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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

spain

King’s big-game fall comes at just the wrong time

April 15, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe 1 Comment

One week and two accidents related to the Spanish royal family’s predilection for guns. On April 9, King Juan Carlos’s 13-year-old grandson, Felipe Juan Froilán, suffered a foot injury while out shooting in Soria, an incident that is being investigated due to the age of the boy. But when the king had a serious fall in Botswana at the weekend while on holiday hunting for big game, it seemed as if it was the monarch who had shot himself in the foot. By a strange twist of fate, the same day that Juan Carlos had his hip operated on, several thousands people marched through central Madrid to commemorate the 81st anniversary of the Second Republic. Their other motive for being there was to … [Read more...] about King’s big-game fall comes at just the wrong time

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: king juan carlos, rey juan carlos botswana, spain, spain news, spain royal family, spanish news

Education in Spain: What do they need to know?

April 11, 2012 by Suzanne O'Connell Leave a Comment

Spanish curriculum

Education is a very powerful tool and the control of what the curriculum contains has worked normally calm people into a frenzy. Does Shakespeare have any relevance to our young people? Should schools be able to drop teaching the Victorians in favour of learning about Twitter? The debate goes on. Now more than ever, it is difficult to decide what the curriculum should consist of. Our world changes so quickly that equipping our young people with what they need for the future is a shot in the dark.  There are many theories about what they should be learning. Most include reference to skills, concepts and personal attributes rather than selected pieces of knowledge. Learning ‘how to’ rather … [Read more...] about Education in Spain: What do they need to know?

Filed Under: Expats, Spain Expat, Spain News Tagged With: british children, british children in spanish schools, british schools spain, budget, curriculum, curriculum in spain, education, education curriculum, education in spain, expats, expats in spain, foreign children, international school, international schools in spain, international schools spain, school books spain, school curriculum, schooling in spain, spain, spain schools for foreign children, spanish ciurriculum, spanish curriculum, spanish education system, spanish high school, spanish schools, spanish secondary schools, special needs, special needs schools, uk expats

La Liga: Levante’s old guard still in the mix

April 10, 2012 by Halima Ali Leave a Comment

As the season began way back in sunny August, there was little doubt about which teams would be competing for the title. But as the usual suspects for the Champions League places were being rounded up, no one could have imagined that one surprise package, labelled “Ugly, poor and bad at football” by their own supporters, would be in contention for a top-four finish with seven matches remaining. Villarreal, Sevilla, Atlético Madrid, and even Málaga with all their Qatari millions, are being outdone by Levante Unión Deportiva, who currently sit in fifth place, just one point behind their city rivals Valencia in fourth. What is even more astounding for a club that is more accustomed to … [Read more...] about La Liga: Levante’s old guard still in the mix

Filed Under: Featured, Spain News, Sports Tagged With: Barça, barcelona, Barcelona and Real Madrid, Champions League, cristiano ronaldo, El Clásico, football, José Mourinho, la liga, Leo Messi, levante, Liga, Messi, Real Madrid, real madrid valencia, spain, Spain football, spain news, spain soccer, spanish football, spanish news, Spanish news in English, Spanish soccer

‘Extraterrestre’: entertaining alien farce just misses the mark

April 9, 2012 by Olwen Mears Leave a Comment

Those who have seen Nacho Vigalondo's debut feature Los Cronocrímenes will be familiar with the director's style. In terms of uniqueness, he is more on a par with the likes of Wes Anderson than Clint Eastwood. And much like Anderson, you either dig his particular vision of the world or you don't. Humour, mixed with a healthy dose of darkness, is an essential ingredient of Vigalondo's work and Extraterrestre (or Extraterrestrial) is no different. The laughs and lighter moments are frequent but they are accompanied by an underlying sensation of subtle menace (one of the most classic examples of this is his 2003 Oscar-nominated short movie 7.35 de la mañana. As in Los Cronocrímenes, in … [Read more...] about ‘Extraterrestre’: entertaining alien farce just misses the mark

Filed Under: Culture, Featured, Films, IberoArts Tagged With: extraterrestre, film, los cronocrímenes, Michelle Jenner, Nacho Vigalondo, spain, spain film, spain news, Spanish cinema, spanish news, UFO

Spain’s Freedom of Information Act? Not by a long chalk…

April 2, 2012 by Nick Lyne Leave a Comment

On March 22, to muted fanfare, the Spanish government announced a new law supposedly giving the public access to official documents and records. Announcing the Transparency and Good Government Law, Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said his aim was to tackle the country’s chronic corruption by allowing people to know “who is spending their money.” The new legislation would see the creation of a website with all public administrations’ and ministries’ financial details, including salaries and contracts, along with rules guaranteeing the public’s right to access information on public spending and a best practices code. Let’s be clear about this, the government’s proposals are not, by any … [Read more...] about Spain’s Freedom of Information Act? Not by a long chalk…

Filed Under: Featured, Politics, Spain News Tagged With: corruption, ley de transparencia, Mariano Rajoy, spain, spain news, Spain transparency law, spanish news, Spanish news in English, test

