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A year-long BBC Eye investigation has uncovered that Chinese tomato paste produced using forced labour in Xinjiang is likely to be being sold in major UK and German supermarkets. Runako Celina has teamed up with Pulitzer-prize winning journalist, Alison Killing, to find out the nature and scale of forced labour in the tomato fields of Xinjiang, and follow a trail that shows the resulting puree might be ending up on European shelves. Using satellite imagery and shipping data, they track the route the tomato paste takes from Xinjiang to Europe, where they uncover evidence showing there's a strong likelihood it is being sold on to some supermarkets. The supermarkets all said they took the allegations very seriously. But they disputed the BBC's findings.
Original broadcast date: December 9, 2022. We think our faces are our own. But technology can use them to identify, influence and mimic us. This week, TED speakers explore the promise and peril of turning the human face into a digital tool. Guests include super recognizer Yenny Seo, Bloomberg columnist Parmy Olson, visual researcher Mike Seymour and investigative journalist Alison Killing.TED Radio Hour+ subscribers now get access to bonus episodes, with more ideas from TED speakers and a behind the scenes look with our producers. A Plus subscription also lets you listen to regular episodes (like this one!) without sponsors. Sign-up at plus.npr.org/ted.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
The UK and EU will on Friday sign a deal to co-operate more closely in tackling illegal immigration and criminal gangs, and Japan's Nikkei 225 index hit a record high after 34 years. Plus, the FT's Alison Killing talks about Russia's failed rebuilding of the Ukrainian city of Mariupol. Mentioned in this podcast:UK and EU agree to co-operate more closely on migrationJapan's Nikkei 225 index eclipses record high after 34 yearsInside Mariupol: Russia's new Potemkin villageThe FT News Briefing is produced by Fiona Symon, Sonja Hutson, Kasia Broussalian and Marc Filippino. Additional help by Zach St. Louis, Sam Giovinco, Peter Barber, Michael Lello, David da Silva and Gavin Kallmann. Our engineer is Monica Lopez. Topher Forhecz is the FT's executive producer. The FT's global head of audio is Cheryl Brumley. The show's theme song is by Metaphor Music.Read a transcript of this episode on FT.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Wat kunnen kunstenaars en journalisten van elkaar leren? En wat gebeurt er als beide disciplines in de praktijk samenkomen? Vragen zoals deze vormen de kern van het promotieonderzoek van Stijn Postema. In deze aflevering gaan Erwin en Sanne in gesprek met Stijn om erachter te komen welke voordelen het freelancers brengt om buiten gebaande paden te werken. Stijn Postema doet promotieonderzoek naar artistieke journalistiek. Daarnaast werkt hij als docent aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam en is hij lector voor de opleidingen Journalistiek en Communicatie van de Christelijke Hogeschool Ede. Voor een uitvoerige introductie van zijn wetenschappelijke werk zie: Stijn Postema & Mark Deuze (2020) Artistic Journalism: Confluence in Forms, Values and Practices in Journalism Studies. Shownotes: De hele journalistieke rapdocumentaire van Jesse van Maanen is hier te bekijken. Vier losse nummers uit de documentaire vind je hier. Meer informatie over Alison Killing, die in 2021 een Pulitzerprijs voor haar combinatie van journalistiek en architectuurkennis vind je hier. De resultaten van het PersVeilig onderzoek naar intimidatie van vrouwelijke journalisten vind je hier. De indexatietool van de NVJ vind je hier. Sanne Poot op Twitter: https://twitter.com/SannePoot#freelanceleven is een podcast voor Villamedia en wordt mede mogelijk gemaakt door het Lira Steunfonds Reprorecht. Erwin van 't Hofs onderzoek aan de Universiteit van Amsterdam wordt mede mogelijk gemaakt door Stichting Democratie en Media en het Stimuleringsfonds voor de Journalistiek.
We think our faces are our own. But technology can use them to identify, influence and mimic us. This week, TED speakers explore the promise and peril of turning the human face into a digital tool. Guests include super recognizer Yenny Seo, Bloomberg columnist Parmy Olson, visual researcher Mike Seymour and investigative journalist Alison Killing.
