boat that landed in Mourtia beach was February 19th, nevertheless, later this very day people who walk on this beach every day, found a rubber boat, engine, a fuel tank and clothes that weren’t there the day before. Port police told people who contacted them about this that there had been no arrivals, and that they should remember that it was April fools day.
Turkish Coast guard picked up 26 people 13.30 this same day, in a life raft that had drifted towards Aydin national park, 10 children, 6 women and 10 men. According to the statement from the passengers, obtained by TCG, they claimed that they had crossed to the island of Samos; were later rounded up by the Greek Coast guard, put on a life raft, and dragged to Turkish waters.
Pictures taken by locals from Mourtia Beach, compared to pictures taken by Turkish coast guard leaves no doubt, people photographed on Samos is the same that TCG found drifting in a raft outside Aydin national park. When we also take into account the statements from locals regarding this landing, the evidence is overwhelming.
If this had been an isolated incident, this could have been an HCG crew taking things in their own hands, but it’s not. Nine known cases in the last two weeks, from Simi in the south to Lesvos in the north, shows that this is not an isolated incident, this is boat crews acting on orders from the top.”
Due to a dispute between local government and the Greek Ministry of migration, 152 new arrivals on Lesvos are still stuck out in the open without any sufficient infrastructure which meets basic needs, such as electricity, toilets or other sanitary facilities, @f_grillmeier (Twitter) reported. 25 people of those 152 who also arrived after March 1 have been staying in a discarded bus at Mytilini Harbour close to an old swimming pool, but have now been tranferred to Kara Tepe.
56people are in tents and underneath broken boats close to Petra, 32 people are reportedly in staying tents at mountain-region of Agios Stefanos, 39 in a chapel close to Kliou, north. According to the media, the local government has not indicated a safe temporary place for those who have to quarantine for 14 days after arrival. The Ministry of Migration says that it is the responsibility of local authorities.
Anxiety and Despair Among People Confined in Camps Across the Country
As a consequence of the locked camps’ regime that seems to be unsustainable in the long run, as it is now, there is growing despair among the people held in the centres across Serbia, guarded by the army. The people staying in these camps are complaining that they are not allowed to provide their families and themselves with enough proper food for a healthier survival within the facilities in which they are held. They say that in the Krnjača camp there is a small shop with no clear pricing, and everything is much more expensive than in the other shops outside of the camp. They are forced to buy food in these shops which they claim are owned by some of the staff, and even there not everyone gets to have a chance to shop.
The SCRM introduced obligatory isolation for new arrivals sent to Preševo camp, which with a population of 1,501 making it the largest camp .
Growing mental health issues, gaps in service provision and supply, conflicts between different groups and the toxic influence of smugglers’ propaganda inspiring some to protest violently, these are some of the issues InfoPark documented from the testimonies of people held in these centres.
CROATIA
Pushbacks continue
Although the official sources claim the “pressure on the border” has reduced, and that there are not that many people trying to cross the green border into Croatia, the reports on pushbacks have not ceased. AYS has received information on several cases of pushbacks in the area close to Velika Kladuša in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Also, L’ ALTRA VOCE have recently shared an account of a pushback of a group of boys who tried to enter Croatia, but were beaten up and had their belongings taken away, they say. The images they sent them display heavily bruised arms and extremities on the boys’ bodies.
Sixteen cops beat them with great violence using steel bars. They insulted and beat them. Then they took everything away from him: cell phones, money, shoes, jackets. And they pushed them into the cold water of a river.
#Covid-19 #Migration #Migrant #Balkans #Grèce #Détention #Camp #Racisme #Refoulement #Merégée #Turquie #Samos #Mourtia #Mythilène #karatepe #Agiosstefanos #Petra #Kliou #Klidi #Sintiki #Privatisation #Serbie #Armée #Presevo #Krnjaca #Santémentale #Croatie #Refoulement #Velikakladusa #Bosnie-Herzégovine
]]>
Les #Sept_Nouvelles_Merveilles_du_Monde
▻https://www.travelchannel.com/interests/outdoors-and-adventure/articles/new-seven-wonders-of-the-world
consulté le 03/06/2018
The following list of the New Seven Wonders is presented without ranking, and aims to represent global heritage.
In 2007, more than 100 million people voted to declare the New Seven Wonders of the World. The following list of seven winners is presented without ranking, and aims to represent global heritage.
