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R.I.P. The Brexit Centre

Brexit is old news, we’ve all moved on, right? Well certainly that’s the prevailing wind in the UK, so much so that Birmingham City University earlier this year closed the Centre for Brexit Studies that I had been associated with as a visiting fellow. Of course, it was part of a restructuring, because money is tight. But even some of that can be traced back to Brexit. In any case, I’ll still be occasionally writing about Brexit on my other platforms, as I do from time to time on Tomorrow’s Affairs, for example here.

2023 in Belgium and the Netherlands: The far right and serious crime

For the New European, 2023 was all about the seedy side of The Netherlands and Belgium, drugs, murders and spy scandals – and above all, the far right Geert Wilders winning the Dutch elections. Before that there had been stories about drug smuggling through the port of Antwerp, Amsterdam’s Red Light district, and a Belgian high society art murder. The year ended on another seedy note with this time a Belgian far right politician being accused of working for China, making the question of whether the far right can be trusted to run European countries ever more acute. Expect more sleeze in 2024, and that’s probably the least of it.

Tram with German-Israel friendship banner with in foreground documenta fifteen poster in Germany's Kassel

documenta fifteen – more about the politics than the art

I intended this documenta fifteen review for The New European to be mostly dedicated to what was on show rather than about the antisemitism controversies that the show in Germany’s Kassel has been embroiled in. Unfortunately, then, right after the opening, there was another major incident and the piece slightly changed direction. Even so, when talking about what what on show, at least during the preview, it’s hard to say that this is a brilliant documenta. It’s mostly a missed opportunity to showcase some of the best of the Global South. Instead it’s part agitprop throwback to the 1960s and 1970s and part naive-seeming return to nature and idealised collectivist village life with the theme of lumbung, the Indonesian communal rice barn. The attempt to open up documenta and make it less stuffy is attractive, ruangrupa inject a welcome dynamic and change of emphasis but the whole is so loosely curated that for such a large exhibition it dramatically under-delivers.

France’s healthcare turn – The Lancet

The Lancet is a peer-reviewed medical journal with an unparalleled name in the field. It also publishes more generalist news stories on medicine and healthcare and it’s such a pleasure to contribute to those. This one, done between France’s presidential and parliamentary elections, looks at the ‘preventive turn’ that many who work in the sector say that France needs to take.

Europe and Syria’s refugees

All my stories in the New Europan can be accessed here.

One of the stories that I was most proud of in 2021 was on Syrian refugees. I was lucky to come across the excellent and articulate artist Issam Kourbaj in Amsterdam’s Museum of the Tropics.

And it was fun to look at the Netherlands somewhat from a British media perspective.

Eurovision or bust

Finally, a nice, lighthearted piece, a bit tongue in cheek, about our human need to be entertained, even if it means risking life and limb. Get ready for the summer of love, the whoring twenties, etc. Or so I thought. Alas, it was not to be. Eurovision song contest antics lost out to the serious stuff, like case numbers and vaccine percentages in this article for the New Europan.

The decline of Social democracy

The New European asked me to shed a light on the baffling decline of social democratic parties in Europe, in the wake of Labour’s poor performance on Super Thursday in May. My unsurprising conclusion: it’s complicated…

Dutch elections take

I got this Dutch pre-election analysis for The New European mostly right, but than again it wasn’t rocket science: Long-serving Dutch PM Mark Rutte gained seats, and so did the far-right. I didn’t see the gain for the so-called progressive liberals of D66 coming but don’t think it’s particularly significant. Further fragmentation and the far-right turn are.

Book chapter: bodies in conflict

And now for something completely different. I contributed a chapter to the book Bodies of Evidence, edited by Gurtum Ertem and Sandra Noeth, associated with Tanzhaus nrw Düsseldorf, published by Passagen Verlag. My contribution: Being There: Journalists and Dead Bodies in Conflict. A rollicking read.

Dutch collectors go for private museums – FT

It’s OK again to flaunt your wealth in the Netherlands as art collectors open a rash of new private museums. A piece for FT Wealth