Camilla Soldati

Journalist, Content Coordinator, Digital Editor

All articles - 27
23 April is World Book and Copyright Day

23 April is World Book and Copyright Day

In a time characterised by cultural flattening and philosophical and creative aridity, books are the best way to comprehend reality. Literature has a huge power: conventional symbols give life to surprising results, able to generate powerful revolutions similar to those in science. As Franz Kafka once said, “A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us”.

No barriers or walls, playing football with the Calais Jungle’s refugees

No barriers or walls, playing football with the Calais Jungle’s refugees

When it comes to migrants, some people build walls while others create playing fields. The latter option has been chosen by #Play4Calais, UK crowdfunding campaign aimed at creating a football pitch on the other side of the Channel. #play4calais Tweets More precisely, in the Calais Jungle, the refugee camp in Northern France that has been many

How the world came to celebrate Earth Day

How the world came to celebrate Earth Day

Earth Day was established on 22 April 1970 due to a rising need of protecting the environment and natural resources. The movement started in the United States and, on that occasion, millions of US citizens took to the streets for a historic demonstration for environmental protection. The lack of environmental regulations started raising concerns. After the publishing

What is the Goldman Environmental Prize and who won it

What is the Goldman Environmental Prize and who won it

Six environmental activists have been awarded the 2016 Goldman Environmental Prize on 18 April in Los Angeles, California. The official ceremony will be held in the capital, Washington D.C., on 20 April. The award has been established in 1990 and is the highest recognition that honours activists from all over the world dedicated to safeguarding

Kenya will plant 20 million trees

Kenya will plant 20 million trees

Deforestation in Kenya – which reached its peak between 1970 and 1990 – represents a serious threat to five highland forests, dubbed “the Water Towers” beacuse of their importance as they’re crossed by the country’s main rivers. Between 2001 and 2014, Kenya lost 8 per cent of its forest cover, an area the size of the US state

The 2016 Pulitzer Prize puts the refugee crisis centre-stage

The 2016 Pulitzer Prize puts the refugee crisis centre-stage

The tragedies lived by tens of thousands of families fleeing war in search for a new life led the New York Times to be awarded the US most prestigious journalistic prize, the Pulitzer Prize, for Breaking News Photography. Reuters has also been awarded for its moving photos of migrants approaching Greek coasts.   Photos “that captured

Malawi faces severe drought and declares a state of national disaster

Malawi faces severe drought and declares a state of national disaster

Malawi’s President Peter Mutharika has declared a state of national disaster on 13 April. The country has been hit by a dreadful drought, which has been affecting Southern Africa for over a year. “According to our estimates, 2016 total maize production will drop by 12% compared to the previous year,” said the head of state. This

Ethiopia, 200 people have been killed on the border with South Sudan

Ethiopia, 200 people have been killed on the border with South Sudan

Ethiopian forces have launched a counter offensive aimed at freeing over 100 women and children that had been kidnapped in a raid in the Gambella Regional State, Ethiopia, on the border with South Sudan. According to Addis Ababa’s governmental sources, the “heavily armed group” – coming from the neighbouring country – also killed 200 people.