1. DREFF and Instituto IBERIA Join Forces to Raise Awareness of the Environment in the Dominican Republic

    Thursday April 9th, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    The Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), and initiative of GFDD/Funglode, signed a collaboration agreement with Instituto IBERIA that will help to continue increasing awareness of sustainable socio-economic development in the Dominican Republic, thereby promoting the exchange of experiences, knowledge, research and environmental awareness in general in the country, while foster a culture that encourages proper management and use of natural resources in Dominican society. The agreement was signed by DREFF’s Director and Executive Director of Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD), Natasha Despotovic, and Instituto IBERIA Director, Víctor Martínez.

    Among other things, Instituto IBERIA -with headquarters in the city of Santiago- will share its venues for screenings, panel discussions and / or workshops held during DREFF, contributing to the promotion of its programming among students and teachers, as well as related initiatives celebrated throughout the year.

    Likewise, the Instituto IBERIA will promote the environmental programs implemented in the context of DREFF such as EcoHuertos, ReCrearte, RDescrubre, Globo Verde Dominicano Award, and Year Round Environmental Film Screenings.

    Since its inception in 2011, the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), an initiative of Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD), provides the Dominican public a platform for knowledge and debate on the environment and sustainable development, their issues and best practices, while celebrating the beauty and unique wealth of the Dominican nature.

    Though the screening of a diverse selection of the best films that deal with issues of major national and international relevance, and the organization of discussion panels, courses, seminars and field visits, DREFF not only promotes dialogue but also inspires the Dominican public to take action to ensure the health and sustainability of the environment.

    More information:
    www.iberia.edu.do
    www.globalfoundationdd.org


  2. DREFF and UNIBE Sign Agreement to Raise Environmental Awareness and Promote Sustainable Development in the Dominican Republic

    Friday April 3rd, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    The Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), an initiative of GFDD/Funglode, signed a collaborative agreement with the Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE, by its Spanish acronym), to support activities that promotes sustainable development in the Dominican Republic. The contract was signed by Dr. Julio Amado Castaños Guzmán, Vice-chancellor of the academic institution, and Natasha Despotovic, GFDD and DREFF Executive Director. With this agreement, both institutions will foster a culture that promotes the proper management and use of natural resources in Dominican society, as well as increase awareness of sustainable economic and social development in the country, promoting the exchange of experiences, knowledge, research and environmental awareness in general in the Dominican Republic.

    Natasha Despotovic said that the partnership “is an excellent opportunity to endorse the environmental programs implemented in the context of the DREFF throughout the year such as ReCrearte, EcoHuertos, Globo Verde Dominicano Award, and Year Round Environmental Film Screenings, among others, and in turn integrate UNIBE’s Community Service program and Ecology Group, while exploring the possibility of developing other joint activities.”

    Through the agreement the DREFF will collaborate, among other things, with the activities of UNIBE’s Environmental Week, held every year in the month of June, and likewise UNIBE will share its venues for screenings, panel discussions and/or workshops during the DREFF, promoting the DREFF’s programming and initiatives throughout the year among students and teachers.

    DREFF aims to raise awareness and deepen the understanding of environmental issues among Dominican audiences. The Festival also celebrates the beauty and diversity of the Dominican Republic’s natural heritage and offers insights into attitudes and actions that will contribute to its appreciation, conservation and sustainable use.

    Links related:
    www.globalfoundationdd.org/
    www.unibe.edu.do


  3. 100 Students Attended the DREFF Year-Round Environmental Film Screenings in San Antonio de Guerra

    Thursday March 26th, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    The Apolinar Concepción, Arcadia Reyes, Cleotilde Castillo and Tomás Hernández Franco schools participated in the event that was held as part of the implementation of the Eco-Schools program.

