#Reform der GAP 2020
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mysterymirrors · 29 days ago
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slakner · 4 years ago
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Kommentar zu den GAP-Beschlüssen: Kein Systemwechsel erkennbar
Kommentar zu den GAP-Beschlüssen: Kein Systemwechsel erkennbar
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Gestern Abend (20.10.2020) haben sowohl der Ministerrat als auch das Europäische Parlament ihre Position zur GAP nach 2020 festgelegt. Im folgenden Beitrag werde ich der beschlossenen Details herausgreifen und begründen, warum ich in den Beschlüssen keinen Fortschritt sehe, sondern eher einen Rückschritt. Es fehlt auf Europäischer Ebene eine Vision der Landwirtschaft 2030 und man ist sich nicht…
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arcticdementor · 5 years ago
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Although there is almost no historical evidence of St Valentine, the most common tradition is that he was martyred for marrying couples illegally. Desperate for troops, the emperor Claudius Gothicus had prohibited young men from being wed — and therefore escaping military service. Poor Valentine was foolish enough to disobey the Roman Emperor, and that rarely ends well.
Unlike most feast days that grew in popularity during the Middle Ages, Valentine’s survived Reformation and secularisation because it came to celebrate a popular ideal: romantic love. Indeed, it is about more than that: the idea of love as a choice; a choice made by two people that no outside authorities — not even Roman emperors — can stand in the way of.
We take love for granted (it being all around) but marrying for romance is quite a radical idea — a fairly recent one and, from a point of view of outcomes, not a very successful innovation.
For most of recorded history, marriage was seen as a contract, largely for the creation of children. If love — agape — developed as a result, all the better, but romance was not a reason for marriage. The Greeks and Romans essentially saw romantic love as a mental illness — “a sickness, a fever, a source of pain” in the words of historian Nigel Saul — while the medieval aristocracy thought of marriages as more like business contracts. Kings used their children as assets with which to make deals, one of the most ruthless being the 12th century Henry II, who had his heir Henry wed when he was five and his bride, daughter of the king of France, just two.
One small illustration of the social values of the age comes via a poem celebrating William Marshal, a tournament star and member of Eleanor’s entourage. Marshal went on to serve four kings and helped save Magna Carta, becoming the epitome of medieval chivalry and also providing the inspiration for A Knight’s Tale and Ser Barristan the Bold in Game of Thrones.
Following Marshal’s death, his five sons commissioned a biographical poem to glorify their father, filled with his derring-do as loyal knight and all-round hero; it contains a passage that to modern eyes seems curious. On the road one day, our brave knight came across a young couple who had eloped because they were in love, but their families disapproved. Marshal, the poem boasts, simply robbed them at the point of the sword and, the reader is supposed to see, rightly so.
This episode says much about popular attitudes at the time, when — like in most societies — marrying against your parent’s wishes put you beyond the pale. Marshal’s own wife, Isabel de Clare, had been awarded to him as a reward for his service to Henry II, when Marshal was 43 and his bride 17. Did she want to marry him? No one cared.
That we came to think of marrying for love as normal is largely down to the Catholic Church. Christian theologians, following the thoughts of St Paul, saw marriage between man and woman as analogous to that between Christ and his Church. Marriage had to be consensual, willingly offered into — a rule the Church enforced with increasing determination from the 12th century.
Western Europeans came to see marriage not just as a business deal between two clans, but a bond between individuals; increasingly, stories about romantic love saw it as likely to lead to not to disaster, but to “happy ever after”.
Along with rules about consent and age, the Church also became increasingly strict about the marrying of relatives, which had a profound effect on wider society. Once people were forced to marry out, their loyalty to their family declined in relation to wider society and this fostered more radical ideas. Maybe Romeo wasn’t just a member of the Montague clan but an individual with his own desires? Maybe his individual happiness was more important than the extended family’s status? The effects have been long lasting, with various studies showing a link between the Catholic Church’s ban on cousin marriage with corruption and democracy.
