https://4edu.info/api.php?action=feedcontributions&user=Eng&feedformat=atom4EDU - User contributions [en]2024-03-28T15:10:27ZUser contributionsMediaWiki 1.37.1https://4edu.info/index.php?title=En_el_instituto&diff=1952En el instituto2011-02-10T09:10:47Z<p>Eng: /* Recreation */</p>
<hr />
<div>Consulta el [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 mapa] para ver donde se sitúa el IIRE. Sobre el mapa también se indica el distribuidor de billetes más cercano, el supermercado, las líneas de autobús y tranvía, la oficina de cambio y la piscina. <br />
<br />
== Wifi ==<br />
Internet es accesible en todo el edificio mediante Wi-fi. Las redes son "IIRE Bedrooms", "Flores", "Ambón" y "Lombok" - la contraseña es la misma para todas: indonesia.<br />
<br />
== KeyCards ==<br />
Si están en una de las habitaciones del IIRE, su tarjeta les da acceso al instituto por la puerta principal. Si están en una habitación StayOkay (solamente para un grupo numeroso), deben entrar por la entrada principal del StayOkay (del otro lado del edificio). <br />
<br />
== Distribuidor de billetes ==<br />
El distribuidor de billetes más cercano está en Sumatrastraat, exactamente antes del Javastraat. Tome a la derecha saliendo del IIRF luego a la derecha aún cuando llegan sobre Borneostraat (allí donde pasan los tranvías) y la primera sobre su izquierda es Sumatrastraat. <br />
<br />
== Pasearse == <br />
=== Transportes públicos ===<br />
<br />
A partir del verano de 2010, la llamada 'OV-chipkaart' es el único billete válido en el transporte público en Amsterdam (exceptuando los trenes, donde aún se pueden utilizar billetes de papel). La chipkaart es una tarjeta electrónica que hay que recargar con dinero, y que se va gastando en cada uso. Hay que pasar la tarjeta por el sensor al subir al transporte y al bajar de él. Se puede obtener la tarjeta (anónima)en el "GVB innfo" en Central Station, y puede recargarse en muchos puntos de la ciudad (por ejemplo en los supermercados Albert Heijn)<br />
<br />
- En los autobuses y tranvías aún puedes comprar billetes de una hora (2,60€) o 24 horas (7€). Para ir en metro necesitarás la chipkaart.<br />
<br />
- Los autobuses, los tranvías y el metro circulan de 6h a 0h30. durante la noche hay autobuses de noches (menos frecuentes). <br />
<br />
- El tranvía 14 va de Timorplein al centro (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan). <br />
<br />
- El autobús 22 va de Javaplein a Central Estación. <br />
<br />
- El tranvía 3 va de Muiderpoort a Albert Cuypstraat y Museumsplein. - La estación Muiderpoort estación puede ser práctica para encontrar un tren que va al aeropuerto, a central estación y demás. Ver los horarios [http://ns.nl/servlet/Satellite?cid=1083234338201&pagename=www.ns.nl%2FPlanner%2Fplannerplus2stap&p=1083234338201〈=en aquí] <br />
<br />
- Si no ver [http://www.gvb.nl/english/travellers/touristguide/espanol/Pages/bienvenido.aspx la guía espanol sobre el transporte en público en Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
=== Alquiler de bicicletas === <br />
es posible alquilar bicicletas al StayOkay.<br />
<br />
== Lavandería == <br />
no hay lavandería para los visitantes pero es posible utilizar el del StayOkay, las fichas pueden comprarse a la recepción de éste. <br />
<br />
== Recreacion == <br />
=== Cinema === <br />
El [http://www.studio-k.nu Estudio K arte cinema ] situado en el mismo complejo oferta de los precios reducidos (5,50/6,00 euro) para los tenedores de keycards IIRF o StayOkay. Se subtitulan todas las películas extranjeras hacia lo neerlandais.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1951Practical Information2011-02-10T08:52:34Z<p>Eng: /* Recreation */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
* Buses, trams and metro run from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
* See also [http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/ Information on public transportation in the Netherlands]<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There are no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception at StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums, canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are Dutch subtitled.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1950Practical Information2011-02-10T08:51:44Z<p>Eng: /* Laundry */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
* Buses, trams and metro run from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
* See also [http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/ Information on public transportation in the Netherlands]<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There are no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception at StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1949Practical Information2011-02-10T08:51:12Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
* Buses, trams and metro run from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
* See also [http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/ Information on public transportation in the Netherlands]<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1948Practical Information2011-02-10T08:50:49Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
* Buses, trams and metro run from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
* See also [http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/Information on public transportation in the Netherlands]<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1947Practical Information2011-02-10T08:49:45Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
* Buses, trams and metro run from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
* See also [http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/]<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1946Practical Information2011-02-10T08:48:03Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
* Buses, trams and metro run from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1945Practical Information2011-02-10T08:45:42Z<p>Eng: /* ATM */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat. The ATM is on your left hand side.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.)<br />
<br />
* Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumsplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Practical_Information&diff=1944Practical Information2011-02-10T08:44:38Z<p>Eng: /* Internet access */</p>
<hr />
<div>Feel free to add information to this page (create account on the top right to edit). If you know French or Spanish, please help us translate this information into these languages by updating [[Des informations pratiques]] and [[Informaciones practicas]].<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Internet access==<br />
There is wireless internet throughout the building. The networks are "Ambon", "Lombok", "Flores" and "IIRE Bedrooms" - the password for all of them is "indonesia".<br />
<br />
In the library there is a computer with internet access, free to use for visitors (whenever staff is present)<br />
<br />
You will also find WLAN outlets throughout the building.<br />
<br />
==Rooms / KeyCards==<br />
Everybody staying at the IIRE will get a key card which opens the front door and the door to your room. Cards will be de-activated at 10.00 at the day of departure, by when the room should be left and emptied.<br />
<br />
You do not need to bring sleeping bag or bedding. But you will have to bring your own towel.<br />
<br />
==Library==<br />
The IIRE library is open whenever staff is present. Books can not be removed from the building, but you are welcome to take photocopies for 10 cents per copy.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50.<br />
<br />
* On buses and trams you can buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.)<br />
<br />
* Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night buses. Night bus 359 runs from the Central Station to Javaplein, near the IIRE.<br />
<br />
* Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
* Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
* Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumsplein.<br />
<br />
* The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
* See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
* See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1790Global Justice School 20102010-12-01T17:53:39Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
*[[reading materials on the capitalist crisis]]<br />
Stéphanie Treillet FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
*[[reading materials on women and the crisis]]<br />
Terry Conway ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
