Helena de Felipe, professora de la Universitat d’Alcalà, imparteix la conferència "Pares berebers, fills amazics", en una nova sessió del cicle "Interpretar la Mediterrània avui".
Hostility towards the Muslim presence in Europe is a growing concern, not only for populations professing Islam but also for numerous actors – both public and private – concerned about respect for human rights.
European-Maghrebi binationals are destined to become major actors in economic and cultural cooperation between the North and South shores of the Mediterranean, a cooperation that constitutes a veritable link between Europe and Northern Africa.
The exceptional youth-led wave of anti-authoritarian protests in several Arab countries in 2010–2011, refocused the world’s attention on Arab youth.
The wave of uprisings and social unrest that swept through Arab countries have motivated reflections about the transformative influence these events might have had in shaping new identities and emerging values.
The reactions in the Arab world to the controversial depictions of the Prophet Mohammed by various European cartoonists reinforced the already widespread impression in the West that Arabs are a belligerent and humourless bunch.
Since the global economic crisis, youth employment prospects have worsened continuously throughout the world, in developed, transition and developing countries alike. The situation is particularly acute in the Arab Mediterranean Countries.