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Behind the Shields of Fantasy: The Populist Aesthetics of Status Loss
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Adam SitzeJohannes VölzLudger Hagedorn
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Decolonial Desires: Thinking through Discipline and Difference
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Clemena AntonovaSaurabh DubeJulian Strube
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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The Return of Yesterday
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Lecture
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Misha Glenny
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Europe’s Long Decades and the Threat to Human Scale
Series: Lecture
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Europe’s Long Decades and the Threat to Human Scale
Series: Lecture
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US Perspective of the War in Ukraine
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Panels and Discussions
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Ivan VejvodaMirjana Tomic, Bruce Stokes, Richard Parker
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Policy Choices, Political Debates, and Public Attitudes
Speakers: Ivan VejvodaMirjana Tomic, Bruce Stokes, Richard Parker
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Policy Choices, Political Debates, and Public Attitudes
Speakers: Ivan VejvodaMirjana Tomic, Bruce Stokes, Richard Parker
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Courage: A Conceptual History
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Lecture
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Aner BarzilayLudger HagedornEdward Skidelsky
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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Philosophy, Sacrifice, and War: Problems and Ambiguities
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Lecture
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James DoddLudger Hagedorn
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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War and the Fate of Europe in Patočka’s Heretical Essays
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Lecture
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David Dusenbury
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Speakers: David Dusenbury
Series: Lecture
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Speakers: David Dusenbury
Series: Lecture
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Civilisations, Barbarity, Conquest, Legitimacy and Crimes of War
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Lecture
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John DunnMisha Glenny
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Series: Lecture
The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February of this year has cast a glaring new light on a very old but ever more urgent question. In his lecture John Dunn asked, if there are any terms on which the human population of the world could still hope to live with one another in peace and personal freedom into a future of many generations? Could we still create together a modus vivendi of real duration? We know now, as we did not yet know in the year 1940, in which John Dunn was born, that any future generational horizon is in ever starker jeopardy because of the colossal and ever less controllable harm we are inflicting as a species on our global habitat. We know, as we could have known in much of Europe for at least three centuries, that the world was then, as it mercilessly remains, a vast distance from realising those terms and that it could not in principle realise them at all rapidly. We still have only a tiny repertoire of forms through which to try to act collectively on any scale: international agencies, civilisations, states, peoples (or, if you prefer, nations) – each of doubtful efficacy and eminently questionable legitimacy. Which of these forms could still take how much of the strain and how and why could war still feature as anything but grounds for despair within that ever more desperate struggle? We have never had any clear idea of how the world could be made a just world for its human inhabitants. Do we still have any rational horizon for collective hope over time?
Read more
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Series: Lecture
The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February of this year has cast a glaring new light on a very old but ever more urgent question. In his lecture John Dunn asked, if there are any terms on which the human population of the world could still hope to live with one another in peace and personal freedom into a future of many generations? Could we still create together a modus vivendi of real duration? We know now, as we did not yet know in the year 1940, in which John Dunn was born, that any future generational horizon is in ever starker jeopardy because of the colossal and ever less controllable harm we are inflicting as a species on our global habitat. We know, as we could have known in much of Europe for at least three centuries, that the world was then, as it mercilessly remains, a vast distance from realising those terms and that it could not in principle realise them at all rapidly. We still have only a tiny repertoire of forms through which to try to act collectively on any scale: international agencies, civilisations, states, peoples (or, if you prefer, nations) – each of doubtful efficacy and eminently questionable legitimacy. Which of these forms could still take how much of the strain and how and why could war still feature as anything but grounds for despair within that ever more desperate struggle? We have never had any clear idea of how the world could be made a just world for its human inhabitants. Do we still have any rational horizon for collective hope over time?
Read more
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We Have to Talk about Power
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Panels and Discussions
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Martin KrygierStephen Holmes
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Debating Liberalism, the State, and the Rule of Law
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Debating Liberalism, the State, and the Rule of Law
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Limits of Machines, Limits of Humans
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Lecture
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Edward LeeLudger HagedornStefan Woltran, Gerti Kappel, Michael Wiesmüller
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Series: Lecture
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Series: Lecture
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