*[http://www.cadtm.org/Third-World-Debt Third World Debt,its causes and consequences]<br />
Pauline Imbach FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
*[[Outline lecture]]<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
*[[Reading materials on migration and the crisis]]<br />
Murray Smith ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerretsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
*[[Reading materials on the crisis of the world order]]<br />
Gilbert Achcar ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
*[[Reading materials on the crisis and identities]]<br />
Peter Drucker ENGLISH<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
*[[Reading materials Marx]]<br />
Alain Tondeur FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
*[[Reading materials food crisis]]<br />
Esther Vivas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
*[[Readings on climate]]<br />
Marijke ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
*[[Reading materilas on ecosocialism]]<br />
Laurent Garrouste FRENCH <br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''Social movements and our fight for another society''': unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
*[[Readings on social movements]]<br />
Penny Duggan ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''Historical overview and discussion on parties''': why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
*[[Reading materials on parties]]<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''Neoliberal crisis, social struggle and political alternative in Latin America'''<br><br />
Key words <br />
• Imperialism <br />
• Experiences of change (and their limits) in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador <br />
• Social-liberalism in Brazil and other countries <br />
• Indianism and development model<br />
• Discussion on “socialism of the XXIst century <br><br />
We will take on three themes <br><br />
1) Imperialism in Latin America under Obama <br><br />
2) Left governments and class struggle in Latin America <br><br />
3) Political alternatives and the debates on “socialism of the XXIst century”<br> <br />
*[[reading materials]]<br />
Franck Gaudichaud SPANISH/FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''BRIC, Asia and the global crisis''': the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
*[[Reading materials on BRIC, Asia ]]<br />
Pierre Rousset ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''The crisis and Europe''': the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
*[[Reading materials on the crisis and Europe]]<br />
Léon Crémieux FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''Plan, market and democracy''': a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
*[[Reading materials on plan, market and democracy]]<br />
Catherine Samary FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''Why internationalism and why an international''': historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
*[[reading materials on internationalism]]<br />
Léon Crémieux FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
'''Final global and individual evaluation''' by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1544Global Justice School 20102010-11-17T14:55:06Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
<br />
Stéphanie Treillet FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
<br />
Terry Conway ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
Myriam Bourgy FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
<br />
Murray Smith ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerritsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
<br />
Gilbert Achcar ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
<br />
Peter Drucker ENGLISH<br />
* [[Communist Manifesto Chapter II]]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article622 Gilbert Achcar, "Marxists and Religion - yesterday and today", ''International Viewpoint'', 2005]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article177 World Congress Fourth International Lesbian Gay Liberation]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1673 Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands ]<br />
* [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7016 self-organization, self-emancipation and identity ]<br />
* [http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/1962 Arab Sexualities ]<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
<br />
Alain Tondeur<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
<br />
Esther Vivas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
<br />
Marijke Colle ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1837 Mobilization for the climate and anti-capitalist strategy - Daniel Tanuro ]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1580 The energy climate plan of Barack Obama - Tanuro - December 2008 ]<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
<br />
Laurent Garrouste <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
Social movements and our fight for another society: unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
<br />
Penny Duggan<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
Historical overview and discussion on parties: why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
[[Strategies of transformation in Latin America]]: popular movements, electoral processes, progressive governments, to what extent can we see a break with imperialism and neo-liberalism? What are the challenges before us: the relationship between the left and social movements, “pachamamismo” and indigenous movement, the coup in Honduras, the situation in Venezuela, a return of the right? The discussion on “socialism of the XXIth century”. What are the possibilities and what is the importance of international solidarity campaigns in Europe and elsewhere.<br />
Franck Gaudichaud<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
BRIC, Asia and the global crisis: the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
<br />
Pierre Rousset<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and Europe: the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
Plan, market and democracy: a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
<br />
Catherine Samary <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
Why internationalism and why an international: historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
Final global and individual evaluation by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Communist_Manifesto_Chapter_II&diff=1543Communist Manifesto Chapter II2010-11-17T14:53:40Z<p>Eng: Created page with 'Communist Manifesto Chapter II The Communists are further reproached with desiring to abolish countries and nationality. The working men have no country. We cannot take from th…'</p>
<hr />
<div>Communist Manifesto Chapter II<br />
<br />
The Communists are further reproached with desiring to abolish countries and nationality.<br />
<br />
The working men have no country. We cannot take from them what they have not got. Since the proletariat must first of all acquire political supremacy, must rise to be the leading class of the nation, must constitute itself the nation, it is so far, itself national, though not in the bourgeois sense of the word.<br />
<br />
National differences and antagonism between peoples are daily more and more vanishing, owing to the development of the bourgeoisie, to freedom of commerce, to the world market, to uniformity in the mode of production and in the conditions of life corresponding thereto. <br />
The supremacy of the proletariat will cause them to vanish still faster. United action, of the leading civilised countries at least, is one of the first conditions for the emancipation of the proletariat.<br />
<br />
In proportion as the exploitation of one individual by another will also be put an end to, the exploitation of one nation by another will also be put an end to. In proportion as the antagonism between classes within the nation vanishes, the hostility of one nation to another will come to an end.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1540Global Justice School 20102010-11-17T14:39:10Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
<br />
Stéphanie Treillet<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
<br />
Terry Conway <br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
Myriam Bourgy <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
<br />
Murray Smith <br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerritsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
<br />