    One hundred students from four public schools located in the Dominican district of San Antonio de Guerra enjoyed the screening of the short film Circular, by Mexican filmmakers Aránzazu Zamora and Alexandra Castellano. The activity, organized by the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) and the Institute of Environmental Law of the Dominican Republic (IDADR for its acronym in Spanish), took place on March 25 of this year. The Apolinar Concepción, Arcadia Reyes, Cleotilde Castillo and Tomás Hernández Franco schools participated in the event that was held as part of the implementation of the Eco-Schools program and in the framework of DREFF’s Year-Round Environmental Film Screenings program.

    DSCN6529Eco-Schools is an international environmental certification program that is provided to schools that develop education and participation programs and projects where the children and friends of the school, following the established procedures, get involved in the implementation of  environmental enhancements in the school and in the community. This program is overseen worldwide by the Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE).

    Through the agreement with IDADR, the DREFF supports this mission: “Providing, through cinema, ideas on attitudes and actions that may contribute to the protection of the natural resources, and promoting the importance of sustainable development in the Dominican Republic,” explains Shamir Omar Reynoso, Environmental Programs Coordinator at GFDD/Funglode.

    Since the inception of its Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival in 2011, Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD) has created and developed five programs that run throughout the year and which contribute significantly to the sustainable development of the Dominican Republic. They are: EcoHuertos, ReCrearte, RDescubre, the Globo Verde Dominicano Award and the Year-Round Environmental Film Screenings program.

    The Year-Round Environmental Film Screenings program provides an opportunity for schools, community centers, businesses and government and non-governmental agencies to enjoy the most interesting screenings on environmental issues that have been shown in previous editions of DREFF, on a complementary basis.

    For more information:
    www.globalfoundationdd.org
    www.dreff.org

     


  4. Dominican Evening at the EFF

    Monday March 23rd, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    The DREFF screened two Dominican films, Lago Enriquillo: Preludio del cambio climático and Mañana and hosted a panel with the films’ directors at the Gala Hispanic Theater  in Washington DC, as part of the 23th edition of the prestigious Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital.

    The Dominican Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) hosted a Dominican evening as part of the Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital (EFF), with screenings and a panel at the Gala Hispanic Theater. Lago Enriquillo: Preludio del cambio climático and Mañana, winner of the Globo Verde Dominicano Award 2014, were shown to an enthusiastic audience who sought to know more about the environmental situation in the Dominican Republic and its exquisite natural resources. The DREFF – an initiative of GFDD – also organized a panel discussion that followed the screenings. Natasha Despotovic, Executive Director of the DREFF, oversaw the panel and introduced the films’ directors, Fernando Báez and Carlos García.

    DCEFF_6With this activity, the DREFF and GFDD once again sought to fulfill one of its objectives, which is to provide information and proposals that contribute to appreciation of the Dominican environment and promote its sustainable use. They also endeavor to contribute to the international screening of Dominican films while providing development opportunities to the country’s young filmmakers.

    For the past several years, the DREFF has worked with the DC Environmental Film Festival (EFF), a veteran organization now in its 23rd year. Natasha Despotovic explained that, through this association, “we have learned a great deal about how to organize our film festival in the Dominican Republic, which is growing and improving daily. In its fifth year, the festival will take place in September in fourteen different cities around the country.”

    The Executive Director of the DREFF and GFDD introduced Fernando Báez, one of the most prestigious Dominican filmmakers today and Carlos García, a budding director who, while participating in this event, had the opportunity to learn and to make contact with some of the best environmental film directors working today.

    About the movies
    Lago Enriquillo: Preludio del cambio climatic presents the history and evolution of the largest lake in the Antilles: Its flora, fauna and its legends. This film is an exhaustive investigation into the lake’s rising water level, analyzed by professionals who have researched it for years. The documentary looks at how the rising water is affecting the area’s inhabitants while attracting the attention of the scientific community around the world who view the phenomenon as a window into the effects and consequences of climate change.

    Mañana shows the journey of a man (The Walker) from a land of chaos and destruction to the “earthly paradise,” now lost. This film invites us to realize that we are all responsible for the future of our planet.

    The DREFF
    Since its inception in 2011, the DREFF provides the Dominican public a platform for knowledge and debate on the environment and sustainable development, their issues and best practices, while celebrating the beauty and unique wealth of the Dominican nature.