"面部认可如何使中国政府能够针对少数群体 TED无线电小时情节的第4部分脸上有什么。查看第1部分,第2部分和第3部分。 记者艾莉森(Alison)杀人(Alison Killing)解释了她在中国新疆的调查" " - 启动AD- #TheMummichogBlogoFmalta Amazon Top和Flash Deals(会员链接 - 如果您通过以下链接购买,您将支持我们的翻译)-https://amzn.to/3cqsdjh 仅在一次搜索中比较所有顶级旅行网站,以在酒店库存的最佳酒店交易中找到世界上最佳酒店价格比较网站。 (会员链接 - 如果您通过以下链接购买,您将支持我们的翻译)-https://www.hotelscombined.com/?a_aid=20558 “因此,无论您希望别人对您做什么,也对他们做,因为这是法律和先知。”“ #Jesus #Catholic。 “从受孕的时刻,必须绝对尊重和保护人类的生活。从他生存的第一刻起,必须将一个人承认为拥有一个人的权利 - 其中每种无辜者都是无辜的权利。”天主教教堂的教理2270。 堕胎杀死了两次。它杀死了婴儿的身体,并杀死了母亲的科学。堕胎是深刻的反妇女。它的受害者中有三个季节是女性:一半的婴儿和所有母亲。 流畅的马耳他无线电是马耳他的第一号数字广播电台,演奏您的轻松最爱 - Smooth提供了“无混乱”的混音,吸引了35-59个核心观众,提供柔和的成人现代经典。我们操作一个流行曲目的播放列表,并定期更新。 https://smooth.com.mt/listen/ 关注电报:https://t.me/themummichogblogdotcom Tumblr:https://www.tumblr.com/themummichogblogofmalta blogspot:https://themummichogblogofmalta.blogspot.com/ 论坛:https://groups.google.com/g/themummichogblog 结束广告---" "要追踪Uyghurs并将其拘留在该地区的营地中。 关于艾莉森杀人 Alison Killing是一名建筑师和调查记者。 2021年,她和她的联合杂志主义者赢得了普利策奖,以赢得了国际报告,他们的工作调查了中国新疆的拘留所网络,并使用卫星图像和建筑技术。 她的其他调查包括:了解如何使用社交媒体来跟踪用户的运动和移民旅行。 TED广播小时的这一部分是由Katie Monteleone生产的,并由Sanaz Meshkinpour编辑。您可以在Twitter @tedradiohour上关注我们,并通过tedradio@npr.org给我们发送电子邮件。 https://www.npr.org/2022/12/09/1141627539/how-facial-recognition-ablowed-the--------------------------the----------------------- "
A blank spot on a digital map can signal much more than a gap in data -- it can mean something is being intentionally hidden. Sharing the remarkable discovery of massive alleged detention camps in Xinjiang, China, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Alison Killing shows how governments can obscure human rights abuses by limiting journalist access on the ground -- and calls for more reliable open-source data (like satellite and social media imagery) to shine a light on the world's darkest places.
A blank spot on a digital map can signal much more than a gap in data -- it can mean something is being intentionally hidden. Sharing the remarkable discovery of massive alleged detention camps in Xinjiang, China, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Alison Killing shows how governments can obscure human rights abuses by limiting journalist access on the ground -- and calls for more reliable open-source data (like satellite and social media imagery) to shine a light on the world's darkest places.
A blank spot on a digital map can signal much more than a gap in data -- it can mean something is being intentionally hidden. Sharing the remarkable discovery of massive alleged detention camps in Xinjiang, China, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Alison Killing shows how governments can obscure human rights abuses by limiting journalist access on the ground -- and calls for more reliable open-source data (like satellite and social media imagery) to shine a light on the world's darkest places.
Last month, new photos and documents surrounding China's internment camps in Xinjiang came to light. These documents further exposed China's efforts against the minority Uyghur population through forced labor, sterilization, and even torture. Holding China's suppression campaign together is a sophisticated mass surveillance infrastructure comprised of advanced facial recognition, mobile phone tracking, and more.BuzzFeed's Megha Rajagopalan, who won a Pulitzer Prize for her coverage on Xinjiang, helps Doug unpack the significance of the leaked documents, how China's campaign against the Uyghurs has evolved in recent years, and China's intricate mass surveillance apparatus.Follow Doug on Twitter @DouglasLFarrar. The 2021 Pulitzer Prize Winner in International Reporting: Megha Rajagopalan, Alison Killing and Christo Buschek of BuzzFeed News. (2021). The Pulitzer Prizes.
