Kolloquiumsvortrag
18:15 Uhr,
IW3 0330 / hybrid
Alissa Klots
(Philadelphia/Regensburg)
"The Restless Generation: Soviet Retirees and the Meanings of Active Old Age, 1950s-1970s"
Kolloquiumsvortrag
18:15 Uhr,
IW3 0330 / hybrid
Oksana Nagornaia (Berlin)
"Tierische Kämpfer, stumme Opfer: Eine animalistische Dimension des Ersten Weltkriegs an der Ostfront"
Podiumsdiskussion
18:30 Uhr,
Falstaff Bremen
Wie steht‘s um die Sicherheitspolitik in Europa,
Herr Anton Hofreiter?
Wissenswertes
04.12.23
Russian Society at War
This panel will present fresh sociological fieldwork research on civilian attitudes towards the war, share direct experiences of continuing human rights advocacy within Russia, and explore the adjustments of exiled Russian scholars abroad.
Resigning to Inevitability. How Russians justify the military invasion of Ukraine (fall-winter 2022)
Svetlana Erpyleva is a sociologist, a researcher with the Public Sociology Laboratory and Centre for Independent Social Research (Russia). She is also a post-doctoral researcher at the Research Centre for East European Studies, University of Bremen. She received her PhD in Social Sciences from the University of Helsinki. Her research is focused on protest movements and collective action, political involvement, political socialization, youth and children’s political participation in Russia and abroad. Currently, she coordinates a large-scale research project on how Russians perceive the current war in Ukraine.
Patterns and dynamics of political repressions before and during the war.
Natalia Yudina has worked since 2004 at the SOVA Center for Information and Analysis (now – SOVA Research Center). Since 2011 she is the head of the "Russian nationalism and xenophobia" project in SOVA and has widely published on the topic.
Alexander Verkhovskiy worked between 1989 and 2002 at the Panorama Research Center and since 2002 has been director of SOVA Center for Information and Analysis (now – SOVA Research Center). His areas of research are political extremism, nationalism and xenophobia, religion and politics, as well as misuse of anti-extremism policies in contemporary Russia.
Russian Academia in Exile - searching affiliation, testing academic freedom
Dmitry Dubrovskiy holds a Ph.D. in History and serves as a research fellow in the Department of Social Sciences at Charles University in Prague. He is also a professor at the Free University in Riga and a research fellow at CISRUS in Washington, D.C. Dubrovskiy has also worked as a visiting lecturer at Bard College in New York, Witwatersrand University in Johannesburg, and as an adjunct assistant professor at the Harriman Institute, Columbia University, from 2015 to 2017. Until March 2022, he held the position of Associate Professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. In April 2022, Russia labeled him a 'foreign agent.' His research interests include academic rights and freedoms, freedom of speech, and minority rights."
This event is on record and open to the media.
Zoomlink
Registration
Where: Hybrid: Elliott School of International Affairs Washington, D.C. / Zoom
When: Monday, 4. December, 21:30 - 23:00 Uhr
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Online-Dossiers zu
» Russian street art against war
» Dissens in der UdSSR
» Duma-Debatten
» 20 Jahre Putin
» Protest in Russland
» Annexion der Krim
» sowjetischem Truppenabzug aus der DDR
» Mauerfall 1989