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Category Archives: Uncategorized
Amnesty International Slum Stories in Cambodia
In 2010 and 2011 film director Chris Kelly produced five short documentaries for Amnesty International about the lives of people coping with the consequences of forced evictions in Cambodia. We have gathered all five films here just in case you … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged AIDs, boeung kak, boeung kak lake, borei keila, buddhism, cambodia, Cambodian, cause, chris Kelly, christo hird, corruption, corruption of religion, Danielle Di Giacomo, destructive development, development, documentary, documentary photography, drug abuse, Edwina Forkin, evictions, film, forced evictions, foreign policy, HIV, human rights, human rights defenders, Hun Sen, impunity, inclusive development, John Vink, Jonathan Oppenheim, Khmer, Khmer diasporas, land rights, Loun Sovath, magnum photographs, monk, multimedia monk, nick cave, Nicolas Axelrod, non-violent protest, northern Ireland screen, of, peaceful protests, phnom penh, photo, photography, photojournalism, police brutality, police violence, progress, prostitution, protest, protests, religion, rule of law, Siem Reap, south east asia, tep vanny, Theravada Buddhism, violence, warren ellis, woman leadership, woman’s rights, women leaders, world bank Village 1 in Boeung Kak is slated to be evicted to make way for the railway development.
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Venerable Loun Sovath
“We Buddhists must find the courage to leave our temples and enter the temples of contemporary human experience, temples that are filled with suffering. If we listen to the Buddha, Christ or Gandhi, we can do nothing else. The refugee … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged AIDs, boeung kak, boeung kak lake, borei keila, buddhism, cambodia, Cambodian, cause, chris Kelly, christo hird, corruption, corruption of religion, Danielle Di Giacomo, destructive development, development, documentary, documentary photography, drug abuse, Edwina Forkin, evictions, film, forced evictions, foreign policy, HIV, human rights, human rights defenders, Hun Sen, impunity, inclusive development, John Vink, Jonathan Oppenheim, Khmer, Khmer diasporas, land rights, Loun Sovath, magnum photographs, monk, multimedia monk, nick cave, Nicolas Axelrod, non-violent protest, northern Ireland screen, of, peaceful protests, phnom penh, photo, photography, photojournalism, police brutality, police violence, progress, prostitution, protest, protests, religion, rule of law, Siem Reap, south east asia, tep vanny, Theravada Buddhism, violence, warren ellis, woman leadership, woman’s rights, women leaders, world bank
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Article from author Darran Anderson about ‘The Cause of Progress’
Check out this very interesting article from author Darran Anderson on his time spent in Cambodia last year.
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