#Great_Wall_of_China (#China)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-great-wall-of-china.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581549051.jpeg
Built between the 5th century B.C. and the 16th century, the Great Wall of China is a stone-and-earth fortification created to protect the borders of the Chinese Empire from invading Mongols. The Great Wall is actually a succession of multiple walls spanning approximately 4,000 miles, making it the world’s longest manmade structure.
#Christ_the_Redeemer Statue (#Rio_de_Janeiro)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-christ-the-redeemer.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581548898.jpeg
The Art Deco-style Christ the Redeemer statue has been looming over the Brazilians from upon Corcovado mountain in an awe-inspiring state of eternal blessing since 1931. The 130-foot reinforced concrete-and-soapstone statue was designed by Heitor da Silva Costa and cost approximately $250,000 to build - much of the money was raised through donations. The statue has become an easily recognized icon for Rio and Brazil.
#Machu_Picchu (#Peru)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-machu-picchu.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581548990.jpeg
Machu Picchu, an Incan city of sparkling granite precariously perched between 2 towering Andean peaks, is thought by scholars to have been a sacred archaeological center for the nearby Incan capital of Cusco. Built at the peak of the Incan Empire in the mid-1400s, this mountain citadel was later abandoned by the Incas. The site remained unknown except to locals until 1911, when it was rediscovered by archaeologist Hiram Bingham. The site can only be reached by foot, train or helicopter; most visitors visit by train from nearby Cusco.
#Chichen_Itza (#Yucatan_Peninsula, #Mexico)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-chichen-itza.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581548887.jpeg
The genius and adaptability of Mayan culture can be seen in the splendid ruins of Chichen Itza. This powerful city, a trading center for cloth, slaves, honey and salt, flourished from approximately 800 to 1200, and acted as the political and economic hub of the Mayan civilization. The most familiar ruin at the site is El Caracol, a sophisticated astronomical observatory.
The Roman #Colosseum (#Rome)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-roman-coloesseum.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581548881.jpeg
Rome’s, if not Italy’s, most enduring icon is undoubtedly its Colosseum. Built between A.D. 70 and 80 A.D., it was in use for some 500 years. The elliptical structure sat nearly 50,000 spectators, who gathered to watch the gladiatorial events as well as other public spectacles, including battle reenactments, animal hunts and executions. Earthquakes and stone-robbers have left the Colosseum in a state of ruin, but portions of the structure remain open to tourists, and its design still influences the construction of modern-day amphitheaters, some 2,000 years later.
#Taj_Mahal (Agra, #India)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-taj-mahal.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581548979.jpeg
A mausoleum commissioned for the wife of Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan, the Taj Mahal was built between 1632 and 1648. Considered the most perfect specimen of Muslim art in India, the white marble structure actually represents a number of architectural styles, including Persian, Islamic, Turkish and Indian. The Taj Mahal also encompasses formal gardens of raised pathways, sunken flower beds and a linear reflecting pool.
#Petra (#Jordan)
▻https://travel.home.sndimg.com/content/dam/images/travel/fullset/2015/10/12/new-seven-wonders-petra.jpg.rend.hgtvcom.616.462.suffix/1491581549062.jpeg
Declared a World Heritage Site in 1985, Petra was the capital of the Nabataean empire of King Aretas IV, and likely existed in its prime from 9 B.C. to A.D. 40. The members of this civilization proved to be early experts in manipulating water technology, constructing intricate tunnels and water chambers, which helped create an pseudo-oasis. A number of incredible structures carved into stone, a 4,000-seat amphitheater and the El-Deir monastery have also helped the site earn its fame.
En 2007, plus de 100 million de personnes ont voté pour élire les Sept Nouvelles Merveilles du Monde.
La #Grande_Muraille_de_Chine (#Chine) :
Construite antre le Vème siècle avant J.C. et le XVIème siècle, la Grande Muraille de Chine a été conçue pour protéger les frontières de l’Empire chinois des invasions mongoles. Aujourd’hui, la Grande Muraille est une succession de multiples murs qui s’étend sur environ 6 500 kilomètres : il s’agit de la plus longue construction humaine au monde.
La statue du #Christ_Rédempteur (Rio de Janeiro) :
La statue du Christ Rédempteur se dresse sur le mont du Corcovado depuis 1931. Cette statue de 40 mètres de haut a été conçue par Heitor da Silva Costa et a coûté environ 250 000 dollars (une grande partie du financement provient de dons).