    Through the screening of a diverse selection of the best films that deal with issues of major national and international relevance, and the organization of discussion panels, courses, seminars and field visits, the DREFF not only promotes dialogue but also inspires the Dominican public to take action to ensure the health and sustainability of the environment.

    The EFF
    The EFF is the world’s premiere showcase of environmentally themed films. Each March in Washington, DC, the Festival presents more than 150 films to an audience of over 33,000. DCEFF program includes thematic discussions and social events, film screenings at museums, embassies, libraries, universities and local theaters. Founded in 1993, EFF is the largest and longest-standing environmental film festival in the United States. It has grown into a major collaborative cultural event both during the festival and all year-round.

    Related links:
    www.globalfoundationdd.org
    www.dcenvironmentalfilmfest.org
    www.unicorniofilms.com.do/

     


  5. DREFF: Special Guest at the DC Environmental Film Festival Opening in Washington, D.C.

    Thursday March 19th, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    The Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), a GFDD’s initiative, was invited as a special guest to the opening night and launch party of the 23rd Annual Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital (DCEFF). The opening was held at a fully packed Elihu Root Auditorium of the Carnegie Institution for Science on March 17, 2015 with the Washington, D.C. premiere of Bikes vs. Cars.

    eff-opening2015-01Stephanie Flack, DCEFF Executive Director, opened the night and introduced Dr. Matthew Scott, President, Carnegie Institution for Science; Dr. Peter Fox-Penner, an internationally recognized expert on energy markets and policy; Greer Johnson Gillis, Deputy Director, District Department of Transportation; Alex Liftman, Global Environment Executive, Bank of America; and filmmakers Margarete Jangård and Chris Paine (Who Killed the Electric Car, 2006; Revenge of the Electric Car, 2011), producers of the opening film Bikes vs. Cars.

    After the welcoming regards and the screening of the film, there was a lively discussion and Q&A session on the transportation challenges in cities all over the world.

    DREFF collaborates DCEFF for several years now. As part of the 2015’s DCEFF program, a Dominican Night will be hosted by GFDD-DREFF on March 20, at the Hispanic Gala Theater in Washington, D.C. Two Dominican films will be screened: Lago Enriquillo… a prelude to climate change” and “Mañana”, winner of the 2014 edition of DREFF’s Globo Verde Dominicano Award. There will be a panel discussion with Natasha Despotovic, GFDD’s Executive Director, as well as filmmakers Fernando Báez and Carlos García following the screening.

    About Bikes vs. Cars
    Traffic gridlock around the world is frustrating people, wasting their time, polluting the air and contributing to climate change. Director Fredrik Gertten (BANANAS! and Big Boys Gone Bananas!) investigates the daily global spectacle of traffic and looks for solutions. Following bicycle activists’ crusades to foster meaningful change, the film documents the struggle for bicyclists in a society dominated by cars. From bike activists in Sao Paulo and Los Angeles, fighting for safe bike lanes, to the city of Copenhagen, where forty percent commute daily by bike, BIKES vs CARS considers the revolutionary changes that could take place if more cities made room for bicyclists. Directed by Fredrik Gertten. Produced by Margarete Jangård and Elin Kamlert. Executive Producer: Chris Paine.

    About DCEFF
    The Environmental Film Festival at the Nation’s Capital (DCEFF) is the world’s premiere showcase of environmentally themed films. Each March in Washington, DC, the Festival presents more than 150 films to an audience of over 33,000. DCEFF program includes thematic discussions and social events, film screenings at museums, embassies, libraries, universities and local theaters. Founded in 1993, EFF is the largest and longest-standing environmental film festival in the United States. It has grown into a major collaborative cultural event both during the festival and all year-round.