Gilbert Achcar<br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
<br />
Peter Drucker ENGLISH<br />
* [http://4edu.info/index.php/File:EN_GJS10_1_Communist_Manifesto_Chapter_II.doc]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article622 Gilbert Achcar, "Marxists and Religion - yesterday and today", ''International Viewpoint'', 2005]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article177 World Congress Fourth International Lesbian Gay Liberation]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1673 Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands ]<br />
* [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7016 self-organization, self-emancipation and identity ]<br />
* [http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/1962 Arab Sexualities ]<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
<br />
Alain Tondeur<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
<br />
Esther Vivas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
<br />
Marijke Colle ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1837 Mobilization for the climate and anti-capitalist strategy - Daniel Tanuro ]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1580 The energy climate plan of Barack Obama - Tanuro - December 2008 ]<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
<br />
Laurent Garrouste <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
Social movements and our fight for another society: unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
<br />
Penny Duggan<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
Historical overview and discussion on parties: why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
[[Strategies of transformation in Latin America]]: popular movements, electoral processes, progressive governments, to what extent can we see a break with imperialism and neo-liberalism? What are the challenges before us: the relationship between the left and social movements, “pachamamismo” and indigenous movement, the coup in Honduras, the situation in Venezuela, a return of the right? The discussion on “socialism of the XXIth century”. What are the possibilities and what is the importance of international solidarity campaigns in Europe and elsewhere.<br />
Franck Gaudichaud<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
BRIC, Asia and the global crisis: the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
<br />
Pierre Rousset<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and Europe: the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
Plan, market and democracy: a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
<br />
Catherine Samary <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
Why internationalism and why an international: historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
Final global and individual evaluation by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1536Global Justice School 20102010-11-17T14:35:08Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
<br />
Stéphanie Treillet<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
<br />
Terry Conway <br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
Myriam Bourgy <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
<br />
Murray Smith <br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerritsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
<br />
Gilbert Achcar<br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
<br />
Peter Drucker ENGLISH<br />
<br />
<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article622 Gilbert Achcar, "Marxists and Religion - yesterday and today", ''International Viewpoint'', 2005]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article177 World Congress Fourth International Lesbian Gay Liberation]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1673 Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands ]<br />
* [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7016 self-organization, self-emancipation and identity ]<br />
* [http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/1962 Arab Sexualities ]<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
<br />
Alain Tondeur<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
<br />
Esther Vivas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
<br />
Marijke Colle ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1837 Mobilization for the climate and anti-capitalist strategy - Daniel Tanuro ]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1580 The energy climate plan of Barack Obama - Tanuro - December 2008 ]<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
<br />
Laurent Garrouste <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
Social movements and our fight for another society: unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
<br />
Penny Duggan<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
Historical overview and discussion on parties: why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
[[Strategies of transformation in Latin America]]: popular movements, electoral processes, progressive governments, to what extent can we see a break with imperialism and neo-liberalism? What are the challenges before us: the relationship between the left and social movements, “pachamamismo” and indigenous movement, the coup in Honduras, the situation in Venezuela, a return of the right? The discussion on “socialism of the XXIth century”. What are the possibilities and what is the importance of international solidarity campaigns in Europe and elsewhere.<br />
Franck Gaudichaud<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
BRIC, Asia and the global crisis: the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
<br />
Pierre Rousset<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and Europe: the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
Plan, market and democracy: a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
<br />
Catherine Samary <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
Why internationalism and why an international: historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
Final global and individual evaluation by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1534Global Justice School 20102010-11-17T14:31:13Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
<br />
Stéphanie Treillet<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
<br />
Terry Conway <br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
Myriam Bourgy <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
<br />
Murray Smith <br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerritsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
<br />
Gilbert Achcar<br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
<br />
Peter Drucker ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* []<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article622 Gilbert Achcar, "Marxists and Religion - yesterday and today", ''International Viewpoint'', 2005]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article177 World Congress Fourth International Lesbian Gay Liberation]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1673 Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands ]<br />
* [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7016 self-organization, self-emancipation and identity ]<br />
* [http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/1962 Arab Sexualities ]<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
<br />
Alain Tondeur<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
<br />
Esther Vivas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
<br />
Marijke Colle ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1837 Mobilization for the climate and anti-capitalist strategy - Daniel Tanuro ]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1580 The energy climate plan of Barack Obama - Tanuro - December 2008 ]<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
<br />
Laurent Garrouste <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
Social movements and our fight for another society: unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
<br />
Penny Duggan<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
Historical overview and discussion on parties: why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
[[Strategies of transformation in Latin America]]: popular movements, electoral processes, progressive governments, to what extent can we see a break with imperialism and neo-liberalism? What are the challenges before us: the relationship between the left and social movements, “pachamamismo” and indigenous movement, the coup in Honduras, the situation in Venezuela, a return of the right? The discussion on “socialism of the XXIth century”. What are the possibilities and what is the importance of international solidarity campaigns in Europe and elsewhere.<br />
