Democracy
News Type
News
Date
Paragraphs

Propelled by the need to develop new and more productive avenues of communication among scholars and policy-makers based in Europe, North America, and the Middle East, in 2010 the Europe Center at Stanford University’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute agreed to launch the multi-year collaborative project titled "Debating History, Democracy, Development, and Education in Conflicted Societies." Our joint initiative aims to promote research and policy projects with partners in Europe, the U.S., and the Middle East.

Viewed in an international context, with a focus on Europe and the Middle East, this collaborative project investigates how societies debate internally and attempt to reconcile differences of historical interpretation and political positions.  The first conference took place at the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, and was dedicated to “Democracy in Adversity and Diversity” (May 18-19, 2011). Topics for the conference included democracy in comparative perspective, political reform, the notion and strategies of democracy promotion, regime transition, negotiating religion and democracy, immigration challenges, minorities and East-West relations, emergence or recovery of civil society, the role of non-governmental organizations in democratic societies, and human rights. 

The next conference, at Stanford University May 17-18, 2012 aims to deepen our understanding of the interplay between history and memory. Given the extensive discussion of memory and history across a variety of disciplines in recent decades, we would like to take stock of our current understanding of the concepts of memory and history as they affect society, politics and culture.  At the same time we wish to examine in what ways insights gained in the course of this cross-disciplinary and global discussion may be effective when considering the circumstances of the Middle East, especially the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We are inviting new, innovative approaches to the study of memory and history as they affect different societies. We especially welcome contributions that engage the concepts of memory and history comparatively. Our goal is to advance beyond restating examples of conflicts between versions of history, and to seek new paths of research that may further the work in various cases, and also potentially offer guidance for engaging particular international and civil conflicts.

The questions that we seek to address at the conference include, among others:

  • How do we understand the historians’ role and engagement in political and cultural conflicts about the past and present?
  • What are the historians’ responsibilities in developing shared narratives about war, civil conflict, occupation, and genocide?
  • How do we understand the relation between the work of professional historians and that of civic society organizations?
  • How do we understand the roles and interplay of history and memory in efforts towards reconciliation?
  • How should one think about the relative importance of historical commissions and truth commissions in “coming to terms with the past.”
  • What is the relationship between the historian’s work on international and domestic conflict and that of judicial institutions?
  • How do efforts in post-conflict situations to reach accurate assessments (“truth”) of the events meet the needs of healing social, ethnic, and/or religious wounds (“reconciliation”)?
  • How do we understand the effectiveness, necessity, and/or legitimacy of remembering and forgetting in models of reconciliation?
  • What are the consequences and meaning of actions of forgiveness, including the formal granting of amnesty? Do these actions conflict with the writing of history?

The conference committee consists of Norman Naimark (Core faculty member of The Europe Center at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and the Robert and Florence McDonnell Professor in East European Studies at Stanford), Yfaat Weiss (Director, The Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Research Center for German-Jewish Literature and Cultural History at Hebrew University of Jerusalem), Gabriel Motzkin (Director, The Van Leer Jerusalem Institute), and Amir Eshel (Director, The Europe Center and Edward Clark Crossett Professor of Humanistic Studies at Stanford).

All News button
1
-

Ever since December 1999, when Greece lifted its longstanding veto and Turkey became an EU candidate state, Greece and Turkey have attempted to overcome animosity and mistrust and resolve their perennial disputes. I argue that despite significant improvements at the level of economic, energy cooperation and minority rights, no breakthrough has been achieved on high-politics issues. The intractable Cyprus question has remained the biggest burden to any reconciliation attempt. Positive spillover of functional cooperation cannot by itself overcome the legacy of decades of acrimonious relations and accumulated disputes. Greece’s mounting economic and social crisis and Turkey’s new foreign policy activism can pose additional obstacles to the resolution of longstanding disputes, absent determined leadership on both sides. Only strong, visionary leadership on both sides can help overcome the pending stalemate.

