News

  • 19.12.11 'we are more' newsletter #6 Read more...
  • 03.10.11 'we are more' newsletter #5 Read more...
  • 16.08.11 Job position at EBLIDA Read more...
  • 07.07.11 'we are more' campagin newsletter #4 2011 special edition on budget is now online Read more...
  • 14.06.11 Artists and social inclusion: A Greens/EFA conference Read more...
  • 26.05.11 'we are more' newsletter #3 Read more...
  • 31.03.11 Summary of the position paper on the Culture Programme Read more...
  • 22.03.11 Remix the docks! Read more...
  • 10.02.11 'we are more' newsletter #2 Read more...
  • 16.12.10 Call for organisations to participate in Cultural Cooperation with Moldova and Ukraine Read more...
  • 09.12.10 'we are more' campaign: demands on the Culture Programme Read more...
  • 09.12.10 'we are more' newsletter #1 Read more...
  • 18.10.10 Culture's contribution to social inclusion Read more...
  • 12.10.10 'we are more' campaign launched! Read more...
  • 22.09.10 Culture Action Europe Newsletter #4 2010 Read more...
  • 22.09.10 Reflections on the challenges facing society today and how culture may offer answers to them Read more...
  • 06.09.10 LabforCulture reports live from the 'Culture and Policies of Change' conference in Brussels Read more...
  • 04.08.10 Members General Assembly and Culture Action Europe Conference 7-9 October 2010 in Brussels Read more...
  • 14.07.10 OMC working group reports have been published Read more...
  • 17.06.10 Culture Action Europe Newsletter #3 2010 Read more...
  • 06.05.10 The Platform for Intercultural Europe is recruting Read more...
  • 14.04.10 Culture Action Europe Newsletter #2 2010 Read more...
  • 12.04.10 The EU 2020 strategy: analysis and perspectives Read more...
  • 31.03.10 Culture Action Europe is looking for a translation intern Read more...
  • 29.03.10 Members’ meetings and policy consultation Read more...
  • 17.03.10 Already 6 new members in 2010! Read more...
  • 10.02.10 Culture Action Europe Newsletter #1 2010 Read more...
  • 10.02.10 Renewed EU commitmment to combating poverty and social exclusion – what perspectives for the Year? Read more...
  • 08.02.10 EP Hearing – Androulla Vassiliou Commisioner-Desginate for Education, Culture, Multilingualism and Youth Read more...
  • 14.01.10 Our contribution to the EC consultation on the future EU 2020 strategy Read more...
  • 11.01.10 Our contribution to the EC consultation on financial regulation Read more...
  • 07.12.09 Culture Action Europe Newsletter #8 Read more...
  • 18.08.09 Post elections analysis – to know more about the composition of the new European Parliament and of the new Culture Committee Read more...
2008
'we are more' newsletter #6 Print
we are more campagin newsletter #6  2011 is now online: click here

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'we are more' newsletter #5 Print
we are more campagin newsletter #5  2011 is now online: click here

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Job position at EBLIDA Print
EBLIDA is looking to appoint a new Office Assistant, by October 2011.
The closing date for applications is 9th September 2011.
Interviews are planned to take place in The Hague (The Netherlands) in the week starting 19th of September.
***

EBLIDA (the European Bureau of Library, Information and Documentation Associations) is looking for an office assistant to join the organization from October 2011.
EBLIDA represents and promotes the interests of library associations and institutions in Europe, working closely in a small team to accomplish the aims and goals of the organization. EBLIDA brings together members from 37 countries in Europe and works on issues of information law, digitization
and online access, education and lifelong learning, culture and information society and library and information science education in Europe.

The Overall mission of EBLIDA is to:
Secure access for all to the benefits of the information society in all formats:
-by active involvement at national and European level regarding legislative andadministrative issues which are of relevance to the library and information sector in Europe
-by supporting formal, informal and non-formal education at all levels, including lifelong
learning
-by making culture and cultural diversity accessible, and securing their preservation
-by supporting scientific and technical development, not least in the areas of Open Access and institutional repositories

JOB DESCRIPTION
Post Title: EBLIDA Office Assistant
Reporting: to Director
Contract Length: One year (renewable)