Open-source investigators forensically analyse digital evidence - social media posts, eyewitness videos, satellite imagery - to find the truth behind news events. Their techniques are now increasingly used by investigative journalists to achieve big impact. An investigation by The New York Times into civilian deaths from air and drone strikes has resulted in a policy change by the US military. Also in the programme - in the west it's headlined as "the Ukraine crisis", but how is the situation being reported in Russian and Ukrainian media? Guests: Alexa Koenig, Executive Director, Human Rights Center, Haley Willis, Visual Investigations Reporter, The New York Times, Benjamin Strick, Investigations Director, Centre for Information Resilience, Alison Killing, Winner of the 2021 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting, and Francis Scarr, Senior Digital Journalist, BBC Monitoring in Moscow. Presenter: Katie Razzall Studio engineer: Tim Heffer Assistant producer: Emily Finch Editor: Richard Hooper
What do architecture, investigation, maps and storytelling have in common? Follow the trail in this episode where Alison Killing takes us on a fascinating journey starting from her training and professional career in architecture and constructions to her research in migration and human rights, culminating with an internationally awarded journalistic collaboration."That wasn't just a problem with the map loading. And it wasn't just that there was information missing from the map and they put a blank tile instead... there was something much stranger going on. I mean, I find it quite enjoyable to push and poke at these different things and try and develop these different investigative techniques and ways that we can maybe start to look at these issues, which are by design very, very difficult first to investigate."
Megha Rajagopalan is a senior correspondent for Buzzfeed News. She won a Pulitzer for her coverage of the Xinjiang detention camps.“It's not so much that I talk to [the Chinese government] to get information. It's more that I talk to them to see how they think about things and what's important to them and what's their view of the world. … There are so many journalists that have been thrown out of China, so there's very few people that are able to actually have those conversations. And in the U.S., there are these seismic decisions being made about China policy, and if you don't talk to the people that run the country, it's a problem.” Thanks to Mailchimp for sponsoring this week's episode. Show notes: @meghara Rajagopalan on Longform Rajagopalan's Buzzfeed News archive 21:00 "This Is What A 21st-Century Police State Really Looks Like" (Buzzfeed News • Oct 2017) 35:00 Rajagopalan's Pulitzer-winning reporting with Alison Killing and Christo Buschek 41:00 "China Secretly Built A Vast New Infrastructure To Imprison Muslims (Part 1)" (Alison Killing, Christo Buschek, Megha Rajagopalan • Buzzfeed News • Aug 2020) 41:00 "What They Saw: Ex-Prisoners Detail The Horrors Of China's Detention Camps (Part 2)" (Alison Killing, Megha Rajagopalan • Buzzfeed News • Aug 2020) 41:00 "Inside a Xinjiang Detention Camp (Part 3)" (Alison Killing, Megha Rajagopalan • Buzzfeed News • Dec 2020) 41:00 "We Found The Factories Inside China's Mass Internment Camps (Part 4)" (Alison Killing, Megha Rajagopalan • Buzzfeed News • Dec 2020) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
How and why is China imprisoning millions of Uighurs in their western province of Xinjiang? BuzzFeed News journalists Megha Rajagopalan and Alison Killing join the podcast to talk about how their reporting uncovered a vast network of secret internment camps in Xinjiang. We discuss how they found the camps despite coverups from the CCP, what life is like for Uighurs and other ethnic minorities in those camps, and why China continues to commit human rights violations in Xinjiang at a massive scale. Read Megha and Alison's groundbreaking work on BuzzFeed News: https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/meghara/china-new-internment-camps-xinjiang-uighurs-muslims https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/alison_killing/china-ex-prisoners-horrors-xinjiang-camps-uighurs https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/meghara/inside-xinjiang-detention-camp https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/alison_killing/xinjiang-camps-china-factories-forced-labor To make sure you hear every episode, join our Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/neoliberalproject. Patrons get access to exclusive bonus episodes, our sticker-of-the-month club, and our insider Slack. Become a supporter today! Got questions for the Neoliberal Podcast? Send them to mailbag@neoliberalproject.org Follow us at: https://twitter.com/ne0liberal https://www.facebook.com/groups/1930401007051265/ Join a local chapter at https://neoliberalproject.org/join
In episode 19 of the World of Intelligence podcast, Terry Pattar, head of the Janes Intelligence Unit is joined by Alison Killing, discussing her recent investigation that identified camps in China where Uighur Muslims are being interned.
