Sacha putnam biography of martin
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Sacha Craddock
British art critic and curator
Sacha Craddock (born 6 August 1955) is an independent art critic, writer and curator based in London. Craddock is co-founder of Artschool Palestine, co-founder or the Contemporary Art Award and council member of the Abbey Awards in Painting at the British School at Rome, Trustee of the Shelagh Cluett Trust, and President of the International Association of Art Critics AICA UK.[1] She was chair of the Board of New Contemporaries and urval process from 1996 until December 2021.[2]
Biography
[edit]Born in New Zealand, Craddock moved to Oxford as a child, and then to London in 1973, where she went on to help formulate[vague] one of the city's most well-known squats on Tolmers Square in Euston.[3] Craddock continues to live communally along with some of the original Tolmer's residents.[4] After completing a grad in fine art painting at huvud St Martins, and a post-graduate
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Ayeesha Menon Radio Plays
The Saturday play THE ROYAL VISIT (R4, 1500, 4 Jun 22), by Ayeesha Menon, was set in Kalina, a Bombay (Mumbai) suburb. The villagers are told that a royal couple will be paying a visit. Jackie, from the Parish Committee, is given the job of planning a big welcome. Shailesh sets up the snack table, and history professor Colin, who is teaching students about British colonialism, is appointed to find a suitable student to present a mango to the Royals. An apt time (Platinum Jubilee weekend) for a play about royals. The production was from well-known Indie company Goldhawk, with production by Nadir Khan assisted by Toral Shah.
6 Mar 2021: The Jungle Book, 1
By Ayeesha Menon. Rudyard Kipling�s family classic, re-imagined in the concrete jungle of present-day India. Mowgli, the orphan boy at the centre of the story, is being brought up by the Wolves, a gang of petty criminals in a tenement block in Mumbai, and quickly learns how to survive in that w
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1. Introduction
1As China invests heavily and strategically in oil fields around the world, the dilemma for developing economies has been balancing the benefits and windfalls from these investments with the varying environmental and societal costs. This is complicated by attempts at social mobilisation by both global and local actors to protect these fuels. In fact, these attempts in the fossil fuel industry have been largely eclipsed by policy choices, such as opting to expand extraction into the Amazon Basin or increasing production in the Atlantic Ocean to meet growing expectations and investor demands, as reflected in this article. Given China’s recent push to expand its energy resources, this article compares two states, one in Latin America and one in Africa – areas of significant Chinese investment and interest – to assess policy outcomes in terms of energy and development, and impacts on social mobilisation.
2With relatively large reserves of crude oil and natural gas in