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kitchenlegrecords · 2 years
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Monday 19.09.22 at KuZe Studentisches Kulturzentrum
Hermann-Elflein-Straße 10, Potsdam, Germany
NOVATRON [Sonic Swirl, Heavy Psyche, Abrasive Noise, Ecstatic Drones] www.novatronmusic.bandcamp.com AGENTE COSTURA [Softnoise] www.agentecostura.bandcamp.com Kognitive Resonanz [Electro Space Salad]Notorische Ruhestoerung [Cathedral Dirt Squirt aka your mom] www.ruhestoerung.noblogs.org Steffen Schuster [Traincaching Legend] www.steffenschuster.bandcamp.com 2G +Test
Eintritt frei
Doors 19h
Kommt am besten getestet oder bringt einen eigenen Test mit. Für den Notfall haben wir auch Tests vor Ort. // Please come (officially) tested or bring your own test. Otherwise we do have some tests on site (limited).
https://www.facebook.com/events/761799611720508/
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usfsacd · 5 years
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Don't forget! Tomorrow we continue our SACD Fall 2019 Lecture Series with Architect/Sole Managing Partner of JSWD Architekten, Olaf Drehsen! . The Cologne-based firm JSWD Architekten founded in year 2000. The four partners Olaf Drehsen, Jürgen Steffens and the brothers Konstantin and Frederik Jaspert are leading an office with more than 150 employed architects from about 30 nations. The partners started on their architectural careers as RWTH students in Aachen. Günter Behnisch, Schuster Architects as well as Volkwin Marg (gmp) influenced their further professional development, followed by teaching posts and the establishment of the firm. In the last several years, JSWD has realized many projects in Germany and increasingly in other European countries, for the most part following successfully entered competitions. .
JSWD finds further architectural, technical and intellectual inspiration in cooperative ventures with other architectural firms in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Italy, Poland, Austria, Switzerland, USA and China while maintaining a collaborative exchange in the realization of joint construction projects. . Lecture + Livestream ‪begins at 5:30 PM‬ and is free to the public, located in CWY 109 (C.W. Bill Young Hall/ROTC building) See you all there! @theartatusf #usfsacd #theartatusf #lectureseries #architecture #jswdarchitekten #olafdrehsen @jswd.architekten (at USF School of Architecture + Community Design) https://www.instagram.com/p/B58nFRapIER/?igshid=1f5mxed0qkqtm
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verschwoerer · 6 years
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"Dieses Projekt ist die größte Chance für Stuttgart, seit ich denken kann. Und ich denke schon eine ganze Weile." Manred Rommel (2007)
"Das Bahnprojekt Stuttgart-Ulm ist eines der am besten und umfassendsten geplanten Projekte der DB AG." Oliver Schumacher, DB-Konzernsprecher (2008)
"Das Bahnprojekt Stuttgart-Ulm mit dem neuen Hauptbahnhof in Stuttgart ist solide geplant und steht auf finanziell sicheren Beinen." Ministerpräsident Oettinger, 18.08.2008
"Wir sind froh, dass die Gegner des Projekts mit ihrer Kostenschätzung ganz offensichtlich falsch liegen." SPD-Landtagsvizepräsident Wolfgang Drexler, 18.08.2008
"Ab jetzt ist Schluss mit lustig: Diese emotionale Art, diese aggressive Art und diese unseriöse Art der Desinformation nehme ich nicht hin. Ich kann der Öffentlichkeit nur sagen: Gehen Sie diesen erkennbaren Gegnern nicht auf den Leim." Ministerpräsident Oettinger bei Verkündung der Kostensteigerung auf 3,1 Mrd. Euro für Stuttgart 21 über die Kostenschätzungen von 8,7 Mrd. Euro, 18.08.2008