    More information: http://www.globalfoundationdd.org/

     


  6. Garbage or Resource? A Dominican Republic Experience screened at Instituto Iberia, Santiago with a ReCrearte presentation

    Thursday February 26th, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    Garbage or Resource? A Dominican Republic Experience”, a short film produced by GFDD/Funglode directed by Ms. Natasha Despotovic, GFDD Executive Director, was screened to students of the Instituto Iberia in Santiago de los Caballeros, Dominican Republic. The screening took place at the historical educational center’s library on February 24th 2015, and also included a presentation of GFDD’s recycled art program ReCrearte by its Coordinator, Bertha Santana.

    Mr. Victor Martinez, Director of Instituto Escuela, welcomed GFDD Staff to the center and with warm regards opened the event, followed with an introduction about the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) and GFDD’s short “Garbage or Resource? A Dominican Republic Experience”, by Maria Victoria Abreu, GFDD’s Socioeconomic Program Manager. After the screening and the presentation of ReCrearte, students and teachers were very proactive in a lively discussion on the importance of recycling to our planet’s sustainability and how to make it happen in our every day’s lives.

    Approximately 85 high school students participated in this activity and were fascinated by topics related to the environment and entrepreneurship with a sustainable approach. They also showed a lot of interest in GFDD’s Globo Verde Dominicano Award, aiming to produce their own environmental audiovisual works to submit to it this year.

    After the discussion, Instituto Iberia showed GFDD Staff members their own short video on a recent excursion to a poor community in the countryside where students and teachers helped improve an unfortunate house and interacted with natural resources.

    This activity is part of GFDD Year Round Environmental Film Screenings under the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) initiative. This year DREFF will take place September 8-13 in fourteen cities of the Dominican Republic.


  7. 90 Students Climb the Highest Mountain in the Caribbean in the 12th Educational Expedition to Pico Duarte

    Wednesday February 25th, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    Participants Travel a Total of 60 Kilometers During Five Days in the Heart of the Dominican Cordillera Central as part of the program RDescubre

    The 12th Educational Expedition to Pico Duarte, part of the initiatives of the RDescubre program, was successfully held when 90 students from various schools in the Dominican Republic had the opportunity to climb Pico Duarte, the highest mountain in the Caribbean. The event, organized by Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD) and Fundación Global Democracia y Desarrollo (Funglode) in collaboration with Siempre Más Foundation, took place from February 18th to the 22nd.

    12va_exp_picoduarte-07The alpinist Karim Mella, President of Siempre Más Foundation, coordinated the expedition, which was also supported by twelve team members of Siempre Más, as well as students from past expeditions, which have been identified by their leadership attributes.

    As part of the event, participants of the Politécnico Ann & Ted Kheel of Verón, La Altagracia; Politécnico Femenino Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes, and Liceo Hermano Miguel, Santiago, made various environmental activities including a cleanup in the Tetero Valley, where they removed about 300 pounds of waste, with the help of the mules of the expedition.

    Students developed several presentations for their schools, where they discussed the symbolic parallels between climbing Pico Duarte and their personal goals and achievements, among other environmental projects that they plan to do when they return from the trip. Students also received seminars by experts in environmental conservation from Armando Bermúdez National Park, this in order to create a greater understanding of the geography of the Cordillera, flora and fauna, climate, conservation environmental, forest fires and reforestation, among other topics.

    Karim Mella, first Dominican to climb Mount Everest, explained that the expedition traveled a total of 60 kilometers in the heart of the Dominican mountain range, on a journey that took five days. Mella said that “the trail was quite difficult because it rained for two days, so the pathways of the journey became muddy”.

    This initiative has been made possible by the support of GFDD and the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), which sponsors several expeditions a year and organizes activities with the intention of bringing together participants and reinforce the values learned during the trip.

    The Educational Expeditions to Pico Duarte reflect the overall mission of the DREFF to interact with leading figures in the environmental community by promoting the participation of young students and encouraging change. Since the first expedition on March 2012 hundreds of students across the country have had the opportunity to participate in this adventure that changes their lives.

