September 21, 2009
Southern Conference on Slavic Studies, 03/25-27/2010, Gainesville
CALL FOR PAPERS
48th Annual Meeting
Southern Conference on Slavic Studies
Gainesville, FL
March 25-27, 2010
DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS: January 15, 2009
The 48th annual meeting of the Southern Conference on Slavic Studies (SCSS) will take place in Gainesville, FL on March 25-27, 2010. The purpose of SCSS is to promote scholarship, education, and in all other ways to advance scholarly interest in Russian, Soviet, and East European studies in the Southern region of the United States and nationwide. Papers from all humanities and social science disciplines are welcome and encouraged, as is a focus on countries other than Russia/USSR.
The program committee is accepting panel and paper proposals until January 15, 2010. Whole panel proposals (chair, three papers, discussant) are preferred, but proposals for individual papers are also welcome. Whole panel proposals should include the titles of each individual paper as well as a proposed title for the panel itself and identifying information (including email addresses and institutional affiliations) for all participants. Proposals for individual papers should include email contact, institutional affiliation, and a brief (one paragraph) abstract to guide the program committee in the assembly of panels. Email (preferably) your proposal to Sharon Kowalsky at
sharon_kowalsky@tamu-commerce.edu
or send it by conventional post to:
Dr. Sharon Kowalsky
Department of History
Texas A&M University-Commerce
PO Box 3011
Commerce, TX 75429
The conference, hosted by the University of Florida, will be held at the Hilton University of Florida conference Center. Gainesville is accessible by three airports: the Gainesville Regional Airport; Jacksonville
International Airport (about 90 minutes away); and Orlando International Airport (about 2 hours away).
Posted by uunguyen at 03:18 PM | Comments (0)
September 04, 2009
Cultural Pluralism Revised: Religious and Linguistic Freedoms
Deadline for essay submission: January 15th, 2010
Berlin April 2010
Cultural Pluralism Revised: Religious and Linguistic Freedoms Essay Competition - Conference - Workshops - Research Grant
Workshop participation in Berlin
Up to 40 successful applicants to the essay competition will be invited to discuss their research with prominent scholars at two of Europe’s leading research institutions. The workshops will take place at the Social Science Research Center Berlin, 7 – 11 April 2010. Workshops will be chaired by José Casanova (Georgetown University) and Fernand de Varennes (Murdoch University).
Competition Details
The competition is open to scholars (maximum 5 years after Ph.D.) as well as practicioners and journalists with relevant backgrounds. Essays may address empirical research and/or theoretical issues related to the topic.
An international jury will award two three-months fellowship to be used for research at the WZB, the Humboldt-University Berlin and the State library Berlin. The Grant includes a monthly stipend of EUR 1,000 plus accommodation and its winners will be invited to join a follow-up workshop in Berlin in 2010/2011.
For the finalists of the essay competition the Irmgard Coninx Foundation will cover travel to and accommodation in Berlin.
For details please visit our website: www.irmgard-coninx-stiftung.de
For inquiries please contact us: info@irmgard-coninx-stiftung.de
Dr. Sabine Berking
Irmgard Coninx Stiftung
c/o Wissenschaftszentrum für Sozialforschung Berlin
Reichpietschufer 50
10785 Berlin
Tel: 0049 30 25491 411
Fax: 0049 30 25491 684
Posted by uunguyen at 12:27 PM | Comments (0)
Governments-in-Exile and the Jews during the Second World War, Southampton
Governments-in-Exile and the Jews during the Second World War
March 21-22, 2010
The Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations at the University of Southampton is organizing a research project which will explore the responses of the anti-Hitler Allies to the Jewish plight during the Second World War. An international two-day symposium to be held at the University of Southampton on 21 and 22 March 2010 and focusing on the various governments-in-exile established in Britain during the war will form an integral part of this project. This symposium aims to bring together scholars engaged in academic research on the bystanders to the Holocaust through a specific and so far neglected area of Holocaust research. The project – based on a comparative analysis of individual cases – intends to explore whether a theory of common taxonomy can be applied across the exiled Governments’ treatment of Jewish issues. Were there any common features of the responses of the governments-in-exile to the Jewish plight? Did the governments cooperate? Are there any similarities in the theoretical analysis of their conduct?
While the subject of the bystanders to the Holocaust has constituted an important part of Holocaust research in the last decades, historians have focused mainly on the two major Western Allied powers, the United States and United Kingdom. There has not been any comprehensive investigation of how the other members of the anti-Hitler alliance helped to shape attitudes and responses to the Nazi persecution and extermination of the European Jewry. The governments of Belgium, Czechoslovakia, France (Free France), Greece, Luxemburg, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and Yugoslavia will form be the main focus of the conference.
The official national representatives in exile were theoretically in a position to impact on the attitudes of their populations at home towards the Jews. As it seems, their main responses to the Holocaust was fostering the exchange of information among the populations in the occupied countries, the exiles, and the major Allied governments. Project and symposium will examine the policies of the governments-in-exile, the actions they actually took (including attempts, if there were any, to impact on initiatives by the Western Allies for the rescue of Jews), and the factors that shaped their policies and actions. The latter includes the role played by the main national underground organizations that informed the governments-in-exile about the sentiments among the populations at home towards the persecuted Jews. Across Nazi occupied Europe the harsh German occupation regime triggered a resurgence in nationalism but this tended to exclude groups which were seen as foreign, and this often meant the Jews as well. Hence the governments-in-exile were caught in a network of complex influences, and this dynamic needs to be investigated.
The Parkes Institute for the Study of Jewish/non-Jewish Relations at the University of Southampton welcomes contributions from senior scholars as well as researchers at the beginning of their academic careers. We intend to publish the conference proceedings in order to stimulate further discussion of the issues raised at the symposium. Holocaust Studies, published by Vallentine Mitchell, has already expressed an interest subsequent to the standard review process. It is expected that symposium and subsequent publication of the proceedings will lead to the establishment of an international network of scholars working on related areas of research that will facilitate further projects in the field.
