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German writer (born 1960) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ulrike Reinhard (born 1960) is a German publisher, author, digital nomad and futurist.[1][2] She is best known for her skatepark in Madhya Pradesh, Janwaar Castle.[3][4][5] Reinhard has also been editor of WE Magazine and has written for Think Quarterly.[6] All her work is related to network theory with the Internet at its core, focusing on interactions and the co-creation processes within a network. Her artwork explores objects both 'emerging' and 'falling into place'.[7]
Ulrike Reinhard | |
---|---|
Born | 1960 (age 63–64) |
Nationality | German |
Alma mater | University of Mannheim |
Occupation | Writer |
Born in Heidelberg[8] in 1960, Reinhard studied business administration at the University of Mannheim. After graduating, she spent over 10 years investigating new media developments in Italy and the United States. Back in Germany, in 1994 she organized a conference on interactive television, accompanied by her publication Interaktives Fernsehen: Kontaktadressen.[9]
She co-founded DNAdigital, a 2008-2010 initiative in Germany that aimed to foster dialogue between the 'Internet Generation' and business leaders regarding the world of work.
She published and contributed to Reboot_D - Digital Democracy, a 2009 compilation of articles and interviews about the way the internet is shaping and transforming society and politics in Germany.[10][11]
In 2008 Reinhard set up a project called WeBenin, aiming to help people in one of the poorest countries in West Africa to empower themselves, avoiding the paradigm of rich NGOs giving goods to poor aid recipients.[citation needed]
She founded a skatepark in Janwaar in Madhya Pradesh, called Janwaar Castle,[12] where one of the main rules to use the rink is "no school, no skateboarding," and which encourages girls to use the rink.[13] The rink has had a positive effect in helping to encourage girls to be involved in physical activities and has reduced violence between the Adivasi and Yadev castes in the area.[13] Now children from both castes make friends.[14] Young people in the village also learn English, how to paint, create 3D models, learn life skills, music and dance.[15] In 2016, Asha Gond, one of the girls from the village who Reinhard was tutoring in English, was selected to attend school in the United Kingdom.[16] The skatepark is 4,843 square feet (449.9 m2) and was opened in April 2015.[17][18] A short film was made about the park, called The Barefoot Skateboarders.[17][19] The non-profit organization that Reinhard created to run the skatepark is also called Janwaar Castle.[17] In March 2017, she founded the Rural Changemakers of Janwaar.
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