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“Arrival” Infrastructures of the Displaced from Ukraine in Vienna
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Panels and Discussions
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Ayşe ÇağlarDavid Himler-Preukschat, Nina Andresen, Tanja Maier, Nataliia Kolchanova, Saskia Schwaiger
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Speakers: Ayşe ÇağlarDavid Himler-Preukschat, Nina Andresen, Tanja Maier, Nataliia Kolchanova, Saskia Schwaiger
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Speakers: Ayşe ÇağlarDavid Himler-Preukschat, Nina Andresen, Tanja Maier, Nataliia Kolchanova, Saskia Schwaiger
Series: Panels and Discussions
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On Europe
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Panels and Discussions
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Joschka Fischer, Bronislaw Geremek, Danuta Hübner, Radosław Sikorski, Aleksander Smolar
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Speakers: Joschka Fischer, Bronislaw Geremek, Danuta Hübner, Radosław Sikorski, Aleksander Smolar
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Speakers: Joschka Fischer, Bronislaw Geremek, Danuta Hübner, Radosław Sikorski, Aleksander Smolar
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Der Wiener Kongress und die Folgen
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Panels and Discussions
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Heinrich-August Winkler, Hazel Rosenstrauch, Sebastian Kurz, Johannes Hahn, Adam Krzeminski, Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
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Speakers: Heinrich-August Winkler, Hazel Rosenstrauch, Sebastian Kurz, Johannes Hahn, Adam Krzeminski, Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Speakers: Heinrich-August Winkler, Hazel Rosenstrauch, Sebastian Kurz, Johannes Hahn, Adam Krzeminski, Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Poland, Ukraine, Russia
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Panels and Discussions
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Ivan KrastevChristian Ultsch
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Der umkämpfte Euro und die Zukunft der Union
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Panels and Discussions
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Dimitris Droutsas, Josef Pröll, Dennis J. Snower, Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
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Speakers: Dimitris Droutsas, Josef Pröll, Dennis J. Snower, Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Speakers: Dimitris Droutsas, Josef Pröll, Dennis J. Snower, Alexandra Föderl-Schmid
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Sprache Macht Politik
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Panels and Discussions
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Ludger HagedornNelia VakhovskaThomas Weiler, Iryna Herasimovich, Sława Lisiecka, Lyuba Yakimchuk, Ursula Ebel, Manfred Müller
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Trojanow trifft: Gibt es eine neue linke Erzählung?
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Panels and Discussions
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Ilija TrojanowJulia Fritzsche
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Rebuild Trust in Politics
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Panels and Discussions
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David F GoodhartIvan KrastevWalter Hämmerle
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Series: Panels and Discussions
If you are searching for the answers to such questions as why people make unexpected political choices or if the “illiberal democracies” are on the rise in Europe, you can find them in Ivan Krastev’s essay “After Europe”. This renowned political scientist from Bulgaria describes the current state of European society as a metaphorical U-turn in thoughts on globalization and geopolitics, refugee crisis and populism, whereas the latter threatens Europe’s established commitment to human rights and social solidarity.
At the same time, David Goodhart, British journalist, divides people into two groups in his book “The Road to Somewhere”. There are the “Somewheres”, who crave for stability, perceive any change as a loss and are social-conservative and often less-educated, on the one hand; and urban, social-liberal “Anywheres”, who prefer self-realisation over stability and tradition, on the other. Even though “Somewheres” comprise ca. 50 % of the population and “Anywheres” just around 25 % - it’s the “Anywheres” who constitute the majority of the lawmakers among us.
Read more
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Series: Panels and Discussions
If you are searching for the answers to such questions as why people make unexpected political choices or if the “illiberal democracies” are on the rise in Europe, you can find them in Ivan Krastev’s essay “After Europe”. This renowned political scientist from Bulgaria describes the current state of European society as a metaphorical U-turn in thoughts on globalization and geopolitics, refugee crisis and populism, whereas the latter threatens Europe’s established commitment to human rights and social solidarity.
At the same time, David Goodhart, British journalist, divides people into two groups in his book “The Road to Somewhere”. There are the “Somewheres”, who crave for stability, perceive any change as a loss and are social-conservative and often less-educated, on the one hand; and urban, social-liberal “Anywheres”, who prefer self-realisation over stability and tradition, on the other. Even though “Somewheres” comprise ca. 50 % of the population and “Anywheres” just around 25 % - it’s the “Anywheres” who constitute the majority of the lawmakers among us.
Read more
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Capitalism, Alone
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Panels and Discussions
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Ivan KrastevShalini RanderiaBranko Milanovic
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Humanity and Catastrophe
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Panels and Discussions
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Katherine YoungerSerhii PlokhiiSofiya DyakPhilippe Sands
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Series: Panels and Discussions
How do we make sense of the destruction of the 20th century? In East West Street, Philippe Sands set out to understand the role law played in processing the horrors of the Holocaust by tracing the lives of three lawyers involved in the development of “genocide” and “crimes against humanity”: two studied law in post-WWI and interwar Lemberg/Lwów/Lviv, and were Polish Jews, and the third was a defendant at Nuremberg who they prosecuted. Sands highlights the entanglement of personal biographies, political contexts, and intellectual genealogies and their echoes in the international response to Nazi crimes. The relationship between the individual and the group, and catastrophe, is also at the heart of Serhii Plokhii’s Chernobyl, which elucidates the environmental and human consequences of a dual systems failure: political as well as scientific. He shows how individual scientists and bureaucrats worked within, perpetuated, and grappled with a fatally flawed Soviet institutional structure – and how the Chernobyl meltdown contributed to the demise of the Soviet system.
Read more
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Series: Panels and Discussions
How do we make sense of the destruction of the 20th century? In East West Street, Philippe Sands set out to understand the role law played in processing the horrors of the Holocaust by tracing the lives of three lawyers involved in the development of “genocide” and “crimes against humanity”: two studied law in post-WWI and interwar Lemberg/Lwów/Lviv, and were Polish Jews, and the third was a defendant at Nuremberg who they prosecuted. Sands highlights the entanglement of personal biographies, political contexts, and intellectual genealogies and their echoes in the international response to Nazi crimes. The relationship between the individual and the group, and catastrophe, is also at the heart of Serhii Plokhii’s Chernobyl, which elucidates the environmental and human consequences of a dual systems failure: political as well as scientific. He shows how individual scientists and bureaucrats worked within, perpetuated, and grappled with a fatally flawed Soviet institutional structure – and how the Chernobyl meltdown contributed to the demise of the Soviet system.
Read more
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