Ioannis Grigoriadis is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Bilkent University (Ankara, Turkey) and Research Fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP). He received his M.A. in International Affairs from the School of International & Public Affairs at Columbia University, and his Ph.D. in Politics from the School of Oriental & African Studies at the University of London. He specializes in European, Middle Eastern and comparative politics with a particular focus on energy politics, nationalism, and democratization. Among his publications are “Redefining the Nation: The Shifting Boundaries of the ‘Other’ in Greece and Turkey” (in Middle Eastern Studies, 2011), “Europe and the Impasse of Centre-Left Politics in Turkey: Lessons from the Greek Experience” ( in Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies, 2010), Trials of Europeanization: Turkish Political Culture and the European Union (2009), “Friends No More?: The Rise of Anti-American Nationalism in Turkey” (in Middle East Journal, 2010),  “Islam and Democratization in Turkey: Secularism and Trust in a Divided Society” (in Democratization, 2009), and “On the Europeanization of Minority Rights Protection: Comparing the Cases of Greece and Turkey” (in Mediterranean Politics, 2008)

Part of the 2011-12 lecture series on Greece and Turkey, sponsored by The Mediterranean Studies Forum and the Europe Center

CISAC Conference Room

Ioannis Grigoriadis Assistant Professor of Political Science at Bilkent University (Ankara, Turkey) and Research Fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP) Speaker
Seminars
-

This event is co-sponsored with The Europe Center

Abstract:

Ruby Gropas is a lecturer in international relations at the law faculty of the Democritus University of Thrace (Komotini) and research fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP). Gropas was in residence at CDDRL in 2011 as a visiting scholar. In this seminar she will discuss the ongoing Greek economic and political crisis, and what it means for the future of the European Union and monetary system. Is the crisis in Greece ‘internal’ or is it symptomatic of a wider European failure? Is the Greek crisis the result of failed modernity, or rather a precursor of things to come? Why has Greece become so important and why has it dominated global politics and world news for the past two years?  Are its malignancies purely domestic or are they representative of a wider malaise within Europe and possibly beyond? The collapse and orderly default of a eurozone country at the heart of the Western financial system arguably marks the end of an era. It has brought with it the deepest social and political crisis that modern Greecehas faced since the restoration of democracy and it has also led to Europe's deepest existential crisis. With the EU struggling to effectively managing the eurozone crisis and the burst of recent movements opposing neo-liberal orthodoxy and the “Occupy” movements – what does this mean for Europe? And what is next?

Speaker Bio: 

Ruby Gropas has worked on asylum and migration issues for UNHCR in Brussels and worked for McKinsey & Co. in Zurich and Athens (2000-2002). As part of the ELIAMEP team, her research concentrates on European integration and foreign policy, Transatlantic relations, human rights, migration and multiculturalism. She was Managing Editor of the Journal of Southeast European and Black Sea Studies (Taylor & Francis) between January 2006 and October 2009. Ruby has taught at the University of Athens and at College Year in Athens. She was Southeast Europe Policy Scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington DC in 2007 and again in 2009. She is Vice-President of the Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation Scholars' Association since June 2009, and was Member of the Academic Organisation Committee of the Global Forum for Migration and Development, Civil Society Days, Athens 2009.

Ruby studied Political Science at the Université Libre de Bruxelles (1994) and undertook graduate studies at the University of Leuven (MA in European Studies) and at Cambridge University (MPhil in International Relations). She holds a PhD in History from Cambridge University (New Hall, 2000).

Encina Ground Floor Conference Room

Ruby Gropas Lecturer in International Relations at the Law Faculty of the Speaker Democritus University of Thrance (Komotini)
Seminars
Paragraphs

The 1400 page Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften (Encyclopedia of the Humanities) offers a co

Image
image of the Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften
mplete overview over all relevant concepts, disciplines and leading thinkers on the field in a global perspective. As the recent development of the field requests, the term “humanities” is conceived in a decisively inter- and transdisciplinary manner, integrating the concepts of “Geisteswissenschaften” , “Cultural Sciences” with parts of the “Social Sciences”.  The characteristics of this encyclopedia are its future oriented approach, which not only summarizes the current situation of the field, but also inserts original research on avantgardistic topics. Special attention is being paid to the future of the foundations and of the practical relevance of the modern humanities, i.e. to the foreseeable development of Enlightenment, Rationalism, Humanism, Democracy and other concepts of societal emancipation in the 21st century.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften: Begriffe - Disziplinen - Personen
Authors
Number
3205785401
Paragraphs

The 1400 page Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften (Encyclopedia of the Humanities) offers a co