For more information, contact the project coordinator, Jan Lanicek, e-mail: J.Lanicek@soton.ac.uk
http://www.southampton.ac.uk/parkes/news/conf-10-exile_symposium.shtml
Jan Lanicek
History Department/the Parkes Institute
University of Southampton
Southampton
SO171BJ
Posted by uunguyen at 12:18 PM | Comments (0)
The Nuremberg Trial - Taking Stock, 10/01/2009, Huremberg
"That Four Great Nations...": The Nuremberg Trial - Taking Stock
Conference Date: 2009-10-01
On 20th November 1945 the trial of the International Military Tribunal opened in the Courtroom 600 in Nuremberg´s Palace of Justice. It is in this historic location, which still houses the original site of the trials of members of the Nazi regime's elites, that currently a new institution of Nuremberg municipal museums is being constructed - the "Memorial Nuremberg Trials".
Parallel to the development of the new permanent exhibition, the Documentation Centre Nazi Party Rally Grounds which will take on the task of curator has organised an international experts' symposium to promote scientific discussion and research on the Nuremberg Trials. The conference is intended to provide an overview of current research, particularly on the trial of the main war criminals, and a discussion forum for new research projects.
The conference will present contributions by 22 renowned experts from eight countries – from the USA, France and Russia to New Zealand and Israel. Lecturers will include Benjamin B. Ferencz, chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Einsatzgruppen Trial of 1947-48, and Prof. David M. Crane, first chief prosecutor at the Special Court for Sierra Leone. The conference will address topics such as the Nuremberg Trial's media reception, the different points of view of the Allied nations, and it will also take a look at further tribunals after Nuremberg.
The multi-disciplinary symposium is directed at experts, both from research and teaching, as well as at students, but will also be open to all interested persons. It is planned as an international event. The conference languages will be German (G) and English (E), there will be simultaneous translation.
For further information and registration please visit www.conference-nuremberg-trial.de
(Ms) Henrike Zentgraf
Dokumentation Centre Nazi Party Rally Grounds
Bayernstr. 110
90478 Nürnberg (Nuremberg)
Germany
Phone: +49-911-231-6689
Fax: +49-911-231-8410
Email: henrike.zentgraf@stadt.nuernberg.de
Posted by uunguyen at 11:02 AM | Comments (0)
August 21, 2009
Language Learning in Computer Mediated Communities, Manoa
LANGUAGE LEARNING IN COMPUTER MEDIATED COMMUNITIES (LLCMC) CONFERENCE
October 11-13, 2009
University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI
http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/
The LLCMC Conference will explore the use of computers as a medium of communication in a wide variety of online language learning communities. Highlights will include a plenary talk by Dr. Gilberte Furstenberg (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), a special panel showcasing online cultural exchanges based at UHM, and fifteen exciting paper presentations. For more details as well as the conference schedule, visit the conference website.
Immediately preceding LLCMC will be a special pre-conference event entitled CULTURA: WEB-BASED INTERCULTURAL EXCHANGES on October 10-11. It will use the original web-based Cultura project, pioneered by Dr. Furstenberg and her colleagues, as a basic model and consist of a series of panels dealing with a variety of topics related to online intercultural exchanges, as well as a Tech Fair (electronic poster sessions) where some participants will demonstrate their own projects. For more details, visit the pre-conference webpage: http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/cultura.html
PRE-REGISTRATION DEADLINE - SEPTEMBER 15, 2009
http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/registration.html
Preregister for the LLCMC Conference by September 15, 2009 to enjoy discount rates. There is no registration fee for the Cultural pre-conference event, but we encourage potential attendees to preregister in advance (whether or not they plan to come to LLCMC) to ensure they have a seat reserved for them.
National Foreign Language Resource Center
University of Hawai'i
1859 East-West Road, #106
Honolulu HI 96822
voice: (808) 956-9424, fax: (808) 956-5983
email: nflrc@hawaii.edu
Posted by uunguyen at 04:00 PM | Comments (0)
August 12, 2009
ROUNDTABLE- Education in Central Asia, 10/08/2009, Toronto
ROUNDTABLE- Education in Central Asia, Univ. of Toronto, Oct. 8
Invitation to Round Table Discussion on Education in Central Asia
TITLE: "Hard Talk" on State-Civil Society-INGO Relationships in Education Development in Central Asia: Challenges, Future Possibilities and Roles for Outside Actors (Focus on: Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan.)
DATE: Thursday, October 8, 2009, from 2 to 5:30 pm. (Free event, immediately before the Central Eurasian Studies Society (CESS) annual conference at the University of Toronto)
LOCATION (and sponsor): Comparative International & Development Education Centre (CIDEC), Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto (OISE/UT), 252 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 1V6. Room 2 211
PARTICIPANTS: Students, researchers, NGO personnel, donor personnel, policy makers, etc.
OBJECTIVES AND SCOPE: To provide a forum to explore important questions of major /central concerns, experiences, interests, pressing needs on the topic. Regarding several areas of education, these include:
To exchange critical perspectives on the current "state" of educational development in Central Asia;
To identify key challenges from the perspectives of a broad range of stakeholders (Especially needs that external donors, international NGOs (INGOs) can help provide);
To stimulate constructive dialogue on policies and roles of INGOs, donors and governments in CA;
To stimulate the development of a comparative, regional approach to educational development in CA;
To form networks for potential research and development projects focused on key issues identified (action plans, proposals, publications, etc.).
DRAFT AGENDA and SCHEDULE
2:00 - Registration; Meet and Greet
2:30-2:45 - Goals of the Round Table; Background, Context , Setting the Stage
2:45-3:30 - Brainstorm Session: Identify & Prioritize Key Issues and Challenges as Round Table Themes
3:30-3:45 - Coffee Break
3:45-4:30 - Working Groups Break-out discussions on key themes identified, including potential future actions: proposals, projects, collaboration, papers, etc.
4:30-5:20 - Working Groups report back to plenary
5:20-5:30 - Wrap-up, suggestions for next steps, future collaboration.
An annotated agenda and further information will be distributed by early September.
Queries can be addressed to:
Sarfaroz Niyozov, email: sniyozov@oise.utoronto.ca
Michael Sinclair, email: msinclairafg04@yahoo.ca
Posted by uunguyen at 01:49 PM | Comments (0)
August 06, 2009
Ukraine and Georgia, 10/23-24/2009, Odessa
Ukraine and Georgia in the Context of the Political, Economic and Security Transformation: Lessons Learned and Perspectives
On the 23rd-24th of October 2009 the International conference “Ukraine and Georgia in the Context of the Political, Economic and Security Transformation: Lessons Learned and Perspectives ” will take place in Odessa, Ukraine. The conference is organized by the National Institute for Strategic Studies – Odessa Branch under support of the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung in Ukraine, Institute of Foreign Policy of the Diplomatic Academy of Ukraine and the General Consul of Georgia in Odessa.
