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Society

Au pair Alices in washing up land

In front | INVESTIGATION
Babysitter, for better or worse (Photo: bekah2067/ Flickr)

It’s an enticing experience which draws many young people abroad – but the catch lies hidden behind closed doors

by Elisa Marengo // 06/03/08

REVIEW

Headscarfs from Europe's presidents on Mars

Are you waiting for the snow in Tallinn? Bothered about a piece of cloth in Turkey? Or taking a politics lesson with McCain? The latest news from our babelblogs

by Katharina Kloss // 28/02/08

PORTRAIT

Turkish love story on Danish shores

With 3.8 million Turkish immigrants in the EU, we head to Denmark with the seventh largest Turkish population in Europe. Aydin Ozturk, 50, settled in Odense with a Danish partner and found his place in society

by Duygu Korhan // 28/02/08

PICTURES

Strasbourg is bikes

With the inauguration of the TGV to Strasbourg, the city is staking its claim for modernity and the environment. The bicycle rules in this city that wants to overtake Fribourg as model of sustainable growth

by Eneko Ilarramendi // 27/02/08

FEATURE

Spot the Italian (or German) in South Tyrol

The fortunate can discover the possibilities of European linguistic diversity at the Free University of Bozen-Bolzano. Multilingualism shows its true colours here – both good and bad

by Margarethe Padysz // 25/02/08

VOX POP
Celebrating in Switzerland (Image: iGenc/ Flickr)

Kosovo independence: your reactions

On 17 February, the state declared independence from Serbia, amidst a split EU outlook. Kosovar, Serb and Russian youth sound out their reactions on the day

by Nabeelah Shabbir // 20/02/08

INTERVIEW
Daniel Porot (Photo: DR)

Daniel Porot: the advantages of a job abroad

We talk to the author of numerous books on career management and job-hunting in Europe, who also teaches in many European and American schools and universities

by Jane Mery // 20/02/08

PORTRAIT

Turkey-Germany: springboard into jobs abroad

More and more young jobseekers are attracted to careers abroad due of either a lack of jobs in their own country or a desire to widen their personal horizons

by Ann-Christin Doms // 19/02/08

ANALYSIS

Are you young, employed and on the move?

As a consequence of encouraging young students to travel the world, it's necessary to expect that many of them, inspired by the itch to travel, decide to move away and work. How do they manage?

by Jane Mery // 19/02/08

REPORT
Erasmus will get you a job! (Photo: blondavenger/ Flickr)

Paris-Japan-Dublin with Erasmus

One voice amidst the 100, 000+ other Socrates students who traverse Europe and its borders

by Angela Steen // 19/02/08

ANALYSIS

Football: fans take over in UK, France and Germany

Faced with Russian oligarchs or American magnates buying out their clubs, some supporters are trying the same tactic out of sheer desperation

by Vincent Lebrou // 08/02/08

ANALYSIS
(Photo: Lanier67/FLickr)

Czech smokers: pubs welcome Europe’s last indoor puffs

The smoking ban, in force in many of the 27 EU member states, may soon take hold in the Czech Republic. Prague’s anti-smoking lobby steps up its fight against the fog. Plus a smoking ban guide map in the EU

by Hans-Jörg Schmidt // 07/02/08

INTERVIEW
Romanian family, Crainimat - redefining everyday life? (Photo: J.Lawron/ Flickr)

Democratic index for Europe

After Eurobarometer and the ‘Index of Happiness’, a new index launched by a British think tank on 31 January aims to ‘measure’ democracy in 25 European countries – and get Europe's citizens to customise their own indices online. Interview

by Nabeelah Shabbir // 31/01/08

FEATURE
Cédric Ragot (Photo: DR)

1000 and more: Europe's young designers

Magazines in auction rooms, high consumption in the art market - trend review

by Anne-Laure Murier // 30/01/08

FEATURE

'Sarkozy or YouTube 3.0?' in Bologna

Better processors, improved data management possibilities integrated into consoles. Report from the 'Future Film Festival' in Italy

by Marco Riciputi // 30/01/08

OPINION
(©Princeton University Press)