"Es sind keine Überraschungen mehr zu befürchten." SPD-Landtagsvizepräsident Wolfgang Drexler zum Thema Kostensteigerungen, Aug. 2008
"Was spielt es für eine Rolle, ob Stuttgart 21 eine Milliarde Euro teurer wird?" Edmund Hug, IBM, Vorsitzender des Forums Region Stuttgart und des Vereins Pro Stuttgart 21, 21.09.2009
"Für mich liegt die Sollbruchstelle bei 4,5 Milliarden Euro." Bahnchef Rüdiger Grube, 09.11.2009
"Die Stadt wird von diesem Jahrhundertprojekt klar profitieren." Stuttgarter OB Wolfgang Schuster, 02.02.2010
"S21 ist tatsächlich unumkehrbar, und das ist gut so." SPD-Landtagsfraktionschef Claus Schmiedel, 04.08.2010
"Das Land zahlt für Stuttgart 21 weniger, als wir in einem einzigen Jahr in den Länderfinanzausgleich bezahlen." Ministerpräsident Stefan Mappus, September 2010
"Die Landtagswahl ist die Befragung der Bürger zu Stuttgart 21." Bundeskanzlerin Angela Merkel, 15.09.2010
"Stuttgart 21 rechnet sich für uns bis zu Baukosten von 4,8 Milliarden Euro." Bahnchef Rüdiger Grube, 11.10.2010
"Die Bäume im Schloßgarten bleiben erhalten." Heiner Geißler, 30.11.2010
"Mit S 21 werden pro Tag 37% mehr Züge fahren als heute." Landes-Verkehrsministerin Tanja Gönner, 30.11.2010
"Über Stuttgart 21 liegt Gottes Segen." SPD-Landeschef Claus Schmiedel, 27.08.2011
"Es gibt in Deutschland keine Stadt, die ein so tolles Projekt vor der Brust hat." Bahnchef Rüdiger Grube, Oktober 2011
"Ich habe dazu immer gesagt, eine Sollbruchstelle in den Verträgen wäre erreicht, wenn die Kosten 4,526 Milliarden Euro übersteigen." Bahnchef Rüdiger Grube, 19.11.2011
"Der Gare de l’Est in Paris ist ein Kopfbahnhof, weil es westlich von Paris keine Menschen mehr gibt, nur Kühe und Atlantik." EU-Kommissar und Ex-Ministerpräsident Günther Oettinger, 20.11.2011
"Wir haben seriös gerechnet." Bahn-Vorstand Volker Kefer, 23.11.2011
"Stuttgart 21 muss weitergebaut werden." Volker Kauder (CDU), Vorsitzender der Unionsfraktion im Bundestag, 09.02.2013
"Ein solches Projekt muss wirtschaftlich sein". Regierungssprecher Steffen Seibert, 19.02.2013
"Gibt das Land nicht mehr Geld für Stuttgart 21, wird das Zugfahren teurer." Bundesverkehrsminister Peter Ramsauer, 07.03.2013
"Stuttgart 21 wird gebaut!" Ministerpräsident Winfried Kretschmann, 07.03.2013
"Wir müssen jetzt bauen, bauen und noch mal bauen. Über die Kosten reden wir dann, wenn sie eintreten." Projektsprecher Wolfgang Dietrich, 20.06.2013
"Es ging uns in der Landesregierung natürlich auch darum, München zu zeigen, was dieses Stuttgart draufhat." Annette Schavan, 13.05.2014
"Niemand hat die Absicht, einen unsicheren Bahnhof zu bauen." Alexander Funk, CDU-Abgeordneter, 06.05.2015
"Ich habe Stuttgart 21 nicht erfunden und hätte es auch nicht gemacht." Bahnchef Rüdiger Grube, 25.11.2016
"Auch ich habe subjektiv betrachtet die Auswirkungen des Baus unterschätzt." Dr. Florian Bitzer, DB Projekt Stuttgart-Ulm GmbH, im Umwelt- und Technikausschuss des Stuttgarter Gemeinderats, 21.03.2017
"Mit dem Wissen von heute würde man das Projekt nicht mehr bauen." Richard Lutz, DB Vorstandsvorsitzender, im Verkehrsausschuss des Bundestags, 20.04.2018
"Wir geben einen Haufen Geld aus und versenken einen Bahnhof und haben dadurch keinen Vorteil. Stuttgart 21 ist die größte Fehlentscheidung der Eisenbahngeschichte." Winfried Hermann, Verkehrsminister Baden-Württemberg, 07.06.2018
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rightsinexile · 7 years
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“The living conditions in both detention centers neither comply with the international standards of detention nor do they comply with ICE’s Performance-Based National Detention Standards (PBNDS)” — Imprisoned Justice: Inside Two Georgia Immigrant Detention Centers. Center for Immigrants’ Rights, PennState Law. May 2017.
