“Fake news” has proliferated within our ultra-connected societies. Sometimes, there is a risk that it might threaten democracy and destabilise international relations.
“Fake news” has proliferated within our ultra-connected societies. Sometimes, there is a risk that it might threaten democracy and destabilise international relations.
After decades of conflict, will the latest elections in the Democratic Republic of Congo put an end to the crisis? To debate this issue, Normandy for Peace and the Bayeux Calvados-Normandy Award invited three specialist reporters who were unexpectedly joined by a Nobel Peace Prize winner, a former African president and a UN diplomat.
Jérôme Delay, a photojournalist who focuses on Africa, is exhibiting a series of twenty shots, taken in the Congo, at the Normandy for Peace village.
What role for women in peace processes? Four experts are in attendance to answer this question, including Jody Williams, the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize winner.
In 1960, Ruby Bridges was the first African-American girl to attend a whites-only school in the United States. As the spokesperson for her foundation, she works with children, attending the Normandy World Peace Forum to explain the importance of tolerance and respect for differences.
The NORMANDY index, explained by its creator: Steve Killelea, founder of the Institute for Economics and Peace.