Le Machu Picchu (#Pérou) :
La cité inca du Machu Pichu est supposée avoir été le centre de la capitale Inca Cusco. Construite au milieu du Vème siècle, la citadelle a été par la suite abandonnée par les Incas. Le site, qui n’a été découvert qu’en 1911 par l’archéologue Hiram Bingham, n’est accessible qu’à pied, en train ou en hélicoptère depuis Cusco.
Chichen Itza (#Péninsule_du_Yucatan, Mexico) :
La puissante cité de Chichen Itza, probablement construite entre le IX ème et le XIIIème siècles, était le centre économique et politique de la civilisation maya. Les ruines les plus visitées sont celles de l’observatoire astronomique El Caracol.
Le #Colisée (Rome) :
Construit au Ier siècle avant J.C., le Colisée a pu accueillir, pendant environ 500 ans, presque 50 000 spectateurs pour les spectacles de gladiateurs et autres événements publics. À cause de tremblements de terre et de vols, le Colisée est aujourd’hui en ruines.
Le Taj Mahal (Agra, #Inde) :
Mausolée construit pour la femme de l’Empereur Mongol Shah Jahan, la Taj Mahal a été construit entre 1632 et 1648. Cette structure de marbre blanc comprend un certain nombre d’influences et de styles architecturaux, parmi lesquels les styles persan, islamique, turque et indien.
Pétra (#Jordanie) :
Déclaré site mondial de l’UNESCO en 1985, Pétra était la capitale de l’Empire nabatéen au Ier siècle avant J.C. Cette civilisation était apparemment très avancée dans la maîtrise de l’irrigation, ce qui a permis de créer un pseudo-oasis.
Mon commentaire sur cet article :
La volonté mondiale de choisir « Sept Nouvelles Merveilles du Monde » montre bien que l’art peut permettre de redéfinir les « codes » établis. On remarque en effet que les « Sept Merveilles du Monde », dont la liste datait de l’Antiquité, se trouvaient toutes aux alentours de la Méditerranée (la pyramide de Khéops à Gizeh en Égypte, les Jardins suspendus de Babylone, la statue de Zeus à Olympie, le temple d’Artémis à Éphèse, le mausolée d’Halicarnasse, le colosse de Rhodes et le phare d’Alexandrie). Plus encore, presque aucune de ces œuvres mystiques n’existe encore aujourd’hui : ces merveilles n’étaient que le symbole de la puissance culturelle et du développement avancé des « civilisations européennes ». Les « Sept Nouvelles Merveilles du Monde » permettent de sortir de cet européanocentrisme en reconnaissant la magnificence de civilisations « autres ».
L’ordre divin
Nora est une jeune mère au foyer. En 1971, elle vit avec son mari et ses deux fils dans un paisible village suisse où l’on a peu senti les bouleversements du mouvement de 68. Pourtant, la paix dans les chaumières et dans son foyer commence à vaciller quand Nora se lance dans le combat pour le suffrage féminin...
« L’ordre divin » est le premier long-métrage de fiction sur le #droit_de_vote des femmes en Suisse et son introduction tardive en 1971. La scénariste et réalisatrice #Petra_Volpe (scénario de « Heidi ») invite le public à plonger dans l’atmosphère et les émotions de la Suisse rurale des années 70, une période riche en changements. « #L'ordre_divin » est un hommage à toutes les personnes qui se sont battues à l’époque pour l’égalité des droits politiques et toutes celles et ceux qui s’engagent aujourd’hui pour l’égalité des sexes et l’autodétermination.
Un blog sur le sujet, par Magenta Baribeau qui vient de terminer un film éponyme :
Maman ? Non merci !
▻http://mamannonmerci.blogspot.ca
4 Cases En Plus : Quoi De Plus Normal Qu’infliger La Vie ? L’interview D’#Oriane_Lassus | MaXoE
▻http://www.maxoe.com/rama/culture-dossiers/focus-livres/4-cases-en-plus-quoi-de-plus-normal-quinfliger-la-vie-linterview-doriane-lass
Dans cette longue interview Oriane Lassus nous explique les différentes étapes qui ont conduit à la réalisation de « Quoi de plus normal qu’infliger la vie ? ». Le premier jet de ce travail, réalisé au cours de sa dernière année aux Beaux-Arts, puis le développement du sujet suite à l’intérêt de son éditrice qui a amené la dessinatrice à se nourrir de rencontres avec d’autres jeunes femmes, engagées dans la même direction, pour comprendre et retranscrire des tranches de vie. De cela découle une plus grande maturation de la pensée chez la jeune femme qui a conduit à « accoucher » de cette version finale qui se veut aussi puissante dans le fond, dans ce qu’elle amène comme matière, comme substrat à la réflexion, que dans la forme, totalement décomplexée qui se joue de certains des codes de la BD pour repenser la séquentialité et la manière de faire avancer le récit.
