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Untitled Document
Cultures d'arxiu
(octubre - noviembre de 2000
Fundació Antoni Tàpies, Barcelona)
- Recorrido
- Documentos
- Guía
Cultures d´arxiu:
memòria, identitat, identificació (julio - septiembre 2002 Universitat de València. La Nau)
- Recorrido
- Boletín:
solicita nuestro boletín nº1 (gratuito, incluir dirección)
Culturas de archivo: fondos y nuevos documentos (febrero - marzo 2003 Universidad de Salamanca. Palacio Abrantes)

- Recorrido
- Boletín:
solicita nuestro boletín nº2 (gratuito, incluir dirección)
Taller: arte, exposición, memoria
(octubre 2003. UPC, ETSAB. Barcelona)
Taller: arte, exposición, memoria II
(octubre 2004. UPC, ETSAB. Barcelona)
Culturas de archivo IV: representaciones
Febrero-abril 2005
Espacio-archivo
Monasterio de Nuestra Señora de Prado
Autovía Puente Colgante s/n
Fondo Ángel Ferrant
Patio Herreriano
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Español
Jorge Guillén, 6
Sala de Referencia Planos y Dibujos
Archivo de la Real Chancillería de Valladolid
Chancillería, 4
Organización y producción: Junta de Castilla y León
Taller/Worshop: Culturas de archivo
Septiembre/September 2005
Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya
Escola Tècnica Superior
d'Arquitectura de Barcelona
- Visita al archivo districte Sants-Monjuic 28 septiembre 2005
Octubre/October 17-23 2005
KUNSTAKADEMIET I TRODHEIM
Fakultet for arkitektur og billedkunst
Lectures and workshop: Archive Cultures
Photogalleries:
- Lecture

-Temporary Library
- Visiting Legal Museum
- Visting Stadtarchiv

- Working on reference room
Participación en SEMINARIO DOCUMENTALIDADES. CGAC.
14 octubre 2006
ver más
Participación en el seminario "La imagen fantasma". Barcelona, Fundació Antoni Tàpies, 28 noviembre 2006
Participación en el simposio internacional "Revistas y Guerra". MNCARS, enero 2007
ver más
Ideas recibidas
Un vocabulario para la cultura artística contemporánea
Curso-programa de conferencias
MACBA Octubre/October 2008
Archivo: el acceso al saber/poder y las alternativas a la exposición
ALLAN SEKULA.
ver más
Conversaciones abiertas Dictadura, Arte y Archivo

Casa Amèrica Catalunya. c/ Còrsega, 299. Barcelona
7/8/9 OCTUBRE 2008 www.americat.net
Programa
Libro Santiago Roqueta. Co-edición y concepto. El libro constituye un montaje de documentos imágenes y rastros dejados por S.R. en su actividad profesional y docente.
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arstechnica.com
By Julian Sanchez | Published: September 09, 2008 - 07:45AM CT
It was a Frenchman, Michel Foucault, who most famously argued that the etymological link between "states" and "statistics" is no accident—that gathering and organizing information about a population is, in itself, a means of exercising power over it. Some of his countrymen have taken the message to heart: The chorus of critics that has emerged to oppose a massive new "Big Sister" database has just been joined by a prominent member of President Nicolas Sarkozy's own cabinet.
The new database, known as EDVIGE, has sparked a firestorm of opposition from French unions, non-profits, and civil liberties groups since the national privacy watchdog, CNIL, forced the government to make its existence public in July. EDVIGE, which has been dubbed "Big Sister" because the acronym is also a woman's first name, stands for "Exploitation documentaire et valorisation de l’information générale" or "Documentary exploitation and evaluation of general information."
Meant to be used by French intelligence agencies and administrative police, the database would collect personal information about groups or individuals over the age of 13 deemed "likely to breach public order." American history buffs might think of our own Project MINARET or the CIA's Operation CHAOS—two of the secret "watch list" programs that gave rise to the original Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act—or of J. Edgar Hoover's notorious "personal and confidential" files, which archived dish and dirt on public figures. Information could be stored not only on direct targets, but on those who "undertake or have undertaken direct and non-fortuitous relations with them."
A massive petition drive against the program has already garnered nearly 130,000 signatures. But one of the more unlikely names lined up against EDVIGE is that of Hervé Morin, France's secretary of defense. Calling the database a "strange mixing-up of categories," Morin has questioned whether it is "useful to gather data such as telephone numbers, sexual orientation, and details of taxes and assets and the like without knowing exactly what the point is."
French Interior Minister Michèle Alliot-Marie, who oversees the EDVIGE program, shot back that she would have put Morin's mind at ease, if only he had "found my phone number." French officials more generally have sought to portray the new system as little more than an upgrade of preexisting databases. The rather low age barrier for inclusion has been cast as a response to growing juvenile delinquency and gang activity
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