Jan T. Gross: Poland's 'anti-semitic' attitude

Public opinion in Poland is stirred after the American professor's post-war publication is released

by Agnieszka Niezgoda // 28/01/08

ANALYSIS
Feminist slogans during a protest in Paris (Photo: DR/ Jean-Claude Seine)

Feminism in France: the Rose Revolution

May 1968 was a turning point in world history, but it was also a rupture for women's history. Feminists of yesterday and today tell us about their war

by Mathilde Magnier // 23/01/08

PANORAMA

1968: a tour of Europe's revolts

Spain, Czech Republic, France, Italy, Poland and Germany - spinning through Europe's uprisings during that infamous year of rebellion

by Jane Mery // 23/01/08

ANALYSIS

May 2008? Young people in France get involved

In France, the fortieth anniversary of the May 1968 student revolts is fast approaching. Like it or not, the memory of this working class uprising is ever-present. The young people of France take the lead in their own style

by Frédérique Taubenhaus // 23/01/08

ANALYSIS
May 1968 poster

Situationism: ideas in conflict

Rue de Seine, Paris 1952. ‘Never work’ is chalked on a wall. Two words about the philosophy of the 'Situationists' who transformed May 1968 and who still inspire activists today

by Fabien Champion // 23/01/08

INTERVIEW
Named 'Dany the red' by the media in 1968, Cohn-Bendit leads the Green Europeans today (Photo: Parti Socialiste/ Flickr)

Daniel Cohn-Bendit: 'Stop the comparisons with 1968'

The German-French Green Party politician, 62, leader of the 1968 student protestors, publicist and current member of the European parliament, on 1968 and the here and now in Europe

by antonia schäfer // 23/01/08

MULTIMEDIA

Videos: Bottle of vodka for the fallen Kaczynskis

Dutch MP Pier Anne Nawijn dancing, that Bush-Merkel massage and Finnish MP Alexander Stubb fights for vodka in the European parliament

by Eduardo S. Garcés // 21/01/08

(Photo: Nemigo/ Flickr)

Try and sing the Spanish national anthem

Talks of a European anthem were recently dropped, but to some Spaniards, it seems a shame to splice lyrics and lose what makes their country’s anthem unique

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 18/01/08

PANORAMA
(Foto: ©Brasil2/istock)

Radiohead album online: what happened next

To shop or be shopped? The EU wants to tighten up the 2004 Intellectual Property Rights Directive. Many member states have already agreed on appropriate measures

by Annamaria Szanto // 18/01/08

Ornela Vorpsi and cat Nougatine Riverside de Cocoa Shehrezade Polpetta Polpi Sala von Vorpsi (foto Corinne Stoll)

Ornela Vorpsi: me, Albania and the 'whoring of the human race'

The Italian-writing, Paris-dwelling, prize-winning Albanian writer, painter and photographer, 39, describes beauty as disturbing, discusses her inspirations and is hopeful for Kosovo

by Mary Maistrello // 18/01/08

FEATURE
Welcome to Vauban, Freiburg (Photo: Rightee/ Flickr)

Eco-suburbs: Vauban, Freiburg

The district in south-west Germany is a pioneering development that puts into action innovative rules for communal living in a unique environment. But this paradise of purity is not without its faults

by Léna Morel // 17/01/08

REVIEW

Babelblogs: Olympics of human rights

British exes, banking superheros, Athens and garapos in Cuba - plus the latest Franco-German blog to watch out for

by Natalia Sosin // 17/01/08

PANORAMA

European leaders: average age 55

True or false: younger heads of state have less experience but more liberal policies than older heads of state, who have more experience? Plus an interactive map of Europe's old - and not so old - fogies

by Akli Hadid // 16/01/08

INTERVIEW
Jean Quatremer (left) (Photo: Donya Feki)

Jean Quatremer: 'there's a lack of passion amongst some MEPs'

Only 55% of Europeans state that they have any confidence in their parliament. On the benches of the French National Assembly, few young MPs are debating. How can the EU attract a new generation?

by Fernando Navaro Sordo // 16/01/08

DEBATE
Portuguese PM Socrates and French president Sarkozy do their own heat session (Photo: Miguel A. Lopes "Migufu"/ Flickr)

