European Strategic Autonomy - What Now in the Western Balkans
Tue, 15.03.2022, 18:00
Panels and Discussions
Ioannis Armakolas
Tue, 15.03.2022, 18:00
Series: Panels and Discussions
Tue, 15.03.2022, 18:00
Series: Panels and Discussions
The Future of Work: Is Artificial Intelligence a New Road to Serfdom?
Tue, 15.03.2022, 18:00
Lecture
Robert Skidelsky
Lecture and Discussion with Lord Robert Skidelsky
Tue, 15.03.2022, 18:00
Series: Lecture
Lecture and Discussion with Lord Robert Skidelsky
Tue, 15.03.2022, 18:00
Series: Lecture
Der Krieg ist wie Giftmüll im Fluss
Fri, 11.03.2022, 19:30
Other
Raphaela Edelbauer, Milena Michiko Flašar, Karl-Markus Gauß, Sabine Gruber, Maja Haderlap, Tanja Maljartschuk, Barbi Markovic, Doron Rabinovici, Christoph Ransmayr, Robert Schindel, Ferdinand Schmalz, Franz Schuh
Fri, 11.03.2022, 19:30
Speakers: Raphaela Edelbauer, Milena Michiko Flašar, Karl-Markus Gauß, Sabine Gruber, Maja Haderlap, Tanja Maljartschuk, Barbi Markovic, Doron Rabinovici, Christoph Ransmayr, Robert Schindel, Ferdinand Schmalz, Franz Schuh
Series: Other
Fri, 11.03.2022, 19:30
Speakers: Raphaela Edelbauer, Milena Michiko Flašar, Karl-Markus Gauß, Sabine Gruber, Maja Haderlap, Tanja Maljartschuk, Barbi Markovic, Doron Rabinovici, Christoph Ransmayr, Robert Schindel, Ferdinand Schmalz, Franz Schuh
Series: Other
War in Ukraine and Universal Values
Fri, 11.03.2022, 17:00
Panels and Discussions
Philipp Blom Serhii Plokhii Timothy Snyder
Fri, 11.03.2022, 17:00
Series: Panels and Discussions
Fri, 11.03.2022, 17:00
Series: Panels and Discussions
The Declaration of Universal Human Rights at Seventy-Five
Mon, 07.03.2022, 16:00
Seminars and Colloquia
Adam Sitze Ludger Hagedorn Martin Krygier
Mon, 07.03.2022, 16:00
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Mon, 07.03.2022, 16:00
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
No End to History
Tue, 01.03.2022, 18:00
Lecture
Katherine Younger Serhii Plokhii
The Post-Soviet Space Thirty Years after the Fall of the USSR
Tue, 01.03.2022, 18:00
Series: Lecture
Thirty years ago, the world lived through one of the most optimistic moments of the 20th century. Communism—and the Soviet Union with it—had collapsed, the Cold War had come to an end, and democracy was on the rise around the globe. We are now in probably the grimmest moment since the start of the 21st century. The Cold War is making its way back, hot war has returned to the geographic center of Europe, and democracy is facing the most profound challenges since the end of World War II. Nowhere were the expectations for the arrival of a new era so high, and nowhere did they crash with such tragic consequences, as in the former Soviet space. Looking back, we see that 1991 did not mark the end of history, either as the ideological evolution of humankind or as a scholarly discipline that has documented the lengthy and painful disintegration of most of the world’s empires. What we see today is the continuing process of the disintegration of the USSR, complete with efforts to establish spheres of influence, border disputes, and open warfare. We also see Russia’s return to the international scene as it attempts to claim the role of not only a regional but also a global power, akin to the role played by the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. In this lecture Serhii Plokhii will discuss the developments of the last thirty years in the lands that once belonged to the USSR, bringing history in to explain the most recent developments in the region.
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The Post-Soviet Space Thirty Years after the Fall of the USSR
Tue, 01.03.2022, 18:00
Series: Lecture
Thirty years ago, the world lived through one of the most optimistic moments of the 20th century. Communism—and the Soviet Union with it—had collapsed, the Cold War had come to an end, and democracy was on the rise around the globe. We are now in probably the grimmest moment since the start of the 21st century. The Cold War is making its way back, hot war has returned to the geographic center of Europe, and democracy is facing the most profound challenges since the end of World War II. Nowhere were the expectations for the arrival of a new era so high, and nowhere did they crash with such tragic consequences, as in the former Soviet space. Looking back, we see that 1991 did not mark the end of history, either as the ideological evolution of humankind or as a scholarly discipline that has documented the lengthy and painful disintegration of most of the world’s empires. What we see today is the continuing process of the disintegration of the USSR, complete with efforts to establish spheres of influence, border disputes, and open warfare. We also see Russia’s return to the international scene as it attempts to claim the role of not only a regional but also a global power, akin to the role played by the Russian Empire and the Soviet Union. In this lecture Serhii Plokhii will discuss the developments of the last thirty years in the lands that once belonged to the USSR, bringing history in to explain the most recent developments in the region.
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The Conundrum of Trafficking and Statelessness in West Bengal
Mon, 28.02.2022, 16:00
Seminars and Colloquia
Ayşe Çağlar Paula Banerjee
Mon, 28.02.2022, 16:00
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Mon, 28.02.2022, 16:00
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Maria Winowska and the Search for a Modern (but Illiberal) Central and Eastern Europe
Thu, 24.02.2022, 16:00
Cancelled
Katherine Younger Piotr Kosicki
Thu, 24.02.2022, 16:00
Series: Cancelled
Thu, 24.02.2022, 16:00
Series: Cancelled
Telling History: On Creating the Polish History Museum and its Exhibitions
Mon, 21.02.2022, 17:00
Seminars and Colloquia
Dariusz Stola Ludger Hagedorn Robert Kostro
Mon, 21.02.2022, 17:00
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Mon, 21.02.2022, 17:00
Series: Seminars and Colloquia
Reverse Perspective, the Politics of Space, and Contemporary Art Practice
Thu, 17.02.2022, 18:00
Panels and Discussions
Clemena Antonova Tomáš Glanc Wim Goes, Volkmar Mühleis
On a Book and an Exhibition
Thu, 17.02.2022, 18:00
Series: Panels and Discussions
On a Book and an Exhibition
Thu, 17.02.2022, 18:00
Series: Panels and Discussions