#ISIS Is On A Mission To Erase History. And Sadly, It’s Succeeding
The militant group’s destruction of antiquities across Iraq and Syria is so widespread even the experts tracking it can’t keep up
▻http://www.vocativ.com/news/237052/isis-is-on-a-mission-to-erase-history-and-sadly-its-succeeding
#EI #Etat_islamique #patrimoine #destruction
Cachez ces poils...
▻http://tracks.arte.tv/fr/coups-de-hashtags-contre-la-pudibonderie
En 2013, elle publie sur un réseau social une #photo d’elle en petite culotte, avec des poils pubiens qui dépassent, ce qui provoque un scandale et lui vaut la suppression de son compte. En même temps, cela renforce ses convictions et sa détermination.
Bon, c’est un sujet #tracks, donc beaucoup à dire sur le traitement et le ton. Mais, c’est intéressant. Les fesses de Kardashian, ça va, une touffe de #poils #pubiens...
#petra_collins]]>Une #playlist de chanteuses féministes que j’ai rassemblé avec divers sources dont un bonne dose de #radiorageuses
▻https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HTBblfRsxWk&index=1&list=PL3lqKiru-8C_dWdH-CGwTKdXNaaaFvkuX
Au menu :
Candye Kane - The Lord Was a Woman
Chumbawamba - Homophobia
Anne Sylvestre - Clémence en vacances
Lady Sovereign - Public Warning
Rickie Lee Jones- Dat Dere
Casey - Ennemi De l’Ordre
Les Reines Prochaine - I Wanna Be a Butch
Betty Davis - Anti Love Song
Compagnie jolie môme - L’hymne des femmes
Tracy Chapman - Behind the Wall
Agnès Bihl - L’enceinte vierge
Peaches - I Don’t Give A FUCK
Tricky - Piece Of Me
Azealia Banks - Yung Rapunxel
Bikini kill - Rebel Girl
Bams - Non
Nina Simone - Feeling Good
Candye Kane - You Need a Great Big Woman
Le Tigre - Viz
Anne Sylvestre - Frangines
Casey - Une lame dans ma veste
Anne Clark - Our Darkness
CocoRosie - Beautiful boyz
Ariana Puello - Oye lo que traigo
Witch Hunt - I Am Guilty
Lhasa de Sela - La confession
Ana Tijoux ft. Shadia Mansour - Somos Sur
Throbbing Gristle - Discipline
Juliette - Garçon Manqué
Chansons historiques de France - Filles d’Ouvriers 1898
Colette Renard - Les nuits d’une demoiselle
Pompom Beretta - Don’t Want Fuck
Le Meufisme - Ta Mère La
Amanda Palmer & The Young Punx - Map of Tasmania
Rena ft. Masra Bass - Под одним небом
Pussy Riot - Punk Prayer
Nancy Sinatra - These Boots Are Made for Walkin’
Yo Majesty - Hustle Mode
Black Barbie - Rap de Bonne Femme
Billy ze kick - quelques mots pour calmer les machos !
Agonie - Tais toi, nettoie
Orties - Plus Putes que toutes les Putes
Juliette Noureddine - Rimes féminines
M.I.A. - Bad Girls
Angel Haze - Cleaning Out my Closet
Rye Rye - Hardcore Girls
Pauline Julien - Une sorcière comme les autres
Emilie Autumn - Gothic Lolita
Anita Drake - Crawling on the ground
Le Tigre - Mediocrity Rules
Le Maximum Kouette - Va T’Faire
Wanda Jackson - Hard Headed Woman
Fiona Apple - Every Single Night
Another Dyke - Eixes alla muala
Tori Amos - Crucify
FKA twigs - Pendulum
Flip and the Dateliners - Mama didn,t Lie
The Slits - Typical Girls
Bikini Kill - White Boy
Juliette Greco - La cuisine
Brittany McDonald - Notice Me
Evanescence - Call Me When You’re Sober
Rittany McDonald - Boy Basher
Lizzy Mercier Descloux - Herpes Simplex
Jean Knight - Mr. Big Stuff
Katie Goodman - Sorry Babe, You’re a Feminist
Lesley Gore - You Don’t Own Me
Tori Amos - Cornflake Girl
Destiny’s Child- Independent Women
Helen Reddy - I Am Woman
Mannick – Je t’ai guetté mon corps
Josette Noreau – Wow ménopause
Submission - Women Beat Their Men
Soeur Sourire - La pilule d’or
Michèle Bernard - Bernadette
Ariane Moffatt - Mon corps
Bratmobile - Gimme Brains
Les Femmouzes T. - La Femme du Soldat Inconnu
Nancy Holloway - Quand un garçon me plait
Wemean - Faida
Beyoncé - Run the World (Girls)
La Bolduc - Les Femmes
Jacqueline Lemay - La moitié du monde est une femme
Francesca Solleville - Demande aux femmes
Candye Kane - Masturbation Blues
Chloé Lacan - Plaisirs Solitaires
P !nk - Fingers
Stella - Si je chante... c’est pour le fric
Ma Rainey - Shave ’Em Dry Blues
TLC - Unpretty
Femmouzes T - On parle de parité
Chantal Grimm, Arlette Mirapeu & Elisabeth Boudjema - La femme libre
Bratmobile - Do You Like Me Like That ?