During the conference the following topics will be discussed:
1. Political Transformation of Ukraine and Georgia: Comparative Analysis
Perspectives of the Bringing Ukraine and Georgia to the Implementation And Realization of the Eastern Partnership.
Colour Revolutions in Ukraine and Georgia and Their Impact to the States’ Democratization
Transformation of Political Systems of Ukraine and Georgia From 1991 to 2009
Role of the Political Elites in the Transformation of the Ukrainian and Georgian Societies
Cooperation with the EU
2. Economic Transformation and Cooperation of Georgia and Ukraine
Socio-Economic Development of Ukraine and Georgia on the Way to the European Integration
Trade and Economic Cooperation between Ukraine and Georgia: Achievements and Perspectives
Ukrainian and Georgian Membership in WTO: Advantages and Disadvantages.
Role of Kiev and Tbilisi in The Creation of the European Energy Space
3. Security Threats In The Black Sea Region
Threats to the National Security of Ukraine and Georgia in the Black Sea Region
Consequences of the Russian – Georgia War to the Internal and External Policy of Georgia and Ukraine
Security of the Energy Transit
Cooperation of Ukraine and Georgia as a Factor of Security in the Black Sea Region.
The Role of the Regional and International Organizations in the Security Sphere in the Black Sea Region
4. Lessons Learned and Perspectives.
If you would like to take part in this conference, please, send filled application form to geo-ukr@ukr.net by the 10th of September, 2009. You will be informed about the selection results by the end of September, 2009.
Application
http://d.yimg.com/kq/groups/12658675/529019727/name/Application form.doc
Posted by uunguyen at 01:18 PM | Comments (0)
August 05, 2009
Social Actors, Practices and Conceptions of Revisionist Politics in Europe, 1938-45, 09/11-12/2009, Bern
Social Actors, Practices and Conceptions of Revisionist Politics in Europe, 1938-45
11-12 September 2009
University of Bern, Chair for Modern and Contemporary History
UniS, Schanzeneckstrasse 1, room A 022
From the 10th to the 12th September a conference on the issue "Coalition of the Revisionists: The System of Alliance around Nazi-Germany during the Second World War. Aims, Motives and Ideas" will take place at the Department of History at the University of Bern (Switzerland).
This conference will be about social and political actors as well as conceptions and methods of revisionist politics in Europe during the Second World War. It aims to bring together outstanding experts to discuss the results of international research and forthcoming projects about "Europe and the Coalition of the Revisionists." It will reflect on the topic: How did the satellites of Germany fit into the vision of a "New Europe," which for many contemporaries seemed to be a realistic aim to be carried on in a coalition with the "Third Reich?"
Program: http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/id=11985%3E
Homepage
http://www.hist.unibe.ch/content/tagungen/revisionist_politics_1938_45/index_ger.html
Posted by uunguyen at 01:56 PM | Comments (0)
July 20, 2009
The Changing Landscape of East-Central Europe since 1700, 09/24-26/2009, Oxford
The 4th conference of the Forum of British, Czech and Slovak Historians will be held at the University of Oxford on 24-26 September 2009. The conference aim is to study modern landscape history transnationally and comparatively with a special focus on East-Central Europe.
To register, and for more information, please contact Jane Cunning: jane.cunning@history.ox.ac.uk
http://www.ceelbas.ac.uk/ceelbas-news/events/conferences/changinglandscape
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME:
"The Changing Landscape of East-Central Europe since 1700 in Transnational Context"
Thursday 24th-Saturday 26th September 2009
History Faculty, George Street, Oxford, England.
Thursday 24th September
13.30: Registration
14.00: Welcome & Keynote Lecture: Verena Winiwarter: Rivers as Socio-natural Sites: Conceptual Considerations for an Environmental History of the Danube River Basin.
15.15: Tea/Coffee Break
15.45: Jozef Tancer: Landscape Perception in Hungarian Travelogues in the 18th and early 19th Centuries.
Eva Chodejovska: Behind the City Walls: Early Modern Prague in Visual Sources.
Markus Cerman: Changes in Early-modern Economic Landscapes: Proto-industrial Employment in 18th century Bohemia.
18.00: Keynote Speaker: Eva Semotanova: Changes of the Czech Historical Landscape: Theory, Methods and Examples.
19.30 for 19.45: Pre dinner drinks: Conference Dinner at Oriel College.
Friday 25th September
9.00 Alice Velkova: The Influence of Social Change in Czech Rural Society on the Landscape in the 18th and 19th Centuries.
Roman Holec: Industrialization and the Changing Landscape in the Kingdom of Hungary, 1780-1918.
Peter Bugge: Landscapes and National Character in 19th Century Bohemia.
11.00: Tea/Coffee Break
11.30: Ales Vyskocil: The Changing Hinterland of Industrial Centres in the 19th Century Bohemian Lands.
Claire Nolte: Praga caput regni: Celebrating Slavic Prague on the Eve of the Great War.
13.00: Lunch (provided in Faculty of History)
14.30: Katya Kocourek: Northern Bohemian Landscape and Integral Nationalism: the Conservation of Czechoslovak National Politics, 1925-31.
Mark Cornwall: The Conquest of Mount Jested: German and Czech Perceptions of the North Bohemian Landscape 1880-1940.
16.00: Tea/Coffee Break
16.30-18.00: Ludovit Hallon: Landscape Changes against the Background of Industrialization and De-Industrialization in Slovakia, 1918-45.
Rajendra Chitnis: Tracing the Changing Landscape in Fiction: The Case of Moravian Wallachia.
19.30: Dinner (Venue to be confirmed) and Keynote Address: Christopher Smout: Wasteland or Resource? The Problem of the British Peat lands since 1700..
Saturday 26th September
9.00: Martin Brown: Frontiers, Landscapes and Zones: Central Europe as an Arena for Cold War, 1945-75.
Mikulas Huba: Landscape Changes and Environmental Problems in Slovakia since 1948.
