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Art Criticism during Wartime: Why Not Everything is a Cultural Policy
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Anna KaluherKatherine Younger
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Small and mighty: The policies of the Benelux countries towards Ukraine
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Aliesia SoloviovaKatherine Younger
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Legacies of Silenced Atrocities: Lessons from Holodomor
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Karolina KoziuraKatherine YoungerLudger Hagedorn
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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The Odesa Childhood of Isaac Babel
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Aleksander KaczorowskiKatherine YoungerMischa Gabowitsch
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Ukraine and the Borders of Europe
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Seminars and Colloquia
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Katherine YoungerLudger HagedornVolodymyr Yermolenko
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Series: Seminars and Colloquia
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Protecting Ukraine’s Heritage: What Heritage and Whose?
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Panels and Discussions
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Katherine YoungerAnna Ilchenko, Bohdana Neborak, Natalka Diachenko, Sasha Dovzhyk, Svitlana Oslavska, Serhiy Klymko
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Speakers: Katherine YoungerAnna Ilchenko, Bohdana Neborak, Natalka Diachenko, Sasha Dovzhyk, Svitlana Oslavska, Serhiy Klymko
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Speakers: Katherine YoungerAnna Ilchenko, Bohdana Neborak, Natalka Diachenko, Sasha Dovzhyk, Svitlana Oslavska, Serhiy Klymko
Series: Panels and Discussions
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Recording the Present for the Sake of the Future
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Panels and Discussions
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Katherine YoungerSofiya DyakMaksym Demydenko, Sebastian Majstorovic, Stephen Naron, Winfried Garscha
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Who Tells Ukraine’s Story and How Should it be Told?
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Panels and Discussions
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Katherine YoungerNataliya GumenyukMisha GlennyAnna Ilchenko, Bohdana Neborak, Oksana Sarkisova, Sasha Dovzhyk, Svitlana Oslavska, Tetyana Ogarkova, Volodymyr Yermolenko, Cathrin Kahlweit
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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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Reporting on the War in Ukraine
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Panels and Discussions
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Katherine YoungerNataliya Gumenyuk
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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Series: Panels and Discussions
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