Yet across the world, and among Asian diasporas, arranged marriage remains the norm, while marriages rates in the west have plummeted since the 1970s. Maybe western ideas of love aren’t the only way forward.
Since the final phrase in this great love revolution in the late 20th century, when social pressure to marry early was relaxed, and with it the Church’s long-held prohibition against divorce, marriage rates have fallen dramatically.
There are now around a quarter of a million marriages a year in Britain, just over half the rate in 1969 when the Divorce Reform Act was passed. Marriage has also become a luxury good, with the gap between professional and working classes rising just this century from 22% to almost 50%. The results are huge numbers living alone, a figure that will surpass 10 million by 2040.
Many are happily single, but many others just don’t find the right person through a modern market that is far from efficient.
Maybe arranged marriage makes more sense. When westerners think of the practice they tend to think of forced marriages, and the horrific tradition of honour killings that often result, but arranged and forced marriages are not the same thing.
In many traditional societies, arranged marriage takes the form of sons and daughters being given a short list of potential suitors from which they can choose (assuming the other person picks them, of course). Speed dating originated among Jewish communities in New York for this exact purpose, and mimics traditional practices in certain ways.
And arranged marriages do have better outcomes, on a purely measurable level.
Harvard’s Dr Robert Epstein analysed the phenomenon among south Asians and Orthodox Jews and, with an admittedly small sample, concluded that they were more successful than the secular western route.
And while marriage rates in the West continue to fall, especially in the US, young people in India are not spurning arranged marriages as that country gets richer. Likewise, in China and across the East “love” continues to play a far less important role in marriage than in Europe.
Western romantics might see that as cold or cynical, but then, perhaps our attitude is rather naïve and even silly. Love wins — but then sometimes it doesn’t.
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warninggraphiccontent · 5 years ago
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13 March 2020
Viral content
There's a definite theme to a lot of the links this week, unsurprisingly. I've also been keeping track of various useful pieces of advice from people used to remote working as coronavirus fundamentally changes how we work and live, whether in the short term or more profoundly - more on that next week.
But for now, here's an extremely useful tech handbook started by the team at Newspeak House, which has resources on everything from health advice and data about the disease, to advice on working remotely and tackling misinformation.
In other news:
We're doing a very quick project for Nesta on missing data in preventive services - looking specifically at children's centres and youth services. Here's the write-up of a workshop we did - thoughts very welcome.
My colleague Nick celebrated three years at the IfG with a terrible chart. Hilarity ensued.
I was very sad to see that Clare Moriarty, one of the most inspirational senior civil servants to those of us working around data and openness in government, is leaving the civil service. This speech of hers from last year is well worth a read.
I'd forgotten just how good the FT's 404 page is.
Delighted to hear the good people at Citizens Advice are finding inspiration in our dataviz. You may be less delighted by the puns that followed.
And a reminder that we're hiring someone to run Whitehall Monitor. A big thank you to Jukesie for including it in his indispensable jobs newsletter.