Robert Pynsent: Landscapes of the Vanquished: A Czech Travel-Writer of the 1940s
11.00: Tea/Coffee Break
11.30: Post 1989 Panel: Adam Fagan: Green Politics after Socialism: two Decades of Democracy on Environmental Activism in the Czech Republic and beyond
Christopher Pickvance: Understanding Environmental Mobilization and Environmental Policy in Hungary: how well do 'Western' Conceptual Frameworks travel?
13.30: Lunch (provided).
Posted by uunguyen at 03:20 PM | Comments (0)
May 29, 2009
The German Question 1945-89, 11/05.-07/2009, Eichstaett
Antwortadresse: zimos@ku-eichstaett.de
Internationale und interdisziplinäre Konferenz
"Die deutsche Frage im Ost-West-Geflecht – zum 20. Jahrestag der Öffnung der Berliner Mauer"
Katholische Universität Eichstätt-Ingolstadt, ZIMOS (05.-07. November 2009)
Die Öffnung der Berliner Mauer am 9. November 1989 erschütterte die seit 1945 erstarrte europäische Nachkriegsordnung und rief bei vielen Nachbarn Deutschlands alte Ängste hervor. Mit dem deutschen Einigungsprozeß war allerdings untrennbar die Überwindung der europäischen Spaltung verbunden, die die Erfüllung jahrzehntealter Träume der Europäer darstellte. Diese beiden Aspekte der damaligen Entwicklungen – Verunsicherung auf der einen und hoffnungsvolle Erwartung auf der anderen Seite – sollen im Rahmen der geplanten Konferenz untersucht werden. Sie wird sowohl auf den deutschen Einigungsprozeß als auch auf die Reaktionen der östlichen und westlichen Nachbarn Deutschlands auf diese Vorgänge eingehen. Besonders intensiv wird sie sich mit der Haltung Moskaus befassen, denn der Schlüssel zur deutschen Einheit war seit 1945 im Kreml
deponiert. Die Beweggründe, die die sowjetische Führung zu seiner Herausgabe veranlaßt haben, geben bis heute Rätsel auf. Auch die Haltung Washingtons, die sich von derjenigen mancher unmittelbarer Nachbarn Deutschlands unterschied, soll im Rahmen der Tagung erörtert werden.
Die Tagung wird sich weiterhin mit der Geschichte der deutschen Frage sowohl im 19. als auch im 20. Jahrhundert beschäftigen. Im Anschluß an die Konferenz wird eine Podiumsdiskussion stattfinden, die sich mit folgenden Fragen befassen wird: Warum war die 1989 erfolgte Überwindung der europäischen Spaltung nicht von Dauer? Warum erlebt Europa 20 Jahre nach dem Fall der Berliner Mauer eine Neuauflage des Ost-West-Konflikts? An der Tagung werden sich Historiker, Politologen, Publizisten und Akteure der damaligen Ereignisse aus Ost und West beteiligen.
Anmeldung per E-Mail (zimos@ku-eichstaett.de) oder per Fax (08421-932717) bis zum 15.10.09
Teilnahmegebühr €18,-
Für Studierende, Auszubildende und Schüler € 9,-
Mitglieder der KU Eintritt frei
Donnerstag, 05.11.2009
16.00 Uhr: Einführung (Leonid Luks, Eichstätt)
16.15 Uhr Die Stalin-Noten von 1952 im Lichte neuer Dokumente aus russischen Archiven (Jürgen Zarusky, München)
17.00 Uhr Wladimir Semjonow über die deutsche Frage – zu den Aufzeichnungen des sowjetischen Deutschlandexperten (Boris Chavkin, Moskau)
Freitag, 06.11.2009
9.00 Uhr: Die Deutschlanddebatte in der nichtoffiziellen polnischen Publizistik der 1970er Jahre (Leonid Luks)
9.45 Uhr: Gorbatschow und die deutsche Frage (Alexander Vatlin, Moskau)
10.15 Uhr: Russische Reaktionen auf den deutschen Einigungsprozeß im Spiegel der Umfragen (Tatiana Timofeeva, Moskau)
11.00 Uhr: Die Deutschlandpolitik der Regierung Kohl nach dem Fall der Mauer (Horst Teltschik – angefragt)
11.45 Uhr: Die Auflösung der DDR (Andreas Umland, Eichstätt)
14.30 Uhr: Das sowjetische Militär und die deutsche Frage (1989-1990) (Zaur Gasimov, Mainz)
15.15 Uhr Die Reaktion der Regierung Mazowiecki auf den deutschen Einigungsprozeß (Wanda Jarzabek, Warschau)
16.15 Uhr: Ungarns Beitrag zur friedlichen Revolution in der DDR (Peter Durucz, Eichstätt)
17.00 Uhr: Die samtene Revolution in Prag und die deutsche Frage (Jan Pauer, Bremen - angefragt)
17.45. Uhr Der skeptische Verbündete – F. Mitterand und die deutsche Einheit (Klaus Schubert, Eichstätt)
19.00 Uhr: Empfang im Holzersaal
Samstag 07.11.2009
9.00 Uhr: Angelsächsische Widersprüche – Die Reaktion Londons und Washingtons auf den deutschen Einigungsprozeß (John Andreas Fuchs, Eichstätt)
9.45 Uhr: 1870/71 und 1989/90 – zwei deutsche Einigungsprozesse im Vergleich (Heinz Hürten, Eichstätt – angefragt)
10.45 Uhr: Droht Europa 20 Jahre nach dem Fall der Berliner Mauer eine neue Ost-West-Konfrontation? Was liegt den Identitätskrisen der postkommunistischen Zivilgesellschaften zugrunde? Versuch einer Bilanz – Podiumsdiskussion.