Image
image of the Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften
mplete overview over all relevant concepts, disciplines and leading thinkers on the field in a global perspective. As the recent development of the field requests, the term “humanities” is conceived in a decisively inter- and transdisciplinary manner, integrating the concepts of “Geisteswissenschaften” , “Cultural Sciences” with parts of the “Social Sciences”.  The characteristics of this encyclopedia are its future oriented approach, which not only summarizes the current situation of the field, but also inserts original research on avantgardistic topics. Special attention is being paid to the future of the foundations and of the practical relevance of the modern humanities, i.e. to the foreseeable development of Enlightenment, Rationalism, Humanism, Democracy and other concepts of societal emancipation in the 21st century.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften: Begriffe - Disziplinen - Personen
Authors
Number
3205785401
Paragraphs

The 1400 page Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften (Encyclopedia of the Humanities) offers a co

Image
image of the Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften
mplete overview over all relevant concepts, disciplines and leading thinkers on the field in a global perspective. As the recent development of the field requests, the term “humanities” is conceived in a decisively inter- and transdisciplinary manner, integrating the concepts of “Geisteswissenschaften” , “Cultural Sciences” with parts of the “Social Sciences”.  The characteristics of this encyclopedia are its future oriented approach, which not only summarizes the current situation of the field, but also inserts original research on avantgardistic topics. Special attention is being paid to the future of the foundations and of the practical relevance of the modern humanities, i.e. to the foreseeable development of Enlightenment, Rationalism, Humanism, Democracy and other concepts of societal emancipation in the 21st century.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften: Begriffe - Disziplinen - Personen
Authors
Number
3205785401
Paragraphs

The 1400 page Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften (Encyclopedia of the Humanities) offers a co

Image
image of the Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften
mplete overview over all relevant concepts, disciplines and leading thinkers on the field in a global perspective. As the recent development of the field requests, the term “humanities” is conceived in a decisively inter- and transdisciplinary manner, integrating the concepts of “Geisteswissenschaften” , “Cultural Sciences” with parts of the “Social Sciences”.  The characteristics of this encyclopedia are its future oriented approach, which not only summarizes the current situation of the field, but also inserts original research on avantgardistic topics. Special attention is being paid to the future of the foundations and of the practical relevance of the modern humanities, i.e. to the foreseeable development of Enlightenment, Rationalism, Humanism, Democracy and other concepts of societal emancipation in the 21st century.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften: Begriffe - Disziplinen - Personen
Authors
Number
3205785401
Paragraphs

The 1400 page Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften (Encyclopedia of the Humanities) offers a co

Image
image of the Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften
mplete overview over all relevant concepts, disciplines and leading thinkers on the field in a global perspective. As the recent development of the field requests, the term “humanities” is conceived in a decisively inter- and transdisciplinary manner, integrating the concepts of “Geisteswissenschaften” , “Cultural Sciences” with parts of the “Social Sciences”.  The characteristics of this encyclopedia are its future oriented approach, which not only summarizes the current situation of the field, but also inserts original research on avantgardistic topics. Special attention is being paid to the future of the foundations and of the practical relevance of the modern humanities, i.e. to the foreseeable development of Enlightenment, Rationalism, Humanism, Democracy and other concepts of societal emancipation in the 21st century.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften: Begriffe - Disziplinen - Personen
Authors
Number
3205785401
Paragraphs

The 1400 page Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften (Encyclopedia of the Humanities) offers a co

Image
image of the Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften
mplete overview over all relevant concepts, disciplines and leading thinkers on the field in a global perspective. As the recent development of the field requests, the term “humanities” is conceived in a decisively inter- and transdisciplinary manner, integrating the concepts of “Geisteswissenschaften” , “Cultural Sciences” with parts of the “Social Sciences”.  The characteristics of this encyclopedia are its future oriented approach, which not only summarizes the current situation of the field, but also inserts original research on avantgardistic topics. Special attention is being paid to the future of the foundations and of the practical relevance of the modern humanities, i.e. to the foreseeable development of Enlightenment, Rationalism, Humanism, Democracy and other concepts of societal emancipation in the 21st century.

All Publications button
1
Publication Type
Books
Publication Date
Journal Publisher
Lexikon der Geisteswissenschaften: Begriffe - Disziplinen - Personen
Authors
Number
3205785401
Subscribe to Democracy