 “The most central problems identified in the report were the absence of a mechanism for early identification and referral of vulnerability among applicants for international protection” — 2016 Annual Report on Status Determination Procedure in Bulgaria. Bulgarian Helsinki Committee, Refugees & Migrants Legal Programme. 2016.
“In response, this article draws on the literature on power in global governance to propose a heuristic framework for understanding power and influence in the diverse context of the global refugee regime” — Power in the Global Refugee Regime: Understanding Expressions and Experiences of Power in Global and Local Contexts. James Milner and Krystyna Wojnarowicz. 2017.
“This study looked at the mental wellbeing of refugees in prisons located in Western Uganda. It highlights the importance of understanding of refugee inmates' mental wellbeing so as to provide them with adequate and prompt services” — The Mental Health of Refugees in Prison, a case-study from Western Uganda. David Stephen Ojok and Charity Ahumuza Onyoin. Refugee Law Project. June 2016. 
“In Rwanda, each additional refugee resulted in an added $205 to $253 to the economy each year. In Uganda, each refugee dollar spent generated an additional $1 to $1.50 in local income” — Far From Being a Burden, Research Suggests Refugees Come with Benefits. Karen Coates. Brandeis University Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism. 2 May 2017.
“From a development perspective, tapping into the economic potential of refugees during this displacement period can reduce pressure on service provision, reduce fiscal stress, create economic gains for both the displaced and the host communities, and reduce tensions and, thus, the impact of exclusion and the potential for violence” — Tapping into the Economic Potential Refugees. Steffen Angenendt and Niels Harild. Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik. May 2017.
“The Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA) created a barrage of new barriers to asylum. These impediments have blocked many refugees from accessing asylum in the United States and inserted additional layers of technicalities, screening, and processing, undermining the effectiveness of the US asylum system” — How the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 Has Undermined US Refugee Protection Obligations and Wasted Government Resources. Eleanor Acer and Olga Byrne. Human Rights First. 2017.
“For the first time, Canada’s Immigration and Refugee Board (IRB) published guidelines on screening asylum seekers who fled their countries for reasons involving sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression” — Canada Levels the Playing Field for LGBTI Refugees. Farida Deif and Graeme Reid. Human Rights Watch. 5 May 2017.
“Given the benefits of family unity in the US immigrant context and the significant negative consequences of family separation, the United States would do well to make a number of changes to current policy and practice that reaffirm its commitment to family unity” — US Immigration Policy and the Case for Family Unit. Zoya Gubernskaya and Joanna Dreby. University of Albany, State University of New York. 2017.
“The SSHRC research project explores the practical and human rights implications associated with the recent moves towards securitization of migration in Canada” — Making Canada's Refugee System Faster and Fairer: Reviewing the Stated Goals and Unintended Consequences of the 2012 Reform. Idil Atak, Graham Hudson and Delphine Nakache. Canadian Association for Refugee and Forced Migration Studies. May 2017.
“The context in which to place the Ezokola and Febles judgment is primarily the notion of criminal exclusion, which removes the entitlement of persons to obtain refugee status, which is contained in article 1F of the 1951 Refugee Convention” — Update on Exclusion and Inadmissibility Jurisprudence: New Developments Since the Decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Ezokola and Febles. Joseph Rikhof. University of Ottawa. April 2017.
“Uniquely, the project focused directly on the impact of policies upon people on the move, drawing together policy analysis and observational fieldwork with in-depth analysis of qualitative interview data from people making – or contemplating making – the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean Sea. As such, the report provides previously-unconsidered insights into the effects of policy on the journeys, experiences, understandings, expectations, concerns and demands of people on the move” — Crossing the Mediterranean Sea by Boat: Mapping and Documenting Migratory Journeys and Experiences. University of Warwick, University of Malta and ELIAMEP Crossing the Mediterranean Sea by Boat project.
“Without comprehensive immigration reform and concrete possibilities for relief, mixed-status and transnational families will continue to be divided. Existing laws do not adequately address family life and the diverse needs of individuals as members of families, creating a humanitarian crisis both within and beyond the borders of the United States” — Separated Families: Barriers to Family Reunification After Deportation. Deborah Boehm. University of Nevada, Reno. 2017.