Have a good weekend
Gavin
Today's links:
Graphic content
Viral chart
A very short thread on the power of data graphics and scientific communication (Carl T. Bergstrom)
Spot the difference... (Rosamund Pearce)
Everyone's job is to help FLATTEN THE CURVE (Dr Siouxsie Wiles)
Coronavirus: How peak of cases could be cut by 'social distancing' (Sky News)
How canceled events and self-quarantines save lives, in one chart (Vox)
It’s not exponential: An economist’s view of the epidemiological curve (voxeu.org)
Viral content
17 responsible live visualizations about the coronavirus, for you to use (Datawrapper)
Illustrative simulations of a transmission model of COVID-19 (The Lancet)
COMMUNICATION THEMES FROM CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK (Visualising Data)
COVID-19: Research in Uncertain Times (Ipsos MORI)
In America, even pandemics are political* (The Economist)
Foot traffic has fallen sharply in cities with big coronavirus outbreaks* (The Economist)
Die Schweiz liegt auf Platz 6 der am stärksten betroffenen Länder – alles zum Coronavirus in 14 Grafiken (NZZ)
9 charts that explain the coronavirus pandemic (Vox)
Right or wrong, there’s no doubt the UK is increasingly an outlier in our Covid response (BBC Newsnight)
Soap is such an ordinary thing. Can it really kill a virus? (YES! Now wash your hands) (Prof Lucy Rogers)
From coronavirus to bushfires, misleading maps are distorting reality (First Draft news, via in other news)
Coronavirus: UK maps and charts (BBC News)
How Coronavirus Hijacks Your Cells* (New York Times)
How Deadly Is Coronavirus? What We Know and What We Don’t* (The Upshot)
Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) (Our World in Data)
Total UK cases COVID-19 Cases Update (Public Health England)
Coronavirus Data Pack (Information is Beautiful)
Wie das Coronavirus nach Deutschland kam (Zeit Online)
COVID-19 MAP (/r/CovidMapping, via Pritesh)
How the World’s Largest Coronavirus Outbreaks Are Growing* (New York Times)
Exponential growth and epidemics (3Blue1Brown)
I’m no epidemiologist, but I am a #dataviz specialist, so here are some thoughts on coronavirus and log scales (John Burn-Murdoch, via Marcus)
When Everyone Stays Home: Empty Public Spaces During Coronavirus (The Atlantic, via Benoit)
#IWD2020
International Women’s Day 2020: Close to three in ten men say sexual jokes or stories at work are acceptable (Ipsos MORI)
Americans overestimate voters’ prejudices against women and ethnic minorities* (The Economist)
What do we know about gender inequality in the UK? (ONS)
Cabinet and civil service gender balance (Ketaki and me for IfG)
Seven in ten support equal coverage for women’s sport, but not at the cost of men’s coverage (YouGov)
A dozen+ visionary pioneers who did great (and good) things with data visualization (RJ Andrews)
Would making salaries public help end disparities?* (FT)
#Budget2020
The budget in charts - Tom, Graham (IfG)
Spring Budget 2020: IFS analysis (IFS)
The Stupidest Budget of All Time* (Tortoise)
Spring Budget 2020 response (Resolution Foundation)
Life and death
Why we run (Strava)
Diabetes risk: what’s driving the global rise in obesity rates?* (FT)
How Working-Class Life Is Killing Americans, in Charts* (New York Times)
Middle-aged generation most likely to die by suicide and drug poisoning (ONS, from 2019)
Changing trends in mortality by leading causes of death, England and Wales: 2001 to 2018 (ONS)
Mortality and life expectancy trends in the UK (The Health Foundation)
Everything else
Political trust (Will Jennings via Alex)
British Election Study 2019 Data Release – Internet Panel, Results File, and Expert Survey
Ministers (me for IfG)
Political protests have become more widespread and more frequent* (The Economist)
Getting moving: Where will transport infrastructure investment unlock city-centre growth? (Centre for Cities)
45 Minute Cities (Alasdair Rae)
National Primary Results Map: Where Biden and Sanders Have Won* (New York Times)
Joe Biden’s surge poses threat to Bernie Sanders’ US primary hopes* (FT)
Meta data
Viral content
Five ways coronavirus could shape our digital future (Jonathan Tanner for the Overseas Development Institute)
Coronavirus divides tech workers into the 'worthy' and 'unworthy' sick (The Guardian)
Coronavirus: A Digital Governance Emergency of International Concern (CIGI)
Fact Check Explorer: Coronavirus (Google)
NHS announces plan to combat coronavirus fake news (The Guardian)
Facts on Coronavirus (Full Fact)
Sifting Through the Coronavirus Outbreak (Mike Caulfield)
The Simplest Way to Spot Coronavirus Misinformation on Social Media (OneZero)
CORONAVIRUS and HAKKAR THE SOULFLAYER'S CORRUPTED BLOOD! Or what do people actually do in a pandemic? (Alex Krasodmoski)