Franck Gaudichaud<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
BRIC, Asia and the global crisis: the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
<br />
Pierre Rousset<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and Europe: the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
Plan, market and democracy: a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
<br />
Catherine Samary <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
Why internationalism and why an international: historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
Final global and individual evaluation by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1533Global Justice School 20102010-11-17T14:30:39Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
<br />
Stéphanie Treillet<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
<br />
Terry Conway <br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
Myriam Bourgy <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
<br />
Murray Smith <br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerritsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
<br />
Gilbert Achcar<br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
<br />
Peter Drucker ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* [* [http://4edu.info/images/c/c0/Agrofuels.pdf Agrofuels. Towards a reality check of key areas]]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article622 Gilbert Achcar, "Marxists and Religion - yesterday and today", ''International Viewpoint'', 2005]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article177 World Congress Fourth International Lesbian Gay Liberation]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1673 Islam, sexuality and the politics of belonging in The Netherlands ]<br />
* [http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article7016 self-organization, self-emancipation and identity ]<br />
* [http://www.solidarity-us.org/node/1962 Arab Sexualities ]<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
<br />
Alain Tondeur<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
<br />
Esther Vivas SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
<br />
Marijke Colle ENGLISH<br />
<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1837 Mobilization for the climate and anti-capitalist strategy - Daniel Tanuro ]<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article1580 The energy climate plan of Barack Obama - Tanuro - December 2008 ]<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
<br />
Laurent Garrouste <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
Social movements and our fight for another society: unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
<br />
Penny Duggan<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
Historical overview and discussion on parties: why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
[[Strategies of transformation in Latin America]]: popular movements, electoral processes, progressive governments, to what extent can we see a break with imperialism and neo-liberalism? What are the challenges before us: the relationship between the left and social movements, “pachamamismo” and indigenous movement, the coup in Honduras, the situation in Venezuela, a return of the right? The discussion on “socialism of the XXIth century”. What are the possibilities and what is the importance of international solidarity campaigns in Europe and elsewhere.<br />
Franck Gaudichaud<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
BRIC, Asia and the global crisis: the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
<br />
Pierre Rousset<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and Europe: the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
Plan, market and democracy: a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
<br />
Catherine Samary <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
Why internationalism and why an international: historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
Final global and individual evaluation by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=Global_Justice_School_2010&diff=1513Global Justice School 20102010-11-17T11:39:22Z<p>Eng: /* Module 1 The global economic crisis */</p>
<hr />
<div>'''27th of November – 18th of December 2010'''<br />
<br />
Arrivals are expected on Saturday 27th of November, departures are scheduled on Saturday 18th of December, after a detailed evaluation and general cleaning.<br />
The school is organized in three separate modules. Participants, who can not stay the whole three weeks, can choose to attend only one or two modules.<br />
<br />
== Module 1 The global economic crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 28th of November and Monday 29th of November'''<br />
<br />
The global economic crisis: a Marxist analysis of the actual crisis and a reminder of the previous crises of global capitalism. This will be the foundation and the global framework of the whole school.<br />
<br />
Stéphanie Treillet<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 30th of November'''<br />
<br />
Women and the global crisis: the document produced for the last World Congress as the starting point. Social problems, migration, wars and violence against women, the rise of patriarchal religious rules against women, attacks on abortion rights, the climate crisis and food sovereignty, all these problems affect women in a specific way.<br />
<br />
Terry Conway <br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''Evening on the debt crisis: with a lecturer from the CADTM''' <br />
<br />
Myriam Bourgy <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 1st of December'''<br />
<br />
The ‘new’ working class: definition of working class and class consciousness, an overview of the history of trade-unionism and of the formation of working class parties should be part of the introduction, linked with a brief history of the Internationals. New problems concerning class consciousness, class identity and fragmentation of the working class will also be discussed.<br />
<br />
Louis-Marie Barnier<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 2nd of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and migration: a short theoretical and historical approach, analysis of the gender dimension, legal and illegal immigrants, war and climate migrants. The political questions linked to migration: fortress Europe, militarisation of borders (Mexico), racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia, divisions in the working class, the fights of undocumented workers and of ‘illegal’ immigrants (USA, Europe), the rise of extreme right movements and parties.<br />
<br />
Murray Smith <br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 3rd of December'''<br />
<br />
Day off, possibility for participants of a walking tour in Amsterdam: Rob Gerritsen<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 4th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis of the world order, imperialism today: Lenin’s classical analysis, the dominance of American imperialism today, the role of European imperialism, geopolitics, the changing roles of ‘emerging’ economies (China in Africa, Brazil in South America…).<br />
<br />
Gilbert Achcar<br />
<br />
ENGLISH <br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 5th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and identities, religious, ethnic, sexual: those identities play different roles and are subject to different dynamics in the current crisis. Religion as a progressive or a reactionary force; ethnicity as a new field of struggles (indigenous peoples and their rights); nationalism (our classical analysis applied today) in a globalised world; how do sexual identities and LGBTI struggles express themselves in different parts of the world.<br />
* [http://www.internationalviewpoint.org/spip.php?article622 Gilbert Achcar, "Marxists and Religion - yesterday and today", ''International Viewpoint'', 2005]<br />
<br />
Peter Drucker<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
== Module 2 The ecological crisis ==<br />
<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 6th of December'''<br />
<br />
Revisiting Marx (and Engels) on nature: what is Marx’s vision on the relationship between humanity and nature? Was Marxist a “productivist”? The development of the workers movement and its vision on progress and on the relationship between man and nature will be part of a historical overview.<br />