Five things Mariano Rajoy has learned in his first 100 days

March 31, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

1. Blaming the previous government can only get you so far. The Socialists left the public accounts in mess, let unemployment soar, and failed to acknowledge the crisis in the first place…We’ve been hearing all that for the last two years or so from the Partido Popular (PP). And turning the Spanish economy around in the near future, given the state it was in at the end of 2011, is a tough –some would say impossible- task. So far the governing party’s own support has remained steady, according to polls, even if Rajoy’s has slipped slightly. But at some point very soon, Spaniards are going to stop thinking about Zapatero’s feeble economic legacy and start focusing exclusively on the … [Read more...] about Five things Mariano Rajoy has learned in his first 100 days

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: austerity plan, economy, eurozone crisis, Mariano Rajoy, Partido Popular, rajoy, spain, spain crisis, spain debt, spain economy, spain news, spain news in english, spanish economy, spanish news, spanish politics, zapatero

Latest ‘[REC]’ instalment offers schlock over terror

March 30, 2012 by James Blick Leave a Comment

REC3 Genesis, the latest movie in Spain’s celebrated zombie franchise, invites viewers to the swank marriage of cooing lovebirds Koldo and Clara. And the nuptial backdrop is a canny move. Director Paco Plaza has rightly realised that weddings - stuffed with religious symbolism, overrun with staggering inebriates and blinded by gaudy dance-floor lights - are a little like a horror movie anyway. Once the guests start eating each other, what’s the difference? The first two films in the series, shot à la The Blair Witch Project with first-person perspective and handheld cameras, played out in a cursed, zombie-infested Barcelona apartment block. The second instalment took up where the … [Read more...] about Latest ‘[REC]’ instalment offers schlock over terror

Filed Under: Featured, Films, IberoArts, Spain News Tagged With: Balaguero, REC, spain, spain news, spanish news, Spanish news in English, UK

Andalusia election gives Rajoy a reality check

March 26, 2012 by Guy Hedgecoe Leave a Comment

Mariano Rajoy’s Partido Popular (PP) may have won the most seats of any party in Sunday’s regional election in Andalusia, but he will view the result as a resounding failure. Rajoy’s conservatives finished the vote count with 50 seats, compared with the Socialists’ 47. In the Socialists’ biggest regional stronghold, that might look like a triumph, but with the United Left (IU) taking 12 seats, the left did enough to govern in coalition. This election came three months into the tenure of Rajoy as prime minister and was seen as a gauge of his national government, as much as the performance of his Andalusian candidate, Javier Arenas. Andalusia has enormous symbolic significance. Ever … [Read more...] about Andalusia election gives Rajoy a reality check

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: Andalusia elections, election, Mariano Rajoy, PP, Socialists, spain, spain debt crisis, spain economy, spain news, spain politics, Spanish deficit, spanish news

Iberian architecture builds a modern legacy

March 23, 2012 by C.S. Ogden 1 Comment

Recently, the widely read architectural website ArchDaily released its Buildings of the Year 2011 report and several winners from its categories are based in Iberia, including the MIMA House (MIMA Architects) in Viana do Castelo and Barcelona’s iGuzzini Illuminazione España H.Q. (MiAS Arquitectes). This, alongside Eduardo Souto de Moura’s 2011 Pritzker Prize win (architecture’s most prestigious award) raises the question: why is Portuguese and Spanish contemporary architecture garnering so much attention all of a sudden? Perhaps the attention may not be so sudden after all. By the time Portugal and Spain entered the EU in 1986, both countries had emerged from a period of architecture … [Read more...] about Iberian architecture builds a modern legacy

Filed Under: Culture, Portugal News, Spain News Tagged With: ArchDaily, ArchDaily buildings of the year, architecture, Lisbon, New York, portugal, Portuguese architecture, spain, Spain and Portugal, Spanish architecture

Inside a Spanish school

March 20, 2012 by Suzanne O'Connell Leave a Comment

Instituto

I had been fortunate to make contact with Tina Sánchez Alfocea, an English teacher at the school. Tina had been enthusiastic about my request to visit, meet her students and ask her some questions. I wanted to see for myself what the inside of a Spanish secondary school looks like and test out some of the anxieties that parents of foreign students have. If you have been following this series of features you will know that many British and other expat parents find themselves in a dilemma. Should their children attend an international school or enter the Spanish system? For some there isn’t an option. The fee-paying alternative of an international school can be well out of bounds. However, … [Read more...] about Inside a Spanish school

Filed Under: Expats, Spain Expat, Spain News Tagged With: british children, british children in spanish schools, british schools spain, budget, bullying, bullying in spain, education, education in spain, expats, expats in spain, foreign children, international school, international schools in spain, international schools spain, school books spain, schooling in spain, spain, spain schools for foreign children, spanish ciurriculum, spanish education system, spanish high school, spanish schools, spanish secondary schools, special needs, special needs schools, uk expats

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