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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Featured

Privatisation through the back door

March 6, 2012 by Suzanne O'Connell 2 Comments

The messages that have come out of the recent demonstrations in Valencia are not just about the effect of the cutbacks on schools and the poor spending decisions of the Valencian government. Even police brutality is only a small part of the story. There is also the underlying accusation that private schools, unlike the state sector, are having their budgets protected. This is not an austerity measure. This is a political spending decision that will create a trend of irreversible privitisation of schools. And it’s not just in Spain. The coalition government in the UK is responsible for something very similar. As school budgets are squeezed and the UK braces for more cut backs, the … [Read more...] about Privatisation through the back door

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog, Spain News Tagged With: education in spain, education privatisation, public services, school protests, spain austerity measures, spain cut backs, spain economy, spain politics, student protests, valencia student protests

Rajoy’s smoke and mirrors have worked – for now, at least

March 6, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe 2 Comments

If we have learnt anything about Spain’s new prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, since he took power in December, it’s that his reputation for being anything but straightforward when conveying his intentions is well deserved. Rajoy has often been portrayed as the embodiment of retranca, a tendency his fellow Galicians are known for to answer questions with ambiguity and multiple meanings. The first two months of his tenure have seen Rajoy behave every bit like the stereotypical Galician. An early example of this was when the prime minister deployed his front-line ministers to announce a major tax increase, just days after himself announcing that “my intention is not to raise taxes.” And now … [Read more...] about Rajoy’s smoke and mirrors have worked – for now, at least

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: EU, euro crisis, francoise hollande, Mariano Rajoy, merkel, Partido Popular, peoples party, popular party, sarkozy, spain austerity, spain deficit, spain economy, spain politics, spain sprending cuts, spain tax, tax hikes

La Liga: Higuaín proves his worth once again

March 5, 2012 by Halima Ali Leave a Comment

The scrawny 19-year-old with the big hair salvaged the ball from the sidelines when 85,000 others in the stadium thought it had gone out of play, played a nice one-two with José Antonio Reyes and slotted the ball into the back of the net to send the fans wild. It was a last minute winner against RCD Espanyol which kept his side in the running for the Liga title, which they would go on to win a few weeks later. The ecstatic Argentine threw his shirt in the air, Iker Casillas ran the length of the pitch to join in the celebrations, Fabio Cannavaro waved the corner flag aloft and Ruud Van Nistelrooy held the discarded shirt up to the crowd as if to announce it: Gonzalo Higuaín had … [Read more...] about La Liga: Higuaín proves his worth once again

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, CF, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, El Pipita, football, Higuain, José Mourinho, la liga, Liga, madrid, Messi, Mourinho, Real Madrid, soccer, spain, Spain football, spain news, spain soccer, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish soccer

The Spanish economy’s sustainability dilemma

March 1, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Benidorm

"Environmental sustainability cannot be understood today without taking into account the economic factor. Only when environmental policy is economically viable can it be sustainable over time. Economic viability and environmental sustainability will be, therefore, the two aims of the policy that this ministry will pursue.” This sentiment, voiced by Environment and Agriculture Minister Miguel Arias Cañete recently, sounds sensible enough. But the full content of his speech, addressed to a congressional committee and outlining his intentions for this legislature, has stirred some deep fears among environmentalists. It has also brought the sustainability-versus-growth debate into the … [Read more...] about The Spanish economy’s sustainability dilemma

Filed Under: Business, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: arias canete, CEOE, conservationists, economy, environmental protection spain, parido popular, peoples party, popular party, spain, spain coast, spain environmental laws, spanish economy, Spanish government, spanish politics

The Serrat–Sabina generation: sitting comfortably

February 27, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

Looking back over the last 50 years of so of popular music, it’s probably a safe enough conclusion to draw that at least one of the secrets of a performer’s enduring popularity is to be inexorably associated with fast-changing times. For most of us, however banal it might seem to the rest of the world — and we may ourselves not even realise it at the time — there is always a moment in life after which things are never quite the same; a high point or an event, a moment, after which events overtake us; when we grow up and settle down to earning a living, raising a family; that sort of thing. For the more Romantic among us, the times leading up to that high point in life, otherwise known … [Read more...] about The Serrat–Sabina generation: sitting comfortably

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, IberoArts, Music, Spain News Tagged With: juan manuel serrat, La orquesta del Titánic, sabina, serrat, serrat sabina, spain, spain music, spain news, spanish news