On TikTok, coronavirus is just another way to gain clout* (New Statesman)
Chinese social media sites blocked medical information about the coronavirus, research indicates (Poynter)
Boris Johnson Has Summoned Major Tech Companies To Downing Street To Help In The Fight Against The Coronavirus (BuzzFeed)
Inside Dominic Cummings’s coronavirus meeting with big tech* (Wired)
How a global health crisis turns into a state-run surveillance opportunity (The Observer)
CIO interview: Sarah Wilkinson, NHS Digital (Computer Weekly)
#OpenDataDay
Celebrating the tenth Open Data Day on Saturday 7th March 2020 (Open Knowledge)
Celebrating Open Data Day around the world (Open Knowledge)
What is ‘open data’ and why should we care? (ODI)
What @instituteforgov is able to do with #opendata (IfG)
#opendataday, #ODD2020, #OpenDataDay2020
#Budget2020
Me
Peter Wells
Owen Boswarva
What Works Centres
Digital markets taskforce: terms of reference (BEIS/DCMS/CMA)
If we want cutting-edge R&D, we must rethink our attitude to failure (Hetan Shah in City AM)
#IWD2020
In a world biased against women, what role do algorithms play? (CDEI)
Mapping Gender Data Gaps: An SDG Era Update (Data2X)
Why cars are unsafe for women* (Caroline Criado Perez for the Sunday Times)
Why the web needs to work for women and girls (Sir Tim Berners-Lee)
International Women’s Day: celebrating the black women tackling bias in AI (Ada Lovelace Institute)
UK government
The UK’s national data strategy is still missing in action (New Statesman)
Does Brexit Britain have a data strategy fit for purpose? - the public sector perspective (diginomica)
Price and prejudice: automated decision-making and the UK government (podcast) (openDemocracy)
The UK Has Slumped in Open Data Rankings: This Should Trouble All of US (Jeni Tennison in Computer Business Review)
MANUFACTURING THE FUTURE: COULD HEALTHCARE DATA HELP REBALANCE THE UK’S ECONOMY? (Reform)
Designing an Information Governance approach for London (LOTI)
Case for helping join up government services (GDS)
MPs told to hold to account those responsible for Post Office Horizon IT scandal (Computer Weekly)
UK.gov is not sharing Brits' medical data among different agencies... but it's having a jolly good think about it (The Register)
The UK’s tech sector has much to be optimistic about (Matt Warman MP for CapX)
I’ve written a bot @UKreleases that tweets out all the transparency releases governments departments post on http://gov.uk (Jon Stone)
At least 20,000 people denied information that could prove right to live in UK (The Independent)
DCMS to examine government data-sharing barriers ahead of programme of ‘radical and transformative change’ (Public Technology, via Colm)
We’re hosting a community meet-up to discuss how we archive data (Technology in Government)
Harnessing the potential of linked administrative data for the justice system (ADR UK)
AI, IoT, tech, etc
AI needs more regulation, not less (Brookings)
AI In Policing: Better Than A Knife Through The Chest? (Forbes)
Better intelligence about artificial intelligence (Nesta)
Reset (Luminate)
IoT Week[note 32] (LOTI)
Everything else
David Hand on Dark Data (Princeton University Press)
We Built a Database of Over 500 iPhones Cops Have Tried to Unlock (Motherboard)
The Robots Are Coming: Ethics, Politics, and Society in the Age of Artificial Intelligence (Kenneth A. Taylor, Boston Review)
How our network is considering data ethics: survey results (ODI)
Researcher danah boyd on how to protect the census and fix tech (Protocol)
How close is humanity to destroying itself?* (The Spectator)
Stealth political ads flourish on Facebook* (Politico)
#NICAR, #NICAR2020
William Gibson on the apocalypse: “it’s been happening for at least 100 years”* (New Statesman)
A Dataset is a Worldview (Hannah Davis)
Centre Write: Digital disruption? (Bright Blue)
Facebook sued by Australian information watchdog over Cambridge Analytica-linked data breach (The Guardian)
Frontex hits activist pair with €24,000 legal bill (EUobserver, via Giuseppe)
A catalogue of things that are stopping change: part II (Rose Mortada and James Reeve)
Opportunities
JOB: Senior Researcher - Whitehall Monitor (IfG)
JOB: Data Journalist / Research Analyst (Spend Network)
JOB: Team Lead - Data Technology (Data Unit) (DfT)
JOB: Policy Fellow (Digital Technology) (The King's Fund)
JOB: Data Science Campus Delivery Manager (ONS)
JOB: Social Media and Engagement Journalist (FT)
JOB: Partnerships and Community Manager (Understanding Patient Data)
JOB: Head of Public Policy (ODI)
JOBS: Good Things Foundation
EVENT: Digital Insight and Business Intelligence in Local Gov 2020 (London Borough of Redbridge and techUK, via Martin)
And finally...
