A woman of many words, marginalized amongst feminists during her lifetime, who continued to speak out against sexual violence – take an International Women’s Day moment to engage with the #MeToo movement’s posthumous champion.
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Women's Mid Wedge Fringe Ankle Boots Suede Round Toe Slip On Wool Knit Booties Bow Tassel Short Boot
Size Chart:
Size 4 US = EU34 = Heel to Toe 22.0cm/8.66"
Size 4.5 US = EU35 =Heel to Toe 22.5cm/8.86"
Size 5 US = EU36 = Heel to Toe 23cm/9.06"
Size 6 US = EU37 = Heel to Toe 23.5cm/9.25"
Size 7 US = EU38 = Heel to Toe 24cm/9.45"
Size 8 US = EU39 = Heel to Toe 24.5cm/9.65"
Size 8.5 US = EU40 = Heel to Toe 25cm/9.84"
Size 9 US = EU41 = Heel to Toe 25.5cm/10.04"
Size 10 US = EU42 = Heel to Toe 26cm/10.24"
Size 11 US = EU43 = Heel to Toe 26.5cm/10.43"
Use your length and width measurements to find your shoe size on the above size chart. If your foot is fat or wide, please select a bigger size up.
PERFECT ITEM FEATURES:
☛Item Type: Ankle-boots
☛Main Material: High Quality Vegan Suede upper; Comfort Velvet Lining; Non-skid Rubber sole.
☛Closure_type: Side Zipper
☛toe_style: Round toe
☛Heel Height: Heel Height 2.36 inch
☛Width: Medium (BM)
☛Season: Spring/Autumn/Winter
☛Color: Multiple colors optional
☛Occasion Lifestyle: Fashion,Classic,Casual.
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A woman of many words, marginalized amongst feminists during her lifetime, who continued to speak out against sexual violence – take an International Women’s Day moment to engage with the #MeToo movement’s posthumous champion.
The border town of Przemyśl is the main point of entry for Ukrainian refugees entering Poland. Almost one million have arrived so far and many more will follow. Most have come from Lviv, the central node for Ukrainians heading west. The Austrian photographer Florian Rainer has followed the route backwards. His images record both the anxiety and resilience of people forced to abandon their homes from one day to the next.
Clinging to his nukes, Putin will only lose power if his own turn on him. It’s hard to predict when, if ever, the leaders he has humiliated and threatened into submission will do the basic calculus and find that obeying the tyrant will inevitably cost way more than defiance.
Independent sources of information have been almost entirely destroyed in Russia. It is critical to reveal to Russian citizens the full truth about the suffering of the Ukrainian nation. An appeal to Russian speakers worldwide from prominent members of the Russian literary intelligentsia.
Freedom, dignity and security: our belief in the aspirations that animate civil society is why we affirm our support for Ukraine today. A statement by the editors of the Eurozine partner journal ‘Esprit’.
A large part of the western Left, focused on NATO and the USA, failed to see Russian aggression. Of course, the war on terror needs to be brought into the discussion – but critique of liberal internationalism cannot add up to support for the ‘spheres of interest’ doctrine.
A diary from the front, a Syrian scenario for Putin, and opportunities to help: here’s a review of what editors and authors of the Eurozine network have to say about Ukraine.
Putin’s autocracy has a reason to be afraid of its smaller neighbour: a working democracy always threatens a tyrant. Supporting Ukrainians’ fight for self-determination is not only a moral obligation, but an existential question for the democratic world.
In ‘Merkur’: why Günter Wallraff’s 1985 bestseller ‘The Lowest of the Low’ appears scandalous by the standards of today’s racial justice discourse – but remains absolutely worth reading for its searing analysis of the exploitation of labour in wealthy democracies.
In ‘New Eastern Europe’: why the West should not be fooled by Russia’s Cold War revivalism; whether Ukraine can turn the tables; and where now after the ruins of Ostpolitik?
‘Akadeemia’ applies Lotmanian semiotics to today’s societal concerns. Including a holistic view of digital fragmentation, integrating ecology into the cultural sphere and creatively rethinking educational practices.
With new variants mutating around the globe, COVID-19 is no longer a novelty. The pathogen is seemingly here to stay, inducing social, political and economic turmoil. This is not a crisis to emerge from quickly. It is a prelude to further emergencies linked to climate change-related transformations and environmental destruction. How will societies deal with its tangible effects? And which issues might be perilously left by the wayside? In this new focal point, supported by the European Cultural Foundation’s Culture of Solidarity programme, Eurozine and partners take stock of this public health crisis and its accompanying crises of values and meaning.
Traditionally, a young woman used to be presented with a bundle of goods to send her off with to adult life. Today’s bottom drawers aren’t necessarily tied to marriages, nor are they strictly material. Yet, the bundle one leaves the house with is as important as ever. In this focal point, we take stock of the notions our foremothers presented us with: women’s ideas and achievements that define our understanding of power, gender and violence, bodies, connection and agency.
The focal point presents the findings of the project ‘Eurasia in Global Dialogue’ being carried out at the Institute for Human Sciences, Vienna (IWM). The focal point is an extension of the earlier focal point, ‘Russia in Global Dialogue’ that ran in Eurozine and at the IWM from 2012–2018.
Post-revolutionary Ukrainian society displays a unique mix of hope, enthusiasm, social creativity, collective trauma of war, radicalism and disillusionment. With the Maidan becoming history, the focal point ‘Ukraine in European Dialogue’ explores the new challenges facing the young democracy, its place in Europe, and the lessons it might offer for the future of the European project.