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International conference
Societies on the Move. Migration, Mobility and Displacement in Eastern Europe
Organized by the Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES), University of Zurich, the Center for Governance and Culture in Europe (GCE), University of St. Gallen, and the initiative Ukrainian Research in Switzerland (URIS), University of Basel
Venue and date: Monte Verità, Congressi Stefano Franscini, Ascona, September 1–6, 2024
Description
Eastern Europe witnessed significant post-Iron Curtain transformations, marked by extensive migration and mobility, fueled by geopolitical shifts and conflicts like the Yugoslav wars. This included rural-urban shifts and transnational labor migrations to the West, with profound impacts on both origin and host countries. Despite serving as transit nations during the 2015 "refugee crisis", the countries of Eastern Europe took in most of the Ukrainian war refugees in 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
However, the war in Ukraine is also present in Western European states, not least in the form of several million war refugees. This international conference is dedicated to the causes, forms and social and political consequences of geographical mobility and migration in Eastern Europe. We focus on the states and societies of the post-socialist and post-Soviet space and the years 1989/1991 to the present, although issues with a broader historical scope are also considered.
Link to conference website
Contact: Dr. Dunja Krempin
Coordinator, Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES)
Email: cees@hist.uzh.ch
International conference on
Europe’s Geopolitical Future: Mapping Perspectives on EU Policy in its Eastern Neighborhood
Conference organized by the Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES) at the University of Zurich in cooperation with the Department of World Politics and International Relation at the Russian-Armenian University in Yerevan
Venue and date: University of Zurich, March 10–11, 2022
Financed with a Seed Funding Grant (SFG) from the Swiss State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI)
Description
The aim of this conference is to explore the EU’s role, interests, goals, and opportunities in the geopolitically complicated environment of its Eastern Neighborhood (comprising Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, the Republic of Moldova and Ukraine). Moreover, the conference looks into the foreign policy priorities of individual countries of the Eastern Neighborhood, and discuss challenges, problems as well as key areas of ongoing and potential collaboration with the EU. Additionally, the conference addresses great power politics in the EU’s Eastern Neighborhood region, in particular EU-Russian relations and its potential to develop a collaborative agenda in a shared neighborhood. The members of the conference will also analyze the Swiss experience in cooperating with the EU and discuss the potential applicability to the Eastern Neighborhood region. A separate panel is dedicated to the larger security and geopolitical implications resulting from the conflict around Nagorno-Karabakh.
Contact: Dr. Dunja Krempin
Coordinator, Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES)
Email: cees@hist.uzh.ch
International conference organized in cooperation between the Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES) at the University of Zurich and the Center for Security Studies (CSS) at ETH Zurich.
Venue and date: University of Zurich, November 10–12, 2021
Link to conference website and program
Eurasia is transforming. Since the emergence of fifteen new national states on the territory of the former Soviet Union, this vast region saw major political and socioeconomic transformations, and repeated reconfigurations of its geopolitical and geo-economic landscape. If the 1990s were marked by Russia’s retreat from the region, in recent years, Russia has emerged as a key power trying to counter the eastward expansion of Western states and organizations, as well balancing China’s growing economic influence, especially in the former Soviet republics of Central Asia. In the meanwhile, the post-Soviet states of the region have developed their own foreign policy agendas: The three Baltic states have become members of NATO and the EU, and Ukraine and Georgia aspire to join Western institutions in the near future. Others, including Belarus, Kazakhstan, Armenia and Kyrgyzstan, have integrated more closely into Russian-led organizations such as the Eurasian Economic Union or the Collective Security Treaty Organization (including also Tajikistan), or have shown no clear geopolitical preference (Azerbaijan, Moldova, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan).
The transformations in the central Eurasian space will have far-reaching repercussions on the international order and present challenges, but also opportunities, for the West, Europe and Switzerland. However, the trajectories are still little understood and have not received the attention that they deserve by the academic community. The key aim of this international conference is therefore to get a better understanding of the changes in this key part of the central Eurasian landmass, by exploring three major issues:
Geopolitics: In a region as vast as Eurasia, geographical factors play a crucial role for politics and international relations. This is especially true for the landlocked post-Soviet states of the Central Asia and Caspian regions, which face significant obstacles to participation in the global economy. The ways these countries engage with one another and with outside powers, including Russia, the West and China, impacts the larger political and economic contours of the central Eurasian region in important ways. Analyzing the interests and motives of the key actors, and understanding the various interactions taking place between regional and outside actors, is a key aim of this conference.
Connections: Since the break-up of the Soviet Union, post-Soviet Eurasia has evolved into several regional groupings. These new regions have formed as societies become linked through multilateral organizations, trade, culture, shared memories and identities, or infrastructure. A second aim of this conference is to understand how these connections have changed and evolved over time and space. Of all the connections, infrastructure, namely transportation routes and energy transportation networks, are especially important, as it is believed that these structural relations among states are important for the emerging regional contours of Eurasia.
Challenges: Another goal of this conference is in seeking to identify and understand key challenges affecting both regional and international dynamics: The trajectories in central Eurasia do not only depend on outside influence, but also on transformations taking place within individual countries, resulting from internal political dynamics or societal responses. A key task of this conference is therefore to analyze internal social dynamics, assess the likelihood of political changes within individual countries, and consider possible consequences for existing patterns of international relations and interactions. At the same time, the members of this conference will also aim to understand the broader global impact of these trajectories, assess current Western policies, and discuss ways in which Europe and the larger West– including Switzerland – should react.
By bringing together scholars from the Eurasian/Asian region, as well as Russia, Europe, the United States, and Switzerland, this conference represents a pioneering endeavor to approach these questions in a comprehensive manner and put them into a broader context. The total number of active participants is around 45, about a third of which were recruited through a Call for Papers (PDF, 51 KB) launched in summer 2019.
The conference is held during the spring semester 2020, which enables students from the University of Zurich, the ETH Zurich, and other Swiss universities to attend the conference or individual conference sessions. The conference is open to non-academics, and practitioners from the relevant Swiss ministries and departments are especially welcome to attend.
Dr. Dunja Krempin, CEES
Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES)
University of Zurich, Depart. of History/Eastern European History
Karl Schmid-Strasse 4, CH-8006 Zürich
Tel. +41 (0)44 634 38 16
Email: cees@hist.uzh.ch
Web: https://www.cees.uzh.ch
The conference is funded by the State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI) and the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
The next conference for young Eastern European experts (JOE) will take place from September 30 to October 2, 2021. The host is the Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES) at the University of Zurich. The conference offers an overview of current Eastern European research in German-speaking countries and enables an interdisciplinary exchange on Eastern Europe as well as networking among young researchers. The conference is aimed at advanced students, doctoral students and younger doctoral candidates from various disciplines who would like to present and discuss their research projects. The conference language is German, contributions can also be submitted and held in English.
The conference is organized by the Deutschen Gesellschaft für Osteuropakunde (DGO), Forschungsstelle Osteuropa (FSO) at the University of Bremen and the Center for Eastern European Studies (CEES) at the University of Zurich.
Download the program: Programm JOE Tagung 2021 (PDF, 194 KB)
If you have any questions, please contact the organization team directly:
JOE Online-Tagung; 28. Tagung der Jungen Osteuropa-Expert*innen Neue Forschungen zu Osteuropa, 1. Oktober 2020
Organisiert von der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Osteuropakunde e. V. (DGO), Berlin in Kooperation mit der Forschungsstelle Osteuropa an der Universität Bremen (FSO) und dem Center for Eastern European Studies an der Universität Zürich