Love in the time of quarantine
I made a graph of old relationships... (Jeremiah Lowin)
BETWEEN THE SPREADSHEETS (1843, via Alice)
I Work from Home (The New Yorker, via David)
Pi Day tomorrow
How a farm boy from Wales gave the world pi (The Conversation)
Even After 31 Trillion Digits, We’re Still No Closer To The End Of Pi (FiveThirtyEight)
Pi Day: How One Irrational Number Made Us Modern* (New York Times)
A colorful π chart (Datawrapper)
Everything else
What's your beverage of choice? (Jess Walker)
Cognition (Steve Stewart-Williams)
This is the scale of the universe (How Things Work)
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itsfinancethings · 4 years ago
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(BRUSSELS) — European Union leaders hunted for compromises Saturday on the second day of a summit to reach a deal on an unprecedented 1.85 trillion euro ($2.1 trillion) EU budget and coronavirus recovery fund, with tensions running high among leaders weary after months of battling the pandemic in their countries.
A full day and night of discussions by the 27 leaders on Friday only added to the irritations over how the huge sums should be spent and what strings should be attached.
The atmosphere “was grumpier” as the talks went on, Dutch Prime Minister Rutte said after Friday’s marathon talks. “This is going to take a while, I think.”
The EU executive has proposed a 750-billion euro fund, partly based on common borrowing, to be sent as loans and grants to the most needy countries. That comes on top of the seven-year 1-trillion-euro EU budget that leaders were fighting over when COVID-19 slammed their continent.
The summit broke up around lunchtime Saturday so that each delegation could discuss the new proposals from host Charles Michel, according to a European diplomat.
The new proposals reduce the proportion of straight-out grants in the rescue package and raise the proportion of loans that will need to be paid back, in an apparent nod to a grouping of “frugal” nations led by the Netherlands, the diplomat said.
But the issue of how to track the rescue money remains the key sticking point, the diplomat said. Michel proposed a measure that would stop short of allowing any country a veto on how governments spend the money.
Another diplomat described Michel’s new proposals as just the first step in what could be a long journey to agreement. Both diplomats spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the closed-door negotiations.
Rutte is seen as a leader of four “frugal” nations that want conditions such as economic reforms attached to EU handouts to help countries recover from the hammer blow of the coronavirus.
He met Saturday ahead of the summit for crisis talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, French President Emmanuel Macron, Italy’s Giuseppe Conte as well as the leader of the EU’s executive, Ursula von der Leyen, and Michel.
One of Rutte’s allies, Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, said the talks were not totally stalled. “There is more and more movement in our direction,” he told ORF television.
The pandemic sent the EU into a tailspin with 27-nation bloc’s economy contracting by 8.3% this year, according to the latest predictions. Around 135,000 of its citizens have died from COVID-19.
As leaders met in person for the first time since February, they wore face masks, bumped elbows and sat in a cavernous meeting hall so they could maintain social distancing. Many of their negotiating positions were further apart than their chairs.
After two fruitless sessions Friday, summit host and European Council President Charles Michel met key players – Rutte, French President Emmanuel Macron and Hungary’s Viktor Orban – in an attempt to narrow the gaps between them. Orban does not want strings attached to EU funds, Rutte does and Macron is arguing that Europe must show solidarity to claw its way out of the crisis.