Constitution tension ... in a Finnish sauna

Temperatures soar as a group of young European journalists get steamed up about the Lisbon Treaty

by Angela Steen // 16/01/08

AGENDA

Swedish ice hotels and Norwegian culture capitals

Plus carnival fever in Venice, cartoons in the south of France and Arab hip hop in Brussels - our guide to the month's best cultural titbits

by Katharina Kloss // 15/01/08

FEATURE

Rennes: 'Helloo, immigrants'

The scene is set: Place de l’Europe, shops, blocks of flats on the horizon and 'Le bar de l'Europe'. At the heart of this little tarmacked tower of babel, Europe is not the stuff of dreams

by Elodie Auffray // 15/01/08

TESTIMONY
(Photo: Álvaro Herráiz/ Flickr)

Turkey through German eyes

The first world forum for the Alliance of Civilizations, launched also by the moderate islamist Turkish PN Erdogan, promotes mutual understanding between different cultures

by Katja Heise // 14/01/08

Intentional outsider (Photo: www.michalzygmunt.pl)

Michal Zygmunt: 'By 2010, Poland will be talking commercial gay movement'

30-year-old author of the book ‘New Romantic’, the journalist and editor of gay magazine ‘Dik Fagazine’ talks politics, left-wing politics and emotion-drained religion

by Natalia Sosin // 11/01/08

FEATURE
Phuket, Thailand (Photo: Madaboutasia/ Flickr)

Young prostitutes surviving in Bangkok

The lively streets of the capital conceal a sordid reality. In this meat market, they do their best to survive and dream of Europe

by Hélène Bienvenu // 11/01/08

TESTIMONY

Hospitals in Europe: pain in the wallet

A guide to social security the French way (to help avoid a head-ache or heart attack when you check your bank balance)

by Jorge Gutiérrez Torrejón // 10/01/08

REPORT
The border was celebrated with the installation of three 'Hello neighbour' benches on three locations along the new Schengen border of Hungary (Photo: http://www.kolbasz-studio.eu)

Hungary-Slovakia: 'Schengen won’t make my life better'

As we celebrate on 21 December 2007, for residents along the Hungarian border, Schengen is a historical event with bittersweet results

by Nóra Farkas // 09/01/08

PICTURES

Schengen: Slovenia and Italy help each other

When Slovenia became part of the Schengen zone on 21 December 2007, the 280km barrier separating it from Italy fell. It had been symbol of the iron curtain and the cold war that have divided Europe for decades

by Monica Nardini // 09/01/08

PORTRAIT
DJ Géro in action in Nouveau Casino club, Paris (©Romy Straßenburg)

DJ Gero: vinyl wonder

Oft dismissed as the childless 'loser generation’, twenty-somethings have unexpected talents. Our German and French correspondents give them a chance to have their say. Part IV of a series from Paris and Berlin

by Romy Straßenburg // 08/01/08

INVESTIGATION
(god.universe/ Flickr)

German Russians: home in Berlin

The story of a community's unconventional journey: 'German Russians' return to Berlin and struggle to live in harmony in their adopted country

by Anne Lainault // 19/12/07

PORTRAIT

Eighties generation: we're not childless losers

Despite their reputation, twentysomethings often have more to offer than first meets the eye

by Romy Straßenburg // 18/12/07

PORTRAIT
Eighties spirit (magaliB/ istock)

Born in the eighties

Twenty-something baby losers. Often disparaged, yet the 'eighties generation' harbour multiple talents. First part of a series of portraits exchanging Paris and Berlin

by Eva John // 14/12/07

FEATURE

Rome: Europe = shops

We continue our series of articles visiting the streets of Europe which carry the continent’s name. In this episode, shopping and lessons in a non-existent Europeanism at the heart of Eur(ope?)

by Tiziana Sforza // 13/12/07

FEATURE
'Plaza del Marqués de Pombal', Lisbon (Photo: Bruno Santos/ Flickr)

Iberia: unite Spain and Portugal

28% of Portuguese and 45% of Spaniards want to unify Spain and Portugal

by Fernando Navarro Sordo // 12/12/07

FEATURE

Hairy Portuguese women

The French and Spanish joke goes that Portuguese women have moustaches

by Giulio Zucchini // 12/12/07

INTERVIEW
Will the mythic '25 de Avril' bridge in Lisbon be renamed 'Salazar Bridge'? (Photo: javier/ Flickr)

