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649 supported projects match your criteria. Awarded projects View map
Groene haven
© Zuza Nazaruk

Green port: mirage or miracle?

ROTTERDAM - The Port of Rotterdam claims to champion sustainability but is the reality matching its marketing?

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Eiland Jan De Nul
© Zoë Deceuninck

Jan De Nul builds controversial port terminal for oil extraction in Guyana

GEORGETOWN - On behalf of US oil giant ExxonMobil, Belgian company Jan de Nul (together with partners) is building an artificial island off the coast of Guyana, South America.

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Hoog Spel: De politieke biografie van Shell
© Marcel Metze

High Stakes, the political biography of Shell

AMSTERDAM – Shell knows how to navigate the highest circles and the shortcuts through political swamps. The oil and gas giant operates in 70 countries. Most of these are not democratic constitutional states. Until recently known as Royal Dutch Shell, Shell has to deal daily with weak or autocratic governments, corruption, unrest, war and terrorism. How does it navigate these challenges?

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Het einde van de Burundese Balkanroute
© Elien Spillebeen

The end of Burundi's Balkan route

GITEGA / BELGRADO - The Burundi Balkan Route offered several thousand Burundians a way out of their homeland in crisis in 2022.

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Wild Land
© Paul Cobbaert

Wild Land, the return of wild animals

BELGIUM - The mythical wolf is back in Belgium. So are the eagle owl and the raven. The seal and the beaver. The tropical tree frog. Even the mysterious lynx. And who knows, soon the iconic brown bear? The list is impressive.

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Is er nog toekomst voor Spitsbergen?
© Johannes De Bruycker

Is there still a future for Svalbard?

LONYEARBYEN - The Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard is warming six times faster than the global average.Natural disasters are threatening residents, while local government is making efforts to limit the damage.  
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Amra Dorjbayar, Alexandro Yaramis, Idries Bensbaho, Jonathan Atzmon, Nathan Tetroashvili en Kanzi Louagie
© Amra Dorjbayar, Alexandro Yaramis, Idries Bensbaho, Jonathan Atzmon, Nathan Tetroashvili, Kanzi Louagie

Sons of Abraham

JERUZALEM - Three friends with three different faiths travel together to the cradle of their religions: Jerusalem. They want to discover what they have in common and what divides them. But soon they are confronted with the harsh realities of conflict.

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Noord-Ierland
© Johannes De Bruycker

New tension in Northern Ireland

BELFAST - Northern Ireland this week celebrates the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement. The 1998 peace brought an end to 30 years of civil war between Protestants and Catholics, but unrest seems to have returned in recent years. Northern Ireland politics has been tumbling into one crisis after another since Brexit.

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Slachtoffers van genitale verminking
©Jorm Sangsorn

Victims of female genital mutilation

BRUSSELS - What prevents a woman with FGM from going to the doctor? While there are more and more survivors of female genital mutilation (FGM) living in Belgium, strikingly very few visit the healthcare centres for women with FGM in the country. Through an in-depth investigation, this project aims to better understand the reasons and meanings of this discrepancy as well as it brings the needs and experiences of these women to the centre of the conversation.

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Vrijzinnig funerair erfgoed
© Dieter Telemans

In search of traces of liberal funerary heritage in Flanders

BRUSSELS - Unknown is unloved, especially when it comes to liberal funerary heritage. Gravestones of freethinkers and other "sinners" have been neglected, forgotten or simply disappeared. And yet, things can be different. Three stories about "dog corners," the neglected memorial of the co-founder of Het Laatste Nieuws and columbaria gnawed by concrete rot illustrate the issue.

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Het verdriet van de rotskerken
© Laura Zuallaert

The sadness of rock churches

LALIBELA - The rock churches of Lalibela in northern Ethiopia are world heritage sites. But during the civil war, the village was occupied by civilian militias of the Tigray Army (TPLF) fighting the government army. The soldiers left Lalibela as a ghost village.

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Heimwee naar de Iraakse moerassen
© Judit Neurink

Nostalgia for the Iraqi marshes

BAGDAD - Climate change is causing an exodus in Iraq of farmers whose land is drying up. They are moving with their water buffaloes or selling their livestock. The government does not know how to deal with climate migration, environmentalists are threatened and even kidnapped.

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Eunice street
© Lara Richir, Ellen Boonen, Michelle Peters

Eunice street

BRUSSELS - How Nigerian girls are forced into Belgian prostitution. In 2018, 21-year-old Eunice Osayande is murdered on the streets of Brussels. The Nigerian woman was smuggled into Belgium with the false promise of becoming a hairdresser here and having a better life than in Nigeria.

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De verkeerde generatie

The Wrong Generation

TUNIS - When Tunisians initiated the Arab Spring in 2010, a challenging transition to democracy began. Nearly a decade later, Kais Saied, an independent candidate, came to power. He stealthily implements his political agenda, dissolving parliament, arresting the opposition and targeting the media and electoral commission. Many Tunisians speak of a true coup d'état.

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The EU's Moroccan waiting room

MELILLA - In June 2022, dozens of people were killed when a large group attempted to storm the border fence near the Spanish exclave of Melilla in Morocco. European leaders are particularly keen to stop migrants, and to that end, they are turning to Morocco, among others.

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Een wind van veranderingv
© Arne Gillis

A wind of change

RIOHACHA - The world is facing a total energy transition, and Colombia, too, is joining the momentum.