China has been massively expanding Uyghur Concentration Camps in Xinjiang, according to a review of satellite images by Buzzfeed News' Megha Rajagopalan, Alison Killing and Christo Buschek. Combined with the exposure from Disney's live action release of Mulan, which was filmed in Xinjiang, and the horrible crimes of the Chinese Communist Party is being revealed for the world to see. Buzzfeed Investigation Part 1 https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/meghara/china-new-internment-camps-xinjiang-uighurs-muslims Part 2 https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/alison_killing/china-ex-prisoners-horrors-xinjiang-camps-uighurs Follow Megha on Twitter! @meghara
China is accused of detaining millions of people from the Uighur ethnic minority and forcing them to work in factories. Pressure is mounting on foreign businesses to ensure material they source from China does not benefit from that forced labour. Alison Killing, an architect and investigator has found that 268 detention facilities have been built in the Xinjiang province in North-West China in just the last few years. Supply chain expert Kate Larsen says companies are often more at risk of exposure to forced labour than they might realise. But Craig Allen of the US China Business Council says US protections already exist to keep companies away from Uighur labour. And Max Zenglein of the Mercator Institute for China Studies says there are substantial incentives for companies to look the other way. (Picture: An alleged Uighur detention facility. Picture credit: Getty Images.)
We're returning to Migration Trail - the immersive web experience using maps, data and audio to chronicle the journey of migrants across Europe and beyond. We chat to Alison Killing, the creator of Migration Trail, to find out more about the project and how they've used data visualisation to create engaging narratives. Everything from prototyping with Google Maps (kind of) and hand drawn routes, to combining open source databases with award winning writers. And what's next for storytelling like this? You can follow Alison and Migration Trail on Twitter. Check out the Migration Trail website and the Migration Trail podcast ------------------------------------------------- Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer Additional music and sound design by Bora Yoon. ------------------------------------------------- Our live event is May 30th at the Royal Institution with Angela Saini (@AngelaDSaini) to discuss her new book Superior. We'll be discussing the re-emergence of race science and dissecting the political roots of race, why scientists can't seem to look beyond it, and the dark and dangerous ways in which scientific racism still exists today. BUY YOUR TICKETS RIGHT HERE ------------------------------------------------- Follow us on social media and send us your questions! Facebook Instagram Twitter Email: whynotadoc@gmail.com #whynotadoc See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
"If you want to go out and start your own cemetery" in the UK, says Alison Killing, "you kind of can." She thinks a lot about where we die and are buried -- and in this talk, the architect and TED Fellow offers an eye-opening economic and social perspective on an overlooked feature of our towns and cities: the cemetery. Speaking specifically to UK laws, she unpacks the fascinating, sometimes funny, often contradictory laws about where you can be buried.
« Si vous voulez créer votre propre cimetière au Royaume-Uni, vous le pouvez. » déclare Alison Killing. Dans ce talk, cette architecte et TEDFellow s'interroge sur les lieux où nous mourrons et où nous sommes enterrés. Elle offre une perspective économique et sociale qui nous ouvre les yeux sur un aspect négligé de nos villes : le cimetière. Parlant en particulier des lois britanniques, elle dévoile des lois fascinantes, parfois amusantes et souvent contradictoires relatives à la façon dont nous sommes enterrés.
"Si quieren empezar su propio cementerio" en el Reino Unido, dice Alison Killing, "como que pueden hacerlo". Ella piensa mucho en los lugares donde morimos y nos entierran, y en esta charla, esta arquitecta y TED Fellow nos ofrece una perspectiva reveladora, económica y social de un aspecto omitido en nuestras ciudades y pueblos. En el caso específico de las leyes británicas, desmenuza las fascinantes, a veces chistosas, a menudo contradictorias leyes sobre donde pueden ser enterrados.
