Spanish Translation of ‘The Movement is Dead, Long Live the Movement!’

A Spanish translation of Tadzio Mueller’s article, ‘The Movement is Dead, Long Live the Movement!‘, published in Turbulence 4, has been made available by Centre Tricontinental. Danish and Finnish translations of the piece are also available.

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New Section on Turbulence Website

A new section, ‘Elsewhere on the Web‘ has been added to the Turbulence website. We will be publishing links to online articles, interviews and videos that we feel resonate with the problematics thrown up by the various issues of Turbulence published so far.

The first text, We Won But We Lost, is an interview with Raquel Gutiérrez, published by Ukhampacha Bolivia in March 2008. It deals explicitly with the question of winning, which we tried to address in Turbulence 1, in the context of Latin America.

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Turbulence Editor Interviews from London G20 Protests

The Morning Show – April 2, 2009 at 7:00am

Turbulence editor, Tadzio Mueller, yesterday gave an interview live from the Climate Camp protests at the G20 Summit in London to the US’ KPFA Community Radio Station.

You can listen to the interview in the player above. The G20 segment begins 11.14 minutes in.

You can also listen to his interview with Deutsche Welle radio online here.

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Turbulence @ G20 Protests

Copies of the latest issue of Turbulence will be being distributed at today’s (April 2, 2009) G20 protests in London.

For more information on the protests, see the following websites:

Climate Camp | G20 Meltdown | Stop the War Coalition | Put People First | G20 Alternative Summit | Indymedia UK | London Indymedia

You can sign the petition against the University of East London’s last minute cancellation of the G20 Alternative Summit here.

A Turbulence editor will be being interviewed live from the G20 protests on the US’ KPFA community radio’s Morning Show between 15:05 and 15:15 GMT today. Tune in to 94.1 FM.

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  • Who we are

    Turbulence is a journal/newspaper that we hope will become an ongoing space in which to think through, debate and articulate the political, social, economic and cultural theories of our movements, as well as the networks of diverse practices and alternatives that surround them. Read more here

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