<br />
Alain Tondeur<br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 7th of December'''<br />
<br />
Food crisis, food sovereignty, peasant movements: the economic crisis and the ecological crisis ; new role of anticapitalist peasant organisations and indigenous peoples, impact of the food crisis for the rural and urban poor in the Global South, link with agricultural policies in Europe and the USA.<br />
<br />
Esther Vivas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 8th of December'''<br />
<br />
The climate crisis explained: the scientific evidence and explanation of this climate crisis, its roots in the capitalist mode of production, what and how do we campaign against this crisis. This conference is mainly based, concerning the political part, on the resolution of the World Congress.<br />
<br />
Marijke Colle<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 9th of December'''<br />
<br />
What is ecosocialism: our socialist program revisited in the framework of the global ecological crisis; why change from socialism to ecosocialism? Dialectics between means and aims, technology is not neutral, link between social justice and ecological justice. Which type of structural measures, which type of production and consumption? <br />
<br />
Laurent Garrouste <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 10th of December'''<br />
<br />
Guided tour of the IISH (International Institute of Social History) by Marcel Van der Linden<br />
<br />
<br />
== Module 3 Strategy, program and the building of parties ==<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 11th of December'''<br />
Social movements and our fight for another society: unions are amongst the first mass social movements; the women’s movement, the global justice movements, mass campaigns (against the war, against climate change…) are an important field of our intervention. What is the importance of these movements for our ecosocialist and feminist project? What is the link with our building of parties?<br />
<br />
Penny Duggan<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Sunday 12th of December'''<br />
<br />
Historical overview and discussion on parties: why parties? What kind of parties? History of the worker’s parties, differences with bourgeois parties; what is a contemporary interpretation of a Leninist party? Recent experiences in building parties.<br />
<br />
Josep-Maria Antentas<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Monday 13th of December'''<br />
<br />
[[Strategies of transformation in Latin America]]: popular movements, electoral processes, progressive governments, to what extent can we see a break with imperialism and neo-liberalism? What are the challenges before us: the relationship between the left and social movements, “pachamamismo” and indigenous movement, the coup in Honduras, the situation in Venezuela, a return of the right? The discussion on “socialism of the XXIth century”. What are the possibilities and what is the importance of international solidarity campaigns in Europe and elsewhere.<br />
Franck Gaudichaud<br />
<br />
SPANISH<br />
<br />
'''• Tuesday 14th of December'''<br />
<br />
BRIC, Asia and the global crisis: the new specific characteristics of Asia, its growing importance in the global crisis; an insight in our political work and new perspectives in party building.<br />
<br />
Pierre Rousset<br />
<br />
ENGLISH<br />
<br />
'''• Wednesday 15th of December'''<br />
<br />
The crisis and Europe: the economic and institutional crisis in Europe, new opportunities, new challenges in building broad anticapitalist parties, European campaigns, strategic problems in the European context.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Thursday 16th of December'''<br />
<br />
Plan, market and democracy: a balance sheet of the Stalinist centrally ‘planned’ societies, what do we mean by our project for socialist democracy? How much room for the market? What representation of the people? What is socialist ‘governance’?<br />
<br />
Catherine Samary <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Friday 17th of December'''<br />
<br />
Why internationalism and why an international: historical aspects of the four internationals; the F.I. today (see also ‘Role and tasks’ voted at the W.C.); globalisation and the appeal from Chavez.<br />
<br />
Léon Crémieux <br />
<br />
FRENCH<br />
<br />
'''• Saturday 18th of December'''<br />
<br />
Final global and individual evaluation by all participants and global cleaning!</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=User_talk:Eng&diff=1507User talk:Eng2010-10-22T07:16:58Z<p>Eng: Blanked the page</p>
<hr />
<div></div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=How_to_get_here&diff=1282How to get here2010-08-15T13:20:02Z<p>Eng: /* How to get tickets */</p>
<hr />
<div>The institute is located in the borough of Zeeburg in the Eastern part of Amsterdam. The address is, Lombokstraat 40, 1094AL AMSTERDAM.<br />
<br />
An interactive map indicating our location and surroundings is available [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&om=1&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.363218,4.936767&spn=0.008858,0.027852&z=16 here].<br />
<br />
===From the Airport===<br />
Arriving to Amsterdam Schiphol Airport you should take the train to Amsterdam Central Station. When you get to Schipol Airport, once you have passed through the “Nothing to declare” doors, you come out into the huge airport entrance hall. Here you will find plenty of machines selling train tickets and windows where you can buy tickets from a human being (next to the Starbucks coffee shop - 0,50 euro more expensive). (Don't worry: the signs say something like “Credit cards with PIN numbers only,” but you CAN pay cash, euros, of course.) There, ask for a ticket for Amsterdam Central Station - or Amsterdam Muiderpoort if you wish to take the train to the institute, and the ticket seller will tell you what time the next train is and which platform to get it on. From there you take the escalators down to the train platforms and take the train he/she has indicated. When you get to Amsterdam Central Station, there are both escalators and an elevator you can choose from on the platform (depending on how many bags you may have, for example) to go down to the hallway to the exit. <br />
<br />
===From the Central Station===<br />
From the Central Station you have two options:<br />
<br />
1) '''Take the train from Amsterdam Central Station to “Amsterdam Muiderpoort”.''' This is a short 5 minutes ride, but leaves you with a scant 10 minutes walk from the station to the Institute (see the map). A train ticket from Schiphol to Muiderpoort is 3,80 euros, from the Central Station it is 2,20 euros. If you arrive with Thalys or ICE you need to buy a new ticket at Amsterdam Central Station. <br />
<br />
2) '''Take a bus from outside the Central station.''' When you come out of the station, you'll see a lot of construction work being done (with temporary blue boards blocking it off). Above the construction (and the boards), you can see buildings in the distance. To your left is a large church with three towers and huge crosses on the top and a hotel with a large sign on the roof that says Barbizon Palace. Walk toward these two buildilngs, toward your left, crossing the tram tracks and then a small bridge over a canal. You're going to take bus #22, but DO NOT stop at the first bus stop you see that says 22. You have to cross the street and wait at the bus stop 22 on the other side of the street, where the church is. That's where Bus 22 going to Indische Buurt stops. The trip takes between 15 and 20 minutes. The stop you want is Javaplein, about the 12th stop (as a reference point, it's two stops after the Muidenpoort train station). The bus has an electronic sign that announces the names of the stop and the name also comes over the loudspeaker. You request a stop using the yellow buttons on the walls of the bus and next to the door. If the sign doesn't work, you can ask the driver to tell you when you get to Javaplein, plus you should count the stops and watch for the names on the side of the bus stops themselves. When you get off at Javaplein, cross the street and walk along Borneostraat. Currently, in February 2010, there is an enormous construction site on this street. After walking about 50 feet, you come to a fork in the road. Take the right fork, the side that has the tram tracks. At the second corner, Lombokstraat, turn right. Number 42 is the second door on the left. You've arrived!<br />
<br />
===From the centre or Amstel Station===<br />