    More information www.dreff.org


  8. The DREFF Promotes Environmental Awareness through Film Showcase in Three Dominican Republic Schools

    by AdminDREFF

    Students from Haina and Boca Chica Enjoy the Documentary a Thirsty World

    Delivering on its commitment to promoting sustainable development and environmental awareness, GFDD/Funglode, through the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival, showcased three screenings in different schools in the Dominican Republic of the film A Thirsty World, in collaboration with the Instituto de Derecho Ambiental de la República Dominicana (IDARD, by its Spanish acronym) and the EcoEscuelas program.  The screenings were held on Wednesday, February 18th at the Instituto Politécnico of Haina and the Vitalina Mordán Cruz School in Boca Chica; and on the 19that the Formerio Rodriguez School in Boca Chica.

    proyeccion_sed-mundo_escuelas-09Reydi Moreta, of the DREFF, and Alejandrina Matos, representing the EcoEscuelas program and the IDARD and Janeira Masiel of EcoEscuelas program as well, offered welcoming words in the different activities, where a large number of students had the opportunity to see the documentary, directed by Yann Arthus-Bertrand, that highlights the everyday harsh reality of people who live without access to water. Moreta took the opportunity to discuss the initiatives of GFDD and the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), which this year takes place in the Dominican Republic from September 8 to 13.

    The screening of these films is part of the DREFF Year-Round Environmental Film Screenings  Program, which aims to raise awareness in communities across the country on environmental and sustainable development issues through cinema. This project allows schools, universities, community centers, businesses, government agencies, and others, to screen some of the best films of the past editions of DREFF.

    About EcoEscuelas
    EcoEscuelas is an international environmental certification program for schools that develop programs and projects for education and participation, where children and friends of the school, following the methodology, are involve in the implementation of environmental improvements in the center and in the center. This program is administered worldwide by the Foundation for Environmental Education (FEE by its Spanish acronym).

    More information: www.dominicanscreenings.org

     


  9. DREFF Participated in the Festival International du Film D’ Environnement (FIFE)

    Friday February 13th, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    Île-de-France, a region that is successfully achieving ecological and social transition to sustainable development, has just celebrated the thirty-second edition of the festival’s most important environmental films from France and one of the largest in Europe, Festival International du Film d’Environnement (FIFE by its French acronym). Team members of the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) traveled to France to participate in the prestigious event, which is also a meeting point of the festivals that are part of the Green Film Network  (GFN), a worldwide association to which the DREFF belongs since January 1st of this year.

    dreff_participated_fife03During one week, from 3 to 10 February, the Director of the DREFF, Natasha Despotovic, and Director of Digital Media and Print Material, Semiramis de Miranda, participated in the event and in the meetings that GFN traditionally held during the festival. “FIFE is an excellent opportunity, not only to see some of the best productions of the year, but to generate contacts, exchange ideas and build networks with some of the most important environmental festivals in the world,” said Despotovic.

    The DREFF networked with the Cinemambiente Festival of Torino, Solidarity Water Europe, Sublimages, Ecozine Film Festival Zaragoza, and Innsbruck Nature Film Festival, among other organizations.

    FIFE presents documentaries, feature films, short films and web documentaries that address issues such as sustainable development, immigration, energy and social problems. Over 100 films representing 41 countries have been presented in this edition.

    “Every year, for a week, FIFE becomes a place where the audience and professionals can exchange ideas and discuss with managers, experts and other persons participating in the festival,” explained the organizers.

    Over the past three years, the event has organized meetings so professionals can share experiences and reflect on the various methods of production and distribution worldwide, in addition to allowing certain films find a distributor in France.

    About DREFF

    Since its inception in 2011, the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF), an initiative of Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD), provides the Dominican public a platform for knowledge and debate on the environment and sustainable development, their issues and best practices, while celebrating the beauty and unique wealth of the Dominican nature.

    Through the screening of a diverse selection of the best films that deal with issues of major national and international relevance, and the organization of discussion panels, courses, seminars and field visits, the DREFF not only promotes dialogue but also inspires the Dominican public to take action to ensure the health and sustainability of the environment.