Loving dictator Salazar

General De Gaulle in France, Churchill in the UK. The Portuguese have voted the founder and leader of the authoritarian regime the 'greatest ever figure in Portuguese history'

by Filippo Lubrano // 12/12/07

INTERVIEW
Lhasa, the capital of Tibet (Photo: Kent Wang/ Flickr)

Railway to the roof of the world

The world’s highest railway was opened between Peking and Lhasa, the Tibetan capital, in July. It has not only opened the door to modernity, but has aroused new clashes between the Chinese government and the Tibetans

by Javier Delgado Rivera // 06/12/07

FOCUS
Second Life contender (Photo: Trendmatcher/ Flickr)

Meru - new Second Life

The alternative to Second Life has Europe in its sights, according to Vladlen Koltun, a 27 year old professor from Stanford

by Adriano Farano // 06/12/07

FEATURE
Pattaya beauty clinic (hytam2/ Flickr)

Plastic surgery: turn to the Thai scalpel

Bangkok and its shiny new clinics have become the new capital for medical tourism, particularly for plastic surgery - and sex changes

by Hélène Bienvenu // 06/12/07

OPINION
Web 2.0 treasure map (Photo: dark_imp666/ Flickr)

Web 2.0: welcome to the global village

With its blogs, podcasts, wikis and other so called 'social networks', version 2.0 of the web has propelled the surfer to the crest of the wave. Could this be a virtuous version of globalisation?

by Fabien Champion // 05/12/07

PANORAMA

Hi5, gaydar.fr, Ning, MySpace and co.

With one login in and a few clicks, virtual communities are promising many marvellous things. Meet kindred spirits, find a job or customise your universe

by Tania Ribeiro // 04/12/07

FOCUS
European breeze on Facebook (Photo: TPCom/ Flickr)

Facebook: UK, Norway and Sweden most active

10 million Europeans have their own profiles on booming social exchange websites such as Facebook. The most active European web users have not wasted any time create groups of their own

by Charly Loufrani et Marine Stefan // 04/12/07

FOCUS
Tecktoniks during a techno parade (Fr@nçois/ Flickr)

Tecktonik - arm-splaying, mullet hair dance craze

TCK. Three letters that stand for a phenomenon: tecktonik. Similar in style to electro, it has been a sensation amongst teenagers in France, Belgium and Holland over the last six months - and is also a registered trademark

by georgia diaz // 03/12/07

REVIEW

God bless our babelblogs

From Prishtina to Kiev with our new reporters project, via Istanbul and the US along the comic soundtrack of Europe - by Groucho Marx and Tim Burton

by Natalia Sosin // 29/11/07

FEATURE
Budapest's homeless sleep on a bench (Photo: Spetzi/ Flickr)

Budapest: my solidarity nights

For the fourth year in a row, demonstrators spend a night in a metro station underground passage to highlight their solidarity with the capital's nearly 30, 000 Hungarian homeless

by Dennis Maschmann // 27/11/07

INTERVIEW
Irene Kaossar (Photo: Estonian Ministry of Education)

Estonian, language of the future?

From September 2007, the Russian minority have to officially learn Estonian in secondary schools - Irene Kaosaar, the head of linguistic minorities, on a 'transition' not a 'reform'

by Giovanni Angioni // 26/11/07

INVESTIGATION
Former Polish plumber campaign (ticondekoga/ Flickr)

Immigration: the plight of Poles in France

Poland has been an official EU country since 1 May 2004. While Poles have the right to move freely around France, things get a lot more complicated when it comes to getting a job

by Sébastien Michel // 22/11/07

FOCUS

Yellow week: where did all the MEPs go?

