Episodios
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Traducción al español (con inteligencia artificial) de los primeros minutos de la emisión "The war of the worlds" de Orson Welles.
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En el verano de 2017, un desacuerdo entre vecinos árabes estuvo a punto de derivar en un conflicto militar. Hoy se ha convertido en una batalla de derechos deportivos que alcanza a las principales competiciones internacionales, también a la Liga española de fútbol. Lee el texto completo en español o inglés en: https://www.realinstitutoelcano.org/blog/piratas-del-futbol-en-el-golfo-contra-el-poder-suave-de-qatar/
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Radio Internacional de China es la única entidad, a nivel estatal, que se dedica a la transmisión radial al exterior desde la República Popular China. ¿Cómo se estableció la CRI? y ¿Qué camino de desarrollo ha recorrido? En el siguiente programa emitido en 1987 se repasa esa historia, que nos permite conocer los primeros pasos de China en el mundo de la transmisión al exterior.
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For World Radio Day 2022, BBC tune in to radio stations around the world that connect communities, spark conversations, keep traditions alive and give a voice to their listeners. From Aboriginal Koori Radio in Australia to a community station in India run by rural women from the lowest Dalit caste, the airwaves carry intimate wisdom, vital knowledge, beats and tunes that keep reminding us who we are.
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We may think we live in a digital age, but only half the world is currently online. Across the globe, small radio stations bind remote communities, play a dazzling array of music, educate, entertain and empower people to make change. Cameroon’s Radio Taboo, in a remote rainforest village 100 miles off the grid, relies on solar power; its journalists and engineers are all local men and women. Radio Civic Sfantu Gheorghe in the Danube Delta preserves the history of the community. Tamil Nadu’s Kadal Osai (“the sound of the ocean”) broadcasts to local fishermen about weather, fishing techniques—and climate change. In Bolivia, Radio Pio Doce is one of the last remaining stations founded in the 1950s to organise mostly indigenous tin miners against successive dictatorships. And KTNN, the Voice of the Navajo Nation, helps lift its listeners’ spirits in a time of loss and grief.
Produced by David Goren
Presented by Maria Margaronis. -
Radio Exterior de España cumple 80 años en 2022. Aunque no recibió ese nombre hasta 1978, las emisiones en onda corta de Radio Nacional comenzaron de forma regular el 15 de marzo de 1942. Durante los años de la guerra fría tuvo una doble función: combatir el comunismo y servir de nexo de unión entre los emigrantes españoles y sus familias.
Tras la restauración de la democracia en España y la caída del bloque soviético, Radio Exterior de España abandonó esa función combativa y el tono paternalista con sus ciudadanos en el extranjero para dar a conocer, en diez idiomas, la realidad de nuestro país en el mundo. Aunque los satélites de comunicaciones primero, e Internet más tarde, favorecieron la calidad sonora y el alcance de sus programas, la emisora internacional de Radio Nacional de España no piensa abandonar la onda corta hasta que esas nuevas tecnologías se hayan implantado mayoritariamente en Iberoamérica y otros rincones del planeta que son objetivo prioritario de sus emisiones. Este programa recoge, a modo de álbum sonoro, algunos de los testimonios históricos de Radio Exterior y de otras emisoras en onda corta con las que compitió en los momentos más críticos de sus 80 años de vida. Este programa fue realizado para el 70 aniversario en 2012 y en el 80 aniversario en 2022 se ha actualizado con lo ocurrido en los últimos años.
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Conference on Culture and Imperialism by the author of "Orientalism", Edward Said. The text of the conference can be also found in the additional materials of the course, here on his own voice.
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Interview in Spanish with French media theorist Armand Mattelart on media, globalization and power, from UNED TV course.
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Entrevista de febrero de 2020 que explica, de forma sencilla, como circula la información en internet a través de los cables transoceánicos. Con Noelia Miranda, emitido por Onda Cero en el programa diario “Julia en la Onda”.
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US and West German intelligence agencies spied on governments across the world for decades using a Swiss encryption firm, a new investigation has claimed.
Hundreds of countries used Crypto AG equipment to protect their top secrets but a probe has found the firm was covertly owned by the CIA and German spy agency BND.
But, by rigging the equipment, American and Western German intelligence agents were able to listen in on their allies and enemies.
The revelation came from a classified CIA report that was obtained by German public broadcaster ZDF. It worked with the Washington Post to break the story.
ZDF's Washington bureau chief Elmar Theveßen told Euronews it was likely the "biggest intelligence eavesdropping operation of the past 60 years".
He said US and West German intelligence agencies used the programme from 1970 to 1993, with the CIA continuing alone until around 2018.
Theveßen said it was used, for example, to listen in to what was happening during Argentina's military dictatorship in the 1970s.
"The US and Germany were able to basically know everything about what was going on with regards to critics of the regime," he said.
"More than 30,000 people were killed back then. They just disappeared and Germany and the US knew exactly what happened through listening in to these communications and, of course, this prompts the big ethical question: why didn't they do anything about it?"
Theveßen also claimed intelligence agencies shared information with then UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher that could have prevented the Falklands War.
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On this edition of Conversations with History, UC Berkeley's Harry Kreisler welcomes social theorist Manuel Castells, Professor of Sociology and Professor of City and Regional Planning at UC Berkeley, to discuss identity and change in the network society. Series: "Conversations with History" [6/2003] [Humanities] [Show ID: 7234].
Available in video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GBB7U5mv0w
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I'm going to talk to you about power in this 21st century. And basically, what I'd like to tell you is that power is changing, and there are two types of changes I want to discuss. One is power transition, which is change of power amongst states. And there the simple version of the message is it's moving from West to East. The other is power diffusion, the way power is moving from all states West or East to non-state actors. Those two things are the huge shifts of power in our century. And I want to tell you about them each separately and then how they interact and why, in the end, there may be some good news.
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Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss how a dominant power can exert a cultural influence on its empire. An empire rests on many things: powerful armies, good administration and strong leadership, but perhaps its greatest weapon lies in the domain of culture. Culture governs every aspect of our lives: our dress sense and manners, our art and architecture, our education, law and philosophy. To govern culture, it seems, is to govern the world. But what is cultural imperialism? Can it be distinguished from cultural influence? Does it really change the way we think and should we try to prevent it even if it does?
With Linda Colley, School Professor of History, London School of Economics; Phillip Dodd, Director, Institute of Contemporary Arts; Mary Beard, Reader in Classics, Cambridge University.
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John Pilger interviews Irish politician Sean MacBride (1983) for "The Outsiders" series.
Also in video: http://johnpilger.com/videos/the-outsiders-sean-macbride
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Conference at the University of Stockholm in 2011, available online in video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7lN7yYhoWPs
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Interview of the sociologist and social thinker Stuart Hall by Pnina Werbner, in 2006.
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From June 26-27, 2017 NDI and Stanford Center on Democracy, Development and the Rule of Law convened an invitation-only event that includes thought leaders from tech firms, political institutions, academia, media, the democracy community and philanthropic organizations for an off-the-record discussion on how to collectively address the global challenge of digital disinformation. CDDRL Draper Hills alumna Svitlana Zalischuk (Ukraine '11) talks about these issues in her country from her perspective as a member of the parliament with CDDRL Mosbacher Director Francis Fukuyama.