    Partnering with some of the most important institutions in the field – including the Green Film Network (GFN) –, every September, during each of its editions, the DREFF organizes over 80 free screenings in 14 cities and nearly 30 venues throughout the Dominican Republic.

    Honoring the commitment of Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD) to contribute concretely to the sustainable development of the Dominican Republic and of the world, creating practical platforms for the implementation of Sustainable Development Goals, the DREFF has developed five programs operating throughout the year, working closely with the community: ReCrearte, EcoHuertos, RDescubreGloboVerde Dominicano Award and Year Round Environmental Film Screening.

    Related links:

    Festival International Du Film D’Environnement

    To see the awards click here

    Green Film Network


  10. The DREFF Kicks-off the Fourth Edition of the Globo Verde Dominicano Award with a Special Category for High School Students

    Tuesday February 3rd, 2015 by AdminDREFF

    Registration is now open until July 24 in the official page of the competition: www.globoverdedominicano.org

    The Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival (DREFF) will host the fourth edition of the first audiovisual competition in the area of environment and sustainable development in the Dominican Republic, the Globo Verde Dominicano Award. This year’s competition will include a special category for high school students: the Globo Verde Junior, which joins the Public Service Announcement, Short Film and Photography categories.

    The Globo Verde Dominicano Award is a unique opportunity for filmmakers, students and young professionals who want to venture into a fairly uncharted area in the Dominican Republic -the creation of environmental audiovisual material- as well as to show their work to a national and international audience as part of each edition of the Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival, which is held every September, and at other international festivals.

    The competition, which began in 2012 with the categories of Short Film and Public Service Announcement, last year added a new category in the area of Photography. This year, with the aim of giving an opportunity to young people and to promote the use of new technologies, the Globo Verde Junior category, exclusively for high school students, will make its debut.

    As in the previous edition of the competition, the Photography category will adhere to a theme that has been determined by the competition’s board of directors. In 2015, on the occasion of the 21st Conference on Climate Change organized by the United Nations, the theme is “Impact of Global Warming and Climate Change.” For more information and ideas on this topic please visit the DREFF blog.

    In addition to cash prizes and equipment contestants will receive a lot of promotion for their works through all web pages related to the DREFF, as well as at film festivals around the world: Turning Our Backs to the Ocean, directed by Armando Larrauri and the winner in the 2012 competition, was presented at the Blue Ocean Film Festival and at the Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital (EFF’s); Sebastian Cabrera, the winner in 2013 with his short film First Steps, was also present at the EFF’s and was part of a panel discussion on recycling in the Dominican Republic. The 2014 winner, Carlos García, director of Tomorrow, is preparing to present his short film this coming March at the same festival, the largest in Washington, DC, and one of the most important at the global level.

    This year, the awards are:

    • Short Film Category: Screening of the short film at an international environmental film festival + a certificate for $2,000 in technical equipment.
    • Public Service Announcement Category: A 15-inch Macbook Pro laptop: 2.2 GHz, with retina display.
    • Photography Category: A certificate for $1,000 in technical equipment.
    • Globo Verde Junior Category: A certificate for $1,000 in technical equipment.

     

    Entries participating in the Globo Verde Dominicano Award will be judged by a jury made of national and international professionals, which will be announced shortly. The winners of the competition will be announced in the framework of the 5th Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival, which will take place September 8-13, 2015.

    Registration is officially open starting today and will remain open until July 24, 2015. The electronic registration form is available on the competition website at (www.globoverdedominicano.org) where the rules for each category can also be found. Those interested in obtaining additional information can submit their questions via social networks on Facebook and Twitter (@GloboVerdeDR), or via email at info@globoverdedominicano.org.

    Since the inception of its Dominican Republic Environmental Film Festival in 2011, Global Foundation for Democracy and Development (GFDD) has created and developed five programs that run throughout the year and contribute significantly to the sustainable development in the Dominican Republic. They are: ReCrearte, EcoHuertos, RDescubre, Year-Round Environmental Film Screenings, and Globo Verde Dominicano. The DREFF is an initiative of Global Foundation for Democracy and Development.


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