» The Jugendmedientage, the Youth Media Days in Germany, are the major event for youth media in the German speaking part of Europe. The 'JMT' team works closely together with the European Youth Media Days team. This year's event will take place at the broadcasting center of the second German television ZDF in Mainz. Don't miss the chance to apply until 29 September 2008.
» Café Babel is the first multilingual European current affairs magazine, designed for readers across borders. Cafebabel.com revolutionises European media through participatory journalism, providing a unique platform of expression for all citizens. Café Babel’s aim is to stimulate and develop European public opinion.
» The Forum for European Journalism Students is an independent non-profit organisation, dedicated to the exchange of information between European citizens with an interest in journalism. The Forum organises and promotes encounters of students with journalism and media professionals. Over 300 schools from all over the continent participate in the FEJS activities on a regular basis. The current priorities of the organisation are to create means of self-management in different countries and to develop partnerships with other international organisations.
» Orangelog.eu aims to provide an interactive, multimedia-based platform for event coverage, bringing together the different participating countries. Orange is the event magazine of the European Youth Press (EYP), that aims to enable young people to voice their opinion on a European level and to provide a critical view of media and politics through journalistic education.
» Europocket TV is the first multimedia platform with a programme exclusively about Europe. The main target group are young Europeans. With its professional application of online television, Europocket TV is a good example for connecting youth all over Europe via new media. The project is mainly funded by the European Parliament.http://www.europocket.tv/
» Youthphotos.eu is a platform for young European photographers. Pictures are not constricted by language barriers, so the idea is to encourage young photographers to show their pictures, impressions and perspectives on Europe.
» EUradio Nantes is a multicultural radio station for young Europeans. Following the slogan »La diversité européenne au creux de l’oreille», the project creates international media on a local basis. The radio broadcasts news, stories and music from all over Europe. This project was initiated by journalism students from different European countries.
» euro|topics aims to contribute to the development of a European public sphere. In a daily press review and selected articles, the most important political, cultural and social debates are being followed and explained. The objective of euro|topics is to make those debates, which up to now had almost exclusively been conducted at national level, accessible Europe-wide. In this way, trans-European discussions, as well as the development of new networks of media, cultural and political exchange, shall be encouraged and supported.
» EUNIC – the European Union National Institutes for Culture is a partnership of national institutions for culture, engaged beyond their national borders and operating with a degree of autonomy from their governments. The EUNIC membership currently includes organisations from 19 EU countries and it is intended that this will grow in time to include national institutes for culture from all the member states. The purpose of EUNIC is to create effective partnerships and networks between the participating organisations, to improve and promote cultural diversity and understanding between European societies, and to strengthen international dialogue and co-operation with countries outside Europe.
» The Goethe-Institut is the cultural institution of the Federal Republic of Germany, operating on a worldwide basis. Its main aims are the promotion of the study of German abroad and the encouragement of international cultural exchange. The Goethe-Institut fosters knowledge about Germany by providing information on its culture, society and politics. With the network of Goethe-Institutes, Goethe-Centres, cultural societies, reading rooms and exam and language centres, it has played a central role in the cultural and educational policies of Germany for over 50 years. Besides the German-Belgian activities, the Goethe-Institut in Brussels is actively participating in the European dialogue. It realises European projects in cooperation with other European cultural institutions.
» Indigo is the first European lifestyle magazine, published in seven languages. More than 100 young journalists from all over Europe produce the magazine on a voluntary basis. It covers a wide variety of European subjects, from language and culture to fashion and politics. A print version of the magazine is currently being planned and the first issue is available in PDF format at www.indigomag.eu in English, French, German, Polish, Italian, Spanish and Dutch. Indigo is open for all young professionals to participate.
» Journal Europa is a European newspaper based in France, working with a network of more than 200 young correspondents between 18 and 35 years from all over Europe. Two organisations, in Nantes and Strasbourg, are publishing magazine (with a circulation of 30.000 copies) in order to give a new vision of Europe, different from Brussels or the mass media's one. Journal EUROPA was created in 2004 in Nantes.