Teilnehmer: Adam Michnik, Warschau – angefragt; Horst Teltschik – angefragt; G. Dalos, Berlin / Budapest - angefragt; Helmut Domke – angefragt; Christian Holtz; Vladimir Kantor, Moskau; Eitan Finkelstein, München; Referenten der Tagung „Die deutsche Frage im Ost-West-Geflecht“ und Studierende des Masterstudienganges Internationale Beziehungen, KU Eichstätt-Ingolstadt
Leonid Luks
(In Zusammenarbeit mit Christian Holtz – Prof. der Akademie für Fragen der Rechtsordnung, Verteidigung und Sicherheit der Russ. Föderation - Beauftragter in Bayern, Denkendorf)
http://www1.ku-eichstaett.de/ZIMOS/
Posted by uunguyen at 01:42 PM | Comments (0)
Language Learning in Computer Mediated Communities, 10/11-13/2009, Hawaii
LANGUAGE LEARNING IN COMPUTER MEDIATED COMMUNITIES (LLCMC) CONFERENCE
October 11-13, 2009, Honolulu, Hawaii
http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/
Once, computers were seen as thinking machines or electronic tutors. Now the computer has become one of many devices that people use to form virtual communities of all kinds. In the field of language education, computer mediated communication (CMC) enables students to interact with one another free of space and time constraints and to participate in communities of learning with their counterparts in the target culture. The Language Learning in Computer Mediated Communities (LLCMC) Conference explores the use of computers as a medium of communication in language learning communities.
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS
* Keynote talk by Dr. Gilberte Furstenberg (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
* Wide range of intriguing concurrent sessions
* Special panel showcasing online cultural exchanges based at the University of Hawaii
* Optional pre-conference event (free) - CULTURA: Web-based Intercultural Exchanges (October 10-11) - http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/cultura.html
See CONFERENCE SCHEDULE for more details -
http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/schedule.html
PRE-REGISTER BY SEPTEMBER 15 to enjoy special discounted rates:
Student - $40
General - $70
Visit http://nflrc.hawaii.edu/llcmc/registration.html for more information about conference registration and to download the registration form.
Questions? Please contact us at nflrc@hawaii.edu
National Foreign Language Resource Center
University of Hawai'i
1859 East-West Road, #106
Honolulu HI 96822
voice: (808) 956-9424, fax: (808) 956-5983
email: nflrc@hawaii.edu
VISIT OUR WEBSITE! http://nflrc.hawaii.edu
Posted by uunguyen at 01:14 PM | Comments (0)
May 27, 2009
Caucasus and Central Asia Conference, 07/3-4/2009, University of Birmingham
Deadline: June 29, 2009
International Inter-Disciplinary Conference
"The Caucasus and Central Asia: Theoretical, Cultural, and Political Challenges"
3-4 July 2009
Caucasus and Central Asia Research Group
The University of Birmingham, UK
This major international conference is the founding event of the University of Birmingham Research Group on the Caucasus and Central Asia, formed by academics and Ph.D. students from across the University of Birmingham. The two-day inter-disciplinary conference will be held in room G51 of the European Research Institute, University of Birmingham on Friday, 3rd July and Saturday, 4th July 2009.
The conference seeks to generate a more balanced and comprehensive understanding of the Caucasus and Central Asia by providing historic, cultural, social, and political perspectives on these strategically important regions of the former Soviet Union. It brings together a wide range of panelists, including policy-makers, CEELBAS-network academics, other distinguished scholars and Ph.D. students specialising in these areas.
Among the main speakers are:
Vicken Cheterian (CIMERA, Geneva)
John Colarusso (McMaster University, Ontario)
Moshe Gammer (Tel Aviv University)
Edmund Herzig (University of Oxford)
Ashirbek Muminov (The Institute of Oriental Studies, Almaty)
Domitilla Sagramoso (Kings College, London)
Thomas de Waal (Conciliation Resources, London)
Papers will be presented on a variety of topics, including:
Language and Literature of the Regions
Ethno-Nationalism and Politics in the South Caucasus
History of the Caucasus
Central Asia and Caucasus and the Outside World
Traditionalism versus Reformism in Islam
Domestic and Foreign Policies of the Central Asian and Caucasian States
Culture and Society of the Regions
The conference is organised with financial assistance from the Centre for East European Language Based Area Studies (CEELBAS); the ASSC Seed Corn Funding of the College of Social Sciences and the Department of Political Sciences of the University of Birmingham.
There is no registration fee but those wishing to attend the conference will be asked to make a small contribution of £5 (students) and £10 (non-students) towards coffee and lunch provided at the conference during two days. For further information you can consult the University of Birmingham website at www.crees.bham.ac.uk
To register an interest in attending this event please contact Ms Nino Kemoklidze at NXK790@bham.ac.uk Please, include your name, institutional affiliation and contact details.
Participants are requested to register by Monday, 29 June 2009.
Posted by uunguyen at 10:22 AM | Comments (0)
May 21, 2009
Governing Difference-A Challenge for New Democracies in Central and South Eastern European Countries06/15/2009, Vienna
Conference announcement:
International conference on June 15, 2009 in Vienna:
"Governing Difference - A Challenge for New Democracies in Central and South Eastern European Countries"
"Governing Difference" is a research project within University of Vienna's research priority area European Integration and Southeastern / Eastern Europe. It is a cooperation between the Department of Political Science and the Department of Legal Philosophy at University of Vienna.
At the final conference of the research project papers will be presented by the research team as well as by renowned scholars, key activists and politicians.
Panel 1
The Role of State Protagonists in Combating Domestic Violence Against Women
Panel 2
International Impact on State Policy Action: Mechanisms, Actors, and Effects
Panel 3
The Role of Civil Society: Practices, Intersections, and Transitions
Keynote Address
Kristen Ghodsee, Bowdoin College, USA:
Religious Freedoms versus Gender Equality: Secularism, State Activism, and Individual Choice in the Islamic Headscarf Debate
For a detailed conference programme please visit our website:
www.univie.ac.at/governingdifference
Venue: Aula at the Campus, court 1.11
Spitalgasse 2,
1090 Vienna, Austria
9-18:00
Attendance is free. Please register at: governing-difference@univie.ac.at
Posted by uunguyen at 08:22 AM | Comments (0)
May 13, 2009
Witkacy as a Social and Political Visionary, 09/17-18/2009, London
Deadline: 31 May 2009
The first British conference on Witkacy: "Witkacy as a Social and Political Visionary"
17-18 September 2009
the Fyvie Hall at the Regent Street Building of the University of Westminster, London
Proposals of not more than 250 words are invited by Dr Jenny Plastow, University of Hertfordshire.
address for submissions: j.j.plastow@herts.ac.uk
further information at: www.witkacy2009.com
Posted by uunguyen at 09:13 AM | Comments (0)
Ottoman Legacies in the Contemporary Mediterranean , 03/24-27/2009, Italy
Deadline: July 15, 2009
Submit proposals to a workshop on the Ottoman Legacies in the Contemporary Mediterranean: the Middle East and the Balkans Compared. The workshop will be part of the eleventh session of the Mediterranean Research Meeting that will take place from 24 to 27 March 2010. It is organized by The Mediterranean Programme of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies at the European University Institute (Italy).The workshop's directors are Prof.Dr. Karl Kaser (University of Graz) and Dr. Eyal Ginio (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem).