Responsibilities
The main responsibilities of the office assistant will be the following:
• Coordination of the work of the secretariat under the supervision of the Director;
• Financial administration and liaison with accountants, banks, etc.
• Administration of the EBLIDA membership database;
• Support in the preparation and production of EBLIDA News;
• Maintenance of the EBLIDA website and the EBLIDA mailing lists;
• Support in the organisation of the EBLIDA Annual Council meeting and Conference and other
workshops and conferences organized or co-organized by EBLIDA.
EBLIDA is looking for someone who matches the following profile:
• Excellent communication skills including fluent oral and written English and good
understanding of Dutch;
• Detailed knowledge of MS Office tools (in particular Word and Excel) and experience using
database software (especially FileMaker Pro) to create and manage databases;
• Experience editing web pages using a CMS and understanding of basic website
management;
• A flair for figures and the proven ability to accurately manage budgets and perform financial
administration;
• Proven ability to work well in a small team and to understand the international
environment;
• Commitment to the aims of EBLIDA along with the confidence and skills to identify and
propose possible changes which would improve the efficiency or success of the secretariat;
• Demonstrated ability to complete work accurately and to short deadlines and the flexibility
to be able to juggle different activities with different priorities and deadlines;
• Experience in a Library or Archive service or in a Library Association and understanding of
the role of EBLIDA in a European context;
• Minimum Intermediate / Higher (Vocational) Educational Qualification(s) and/or relevant
employment experience
The position of office assistant will offer the successful candidate the opportunity to work in a
vibrant and exciting international environment and to establish close contacts with library and
information professionals from across Europe. The aim of the EBLIDA secretariat is to offer a high
level of service to the EBLIDA Executive Committee, the EBLIDA members and to other European
stakeholders. The position requires a person who can work within the framework of a network
organization, but also a person who can work independently and with great self motivation.
Terms and conditions of employment
• Location: EBLIDA Headquarters, Koninklijke Bibliotheek, The Hague, The Netherlands.
Occasional travel outside The Netherlands may be required.
• Hours: 28 hours per week (four days per week). In connection with special events
(conferences, workshops, etc.) some work may be expected outside the normal working
hours.
• Salary: approximately €1600 gross per month (excluding benefits) based on 28 working
hours per week.
• Period of employment: the initial appointment will be for one year, subject to satisfactory
performance of responsibilities and duties. The appointment is open to renewal at the end
of this period by mutual consent.

How to apply

Interested candidates should send their application in English including a full CV, short covering
letter explaining the candidate’s motivation for applying and the skills they believe they would bring
to the post, and the names of at least two referees to This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it to arrive no later
than 9th September 2011.
Subject: Application Office Assistant.

Interviews are planned for the week starting 19th September and the successful candidate would be
expected to start work after that as soon as possible.

If you have further questions about the position, please contact Vincent Bonnet on +31 70 31 40 137
or by email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .
 
'we are more' campagin newsletter #4 2011 special edition on budget is now online Print
we are more campagin newsletter #4 2011 special edition on budget is now online: click here

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Artists and social inclusion: A Greens/EFA conference Print

Artists and social inclusion: A Greens/EFA conference

The Green Group of the European Parliament will organise a public conference entitled "Artists and Social inclusion" during which Culture Action Europe will speak on the panel "European Union vs. Local and Regional Policies". The conference will take place on 28 June 2011 from 09:30 to 13:00 in the European Parliament. To find out more and register, click here.
 
'we are more' newsletter #3 Print

Print
we are more campagin newsletter #3  2011 is now online: click here

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Summary of the position paper on the Culture Programme Print
The summary of the position paper on the Culture Programme is now available on the 'we are more' campaign website. To read the summary click here.
 
Remix the docks! Print

Remix the docks!
We invite you to participate in Dock's Docs Gdańsk Remix competition for the best collage of video documentaries from the Gdańsk Shipyard and Solidarność (Solidarity). We provide the video material, you mix it, record the musical score, process and play with it. Dock's Docs competition is your space of freedom. Until April 30 create a short and win a scholarship in Parisian school Ina Sup and a VIP invitation to the European Culture Congress in Wrocław (8-11 September 2011)!

In the frame of the impending Polish EU Presidency 2011, the Polish National Audiovisual Institute (NInA) and l’Institut National de l’Audiovisuel (Ina) open the archive that contains recordings of the key events of the contemporary history of Europe. Participants will be able to use them in order to tell their own original story. The entries can be based fully or partly on the provided archive records. We encourage all forms of artistic creativity and intervention– animation, music, samples, fragments of your own films.

To take part in the competition visit www.dailymotion.com/gdanskremix
More information: www.culturecongress.eu
Contact: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it




 
'we are more' newsletter #2 Print
we are more campagin newsletter #2  2011 is now online: click here

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Call for organisations to participate in Cultural Cooperation with Moldova and Ukraine Print


Culture Action Europe is a partner in the Tandem project: cultural co-operation placements between Moldova-Ukraine-EU. To find out more information go to the website of co-ordinating organisation MitOst here.
 
'we are more' campaign: demands on the Culture Programme Print
To read Culture Action Europe's contribution to the consultation on the Culture Programme and we are more campaign's demands on the Culture Programme go here.
 