“The main conclusion is that in a post-post-Cold War era characterized in part by the reconnecting of security and humanitarian policy, European governments have developed restrictive policies despite public sympathy” — Another Story: What Public Opinion Data Tells Us About Refugee and Humanitarian Policy. Brad Blitz. Middlesex University and London School of Economics. 2017.
“This report examines the relationship between gang violence and SGBV in El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. It describes common forms of SGBV in the gang context and the ways in which gangs use SGBV to exert and maintain control over populations and territories in the areas where they operate” — Neither Security nor Justice: Sexual and Gender-based Violence and Gang Violence in El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. Kids In Need of Defense. 4 May 2017.
“Ultimately, the DHS will need to refine and prioritize the cases that are placed into the system and the government needs new tools, widely used in other adjudication systems, that can reduce backlogs, incentivize cooperation, and facilitate resolution. Congress should similarly reexamine the barriers to status and avenues for regularization or preservation of status” — Immigration Adjudication: The Missing "Rule of Law". Lenni Benson. New York Law School. 2017.
“Although the majority of those migrants seeking legal protections stay in countries neighboring their own, hundreds of thousands continue their journeys in search of protection and stability in more distant states, including in the European Union, the United States, and Australia. In response to the significant increase in asylum seekers arriving at their borders, all three entities have significantly increased deterrence measures with the hopes of keeping new arrivals from entering” — The Impact of Externalization of Migration Controls on the Rights of Asylum Seekers and Other Migrants. Bill Frelick, Ian Kysel and Jennifer Podkul. 13 April 2017.
“Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) has been performed in Egypt since pharaonic times. An FGM prevalence of 87.2% among all women aged 15-492 in a population of nearly 95 million suggests that Egypt has the greatest number of women and girls who have experienced FGM of any country in the world” — Country Profile: FGM in Egypt. 28 Too Many. April 2017.  
“Increased immigration enforcement—as well as potential restrictions on legal immigration and refugee resettlement—will impose fiscal costs on taxpayers and threaten immigrants, their families, and their communities across the country.” — The Facts on Immigration Today: 2017 Edition. The Center for American Progress immigration team and Michael D. Nicholson. 20 April 2017.
“A CBP [Customs and Border Protection] officer in south Texas reportedly told a Central American asylum seeker, “Trump says we don’t have to let you in.”...CBP officers are improperly rejecting asylum seekers at small ports of entry and major ones across the border” — Crossing the Line: U.S. Border Agents Illegally Reject Asylum Seekers. Human Rights First. May 2017.
“Despite considerable support from the EU, at the end of 2016 the reception facilities in both countries were not yet adequate to properly receive (Italy) or accommodate (Greece) the number of migrants arriving.” — Special report no 06/2017: EU response to the refugee crisis: the ‘hotspot’ approach. European Court of Auditors.
“Six months on, a large number of displaced people – including hundreds of unaccompanied children – are sleeping rough in Calais, seeking shelter in nearby makeshift camps, or living on the streets of Paris. Many still hope to one day make it to the UK.” — Six Months On: Filling Information Gaps Relating to Children and Young Adults in Northern France Following the Demolition of the Calais Camps. Refugee Rights Data Project. April 2017.
“Fear of retaliation by gang members combined with lack of trust in the police mean that women and girls in gang-controlled territories rarely seek state protection from Sexual and Gender-based Violence (SGBV). Government agencies interviewed for this report confirmed the challenges that victims encounter in reporting SGBV by gangs or in gang-controlled areas, citing that while they know these forms of violence are extremely common, their agencies receive few—if any—reports.” Neither Security Nor Justice: Sexual and Gender-based Violence and Gang Violence in El Salvador, Honduras, and Guatemala. Kids In Need of Defense. May 2017.
“While these outbreaks of widespread acute violence tend to be relatively rare, they have occurred against the backdrop of chronic persecution delivered through a legal framework designed to marginalise, oppress and control the Rohingya community which has been imposed since the 1980s, growing ever more restrictive as time goes on.” Burned, Stabbed and Shot: Physical evidence of the atrocities committed against the Rohingya. Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK. 16 May, 2017.
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