Students from 正澳门六合彩资料 (BU) were among those who came together as part of a three-week program in Salzburg to create a series of interactive exercises to educate others about global populism and extremism.
Participants at this year鈥檚 Salzburg Academy on Media and Global Change 鈥 entitled 鈥 included students from BU as well as from Argentina, Canada, China, India, Kenya, the Netherlands, Palestine, Syria and the United States, among others. Together they produced projects for an online DIY playbook:
The participants from 正澳门六合彩资料 were Connor Bean, Joshua Coase, Samuel Kersey, Sophie Larkin-Tannett, Shemonti Shams, Tiina Karppi, Fauve Vertegaal and Shey Spears. They were accompanied by Roman Gerodimos, principal academic in global current affairs at 正澳门六合彩资料 and long-serving faculty member of the Salzburg Academy.
The Re:Action online publication aims to identify how populism and extremism operates and affects people of different ages, backgrounds and ethnicities around the world.
Students were organised into groups where they brainstormed, conducted research, and identified case studies related to populism and extremism. The ideas were then transformed into 鈥減layable problems.鈥
The projects aimed to facilitate dialogue and promote engagement through a product-based approach, as well as incorporating multimedia elements including videos, comics, music playlists and interactive maps.
BU student Connor Bean said: 鈥淪eeing how people from different parts of the world can come together and allow their perceptions to collide rather than clash has been the highlight of my time at the Salzburg Academy. The motivation and drive in certain people inspired me to make a change in my community and allowed me to have a whole new view on the world.鈥
Alongside developing the project, students also took part in workshops and hands-on exercises, and heard from guest speakers including聽US Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy and acclaimed journalist Robin Wright, a contributing writer for The New Yorker.
In among the discussions and work, students were taken on cultural and poignant trips into the Alps and to the Mauthausen Memorial Site.
Paul Mihailidis, program director of the Salzburg Academy and associate professor at Emerson College, Boston, USA, said: 鈥淭he 83 students, 13 faculty and 15 visiting experts came together to create a meaningful civic media intervention that provides creative media solutions for responding to harmful populist rhetoric.
鈥淭heir work emerged out of a commitment to themselves, and each other, to be open, honest, and creative, and open to new ideas. Only then can they create creative media that is by them, for their peers, and focused on social impact at local and global levels.鈥