Thanks to the many citizen science projects that exist today, all of us who make up the social fabric can actively contribute to scientific knowledge and sustainable development.
Madrid-born Pablo Cerezal is an author and blogger who writes for various Spanish-speaking media such as Ethic, El País and La Rázon (Argentina). He wrote Los cuadernos del Hafa (2012), Breve historia del circo (Chamán Ediciones, 2017), the journalistic chronicles Al-Maqhaa (2017), and the urban chronicles Madrid-Cochabamba (2015) with Claudio Ferrufino-Coqueugniot.
Thanks to the many citizen science projects that exist today, all of us who make up the social fabric can actively contribute to scientific knowledge and sustainable development.
Bookshops’ shelves display an increasing number of books with a smaller number of pages. Data seems to confirm that books with more than 400 pages are increasingly becoming a rarity. Why are shorter books being published, and what does that tell us about how we engage in our free time?
“To Pamplona we will go” people sing during the festival of San Fermín, which is just one of the many popular fiestas celebrated in Spain throughout the year. Let’s take a trip through the country following the most highlighted dates of the festive calendar.