In the political landscape that has resulted from the Arab uprisings of 2011, the new collaboration and / or opposition between power and the media is a key aspect of the political conflict.
The exhibition Wa Habibi curated by María Santoyo, presents a selection of images taken between 2012 and 2015, in successive trips to the country that the author was forced to leave.
The devastation of the country since 2011 has caused the biggest humanitarian disaster in the Middle East since the end of World War II: nearly half a million dead and more than half of the Syrian population has converted to refugees or moved.
The main network of think tanks on politics and security in the Mediterranean is holding its 2017 annual assembly and conference.
In 2011, as the wave of anti-authoritarian protests spread across the Maghreb and the Middle East, Palestine, an example of popular mobilization over the past few decades, was left without its "Arab Spring".
The fall of East Aleppo in December 2016 strengthened the military position of the Syrian regime and its allies and revived the dynamics of the conflict in three main areas.
After leading Turkey for almost three decades, Recep Tayyip Erdogan has managed to get the population to support a controversial referendum on a constitutional reform that will enthrone him as omnipotent president.
Turkey is one of those issues that appear repeatedly on the European agenda and about which almost everyone has created an opinion.
Complementary to the Aula Mediterrània 2016-2017 conference series, the third edition of the Aula Mediterrània Interdisciplinary Research Seminar, aims to address various topics with a common theme: the Mediterranean.
Since 2014, approximately 1.6 million refugees and migrants have reached the coasts of Europe via the Mediterranean. In the same period of time, about 12,000 people have died while trying to cross the sea.
Various associations and organizations working to strengthen the role of women participate in the colloquium, held on the occasion of the presentation of the first report of the Euro-Mediterranean Women's Foundation.
When al-Jazeera broadcast live the celebration of thousands of Egyptians of the fall of President Hosni Mubarak on February 11, 2011, its director followed impassively the agitation of the moment from the central newsroom.