This area offers a wide range of continuously updated news regarding both academic and cultural events together with academic calls and study programs
The Conference page of the Portal on Central Eastern and Balkan Europe (PECOB) presents information on upcoming academic conferences. These conferences take place or deal with Central Eastern and Balkan Europe in a variety of disciplines: political science, sociology, anthropology, economics, language and literature. PECOB provides infromation on the program, participants and location of a conference to scholars, students and every one who is interested in participating.
Upcoming conferences, whose details are provided in the links below, will be discussing issues such as the condition of minorities, romanian studies, anthropology. Moreover, a PhD symposium on Southeast Europe is organized by some of the most important British research centers in London. Many conferences will focus on post-communist studies.
This International Research Conference has the aim to discuss about the transformations of the political system in Russia, the collapse of the other states and the relationships between the authorities and people, primarily in the Russia's revolutions and wars of the 20th and 21st Centuries.
This international conference aims to facilitate a cross-cultural, comparative study of the impact of media and film on the playing out of the crisis of multiculturalism in West and East European societies, and to analyse the similarities and differences in media and cinematic approaches to ethnic cohesion issues throughout Europe.
The German-Russian Museum Berlin - Karlshorts organizes a Conference with the aim to examine the different aspects of the German occupation regime in Russia, Belarus, the Baltic states and Ukraine, and investigate the reactions on the part of the local population.
Experienced lecturers will highlight, through which methodologies, to link advanced technology in the field of energy efficiency and the preservation of historical buildings and natural settings. A broad array of narratives from UNESCO designated sites in Eastern and Western Europe will constitute the backbone of the front desk part of the school. However, renovation and adaptation of physical structures alone won’t exhaust the educational purpose of the course since the energy governance issue will also be investigated. In particular, trainees will be taught how to manage energy into the planning and management of UNESCO designated cultural and natural sites, and how to use traditional to contemporary buildings.
The course will also include a number of team working sessions and on field exercises which will use the World Heritage Site of Dubrovnik as a real training scenario laboratory.