You can learn more about the workshop in the following link:
http://www.eui.eu/RSCAS/Research/Mediterranean/mrm2010/desc_pdf/MRM2010_Ds03.pdf
All relevant details regarding the submission of proposals are available on the Mediterranean Research Meeting web page:
http://www.eui.eu/RSCAS/Research/Mediterranean/mrm2010/
Applications must be submitted electronically by 15 July 2009.
Prof.Dr. Karl Kaser (Univerity of Graz)
Dr. Eyal Ginio (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem), the workshop's directors.
Posted by uunguyen at 09:07 AM | Comments (0)
March 19, 2009
2009 JUNIOR SCHOLAR TRAINING WORKSHOPS
2009 Junior Scholar Training Workshops on Russia, Eastern Europe, and Eurasia
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
2009 JUNIOR SCHOLAR TRAINING WORKSHOPS
Held in conjunction with the Fisher Forum
"Mobility in Russia and Eurasia"
June 15-17
Moderators: Willard Sunderland (History, University of Cincinnati) and Sarah
Phillips (Anthropology, Indiana University)
Balkan Studies Training Workshop
"Blurring Boundaries and Shifting States: Accession and Secession in
Southeastern Europe"
June 8-10
Moderator: Carol Leff (Political Science, University of Illinois)
Eurasia Studies Training Workshop
"Islam and Muslim Identities in Russia, Eastern Europe, and Eurasia"
June 10-12
Moderator: John Schoeberlein (Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard University)
Slavic Reference Service Individualized Research Practicum
Duration of the Lab
The Slavic Reference Service offers Individualized Research Practicum to select Summer Lab associates. Associates can apply using the SRL
application.
Voluntary Discussion Group: Russian History and Culture
June 15-18
Coordinator: Ann Kleimola (Professor of History, University of Nebraska)
For more information contact the Russian, East European and Eurasian
Center at the University of Illinois at http://www.reec.uiuc.edu or by
phone at 217.333.1244.
Tracie Wilson, Associate Director
Russian, East European, and Eurasian Center
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
108 International Studies Building, MC-487
910 South Fifth Street
Champaign, IL 61820
(217) 333-6022
wilsont@illinois.edu
Posted by agripley at 04:16 PM | Comments (0)
Study Abroad: Europe meets Russia: A Forum for Young Leaders, 04/28 - 05/02/2009, Berlin
The Institute for Cultural Diplomacy (ICD) is delighted to announce the launch of a new program.
Europe meets Russia: A Forum for Young Leaders, will take place in Berlin from April 28th - May 2nd, 2009.
By taking part in Europe meets Russia, young leaders will gain insight into cultural diplomacy, and learn from influential figures. Students and young professionals will develop contacts on social and professional levels through the participation of interesting lectures, challenging workshops, and discussions, that cover the state of the European-Russian relationship, and how it influences economic, political and societal relations today.
The ICD is now accepting applications for participants with an active interest in the issue.
Please see the following link for further information, including the application form:
http://www.culturaldiplomacy.org/index.php?en_program_emr_introduction
For specific inquiries into the program, please contact us at: emr@culturaldiplomacy.org
The Institute for Cultural Diplomacy is an international, not-for-profit, non-governmental organization concerned with the promotion of intercultural understanding. Our activity includes conducting research into cultural diplomacy and the organization of leadership initiatives. ICD Programs have been developed to facilitate intercultural exchange at the grass roots, civil society and political levels. Participants are encouraged to develop their own leadership initiatives, which are supported through an online forum and personal consultation.
To learn more about the ICD, please visit our website: www.culturaldiplomacy.org
Mark Donfried - Director & Founder
Institute for Cultural Diplomacy (ICD)
Keithstr. 14, Berlin, D-10787 Germany
Phone: +49/(0)30 2360 7680
Fax: +49/(0)30 2360 768 11
http://www.culturaldiplomacy.org
Posted by agripley at 04:12 PM | Comments (0)
Europe meets Russia: A Forum for Young Leaders
The Institute for Cultural Diplomacy (ICD) is delighted to announce the launch of a new program. Europe meets Russia: A Forum for Young Leaders, will take place in Berlin from April 28th - May 2nd, 2009. By taking part in Europe meets Russia, young leaders will gain insight into cultural diplomacy, and learn from influential figures. Students and young professionals will develop contacts on social and professional levels through the participation of interesting lectures, challenging workshops, and discussions, that cover the state of the European-Russian relationship, and how it influences economic, political and societal relations today.
The ICD is now accepting applications for participants with an active interest in the issue. Please see the following link for further information, including the application form: http://www.culturaldiplomacy.org/index.php?en_program_emr_introduction
For specific inquiries into the program, please contact us at: emr@culturaldiplomacy.org
The Institute for Cultural Diplomacy is an international, not-for-profit, non-governmental organization concerned with the promotion of intercultural understanding. Our activity includes conducting research into cultural diplomacy and the organization of leadership initiatives. ICD Programs have been developed to facilitate intercultural exchange at the grass roots, civil society and political levels. Participants are encouraged to develop their own leadership initiatives, which are supported through an online forum and personal consultation. To learn more about the ICD, please visit our website: www.culturaldiplomacy.org
Institute for Cultural Diplomacy (ICD)
Keithstr. 14, Berlin, D-10787 Germany
Phone: +49/(0)30 2360 7680
Fax: +49/(0)30 2360 768 11
www.culturaldiplomacy.org
Posted by agripley at 03:18 PM | Comments (0)
February 19, 2009
Area Studies Conference, 02/26-28/2009
The Russian and East European Institute invites all members of the REEI community to attend the upcoming conference on “Area Studies in the Future of Higher Education,” taking place February 26-28. All of the conference panels and the opening reception are free and open to the public. To view the complete schedule, please visit the conference website: http://www.indiana.edu/~reeiweb/2009asc/index.shtml.