If you will be somewhere in Amsterdam city centre, tramway number 14 (Direction Flevopark) runs through Jordaan, via Dam Square and Waterlooplein to the Institute. Get off at Zeeburgerdijk, from where you can see our building.<br />
<br />
From Amsterdam Amstel station (arrival point of Eurolines buses) you can either take the train or bus 15 or 37 to Muiderpoort station.<br />
<br />
[http://maps.google.nl/maps?ie=UTF8&t=h&layer=c&cbll=52.36542,4.936634&panoid=brILbi7oIEwWhRPsS9NmFg&cbp=12,260.94,,0,2.71&ll=52.365307,4.936637&spn=0,359.987748&z=17 See the entrance of the Institute with Google Maps Streetview (to the left)]<br />
<br />
===How to get tickets===<br />
As from summer 2010, the 'OV-chipkaart' is the only valid ticket on public transportation in Amsterdam (except on trains where paper tickets remain valid). The chipcard is an electronic pass that you load money on, which then deducts by use. You have to check in with the card and again to check out when you leave the bus/tram/metro. You can get an anonymous card at the "GVB info" at the Central Station, which can be reloaded at numerous locations throughout the city (including most Albert Heijn supermarkets). The card itself costs € 7,50. <br />
<br />
On buses and trams you can still buy 1 hour ( € 2,60) or 24 hours ( € 7,00) tickets on board. If you go by metro (not likely because of our location) you will need to have a chipkaart.<br />
<br />
==Parking==<br />
<br />
Paid parking is possible in the streets around the IIRE. The price is € 2.80 per hour Monday - Saturday 9.00-21.00 or € 14.40 for a full day (9.00 - 19.00).<br />
<br />
A more economic solution is to use the [http://www.bereikbaaramsterdam.nl/live/main.asp?name=pagina&p_en_r=true&item_id=1057 Zeeburg P+R] from where you can take bus 37.<br />
<br />
There are regular break in to cars in the neighbourhood, so we strongly encourage you to empty the car completely.<br />
<br />
There is free parking, without surveillance, at the Science Park (July 2010), 20 minutes walk from the institute. See the map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&om=1&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.356339,4.953289&spn=0.008545,0.027595&z=15&iwloc=00047d620c8f2c5206810 here]<br />
<br />
==See Also==<br />
[http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/ Dutch Journey Planner in English, with travel times and information]</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=User_talk:Eng&diff=1177User talk:Eng2010-04-01T07:58:44Z<p>Eng: </p>
<hr />
<div>Thanks for doing some needed proof reading! /Bertil.<br />
<br />
My pleasure, I think we need even more but that can be done later - thank you for keeping it updated! Eng</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=L42&diff=1176L422010-04-01T07:48:27Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>==General info==<br />
The address is: Lombokstraat 42, 1094AL Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
The house is the residence of Marijke (1st floor) and Alex (2nd floor). Marijke is the co-director of the IIRE and Alex the librarian. The guest room is located on second floor, next to the kitchenette. Users of the guest room share the kitchenette and the bathroom with Alex.<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Inside the house==<br />
<br />
Towels, duvets, sheets etc. are available in the guest room.<br />
<br />
There is no hired cleaning personnel, so please leave the rooms tidy and clean. You are also more than welcome to water the plant (if it is not already dead). <br />
<br />
===Wifi===<br />
The wifi from the IIRE reaches the house. The networks are "Ambon", "Flores" and "Lombok". Password for all networks is 'indonesia'.<br />
<br />
===Heating===<br />
Use the radiators. If it does not work properly, kindly ask Alex or Marijke to have a look at it.<br />
<br />
===Garbage===<br />
Please take your garbage with you. Ordinary garbage is disposed in the containers, to the right of the entrance. Paper and glass have to be sorted, and can be deposed on the other side of Borneostraat (the street where the tram runs).<br />
<br />
==Shopping==<br />
Javastraat has plenty of reasonably priced greengrocers, butchers, bakers etc. The nearest supermarkets are the Albert Heijn branches on Molukkenstraat and Javastraat (See [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362729,4.93564&spn=0.014047,0.036564&z=15&om=1 map]. All shops in this area are closed on Sundays, but most in the city centre will be open.<br />
<br />
The local Dappermarkt ([http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362956,4.931402&spn=0.007023,0.018282&z=16&om=1&iwloc=00043517b11cff431b1a2 here]) is reasonably priced and has a good selection of both food and non-food.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
- Tickets can be bought when boarding the bus or tram. It is however cheaper to buy a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Tariff_System#Strippenkaart Strippenkaart] in advance (can be bought from StayOkay frontdesk)<br />
<br />
- Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night busses<br />
<br />
- Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
- Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
- Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
- The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner [http://ns.nl/en/ here]and [http://www.9292ov.nl/ here]<br />
<br />
- See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
- See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums, canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
==When leaving==<br />
Please leave the place clean and tidy. If you leave in ordinary office hours, please drop by the IIRE office with your used beddings and the key. If nobody is around, please leave beddings and the keys visible in the room.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=L42&diff=1174L422010-04-01T07:48:09Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>==General info==<br />
The address is: Lombokstraat 42, 1094AL Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
The house is the residence of Marijke (1st floor) and Alex (2nd floor). Marijke is the co-director of the IIRE and Alex the librarian. The guest room is located on second floor, next to the kitchenette. Users of the guest room share the kitchenette and the bathroom with Alex.<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Inside the house==<br />
<br />
Towels, duvets, sheets etc. are available in the guest room.<br />
<br />
There is no hired cleaning personnel, so please leave the rooms tidy and clean. You are also more than welcome to water the plant (if it is not already dead). <br />
<br />
===Wifi===<br />
The wifi from the IIRE reaches the house. The networks are "Ambon", "Flores" and "Lombok". Password for all networks is 'indonesia'.<br />
<br />
===Heating===<br />
Use the radiators. If it does not work properly, kindly ask Alex or Marijke to have a look at it.<br />
<br />
===Garbage===<br />
Please take your garbage with you. Ordinary garbage is disposed in the containers, to the right of the entrance. Paper and glass have to be sorted, and can be deposed on the other side of Borneostraat (the street where the tram runs).<br />
<br />
==Shopping==<br />
Javastraat has plenty of reasonably priced greengrocers, butchers, bakers etc. The nearest supermarkets are the Albert Heijn branches on Molukkenstraat and Javastraat (See [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362729,4.93564&spn=0.014047,0.036564&z=15&om=1 map]. All shops in this area are closed on Sundays, but most in the city centre will be open.<br />
<br />
The local Dappermarkt ([http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362956,4.931402&spn=0.007023,0.018282&z=16&om=1&iwloc=00043517b11cff431b1a2 here]) is reasonably priced and has a good selection of both food and non-food.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
- Tickets can be bought when boarding the bus or tram. It is however cheaper to buy a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Tariff_System#Strippenkaart Strippenkaart] in advance (can be bought from StayOkay frontdesk)<br />
<br />
- Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night busses<br />
<br />
- Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
- Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
- Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
- The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]and [http://www.9292ov.nl/ here]<br />
<br />
- See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
- See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums, canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
