Miccia Mag is a digital magazine with a decolonial and intersectional approach. It tells stories that transcend the present, offering new perspectives, questions, possibilities and visions. Every voice offers a unique perspective. Every story offers a new way to view things. Miccia Mag activates your critical thinking to generate change.
Fossil fuel sponsorships and their hidden influence
How Oil and Gas Companies deceive citizens to maintain their pollution business.
Why lgbtq+ memory matters for our present and future
The memory of the LGBTQ+ community.
Why public interest journalism matters for democracy
It means caring for our democracy.
How fossil fuel companies spread climate disinformation
The strategy through influencers and gamers.
Why dance is political: the voice of Nadege Okou
“And if we do not know our roots, we cannot move forward because we lose the essence”: the voice of Nadege Okou.
Ethnic profiling in Italy: why it matters and why data is missing
But data and statistics are missing.
Being happy in a racist society: the voice of Nogaye Ndiaye
The voice of Nogaye Ndiaye, law graduate and populariser on human rights issues, member of the creative committee of the Blackn[è]ss festival.
Decolonizing Palestine: the double standard of international law
The Italian left celebrates Muslims like Mamdani abroad but ignores thInterview with Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur for the Occupied Territories of Palestine.e struggles of those who were born in Italy without citizenship. Voices and stories of exclusion and political hypocrisy.
Institutional racism in Italy: the voice of Abdulkadir Monaco Abdullahi Omar
The voice of Abdulkadir Monk Abdullahi Omar, activist and social worker.
Giambellino art: redesigning the neighborhood through culture
The voice of Milano Mediterranea and its artists.
Where hope doesn’t arrive, climate activism does
The voices of Maria Letizia Ruello, researcher and spokesperson for Ultima Generazione, and Michela Spina, student of veterinary medicine and spokesperson for Fridays for Future.
Why media responsibility in climate change fails in Italy
And much of the media is responsible for it.
Environmental crimes in Italy: crimes without guilt
Washable paint scandalises more than the climate crisis and environmental disasters by companies in Italy.