A European project and a team of specialists to tell citizens about European projects and issues crucial to Europe’s future.

A Brave New Europe: a European project (replicated in three editions) to tell about European projects

The first question our Guide answers is as simple as it is broad and complex: what are European projects? In our pages we answer in many ways: European projects are an opportunity and a resource, a stimulus to grow and improve one’s business, a path to develop links and partnerships, a way to respond to common challenges, a way to “make policy” through concrete actions.

One of the most effective ways to answer the question, which we have fully embraced in one of our columns, is to tell the story and experience of those who have implemented them. In these stories we capture the importance and capacity of European projects to transform people, organizations and local organisations.

Dedicated to these stories is a project called “A Brave New Europe“, aimed at acquainting citizens with European cohesion policy projects and how the action of European funds can improve the daily lives of people and local communities; but also, the areas where more, and better, could be done through European funds.

“A Brave New Europe” is a European project, funded in three editions: in 2021 (“A Brave New Europe”), 2022 (“A Brave New Europe – Next Generation”) and 2023 (“A Brave New Europe – Voyager”). It was produced by Slow News and Percorsi di Secondo Welfare, joined by other major partners: Internazionale, Zai.net, Revue Dessinée Italia, Radio Popolare and Le Grand Continent.

The project involved a dense network of journalists, researchers, and experts, who showed with different stories and languages (articles, podcasts, videos, and comic book journalism) how “a bolder Europe” can be concretely achieved.

In the three editions of “A Brave New Europe,” an extensive collection of materials has been produced, whose spirit, goals and way of communicating we share. The tools developed by the project are an important addition to other in-depth platforms offered among our pages.

We offer a quick review of them: collectively, they represent a voice that tells the story of European projects in a concrete, brilliant, sharp and insightful way.

A Brave New Europe: the thematic series

Most of the content of “A Brave New Europe” is hosted on the website of Slow News, the project’s lead partner. The approximately 90 episodes, which tell the story, impact, progress and limitations of numerous projects, policies and programs supported through cohesion funds, are organized by thematic series.

A Brave New Europe: the other instruments

The Slow News website offers a number of other interesting tools produced by the “A Brave New Europe” project partnership.

First of all, it proposes a complete archive of articles, which also includes some short insights not part of the main “series” (for example: a short article also expressing some of our difficulties with links to the web pages of official sites).

It also offers an interactive map that allows you to search local organisations (throughout Italy, and some other countries in Europe) for project experiences mentioned by articles and episodes of “A Brave New Europe.”

We find projects in Turin (at Officine Grandi Riparazioni) and in the province of Cuneo, in Lombardy (in Milan, Brugherio and Pavia), in Bolzano, Treviso and Venice, on the island of Elba and Lipari, in the Asiago mountains and on the Madonie Mountains, in Sardinia and Sicily(Acireale, Caltanissetta and Palermo), in Apulia and Calabria, in Rome and Naples, to name a few.

Finally, the project developed a web mini-comedy in five episodes. It stars journalists from a fictional newspaper, called “La Smonta,” who address in ironic and bittersweet tones various topical issues covered by the project: the elderly, mobility, energy, migrants and poverty. It is a production that underscores the importance of serious and documented information on issues affecting Europe and its citizens.

Other articles, multimedia materials and insights can be found on websites of other project partners:

We will devote an upcoming interview to Pathways to Second Welfare., a research and information laboratory that, as a scientific partner of the project, has given academic consistency and horizon to the analysis of projects supported by cohesion funds, the contexts in which they develop, and the trends and dynamics most important for their success. In a future article we will recount its activity, experience and journey on European projects.

We leave you to read the materials of “A Brave New Europe” and the content developed by the project partners. A tool that deepens and illustrates what is also for us a fundamental question: what are and what do European projects produce?