==When leaving==<br />
Please leave the place clean and tidy. If you leave in ordinary office hours, please drop by the IIRE office with your used beddings and the key. If nobody is around, please leave beddings and the keys visible in the room.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=L42&diff=1173L422010-04-01T07:47:04Z<p>Eng: /* Public transportation */</p>
<hr />
<div>==General info==<br />
The address is: Lombokstraat 42, 1094AL Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
The house is the residence of Marijke (1st floor) and Alex (2nd floor). Marijke is the co-director of the IIRE and Alex the librarian. The guest room is located on second floor, next to the kitchenette. Users of the guest room share the kitchenette and the bathroom with Alex.<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Inside the house==<br />
<br />
Towels, duvets, sheets etc. are available in the guest room.<br />
<br />
There is no hired cleaning personnel, so please leave the rooms tidy and clean. You are also more than welcome to water the plant (if it is not already dead). <br />
<br />
===Wifi===<br />
The wifi from the IIRE reaches the house. The networks are "Ambon", "Flores" and "Lombok". Password for all networks is 'indonesia'.<br />
<br />
===Heating===<br />
Use the radiators. If it does not work properly, kindly ask Alex or Marijke to have a look at it.<br />
<br />
===Garbage===<br />
Please take your garbage with you. Ordinary garbage is disposed in the containers, to the right of the entrance. Paper and glass have to be sorted, and can be deposed on the other side of Borneostraat (the street where the tram runs).<br />
<br />
==Shopping==<br />
Javastraat has plenty of reasonably priced greengrocers, butchers, bakers etc. The nearest supermarkets are the Albert Heijn branches on Molukkenstraat and Javastraat (See [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362729,4.93564&spn=0.014047,0.036564&z=15&om=1 map]. All shops in this area are closed on Sundays, but most in the city centre will be open.<br />
<br />
The local Dappermarkt ([http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362956,4.931402&spn=0.007023,0.018282&z=16&om=1&iwloc=00043517b11cff431b1a2 here]) is reasonably priced and has a good selection of both food and non-food.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
- Tickets can be bought when boarding the bus or tram. It is however cheaper to buy a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Tariff_System#Strippenkaart Strippenkaart] in advance (can be bought from StayOkay frontdesk)<br />
<br />
- Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night busses<br />
<br />
- Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
- Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
- Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumplein.<br />
<br />
- The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
- See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
- See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums, canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
==When leaving==<br />
Please leave the place clean and tidy. If you leave in ordinary office hours, please drop by the IIRE office with your used beddings and the key. If nobody is around, please leave beddings and the keys visible in the room.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=L42&diff=1172L422010-04-01T07:46:22Z<p>Eng: /* Inside the house */</p>
<hr />
<div>==General info==<br />
The address is: Lombokstraat 42, 1094AL Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
The house is the residence of Marijke (1st floor) and Alex (2nd floor). Marijke is the co-director of the IIRE and Alex the librarian. The guest room is located on second floor, next to the kitchenette. Users of the guest room share the kitchenette and the bathroom with Alex.<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Inside the house==<br />
<br />
Towels, duvets, sheets etc. are available in the guest room.<br />
<br />
There is no hired cleaning personnel, so please leave the rooms tidy and clean. You are also more than welcome to water the plant (if it is not already dead). <br />
<br />
===Wifi===<br />
The wifi from the IIRE reaches the house. The networks are "Ambon", "Flores" and "Lombok". Password for all networks is 'indonesia'.<br />
<br />
===Heating===<br />
Use the radiators. If it does not work properly, kindly ask Alex or Marijke to have a look at it.<br />
<br />
===Garbage===<br />
Please take your garbage with you. Ordinary garbage is disposed in the containers, to the right of the entrance. Paper and glass have to be sorted, and can be deposed on the other side of Borneostraat (the street where the tram runs).<br />
<br />
==Shopping==<br />
Javastraat has plenty of reasonably priced greengrocers, butchers, bakers etc. The nearest supermarkets are the Albert Heijn branches on Molukkenstraat and Javastraat (See [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362729,4.93564&spn=0.014047,0.036564&z=15&om=1 map]. All shops in this area are closed on Sundays, but most in the city centre will be open.<br />
<br />
The local Dappermarkt ([http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362956,4.931402&spn=0.007023,0.018282&z=16&om=1&iwloc=00043517b11cff431b1a2 here]) is reasonably priced and has a good selection of both food and non-food.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
- Tickets can be bought when boarding the bus or tram. It is however cheaper to buy a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Tariff_System#Strippenkaart Strippenkaart] in advance (can be bought from StayOkay frontdesk)<br />
<br />
- Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night busses<br />
<br />
- Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
- Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
- Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumsplein.<br />
<br />
- The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
- See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
- See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums, canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
==When leaving==<br />
Please leave the place clean and tidy. If you leave in ordinary office hours, please drop by the IIRE office with your used beddings and the key. If nobody is around, please leave beddings and the keys visible in the room.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=L42&diff=1171L422010-04-01T07:44:58Z<p>Eng: /* Recreation */</p>
<hr />
<div>==General info==<br />
The address is: Lombokstraat 42, 1094AL Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
The house is the residence of Marijke (1st floor) and Alex (2nd floor). Marijke is the co-director of the IIRE and Alex the librarian. The guest room is located on second floor, next to the kitchenette. Users of the guest room share the kitchenette and the bathroom with Alex.<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Inside the house==<br />
<br />
Towels, duvets, sheets etc. is available in the guest room.<br />
<br />
There is no hired cleaning personnel, so please leave the rooms tidy and clean. You are also more than welcome to water the plants (if they are not already dead). <br />
<br />
===Wifi===<br />
The wifi from the IIRE reaches the house. The networks are "Ambon", "Flores" and "Lombok". Password for both networks is 'indonesia'.<br />
<br />
===Heating===<br />
Use the radiators. If it does not work properly, kindly ask Alex or Marijke to have a look at it.<br />
<br />
===Garbage===<br />
Please take your garbage with you. Ordinary garbage is disposed in the containers, to the right of the entrance. Paper and glass have to be sorted, and can be deposed on the other side of Borneostraat (the street where the tram runs).<br />
<br />
==Shopping==<br />
Javastraat has plenty of reasonably priced greengrocers, butchers, bakers etc. The nearest supermarkets are the Albert Heijn branches on Molukkenstraat and Javastraat (See [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362729,4.93564&spn=0.014047,0.036564&z=15&om=1 map]. All shops in this area are closed on Sundays, but most in the city centre will be open.<br />
<br />
The local Dappermarkt ([http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362956,4.931402&spn=0.007023,0.018282&z=16&om=1&iwloc=00043517b11cff431b1a2 here]) is reasonably priced and has a good selection of both food and non-food.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
