Society
Topics
-
Recycle Beirut and Lebanon′s rubbish crisis
Green awakenings
With Lebanon's rubbish crisis in its second year, ordinary citizens are taking the problem of the ever-growing piles of trash into their own hands. This shift in consciousness represents a new reality for the government. By Alice Kohn in Beirut
By Alice Kohn -
The German board game 'Istanbul'
Good clean Oriental fun?
Just a game? Think again! If the world is to survive, we all need to move closer together. Yet how can a society that ridicules others and reduces them to the level of pawns in a game expect to make any kind of constructive contribution? By Stefan Buchen
By Stefan Buchen -
Interview with Sheikha Halima Krausen
″Women do the real work!″
Sheikha Halima Krausen was the imam of Hamburg′s Islamic Centre until 2014. Carolin Kubo spoke to the courageous Islamic theologian about the years she spent working for the local Islamic community and about her latest research project
By Carolin Kubo -
Countering radicalisation with '180° Turn'
Together we are strong
Young people, mostly from immigrant backgrounds, are working for a Cologne initiative fighting religious fanaticism. They aim to combat the radicalisation of others of their generation by coming together as peers. By Nina Niebergall
By Nina Niebergall -
Underage refugees and family reunification
Who needs parents?
A temporary halt in the reunification of families for some refugees means all thousands of relatives can currently do is wait. Criticism relating to a raft of "Asylum Package II" measures, the bureaucratic shortcomings of the authorities, not to mention lengthy processing times is rife. By Ulrike Hummel
By Ulrike Hummel -
Social media and the Arabellion
The myth of the Facebook revolution
Today, six years after the so-called Facebook revolutions of the Arab Spring, the hopes once placed in the social media have largely vanished. Authoritarian regimes in the region have long since succeeded in taking control of these channels and using them for their own ends. By Niklas Kossow and Ilyas Saliba
By Niklas Kossow und Ilyas Saliba -
Churches in Syria after the fall of East Aleppo
Time for a new beginning
Christian Churches in Aleppo have welcomed the government troops' victory. But after five years of war, it is important that they abandon the paradigm that the Assad regime is the protector of religious minorities and work tirelessly to overcome the religious divide. By Claudia Mende
By Claudia Mende -
Iran's economy after the nuclear agreement
State firms win most foreign deals
When world powers agreed in 2015 to lift sanctions on Iran in return for curbs on its nuclear programme, the deal's supporters in the United States, Europe and Tehran hoped renewed trade and investment could boost Iran's private sector and weaken the state's hold on the economy. But a Reuters review of business accords reached since then shows that the Iranian winners so far are mostly companies owned or controlled by the state, including Iran's Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. By Yeganeh Torbati, Bozorgmehr Sharafedin and Babak Dehghanpisheh
-
Social media against Islamic extremism
An invisible battle
If we are to counteract the scourge of Islamic misinterpretation and defend what is intrinsically a religion of peace, argues Abdalhadi Alijla, we need educational, civil society and means-tested programmes coupled with a stronger political will
By Abdalhadi Alijla -
Egypt′s Coptic Church
The cost of a cornerstone
Despite a new law aimed at facilitating the construction of Christian houses of worship, the situation on the ground looks somewhat different. By Flemming Weiss-Andersen, Eva Plesner and Elisabeth Lehmann
By Elisabeth Lehmann -
Satirical news website Noktara
A laughing matter
A satirical website by and for German Muslims! Seriously? Well, yes and no. The people behind the German satirical news website Noktara are out to make people laugh and dispel a few cliches. To find out more, Dunja Ramadan spoke to Soufian El Khayari and Derya Sami Saydjari
By Dunja Ramadan -
Trump′s plans for the USA
Beware Muslim registration!
Donald Trump′s unashamedly populist election campaign made a point of targeting minorities – among them foreigners, women, the disabled and Muslims. His commitment to the idea of Muslim registration is a sinister echo of 1930s Germany and should put us all on our guard. Commentary by author Fred Amram
By Fred Amram
Most read articles
-
Samia Mehrez's "The Many Lives of Ibrahim Nagui"
Reframing a divided legacy
-
Tunisia's Carthage Film Festival
Decolonial cinema
-
Morocco-Algeria arms race
"The solution requires political courage"
-
Moroccan Gnawa festival
A Sufi tradition on the world stage
-
Sex tourism in Egypt
A bride for the summer
-
Prostitution in Tunisia
The big reveal