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Lake Balkhash is the 14th largest lake in the world and one of the largest in Asia. Its ecological importance is matched by the number of threats it has been facing for decades: copper mining, hydropower, agricultural development – and now a nuclear power plant.
How to reach local communities and experts, scientists and policy-makers, cultural institutions, businesses, and the wider public in order to transmit the significance of this unique body of water?
That's what we discussed with Aigerim Kapar, co-founder of the platform Artcom and the initiative Care for Balkhash. Aigerim is an interdependent curator, interdisciplinary researcher, and decolonial activist from Almaty and has been engaged in a number of ecological efforts in Kazakhstan for over 10 years.
Many thanks to researcher, writer, and curator Giada Dalla Bontà –who had originally conceived and drafted this topic for a collaborative project with (the podcast interviewer/me/Boris Schneider) and who introduced (him/me) to Aigerim's exhibition 'Interweaving Climate, Water(s) and Communities,' which informs this podcast episode.
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The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
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References cited in the episode:
http://careforbalkhash.org/
https://artcomplatform.com/
http://careforbalkhash.org/program_art_collider_balkhash_almaty_eng
http://artcomplatform.com/artcombb13
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This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya
Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky
By Eurasian Climate Brief TeamLake Balkhash is the 14th largest lake in the world and one of the largest in Asia. Its ecological importance is matched by the number of threats it has been facing for decades: copper mining, hydropower, agricultural development – and now a nuclear power plant.
How to reach local communities and experts, scientists and policy-makers, cultural institutions, businesses, and the wider public in order to transmit the significance of this unique body of water?
That's what we discussed with Aigerim Kapar, co-founder of the platform Artcom and the initiative Care for Balkhash. Aigerim is an interdependent curator, interdisciplinary researcher, and decolonial activist from Almaty and has been engaged in a number of ecological efforts in Kazakhstan for over 10 years.
Many thanks to researcher, writer, and curator Giada Dalla Bontà –who had originally conceived and drafted this topic for a collaborative project with (the podcast interviewer/me/Boris Schneider) and who introduced (him/me) to Aigerim's exhibition 'Interweaving Climate, Water(s) and Communities,' which informs this podcast episode.
---
The Eurasian Climate Brief is a podcast dedicated to climate issues in the region stretching from Eastern Europe to Russia down to the Caucasus and Central Asia.
---
References cited in the episode:
http://careforbalkhash.org/
https://artcomplatform.com/
http://careforbalkhash.org/program_art_collider_balkhash_almaty_eng
http://artcomplatform.com/artcombb13
---
This episode is supported by n-ost, a media NGO and European Journalistic Network committed to cross-border and multi-prospective reporting, and made by:
Jingle: Natallia Kunitskaya
Sound editing & mixing: Angelo Tripkovsky