- Tickets can be bought when boarding the bus or tram. It is however cheaper to buy a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Tariff_System#Strippenkaart Strippenkaart] in advance (can be bought from StayOkay frontdesk)<br />
<br />
- Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night busses<br />
<br />
- Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
- Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
- Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumsplein.<br />
<br />
- The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
- See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
- See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums, canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
==When leaving==<br />
Please leave the place clean and tidy. If you leave in ordinary office hours, please drop by the IIRE office with your used beddings and the key. If nobody is around, please leave beddings and the keys visible in the room.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=L42&diff=1170L422010-04-01T07:42:55Z<p>Eng: /* General info */</p>
<hr />
<div>==General info==<br />
The address is: Lombokstraat 42, 1094AL Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
The house is the residence of Marijke (1st floor) and Alex (2nd floor). Marijke is the co-director of the IIRE and Alex the librarian. The guest room is located on second floor, next to the kitchenette. Users of the guest room share the kitchenette and the bathroom with Alex.<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
Please see the interactive map [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.36352,4.936423&spn=0.006761,0.01133&z=16&om=1 here] to see the location of the IIRE. On the map you can also see the nearest ATM's post office, supermarket, public transportation, exchange bureau, swimming pool.<br />
<br />
==Inside the house==<br />
<br />
Towels, duvets, sheets etc. is available in the guest room.<br />
<br />
There is no hired cleaning personnel, so please leave the rooms tidy and clean. You are also more than welcome to water the plants (if they are not already dead). <br />
<br />
===Wifi===<br />
The wifi from the IIRE reaches the house. The networks are "Ambon", "Flores" and "Lombok". Password for both networks is 'indonesia'.<br />
<br />
===Heating===<br />
Use the radiators. If it does not work properly, kindly ask Alex or Marijke to have a look at it.<br />
<br />
===Garbage===<br />
Please take your garbage with you. Ordinary garbage is disposed in the containers, to the right of the entrance. Paper and glass have to be sorted, and can be deposed on the other side of Borneostraat (the street where the tram runs).<br />
<br />
==Shopping==<br />
Javastraat has plenty of reasonably priced greengrocers, butchers, bakers etc. The nearest supermarkets are the Albert Heijn branches on Molukkenstraat and Javastraat (See [http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362729,4.93564&spn=0.014047,0.036564&z=15&om=1 map]. All shops in this area are closed on Sundays, but most in the city centre will be open.<br />
<br />
The local Dappermarkt ([http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.362956,4.931402&spn=0.007023,0.018282&z=16&om=1&iwloc=00043517b11cff431b1a2 here]) is reasonably priced and has a good selection of both food and non-food.<br />
<br />
==ATM==<br />
The nearest ATM is at Sumatrastraat, just before Javastraat. Turn right from the IIRE front door, right again when you reach Borneostraat (where the tram rails run) and the first to your left is Sumatrastraat.<br />
<br />
==Getting around==<br />
<br />
See also [[How to get here]]<br />
<br />
===Public transportation===<br />
- Tickets can be bought when boarding the bus or tram. It is however cheaper to buy a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Tariff_System#Strippenkaart Strippenkaart] in advance (can be bought from StayOkay frontdesk)<br />
<br />
- Busses, trams and metro runs from 06.00 to 00.30. In the night there is a less regular service of night busses<br />
<br />
- Tram 14 runs from Timorplein to the city centre (Waterlooplein, Dam, Jordaan)<br />
<br />
- Bus 22 runs from Javaplein to the Central Station<br />
<br />
- Tram 3 runs from Muiderpoort to Albert Cuypstraat and Museumsplein.<br />
<br />
- The Amsterdam Muiderpoort station can be handy for trains connecting to the airport, the central station and other destinations. There is a journey planner at [http://ns.nl/en/ here]<br />
<br />
- See [http://www.gvb.nl/english/Pages/default.aspx English language information on public transportation in Amsterdam]<br />
<br />
- See [http://ns.nl/cs/Satellite/travellers Information on trains in the Netherlands] for schedules and fares. At most train stations tickets can only be bought at the vending machine, which usually accepts neither bills nor foreign cards. You should therefore make sure to have sufficient coins with you.<br />
<br />
===Bike rental===<br />
It is possible to rent bikes from StayOkay.<br />
<br />
==Laundry==<br />
There is no laundry facilities available for visitors. It is possible to do laundry at StayOkay, tokens can be bought from the reception.<br />
<br />
==Recreation==<br />
<br />
The IIRE has a folder with information about Amsterdam. The StayOkay reception is equally helpful, and they sell tickets to museums canal cruises etc.<br />
<br />
===Cinema===<br />
The [http://www.studio-k.nu Studio K art cinema] located in the same complex offers reduced price (5,50 / 6,00 euro) for holders of IIRE and StayOkay keycards. All foreign language movies are subtitled into Dutch.<br />
<br />
===Other Sources===<br />
<br />
The [http://www.iamsterdam.com/ I Amsterdam website] has lots of up to date information on what is happening in Amsterdam.<br />
<br />
==When leaving==<br />
Please leave the place clean and tidy. If you leave in ordinary office hours, please drop by the IIRE office with your used beddings and the key. If nobody is around, please leave beddings and the keys visible in the room.</div>Enghttps://4edu.info/index.php?title=How_to_get_here&diff=642How to get here2009-09-10T11:02:19Z<p>Eng: </p>
<hr />
<div>The institute is located in the borough of Zeeburg in the Eastern part of Amsterdam. The address is, Lombokstraat 40, 1094AL AMSTERDAM.<br />
<br />
An interactive map indicating our location and surroundings is available here:<br />
<br />
http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=tr&msa=0&msid=102375251611905308015.000435176b3db4c543499&ll=52.363218,4.936767&spn=0.005621,0.020084&z=16&om=1<br />
<br />
<br />
Arriving to Amsterdam Schiphol Airport you should take the train to Amsterdam Central Station.<br />
<br />
From the Central Station you have two options:<br />
<br />
1) Take the train from Amsterdam Central Station to “Amsterdam Muiderpoort”. This is a short 5 minutes ride, but leaves you with a scant 10 minutes walk from the station to the Institute (see the map) A train ticket from Schiphol to Muiderpoort is 3,80 euros. If you arrive with Thalys or ICE you need to buy a new ticket at Amsterdam CS. <br />
<br />
2) Leave the station and take the number 22 bus from in front of the church (on the other side of the road). The bus is in the direction of Indische Burt. You should get off at the stop Javaplein (about 20 minutes). From Java plein you cross the road and go down Borneostraat and Lombokstraat is send on the right. You should see quite qickly the big old school that is the building that houses among others our Institute. You can buy the ticket in the bus.<br />
<br />
If you will be somewhere in Amsterdam city centre, tramway number 14 (Direction Flevopark) runs through Jordaan, via Dam Square and Waterlooplein to the Institute. Get off at Zeeburgerdijk, from where you can see our building.<br />
<br />
From Amsterdam Amstel station (arrival point of Eurolines buses) you can either take the train or bus 15 or 37 to Muiderpoort station.<br />
<br />
[http://maps.google.nl/maps?ie=UTF8&t=h&layer=c&cbll=52.36542,4.936634&panoid=brILbi7oIEwWhRPsS9NmFg&cbp=12,260.94,,0,2.71&ll=52.365307,4.936637&spn=0,359.987748&z=17 See the entrance with Google Maps Streetview (to the left)]<br />
<br />
==Parking==<br />
<br />
Paid parking is possible in the streets around the IIRE. The price is € 2.40 per hour Monday - Saturday 9.00-21.00 or € 14.40 for a full day.<br />
<br />
A more economic solution is to use the [http://www.bereikbaaramsterdam.nl/live/main.asp?name=pagina&p_en_r=true&item_id=1057 Zeeburg P+R] from where you can take bus 37.<br />
<br />
There are regular break in to cars in neighbourhood, so we strongly encourage you to empty the car completely.<br />
<br />
==See Also==<br />
[http://journeyplanner.9292.nl/ Dutch Journey Planner in English]</div>Eng