This conference is sponsored by the Provost and Executive Vice President Karen Hanson, Vice President for International Affairs Patrick O’Meara, Russian and East European Institute, Center for the Study of Global Change, Center for West European Studies, African Studies Program, East Asian Studies Center, Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies, Inner Asian and Uralic National Resource Center, Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies Program, Center for International Business and Research, Center for the Languages of the Central Asian Region, and India Studies Program.
Posted by agripley at 02:56 PM | Comments (0)
February 13, 2009
Conference: Polish Music Since 1945, 04/30-05/02/2009, London
Polish Music Since 1945
Canterbury Christ Church University
30 April - 2 May 2009
Conference organised in association with the Sounds News Music Festival and the Institute of Musical Research
The provisional programme and booking form are now available on the
conference website www.cccupolishmusicconference.org.uk
Valerie James
Administrator
Institute of Musical Research
School of Advanced Study
University of London
Senate House
Malet Street
London WC1E 7HU
www.music.sas.ac.uk
Tel: 020 7664 4865
Posted by agripley at 09:07 AM | Comments (0)
February 02, 2009
World Politics and Popular Culture Conference
Deadline: March 13 2009
World Politics and Popular Culture Conference
November 19-20 2009
The Grand Hotel
Grand Parade
Tynemouth
NE30 4ER
(Organisers: Dr Matt Davies, Dr Kyle Grayson, Dr Simon Philpott, Politics, School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University)
After the attacks on New York and Washington of 2001, the Bush administration declared in all earnestness a 'Global War on Terror.' The irony of the phrase coincided with the death of irony itself. And, ironically, within a couple of months of the September 11 attacks, Karl Rove was meeting with 'liberal Hollywood elites' to discuss ways in which the industry could assist prepare American and global audiences for a long war.
Rove's effort to enlist the culture industries recognised the extraordinary reach and influence of popular cultural forms. In recent decades the range of popular cultural forms has extended dramatically. In anti-globalisation protests, old forms of minstrelsy, puppetry, and street theatre were coordinated in mass demonstrations using cell phones, internet video uploads, and blogs. Indeed, in culture at large, familiar media such as literature, radio, cinema and television have been expanded into new realms made possible by the advent of digital technologies: web communities, blogging, online gaming, video games. These have become important sites at which identity and community are made and contested, where issues of representation have taken on new impetus and where the orthodox politics of the real have unravelled.
World cinema and music have become an established feature of western lifestyles and consumption patterns but more recently the formerly colonised have begun writing back to western elites and populations challenging established and seemingly settled narratives of global politics. Al Jazeera, Hamas, Hezbollah and many other groups exploit the decentred realms of electronic media to confront western governments and populations with images of their violence and embedded racism. Popular music has become increasingly diversified and produced new communities of identity, politics and protest. Food, clothing, wine, cars, travel, clubbing, gambling, magazines and fanzines all form part of lifestyle choice and are central to the politics of consumerism and fetish.
Political debate often characterised by more heat than light focuses on many of these sites: health risk (food), security (hoodies, ethnic minority apparel), wine and gambling (addiction), cars and travel (environmental security and sustainability). Just as much as the
emergence of global insecurities unbound by national borders - not only the threat of 'terror,' but also of financial instability, disease, or climate change - these global public spheres have undermined received conceptions of international politics.
This conference seeks to explore the limits of the popular and to interrogate the category of culture in the context of this crisis - or at least destabilizing - of the international. What do these terms of 'popular,' 'culture,' and 'international' mean both in isolation and when used in conjunction? In what ways and with what effects has popular culture become a series of sites at which political meaning is made, where political contestation takes place and where political orthodoxy is reproduced and challenged?
We welcome papers on any aspect of the politics of popular culture and particularly those that critically engage with the concepts of politics, popular and culture. In addition to welcoming papers on established areas of research such as television, cinema, news media, radio, music and theatre, we also hope that researchers interested in food, drugs, gaming, gambling, sport, clothing and other apparel, clubbing, automobile cultures, public art, consumption, fear, and audience studies will extend the range of topics and forms of analysis by contributing papers to this conference.
Please submit abstracts of up to 300 words by Friday March 13 2009:
Sue.Tatah@ncl.ac.uk
For further information: Matt.Davies@ncl.ac.uk; K.A.Grayson@ncl.ac.uk; Simon.Philpott@ncl.ac.uk
Newcastle and Tynemouth:
The conference is being held at The Grand Hotel http://www.grandhotel-uk.com/on the seafront at Tynemouth, about 10 miles east of Newcastle. It is easily reached by Metro, the hotel about ½ mile from Tynemouth Metro station. Tynemouth, Cullercoats and Whitley Bay offer an excellent range of restaurants, pubs, cafes and clubs as
well as accommodation to suit all tastes and budgets. Newcastle itself is on the east coast main line that runs between London and Edinburgh and is readily accessed by train. Its international airport is also well serviced by a range of domestic, European and other international carriers including Easyjet, Ryanair, Emirates and KLM/Air France.
Dr Simon Philpott
Senior Lecturer in International Politics
School of Geography, Politics & Sociology
Newcastle University
Newcastle upon Tyne
NE1 7RU
Ph:+44 +191 2227473
Posted by agripley at 03:37 PM | Comments (0)
January 30, 2009
European Social Science History Conference, 13-16 April 2010, Ghent, Belgium
Deadline: 1 May 2009
The European Social Science History Conference (ESSCH) is the largest Europe based conference for historians and social scientists in all fields, gathering more than 1000 participants every second year. The next European Social Science History Conference will take place in Ghent, Belgium, from the 13th to the 16th of April 2010. The Gender and Women Network is one of the largest networks of the ESSCH. Seventeen sessions are scheduled for the next conference.
We would like invite all scholars working in this field to consider applying with a paper, a panel or a roundtable proposal for this conference. Please register your proposal at http://www.iisg.nl/esshc/
The deadline is 1 May 2009.
Below you will find a list of possible themes, but these are by no means meant as limiting. On the contrary, feel free to suggest other themes (NB! for all themes we especially appreciate panels that bring together perspectives from different national/regional contexts).
