Thirty-six years ago, Bruce Sterling's «Islands in the Net» expressed for the first time the dream of a transnational cooperativism capable of offering its members an alternative that would simultaneously address the erosion of social cohesion that was then emerging under Reagan and Thatcher and the fracture, growing steadily since the post-war period, between the general conditions of life and access to resources and knowledge in the most capitalized countries and the rest of the world.

Bruce Sterling and the dream of transnational cooperativism

Thirty-six years ago, Bruce Sterling's «Islands in the Net» expressed for the first time the dream of a transnational cooperativism capable of offering its members an alternative that would simultaneously address the erosion of social cohesion that was then emerging under Reagan and Thatcher and the fracture, growing steadily since the post-war period, between the general conditions of life and access to resources and knowledge in the most capitalized countries and the rest of the world.

What demoscopic studies reveal about the current level of social awareness, the rise of authoritarian leaderships and how we can work to bring about real change.

How to overcome social passivity and the rise of authoritarian messiahs

What demoscopic studies reveal about the current level of social awareness, the rise of authoritarian leaderships and how we can work to bring about real change.

An open letter to the European Commission published by «Petites Singularités»

The European Union must keep funding free software

An open letter to the European Commission published by «Petites Singularités»

In peninsular Spain there have not been any «interreligious conflicts» nor have there been significant Jewish communities throughout contemporary history, yet anti-Semitism has been and continues to be commonplace, invisible yet omnipresent, in the life of today's generations. Why is that and how can we confront it?

How to confront Spanish anti-Semitism?

In peninsular Spain there have not been any «interreligious conflicts» nor have there been significant Jewish communities throughout contemporary history, yet anti-Semitism has been and continues to be commonplace, invisible yet omnipresent, in the life of today's generations. Why is that and how can we confront it?