CONTACT POINT: Alternative financing of cultureOlena Pravylo
油
This document outlines a project to develop an efficient alternative system for financing culture in Eastern Partnership countries including Armenia, Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus, Azerbaijan, and Moldova. The project aims to define stakeholders, create alliances, research the existing environment, and develop individual strategies for each country by March 31, 2015. A team is assembled with roles including project manager, coordinator, research officer, country coordinators, and others to carry out tasks like announcing open calls, conducting meetings, collecting and analyzing data, and creating short and long-term strategies and an action plan.
Alternative financing for culture ACTION PLAN 2014-2015Olena Pravylo
油
This document summarizes a workshop on alternative financing for culture held in Minsk, Belarus in October 2014. It identifies the problem of inefficient cultural financing systems and maps out the causes and effects. The workshop's goal is to create an efficient cultural financing system. Solutions are presented through an objectives tree, including outcomes like increased knowledge, understanding of democratic reality, and legislation fitting social development levels. Next steps include forming a research team to analyze alternative funding models and develop an implementation strategy and action plan by March 2015.
The document discusses moviemaking in Ukraine and Georgia. It notes challenges in Ukraine like outdated thinking, corruption, and working with limited budgets. However, amateur filmmakers are passionate. Georgia is highlighted for implementing fast reforms and cultural interest, despite prejudice and Russian influence. The speaker's organization has run cultural projects in Ukraine since 2009 and plans future collaborations, like an Azerbaijani cinema event, to promote culture in the region.
The document discusses three primary tasks for effective continuous delivery (CD): breaking down monolithic codebases, designing an optimal test suite, and setting up a deployment pipeline. It emphasizes that CD requires decomposing large codebases into separate services and libraries to enable faster builds and testing. The test suite should follow a testing pyramid approach with more automated unit and integration tests. An effective deployment pipeline automates testing, builds and releases through distinct stages without shadow steps.
CONTACT POINT: Alternative financing of cultureOlena Pravylo
油
This document outlines a project to develop an efficient alternative system for financing culture in Eastern Partnership countries including Armenia, Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus, Azerbaijan, and Moldova. The project aims to define stakeholders, create alliances, research the existing environment, and develop individual strategies for each country by March 31, 2015. A team is assembled with roles including project manager, coordinator, research officer, country coordinators, and others to carry out tasks like announcing open calls, conducting meetings, collecting and analyzing data, and creating short and long-term strategies and an action plan.
Alternative financing for culture ACTION PLAN 2014-2015Olena Pravylo
油
This document summarizes a workshop on alternative financing for culture held in Minsk, Belarus in October 2014. It identifies the problem of inefficient cultural financing systems and maps out the causes and effects. The workshop's goal is to create an efficient cultural financing system. Solutions are presented through an objectives tree, including outcomes like increased knowledge, understanding of democratic reality, and legislation fitting social development levels. Next steps include forming a research team to analyze alternative funding models and develop an implementation strategy and action plan by March 2015.
The document discusses moviemaking in Ukraine and Georgia. It notes challenges in Ukraine like outdated thinking, corruption, and working with limited budgets. However, amateur filmmakers are passionate. Georgia is highlighted for implementing fast reforms and cultural interest, despite prejudice and Russian influence. The speaker's organization has run cultural projects in Ukraine since 2009 and plans future collaborations, like an Azerbaijani cinema event, to promote culture in the region.
The document discusses three primary tasks for effective continuous delivery (CD): breaking down monolithic codebases, designing an optimal test suite, and setting up a deployment pipeline. It emphasizes that CD requires decomposing large codebases into separate services and libraries to enable faster builds and testing. The test suite should follow a testing pyramid approach with more automated unit and integration tests. An effective deployment pipeline automates testing, builds and releases through distinct stages without shadow steps.