Rajoy, reform and the burden of employment expectations

February 23, 2012 by Christopher Coats Leave a Comment

As thousands took to the streets at the weekend, it quickly became clear that the Partido Popular’s approach to job creation had more than a few critics. Focusing their anger on reforms passed on February 9, critics called out the new government’s efforts to reduce mandatory severance pay from 45 to 33 days per year worked and allowing what they felt was an unfair freedom for companies to opt out of collective bargaining agreements and adjust wages and hours according to their financial standing. The Rajoy government insisted that it “wants to give firms the ability to modify workers' hours in response to demand rather than simply laying them off, bringing an end to the rapid rise in … [Read more...] about Rajoy, reform and the burden of employment expectations

Filed Under: Business, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: economy, la liga, labour market, labour reform, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, popular party, PP, rajoy, spain, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, unemployment

La Liga: Valencia’s thrashing underlines Spain’s class divide

February 21, 2012 by Halima Ali Leave a Comment

Valencia coach Unai Emery is under no illusions. Asked if it was impossible to compete for second place following defeat at the hands of a revitalised Barcelona side at the Camp Nou on Sunday, his answer was short and to the point: “Sí”. The 5-1 thrashing against their direct rivals for the runner-up spot illustrated, perhaps somewhat unfairly, the chasm that lies between the big two of Barça and Real Madrid and the rest of the league. The eagerly anticipated clash couldn’t have started better for Valencia, who took the lead after just nine minutes when Pablo Piatti struck, but Los Che were completely undone by Lionel Messi. The Argentinean netted four times – to stay hot on the heels … [Read more...] about La Liga: Valencia’s thrashing underlines Spain’s class divide

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, football, la liga, Liga, madrid, Messi, Real Madrid, soccer, spain, Spain football, spain soccer, spanish football, Spanish soccer, Unai Emery, Valencia

Goya 2012: no joy for Almodóvar

February 21, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

I can’t say I was unhappy to be proved wrong in predicting the winners at Sunday’s Goya Awards. Never believe the media. Given the hype, Pedro Almodóvar’s The Skin I Live In looked set to sweep the board, with 16 nominations. But instead the Spanish Film Academy gave the best prizes to Enrique Urbizu’s No Rest for the Wicked, which carried off Best Picture and Best Director, while veteran José Coronado took Best Actor for his portrayal of a maverick cop in the gritty police thriller — the fabulous curly perm he sports in the role was worth an award in itself. Interviewed as he entered the gala event at Madrid’s Opera House, Almodóvar gave the impression he had been tipped off that he … [Read more...] about Goya 2012: no joy for Almodóvar

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: Almodóvar, Black Bread, Goya, premios goya, Sleeping Voice, spain, Spain cinema, spain news, Spanish cinema, spanish news, Spanish news in English, the skin I live in

Franco in a fridge: he pulls in the punters, but is he art?

February 20, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

More than 36 years after heading for the great military dictatorship in the sky, General Francisco Franco proved his enduring pulling power by stealing the show at last week’s annual ARCO contemporary art fair, appearing in a fridge and as a fast-spinning bust; even his eyebrows were a big draw. Siempre Franco (Forever Franco) was the star attraction at the five-day artfest, a life-size hyperrealist representation of the man who ruled Spain with an iron fist for four decades. The piece was created by Eugenio Merino out of resin, silicon, and human hair, and was decked out in Franco’s trademark green military uniform with purple sash, red cummerbund, and dark sunglasses, crouching inside a … [Read more...] about Franco in a fridge: he pulls in the punters, but is he art?

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: ARCO, Eugenio Merino, Eugenio Merino Siempre Franco, francisco franco, Franco, Franco ARCO, Siempre Franco, spain, spain art, spain civil war, spain news, spanish news, Spanish news in English, valle de los caidos, valley of the fallen

Ferran Adrià’s lavish tale sates our curiosity, but not our appetite

February 16, 2012 by James Blick Leave a Comment

The food world was startled when Spanish uber-chef Ferran Adrià announced that El Bulli, his temple to haut cuisine and five-times best restaurant in the world, would be serving its last mind-bending supper in July 2011. Although dispensing with the diners might seem an odd move for a chef, it makes sense after watching German director Gereon Wetzel’s documentary El Bulli: Cooking in Progress. Shot from 2008 to 2009, the film is a year in the life of Adrià and his chefs. And it portrays a chef-cum-artist for whom the logical next step is his proposed culinary think tank (due to open in 2014), rather than a restaurant that serves dinner. The film opens as the whitewashed El Bulli, sunk … [Read more...] about Ferran Adrià’s lavish tale sates our curiosity, but not our appetite

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Spain News Tagged With: Adria, chef, el bulli, El Bulli: Cooking in Progress, ferran adria, film, Gereon Wetzel, spain, spain chef, spain food, spain news, spanish food, spanish news

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