'we are more' newsletter #1 Print

we are more campagin newsletter #1  2010 is now online: click here

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Culture's contribution to social inclusion Print


In the framework of the preparations for the EU Belgian Presidency conference on culture and social inclusion, Culture Action Europe drafted a short position paper on the European perspective on the subject. Read the paper here.
 
'we are more' campaign launched! Print
On the 7th October in BOZAR, Culture Action Europe launched its new campaign 'we are more'. To find out more and see the campaign website go here: www.wearemore.eu
 
Culture Action Europe Newsletter #4 2010 Print


Culture Action Europe Newsletter #4  2010 is online: click here

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Reflections on the challenges facing society today and how culture may offer answers to them Print

In his book The Disturbing Guest*, the Italian philosopher, Umberto Galimberti, sustains that today’s youth is confronted with the presence of what he calls a “new guest”: nihilism. He believes that the existing discomfort among young people does not have psychological roots, its origin being strictly cultural. Indeed, he writes that “the remedies elaborated by our culture appear to be ineffective, both in their religious version because God is unquestionably dead as well as in the version provided by the Enlightenment because it is not reason that appears to regulate the relationships between human being in our times. It is therefore only “instrumental reason” that remains, which guarantees technical progress but that, given the lack of thought and the barrenness of feeling, does not broaden our horizons of what makes sense.”

 

The book is at times alarming, because if our society lacks the means to provide young people with the instruments by which they can give sense to their lives it follows that the world, such as we have known it, is heading towards disaster. But, as Galimberti puts it, human beings have always felt the need to give meaning to their lives, and to the world they live in. It seems therefore, that we are today in situation in which human beings need “sense” but are no longer, at this point, capable of creating it.

 

If the “disease” is cultural, then the solution should be looked for in culture. This entails, on the one hand, the need to generate a process of renovation and, on the other, to develop the capacity of individuals to provide for new sense in their lives. However, the main question still remains: how should we go about achieving this? According to Galimberti the answer lies in going back to ancient Greek philosophy and its belief in “knowing oneself” and in understanding  the “art of living” in order to find sense in our lives.

 

Nevertheless, if this were to be a possible solution, how and by whom should it be put into effect? The truth is that it should be a collective endeavour, with the main responsibility lying in the system itself which has to be capable of providing our society with new cultural instruments. In order to do this, it is necessary to give culture a political sense, if by politics we understand the affairs of state, and therefore of government. It derives that culture, also in its meaning of “provision of knowledge”, is a constituent part not only of the “art of governing” but of “citizenship”. Both are therefore needed to shape a society, understood as a system, which not only provides for sense but also makes sense, thus giving human beings the possibility to lead their lives in order, with an ensuing feeling of fulfilment.

 

Mercedes Giovinazzo, chair of the Executive Committee

 

*Galimberti, U., L’ospite inquieto: il nichilismo e i giovani, Serie Bianca Feltrinelli, 2007

 
LabforCulture reports live from the 'Culture and Policies of Change' conference in Brussels Print
For live blogging and interviews of speakers and participants of the conference 'Culture and Policies of Change' taking place on 6-7 September in Brussels go to LabforCulture website

The 'Culture and Policies of Change' conference is a Culture Watch Europe event organised by the  Council of Europe, in co-operation with the European Commission, the European Economic and Social Committee (EESC), the European Union National Institutes for Culture (EUNIC), Culture Action Europe, The Budapest Observatory, the International Federation of Arts Councils and Culture Agencies (IFACCA), the Allianz Kulturstiftung, the European Cultural Foundation, and supported by the "Communauté française" of Belgium and the Ministry of Culture of Slovenia. During the conference senior policy makers, practitioners and researchers operating at national, regional and local levels will engage in reflection on new perspectives of cultural policies in the light of major world changes and challenges. Read more on the conference website.
 
Members General Assembly and Culture Action Europe Conference 7-9 October 2010 in Brussels Print
Registration is open for the Culture Action Europe conference 2010
We are delighted to announce that registrations for the Culture Action Europe conference The Time is Now, that will take place in Brussels from the 7th-9th of October, are now open. Please go to www.cultureactioneuropeconference.eu to register and for more information.
The Culture Action Europe conference is the unmissable event in the European Cultural Policy and politics calendar – bringing together cultural organizations, civil society and European policymakers for debate and provocation.
 
OMC working group reports have been published Print
The Open Method of Coordination working groups reports exchanging good practices, comparing policies and making recommendations for action at national or European level have been published. Find out more here.
 
Culture Action Europe Newsletter #3 2010 Print

Culture Action Europe Newsletter #3 2010


Culture Action Europe Newsletter #3  2010 is online: click here

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