Call a plumber for leaking Balkan and Turkey progress reports, bye-bye Bosnians! aka Lidija Topic's 'total recall' and EU Wining and Dining Day

by Pim de Kuijer // 05/11/07

FEATURE
University of Sciences, Vilnius (Photo: Jorden Van der Ven)

Soviet mentality brakes Lithuanian educational reform

The educational system has changed as many times as the capital of Vilnius has changed hands – the current system is as young as the independent country, and much criticised

by Marc Serena // 05/11/07

FOCUS
Lithuanian parliament (Photo: Jorden Van der Ven)

Lithuania: a stranger in the south of the north

Since achieving independence in 1990, it has strived to walk steadily on its own. On the eve of reaching adulthood as a self-governing country, Vilnius is like a little girl who has been picked on too many times by her bigger neighbours

by Marta Palacín // 31/10/07

PICTURES
Vilnius' night

Picturing faith in Vilnius

Vilnius’ landscape is defined by the number of houses of worship scattered throughout it. This reflects the rich heritage Vilnius has with the number of religions that have co-existed together for hundreds of years

by Jorden Van der Ven // 31/10/07

INVESTIGATION
(Photo: xufa/ Flickr)

Epso: just English, French and German please

Controversy brews because competition announcements for the European Personnel Selection Office were published in only three languages. Officials blow the whistle on the apparently chaotic management of translations

by Chiara Puletti // 30/10/07

ANALYSIS
(Photo: Ruipereira/ Flickr)

Velib: bicycle + freedom on city streets

The French capital has been enjoying the success of the Vélib’ adventure since summer 2007, and the urban rent-a-bicycle-for-next-to-nothing fever has caught the rest of Europe

by Fabien Champion (avec PA) // 29/10/07

ANALYSIS
George Lazenvy was the original Marlboro Man in Europe (Photo: Fernanda TrinSky/ Flickr)

Sexual homeys

Having come 'en masse' to our planet, the metrosexuals, uebersexuals and retrosexuals have replaced man, the real thing, which from now on will be classified as an endangered species

by Lucie Solem (Relecture YL) // 25/10/07

PANORAMA

Feminism in Europe

Long a part of the mainstream, but women have not gained ground since the eighties. Many dismiss the feminist concept completely, others see 'new feminism' taking a step backwards

by Lena Meier (und KK) // 24/10/07

PANORAMA

Your ‘vintage man’ order has been received, issue no. 458

Not overly handsome, but wickedly sophisticated. Neither being excessively ribbed in the torso department, nor metro-sexual in the feminine sense, here is a whistle stop tour of five 'vintage' men, all of who are ‘made in Europe’

by Hélène Rançon // 24/10/07

INTERVIEW
The 38 year old is by turns a poet, history scholar and art critic at the Russian Institute of Arts History in St. Petersburg (Photo: DG)

Putin, prime minister in 2008?

On 26 October, the EU-Russia summit in Mafra, Portugal could reveal the Tsar's energy policy or Kremlin successor ambitions. Poet and art critic Dmitry Golinko provides a Russian reaction

by Anne Lainault (Relecture YL) // 22/10/07

REVIEW
Christian Gatoré and his mother Béatrice Mushashi moved from Rwanda to Paris in 1994 (Photo: KK)

Mum, what’s Communism? Dad, what’s Ramadan?

Yasmin, Cihan, Mani and Christian document their parents through the lens in Franco-German film 'Mon monde - meine Welt', a bitter-sweet reality bite that there is no quick-fix solution to the immigration issue

by Katharina Kloss // 17/10/07

FOCUS
The happy couple? (Photo: Darrismac/ Flickr)

Merkozy is leaking water

A conflict of interest is poisoning the apparent honeymoon between the French and German leaders, Angela Merkel and Nicolas Sarkozy, as they work on the EU constitution

by Xavi Hervás // 17/10/07

INTERVIEW
A worrying atmosphere in Italy (Photo: Piccinini)

Roberto Saviano: Spain in mafia hands

From investments in the Costa del Sol to French suburbs – the second part of an interview with the author of ‘Gomorra’

by Adriano Farano // 16/10/07

REVIEW
(Photos: Kerstin Stelter/ corazón international)

Fatih Akin’s cinema: a step closer to integration

Belonging to the homeland, the importance of education for immigration and Turkey's entry into the European Union are converging themes in 'The Edge of Heaven', the latest film by the German director

by Marcos de Barros // 12/10/07

Stereo Total's latest offering, 'Paris<>Berlin' (Photo: Simgil/ Stereo total)

Françoise Cactus: 'society is a little too turned on by sex'

The vocalist and drummer for kitsch pop duet 'Stereo Total', 43, evokes Franco-German bilingualism applied to masculinity-femininity, Gainsbourg and modern frustrations