Angel Haze - No Bueno
Amplify Dot (A.Dot) ft. Kano - Semantics
Eartha Kitt - I Want To Be Evil
Lunachicks - Mr. Lady
Hollie Cook - Milk & Honey
12°5 - nana mec
Erykah Badu - Window Seat
Bombes 2 bal - Si tu veux
Estelle ft. Janelle Monáe - Do My Thing
Thee Headcoatees - Don’t Wanna Hold Your Hand
Speech Debelle ft. Roots Manuva & Realism - Blaze Up A Fire
Jill Sobule - I Kissed A Girl
Sté Strausz - Track Cheul
Julie Ruin - I Wanna Know What Love Is
Poetic Pilgrimage- Modern Day Marys
Invincible - People Not Places
Anne Sylvestre - La reine du créneau
Leslie Weiner - Witch, Dream 1
Aretha Franklin & Annie Lennox - Sisters Are Doin’ It For Themselves
Zaza Fournier - Mademoiselle
Marlena Shaw - Woman of the ghetto
The Slits - I Heard It Through The Grapevine
Sarah Jones ft. DJ Vadim - Your Revolution
Cyndi Lauper - She Bop
Casey - Rêves illimités
Christina Aguilera ft. Lil’Kim - Can’t Hold Us Down
Monie Love - It’s A Shame (My Sister)
Hollie Cook - Postman
Queen Latifah - U.N.I.T.Y.
Sexy Sushi - Sex Appeal
Nina Simone - Marriage is for old folks
Missy Elliot - Toyz
Anne Sylvestre - Gulliverte
Tricky - Piece Of Me
Lola Lafon - Une vie de voleuse
Nina Simone - Four Women
Collectif Mary Read - Dans l’ombre de l’histoire
Anne Sylvestre - Douce Maison
Casey - Creature Ratée
Teen Idle - Marina & The Diamonds
Destiny’s Child - Survivor
Christina Aguilera - Beautiful
Circuit des Yeux - Do the Dishes
Jacqueline Humbert & David Rosenboom - Distant space
The Au Pairs - it´s obvious
Sleater-Kinney - Little Babies
Dog Faced Hermans - Keep Your Laws Off My Body
Canti di donne in Lotta - Aborto di stato
Coro delle Mondine di Correggio - Son la mondina son la sfruttata
Ke$ha - Run Devil Run
Louane - Avenir
Superchick - Courage
KT Tunstall - Suddenly I See
Lauryn Hill – Doo-Wop (That Thing)
Sexy Sushi - J’aime Mon Pays
Tango della femminista
Krudas - No me dejaron
Liliana Felipe - Las histéricas
Mavis Staples - I Like The Things About Me
Aretha Franklin - Respect
Betty Davis - Nasty Gal
Laura Lee - Women’s Love Rights
Gloria Gaynor - I Will Survive
Marie-Paul Belle - Wolfgang et moi
Mama Béa - No Woman’s Land
Colette Magny - Any Woman’s Blues
Etta James - W.O.M.A.N.
Rufus - I’m A Woman (I’m A Backbone)
Queen Ifrica - Daddy
Nicole Rieu - Olympe Reveille nous !
Oumou Sangare - Moussolou
Fatima Al Qadiri - Shanzhai
Lena Platonos - Εμιγκρέδες της Ρουμανίας
Jeanne Cherhal - Les nuits d’une demoiselle
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vos suggestions sont les bienvenus, la playliste n’est pas close.
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