"Against the Rich Establishment" and "Politically Mix Up the Parliament" Published: 15 March 2022 Transatlantic Media Fellowship Madeleine Hofmann's articles covered young progressives bringing new voices to politics in the US and Germany By Madeleine Hofmann
Memorial and Education Centre Andreasstraße: Prison Museums and Memory Published: 14 March 2022 Reflection Justin Reid gives his opinion on the prison-turned-museum Andreasstraße By Justin Reid
The Journey is the Destination: German Politics of Remembrance and Their Contradictions Published: 27 August 2021 Article German remembrance culture can be criticized with good arguments. But we should recognize its complex and contradictory antecedents and origins. By Jacob Eder
Building a Diverse and Inclusive Culture of Remembrance Published: 21 July 2021 Building a Diverse and Inclusive Culture of Remembrance (DAICOR) is a reciprocal transatlantic exchange program for individuals with a professional interest in the promotion of an inclusive and progressive culture of remembrance in public spaces in Germany and the United States.
Building a Diverse and Inclusive Culture of Remembrance (DAICOR) Published: 8 March 2021 Call for Applications Building a Diverse and Inclusive Culture of Remembrance (DAICOR) is a reciprocal transatlantic exchange program for individuals with a professional interest in the promotion of an inclusive and progressive culture of remembrance in public spaces in Germany and the United States.
A growing affordable housing crisis—on both sides of the Atlantic Published: 10 January 2020 Capstone In both the US and Germany, the growing shortage of affordable housing is increasingly reaching into the middle class and impacting broad swaths of society—increasing the pressure on policymakers to implement solutions. By Tarik Englmann
Despite hosting their first Pride in 2019, Georgia’s queer community is still in a vulnerable position Published: 11 December 2019 Capstone Support for Georgia’s LGBTQ+ community is popular in the international community, but is it what Georgia needs? By Xandie Kuenning