Michel is expected to present leaders with possible compromises when the summit resumes, though it remains to be seen if they can reach agreement or will have to schedule another meeting.
Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis was pessimistic after the first day.
“I don’t have the impression that we are getting close to an agreement,” he said.
Rutte, however, said that despite the mounting acrimony, the talks were creeping forward.
“You make a bit of progress during the day,” he said. “For a start, it helps if you better understand each other’s positions, then you can search for possible compromises.”
____
Associated Press writer Angela Charlton contributed from Paris.
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mysterymirrors · 2 months ago
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slakner · 4 years ago
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Nach der AMK ist vor der AMK: Eine Bewertung der BMEL-Position zur GAP nach 2020
Am Mittwoch, 17.03. hat sich die Agrarministerkonferenz vertagt, aber nach der AMK ist vor der AMK. Ich nehme eine Bewertung der BMEL-Position zur GAP nach 2020 vor.
Aktuell geht die Umsetzung der GAP-Reform nach 2020 in ihre heiße Phase. Die Agrarministerkonferenz hat am 17.März 2021 virtuell getagt und sich nach vielen Stunden Verhandlungen ohne Einigung vertagt. Geplant ist, in der Woche 22.-26.März eine weitere Sitzung durchzuführen, auf der eine Einigung erzielt werden soll. Parallel dazu sollen am 24.März 2021 drei Umsetzungsgesetze für die GAP-Reform…
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awardsleague · 6 years ago
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OSCAR NOMINATIONS
i know we all wanna die but we’re almost done!!!!! just think about the cast of dune (2020) to get thru the day
Best Picture:
“Black Panther” “BlacKkKlansman” “Bohemian Rhapsody” “The Favourite” “Green Book” “Roma” “A Star Is Born” “Vice”
Lead Actor:
Christian Bale, “Vice” Bradley Cooper, “A Star Is Born” Willem Dafoe, “At Eternity’s Gate” Rami Malek, “Bohemian Rhapsody” Viggo Mortensen, “Green Book”
Lead Actress:
Yalitza Aparicio, “Roma” Glenn Close, “The Wife” Olivia Colman, “The Favourite” Lady Gaga, “A Star Is Born” Melissa McCarthy, “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”
Supporting Actor:
Mahershala Ali, “Green Book” Adam Driver, “BlacKkKlansman” Sam Elliott, “A Star Is Born” Richard E. Grant, “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” Sam Rockwell, “Vice”
Supporting Actress: Amy Adams, “Vice” Marina de Tavira, “Roma” Regina King, “If Beale Street Could Talk” Emma Stone, “The Favourite” Rachel Weisz, “The Favourite”
Director:
Spike Lee, “BlacKkKlansman” Pawel Pawlikowski, “Cold War” Yorgos Lanthimos, “The Favourite” Alfonso Cuarón, “Roma” Adam McKay, “Vice”
Animated Feature:
“Incredibles 2,” Brad Bird “Isle of Dogs,” Wes Anderson “Mirai,” Mamoru Hosoda “Ralph Breaks the Internet,” Rich Moore, Phil Johnston “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,” Bob Persichetti, Peter Ramsey, Rodney Rothman
Animated Short:
“Animal Behaviour,” Alison Snowden, David Fine “Bao,” Domee Shi “Late Afternoon,” Louise Bagnall “One Small Step,” Andrew Chesworth, Bobby Pontillas “Weekends,” Trevor Jimenez
Adapted Screenplay:
“The Ballad of Buster Scruggs,” Joel Coen , Ethan Coen “BlacKkKlansman,” Charlie Wachtel, David Rabinowitz, Kevin Willmott, Spike Lee “Can You Ever Forgive Me?,” Nicole Holofcener and Jeff Whitty “If Beale Street Could Talk,” Barry Jenkins “A Star Is Born,” Eric Roth, Bradley Cooper, Will Fetters
Original Screenplay:
“The Favourite,” Deborah Davis, Tony McNamara “First Reformed,” Paul Schrader “Green Book,” Nick Vallelonga, Brian Currie, Peter Farrelly “Roma,” Alfonso Cuarón “Vice,” Adam McKay
Cinematography:
“Cold War,” Lukasz Zal “The Favourite,” Robbie Ryan “Never Look Away,” Caleb Deschanel “Roma,” Alfonso Cuarón “A Star Is Born,” Matthew Libatique
Best Documentary Feature:
“Free Solo,” Jimmy Chin, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi “Hale County This Morning, This Evening,” RaMell Ross “Minding the Gap,” Bing Liu “Of Fathers and Sons,” Talal Derki “RBG,” Betsy West, Julie Cohen
Best Documentary Short Subject:
“Black Sheep,” Ed Perkins “End Game,” Rob Epstein, Jeffrey Friedman “Lifeboat,” Skye Fitzgerald “A Night at the Garden,” Marshall Curry “Period. End of Sentence.,” Rayka Zehtabchi
Best Live Action Short Film: “Detainment,” Vincent Lambe “Fauve,” Jeremy Comte “Marguerite,” Marianne Farley “Mother,” Rodrigo Sorogoyen “Skin,” Guy Nattiv
Best Foreign Language Film:
“Capernaum” (Lebanon) “Cold War” (Poland) “Never Look Away” (Germany) “Roma” (Mexico) “Shoplifters” (Japan)
Film Editing:
“BlacKkKlansman,” Barry Alexander Brown “Bohemian Rhapsody,” John Ottman “Green Book,” Patrick J. Don Vito “The Favourite,” Yorgos Mavropsaridis “Vice,” Hank Corwin
Sound Editing:
“Black Panther,” Benjamin A. Burtt, Steve Boeddeker “Bohemian Rhapsody,” John Warhurst “First Man,” Ai-Ling Lee, Mildred Iatrou Morgan “A Quiet Place,” Ethan Van der Ryn, Erik Aadahl “Roma,” Sergio Diaz, Skip Lievsay
Sound Mixing:
“Black Panther” “Bohemian Rhapsody” “First Man” “Roma” “A Star Is Born”
Production Design:
“Black Panther,” Hannah Beachler “First Man,” Nathan Crowley, Kathy Lucas “The Favourite,” Fiona Crombie, Alice Felton “Mary Poppins Returns,” John Myhre, Gordon Sim “Roma,” Eugenio Caballero, Bárbara Enrı́quez
Original Score:
“BlacKkKlansman,” Terence Blanchard “Black Panther,” Ludwig Goransson “If Beale Street Could Talk,” Nicholas Britell “Isle of Dogs,” Alexandre Desplat “Mary Poppins Returns,” Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman
Original Song:
“All The Stars” from “Black Panther” by Kendrick Lamar, SZA “I’ll Fight” from “RBG” by Diane Warren, Jennifer Hudson “The Place Where Lost Things Go” from “Mary Poppins Returns” by Marc Shaiman, Scott Wittman “Shallow” from “A Star Is Born” by Lady Gaga, Mark Ronson, Anthony Rossomando, Andrew Wyatt and Benjamin Rice “When A Cowboy Trades His Spurs For Wings” from “The Ballad of Buster Scruggs” by David Rawlings and Gillian Welch
Makeup and Hair:
“Border” “Mary Queen of Scots” “Vice”
Costume Design:
“The Ballad of Buster Scruggs,” Mary Zophres “Black Panther,” Ruth E. Carter “The Favourite,” Sandy Powell “Mary Poppins Returns,” Sandy Powell “Mary Queen of Scots,” Alexandra Byrne
Visual Effects:
“Avengers: Infinity War” “Christopher Robin” “First Man” “Ready Player One” “Solo: A Star Wars Story”
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mysterymirrors · 2 months ago
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mysterymirrors · 4 months ago
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mysterymirrors · 5 months ago
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mysterymirrors · 7 months ago
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mysterymirrors · 9 months ago
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mysterymirrors · 11 months ago
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mysterymirrors · 1 year ago
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mysterymirrors · 1 year ago
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