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Femmes a abattre
© Juliette Robert

Femmes à abattre

BRUSSELS - These women weren’t leading  the same battles, walking in the same streets or speaking in the same forums. Yet they were all victims of the same crime:  political feminicide.

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Noorderlicht, aan het einde van de tunnel
© Roel Nollet

Northern Lights, at the end of the tunnel

REYKJAVIK - "No one will end up on the streets," Thorir Hall says decidedly. He works for the Red Cross. "In Iceland, sleeping on the streets is not an option." It is a beautiful day today. Outside, it is freezing at minus four. In central Reykjavik, the aid agency has just opened a new emergency shelter. Last year, some 4,000 refugees applied for asylum in the country. It seems a ridiculously small number when compared to countries like Greece, Lebanon or even Belgium, but for Iceland it is 70 times more than a decade ago. "Finding housing for everyone is now the biggest challenge," Thorir adds. The island is three and a half times the size of Belgium, but 30 times fewer people live there. Journalists Majd Khalifeh and Roel Nollet travel to Iceland to document the increase in refugees.

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Monsters bestaan niet

Monsters don't exist

BRUSSELS – ‘Once upon a time there was a man...’ Thus begins the story I was told as a little girl. In the podcast ‘Monsters don’t exist’ I revisit that story together with my contemporaries who grew up in 1990s turbulent Belgium, just like me. While we were busy with homework and playing in the streets, unsettling images and news reports seeped into our young lives and reshaped our understanding of the world forever.

 

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De Taalunie
© Tomas Vanheste

Is the Dutch Language Union going on the deep end?

AMSTERDAM/BRUSSELS - The Dutch Language Union is unique in the world; nowhere else do two countries cooperate so closely in a policy area. They have been doing so since 1980, when the Netherlands and Belgium concluded the Language Union Treaty. In it they solemnly declared their joint commitment to spread the Dutch language throughout the world.

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Farmasector houdt medisch nieuws in wurggreep
© Roberto Sorin / Unsplash

Pharma sector keeps medical news in tight grip

BRUSSELS - The flip side of pharmaceutical companies' staggering profit figures is that the marketing for their products is incredibly important. Dutch research shows that pharma even spends twice as much money on this than on the development of new drugs. In this study we examine to what extent and in what way health information in the professional media is influenced by the pharmaceutical industry.

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The Mexican method
© Arthur Debruyne

The Mexican method

SCHIPHOL - In Belgium and the Netherlands, Mexican laborers have raised a new branch of the drug industry: crystal meth. Arthur Debruyne portrays all those involved. 'Buying gloves? Just tell those mexi to work'.

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Kleerkastvasten, de textielketen ontrafeld
© Sarah Vandoorne

Wardrobe fasting, uravelling the textile supply chain

BRUSSELS - You never wear one third of the clothes in your wardrobe. Another third you rarely ever put on. You have not touched nine out of ten outfits for a whole year. You throw away more clothes than any other European. And yet you keep buying new clothes. Because you feel that you need them. Because every morning you wake up and think you have nothing to wear.

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Nachtboek uit Kiev
© Helena Cazaerck

Nightbook from Kiev

KIEV - What does war do to people? Helena Cazaerck, philosopher, journalist and musician, travels to Kiev to find out. She wants to sketch not only the suffering but also the absurdity and irrationality.

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Zelfbediening bij Damiaanactie
© Knack

Self-service at Action Damien

BRUSSELS - Experienced staff are being fired, volunteers are dropping out and losses are piling up. Meanwhile, external consultants earn up to €20,000 a month. What is going on at Action Damien?

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Nordic harvest
© Nordic Harvest

With ten billion at the table

COPENHAGEN - By 2050, the earth will have 10 billion inhabitants. At the same time, the area of available agricultural land per person is shrinking. As climate disrupts, classical farming systems are colliding with their limits.

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Handboek voor Onderzoeksjournalisten
© Anne Van Hootegem

Guide for research journalists

AMSTERDAM / BRUSSELS - The official handbook of the Dutch-Flemish Association of Investigative Journalists covers the internationally renowned Story-Based Inquiry method, which is a quick and efficient way to organise and conduct journalistic research. The authors also discuss the social, psychological, legal, financial, ethical and societal aspects of investigative journalism around this method.

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Hashtags in the battle for women's bodies in Egypt

CAÏRO - Those who hoped the 2011 Egyptian revolution would dramatically improve women's lives are being disappointed. More than a decade later, calls for equal rights and opportunities are ringing louder than ever. Social media are once again an ideal sounding board for emancipatory ideas. And the regime? As ever, it reacts defensively. Whoever does not go along with the official discourse on women's rights is gagged.'

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100 jaar om de zee te stoppen
©Julie Steendam

100 years to stop the sea

HAVANA - The IPCC is clear: besides radically reducing emissions, the world must also prepare for the consequences of 1.5 degrees of warming of our atmosphere. How will we feed, shelter and protect ourselves in this heralded 'climate hell'?

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Kunst voor Das Reich
© Lannoo / Geert Sels

Nazi-looted art from Belgium

BRUSSELS – A huge amount of art was stolen during World War II. The Nazis looted art from occupied countries and brought it to Germany, where they established ambitious collections. The story of what happened to Belgian art has yet to be told. How did paintings by Memling, Van der Weyden, Bruegel, Jordaens and Cranach leave the country so easily? The Nazis looted homes, stole art and forced owners to sell, spending millions of Reichsmarks in the process.

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