* Gender and body politics (war mass rape, sterilizations, human rights, etc…)
* The impact of post structuralism on women’s and gender history and social sciences.
* Feminisms (transnational and international organizing, transfer of ideas, the Women’s Movement of the 1970’s, etc…)
* Feminism and Communism (everyday life and gender under communist regimes, feminists and communism, Marxist feminism, etc…)
* Gender and labor (the impact of the new global division of work and of the new organization of work, gender and suffering at work, etc…)
* Imperial feminisms
* Theory and historiography
* Gender /memory/public history
* Masculinities
* Prominent recent books in the field (‘meet the author’ sessions)
We especially welcome contributions dealing with Latin America, East-Central- and South East Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Asia.
The coordinators of the Women and Gender network,
Maria Bucur, Indiana University, USA, mbucur@indiana.edu
Elisabeth Elgán, Södertörn University, Sweden, elisabeth.elgan@sh.se
Posted by agripley at 10:20 AM | Comments (0)
November 25, 2008
Young People Today in Eurasia and Eastern Europe, IREX
2009 Regional Symposium Grants IREX
Prospects and Challenges for the First Post-Communist Generation:
Young People Today in Eurasia and Eastern Europe
In Spring 2009, IREX, in collaboration with the Woodrow Wilson
International Center for Scholars' Kennan Institute and East European
Studies Program (WWC), will be administering its ninth annual research
Symposium that will examine issues concerning youth in Eastern Europe
and Eurasia from political, historical, economic, and demographic
perspectives. The symposium will bring junior and senior scholars and
members of the policy community together to study and discuss timely
topics, including economic trends, political parties, education reform, public health, reproductive trends, and trafficking and other
cross-border criminal activity.
Junior scholars will be chosen based on a national competition to
present their current research on the topic of the Symposium. Grants
will be awarded to approximately ten junior scholars. The Regional
Symposium is scheduled to take place in April 2009 in the Washington, DC metropolitan area and will involve two full days of reviews of current research projects, roundtable discussions, and the development of policy recommendations.
http://www.irex.org/programs/symp/index.asp
Posted by agripley at 10:05 AM | Comments (0)
November 04, 2008
Conference: Does it really matter? Visa facilitation in the Western Balkans, 12/10/2008, Brussels
European Citizen Action Service (ECAS) and King Baudouin Foundation (KBF) have great pleasure to invite you to take part in the conference "Does it really matter? Visa facilitation in the Western Balkans: Monitoring of the new agreements". The event will be held on 10 December 2008 in the Crown Plaza Hotel Europe, in Brussels, Belgium.
The Visa Facilitation Agreements (VFA) signed by the EU with five countries of the Western Balkans (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro and Serbia) came into force on the 1 January 2008. They were intended to facilitate "people to people" contacts between the citizens of the EU and WB and allow certain categories of citizens to travel and conduct business in the Schengen zone without over-burdensome administrative procedures.
However, a monitoring conducted in the region by local organizations has showed that the implementation of these agreements by member states is defective and that the VFAs are simply not achieving results for which they were designed. Moreover, striking differences in implementation of the VFAs between different EU member states have been recorded.
If you would like to attend this event we kindly ask you to confirm your presence by replying to this e-mail before Friday 21 November 2008.
We sincerely hope that this project will appeal to you and that you will join us for this conference.
Here is the draft programme of the conference:
Does it Really Matter? Visa Facilitation in the Western Balkans:
Monitoring of the new Agreements
International Conference
10 December 2008,
Venue: Crown Plaza Brussels Europa Hotel
Address: 107 rue de la Loi
Brussels, Belgium
With our best regards,
Kenan Hadzimusic
Project Manager
ECAS - European Citizen Action Service
83, Rue du Prince Royal
1050 Brussels
Tel: +32 2 548 04 93
Fax: +32 2 548 04 99
E-mail: kenan.hadzimusic@ecas.org
Website: www.ecas-citizens.eu
__._,_.___
08:30 - 09:00 Registration
09:00 - 09:30 Keynote address: Jacques Barrot, Vice President
of the European Commission, Responsible for Justice, Freedom and Security
(TBC)
Discussion Q&A
09:30 - 10:45 Panel 1: Presentations of the findings of the
hotline and survey reports on visa facilitation in Western Balkans
Issues for debate:
* What are the convergences in the survey and hotline results in the five countries?
* Have the visa facilitation agreements done their homework ? triggered people to people contacts among citizens of the EU and Western Balkans?
* What are the main findings of the analysis of surveys accomplished with visa applicants? Do both reports draw the same conclusions?
* Have the advantages come through: multiple entry visas, easier access to the special categories of population, lower issuing costs, etc?
* Are the visa facilitation agreements worth amending? What mechanism could be put in place to evaluate and control the implementation of the agreements?
Chair: Amra
Seleskovic, Director, Vesta Association, Bosnia - Herzegovina
Panel: Leszek
Chajewski, Battory Foundation - Survey Report
Kenan Hadzimusic, Project Manager, European Citizen Action Service - Hotline Report
Ditmir Bushati, Executive Director, European Movement Albania, Albania
Discussion Q&A
10:45 - 11:00 Coffee Break
11:00 - 12:30 Panel 2: From visa facilitation to
visa liberalization
Issues for debate:
* What are the next steps for advocating visa liberalization?
* Could a common visa code between member states constitute a good tool to insure more uniform visa implementation?
* What are the convergences with other studies accomplished in Eastern Europe?
* What is the role of the National governments in Western Balkans in the visa liberalization process?
* Is the decision to liberalize the visa system with Western Balkans
intrinsically of a political nature?
Chair:
Daliborka Uljarevic, Executive Director, Centre for Civic Education,
Montenegro (TBC)
Panel: Jelko
Kacin, Member of the European Parliament, Slovenia (TBC)
H.E. Pierre Sellal, French Ambassador to the EU, Brussels (TBC)
Alexandra Stiglmayer, Senior Analyst, European Stability Initiative,
Brussels
Tanja Hafner-Ademi, Coordinator of Balkan Civil Scoiety Development Network, Macedonia
Discussion, Q & A
Concluding Remarks
12:30 - 13:15 Lunch Break
END OF THE CONFERENCE
Posted by agripley at 09:22 AM | Comments (0)