FILTER RESULTS
FILTER RESULTS
close.svg
Search Result for “Ultraman paintings”

Showing 1 - 10 of 28

OPINION

Krabi deserves protection

News, Editorial, Published on 25/10/2025

» Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul this week granted a small victory to Krabi villagers fighting the quarry industry by agreeing to set up a fact-finding panel to assess the impact of quarrying on ecologically and archaeologically important areas.

OPINION

Time to let Afghan women lead

News, Palwasha Hassan & Shafiqa Khpalwak, Published on 10/03/2025

» This year's International Women's Day is marked by a sense of foreboding, even despair. Progress on women's rights and representation is stalling: the number of women in parliaments grew last year at the lowest rate in a generation, and the global financing gap for gender initiatives remains wide. At a time of widespread democratic backsliding -- and with US President Donald Trump freezing foreign aid, including for gender initiatives -- the prospects for improvement appear bleak.

OPINION

The long-lost art of collaboration

Oped, Vanessa Badré, Published on 01/01/2025

» At a time of rising international tensions and deep polarisation in many countries, trust-building and cooperation seem like forgotten arts. To reconnect with them and devise creative solutions to shared challenges, it is worth seeking insights from artists themselves.

OPINION

Protesting ethically for the planet

News, Peter Singer & Martin Skladany, Published on 05/09/2024

» Climate protesters have disrupted the tennis at Wimbledon, thrown tomato soup at the glass protecting famous paintings, sprayed orange powder on Stonehenge, and blocked traffic. In response, European governments have been cracking down on environmental protesters with detentions and fines, and, in one case, with a five-year prison sentence for advocating civil disobedience in a Zoom call.

OPINION

You can look, but please don't touch

Roger Crutchley, Published on 01/09/2024

» When we were kids, most of us heard the words "don't touch that!" from our parents if we were in the presence of something breakable and possibly valuable. That's probably what a father wishes he had said when he took his four-year-old son to a museum in the Israeli city of Haifa last week.

OPINION

Important to invest in cultural assets

Oped, Brian Mertens, Published on 15/02/2024

» Thailand's vast architectural and cultural heritage is more than just a source of enjoyment and public pride. It is probably the nation's most important resource besides its people. And heritage empowers the people. It supports social and economic welfare in lots of ways. It's worth taking care of.

OPINION

Getting historic renovations right

Oped, Atch Sreshthaputra, Published on 09/11/2023

» There has been some good news about the conservation of heritage architecture in Thailand in recent years -- but bad news as well. First, the good part: our society is waking up to the value of heritage. Despite little public funding and weak legal protection, some old buildings and sites are being conserved. Many people, companies and institutions throughout the nation now recognise that preserving our historic architectural resources improves our economy, communities and quality of life.

OPINION

Abe Shinzo, it seems we hardly knew you

News, Koichi Hamada, Published on 10/07/2023

» A year has passed since former Japanese Prime Minister Abe Shinzo was assassinated by a gunman during a campaign rally in Nara on July 8, 2022. Much like the assassination of US President John F Kennedy in Dallas in 1963, Abe's murder marked a watershed moment in Japan's history.

OPINION

Mexico's cart ban marks generic shift

Oped, Aldo Solano Rojas, Published on 25/06/2022

» In April, the government of Mexico City's central Cuauhtémoc alcaldía, or borough, mandated that all its rótulos -- the hand-painted signs decorating street vendors' kiosks -- be erased.

OPINION

Why no women?

Oped, Postbag, Published on 22/01/2022

» Re: "PPRP renegades unveil party: Sang Anakot Thai aims to heal economy", (BP, Jan 20). Your front-page photograph illustrating the formation of the new Palang Pracharath Party (Building Thailand's Future) is a line-up of old and bold politicians from the past -- all of them men.