News

Feb 17, 2012

I was a panelist on journalist debates in the framework of Barents Spektakel festival in Kirkenes.

We discussed Prejudices about each other. Journalists from Russia, Norway, Finland and Sweden put forward their own versions. I shared my version: media itself   cultivate hate speech. I presented   examples reading headlines in Karelian media over the past six months. Those headlines present Finns, Norwegians and Swedes as quite criminal people
Feb 4, 2012

Acquaintance with management of festivals of documentary cinema of Northern countries became the theme of the week long training of the Russian experts in Norway and Finland within the limits of the project «Management of film festivals» financed by Ministerial council of Northern countries. 13 representatives of film festivals of the Northwest of Russia from St.-Petersburg, Murmansk, Kaliningrad, Arkhangelsk and Petrozavodsk took part in the trip from January, 18th till January, 28th.

Jan 31, 2012

The nearer   Barents Spektakel,   more worries for journalists : so many events in five days ...A group of Russian journalists   covering  this extraordinary festival is formed at last. Thanks to a grant from the Norwegian Barents Secretariat and Nordic  Journalists Centre   (Denmark) for the ninth time we will be able to try this "cultural-political cocktail " as organizers- Pikene på broen- call Barents Spektakel.

 

Journalists’ cooperation gets €537.000 grant

Nov 14, 2011


The grant of DKK 4 million (€537.000) is given by the Nordic Council of Ministers and will be administrated by the Nordic Journalist Centre in Århus, Denmark. It will facilitate for more cooperation between Nordic and Russian journalists.


- It’s great. With this amount of money we’ll be able to dig deeper and run really high-quality projects. It’s extremely important that we in the Nordic Region have a regional network and working relationship with our big neighbor to the east. Especially so for Norway and Finland, which share common borders with Russia, says Steen Rasmussen, head of Nordic Journalist Centre.

The grant will allow Russian journalists to learn more about Nordic democracy and the free press, while Nordic journalists will acquire more in-depth knowledge of Russia, reads the portal of Nordic cooperation.

The grant will help to fund a wide range of projects for student journalists and, in particular, for their more experienced colleagues. Projects will range from actual continuing education to study trips, teaching and working together on journalistic and cultural projects, e.g. photography books.

In previous years, the Barents Press network of journalists in the Barents Region has arranged a wide-range of topical seminars and study trips across the borders in the north with financial and technical support from Nordic Journalist Centre.

Thomas Nilsen,

BarentsObserver.com

 

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