No Reino Unido, "se você quiser começar seu próprio cemitério", diz Alison Killing, "você pode". Ela pensa muito sobre onde morremos e somos enterrados, e nessa palestra a arquiteta e TED Fellow oferece uma perspectiva econômica e social reveladora sobre uma característica negligenciada de nossas cidades: os cemitérios. Falando especificamente sobre o Reino Unido, ela explica as leis fascinantes, às vezes divertidas, e normalmente contraditórias, sobre onde você pode ser enterrado.
"Wenn man [in Großbritannien] seinen eigenen Friedhof beginnen möchte," sagt Alison Killing, "kann man das in gewisser Weise." Sie denkt viel darüber nach, wo wir sterben und wo wir beerdigt werden -- und in diesem Vortrag bietet die Architektin eine erhellende ökonomische und soziale Perspektive über einen übersehenen Bestandteil von unseren Städten, den Friedhof. Sie spricht insbesondere über Regeln in Großbritannien und erklärt die faszinierenden, manchmal lustigen und oft widersprüchlichen Gesetze über Beerdigungsorte.
"여러분이 영국에서 자기 소유의 공동묘지를 만들고 싶다면 할 수 있습니다." 라고 앨리슨 킬링은 말합니다. 이 강연에서 우리는 어디에서 죽고 묻히는지 많은 생각을 합니다. 건축가이자 TED회원인 앨리슨은 우리 마을과 도시에서 간과되고 있는 공동묘지에 대한 놀라운 경제적 사회적 관점을 제시합니다. 영국의 법에 대해 자세히 이야기하면서 흥미롭고 때로는 재미있으며 가끔은 모순적인 여러분이 묻힐 수 있는 장소에 대한 법에 관한 이야기를 풀어냅니다.
En esta breve y provocativa charla, la arquitecta Alison Killing mira edificios donde ocurre la muerte; cementerios, hospitales, hogares. La forma como morimos está cambiando y la forma en que construimos para morir... bueno, tal vez deba cambiar también. Es una mirada sorprendente y fascinante a un aspecto oculto de nuestras ciudades y de nuestras vidas.
Durant cette courte présentation,l’architecte Alison Killing examine les édifices qui accueillent la mort et les mourants : les cimetières, les hôpitaux, les maisons de retraite. Notre façon de mourir change et notre façon de bâtir ce qui accueille la mort devrait, peut-être, changer aussi. C’est un regard étonnamment fascinant sur un aspect caché de nos villes et nos vies.
Nesta curta e provocativa palestra, a arquiteta Alison Killing analisa construções onde a morte e a sua chegada acontecem: cemitérios, hospitais, nosso próprio lar. O modo como morremos está mudando, e os lugares construídos para a morte... bem, talvez devessem mudar também. É um olhar surpreendentemente fascinante quanto aos aspectos escondidos de nossas cidade e nossas vidas.
In diesem kurzen, provozierenden Vortrag betrachtet die Architektin Alison Killing Gebäude und Orte, wo Menschen dem Tod ins Auge blicken und auch sterben – Friedhöfe, Krankenhäuser und Heime. Die Art, wie wir sterben, ändert sich, und die Art wie wir für das Sterben bauen ... nun, die sollte sich vielleicht auch ändern. Dies ist ein überraschend faszinierender Blick auf die verborgenen Aspekte unserer Städte und unser aller Leben.
이 짧은 도발적인 이야기에서, 엘리슨 킬링은 죽음과 죽어가고있는 일이 벌어지는 건물을 보고 있습니다 - 묘지들, 병원들, 시설들. 우리가 죽는 방법은 바뀌고 있고 죽음을 위한 건물을 짓는 일... 아마도 이 역시 바뀌어야 할 것 같습니다. 우리의 도시와 인생의 숨어있는 면을 보는것이 놀랍고도 대단히 흥미롭습니다.
In this short, provocative talk, architect Alison Killing looks at buildings where death and dying happen -- cemeteries, hospitals, homes. The way we die is changing, and the way we build for dying ... well, maybe that should too. It's a surprisingly fascinating look at a hidden aspect of our cities, and our lives.