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“From Dayton to Brussels, via Tuzla: Post-2014 Politico-Economic Restructuring in Bosnia and Herzogovina” a talk by Danijela Majstorovic

Anderson Hall, Room 216

The political and economic transformations of peace-building and state-building efforts in post-Dayton Accords Bosnia–Herzegovina (BiH) have resulted in a dysfunctional, ethnically divided and impoverished country in social crisis. Articulating a demand for greater social justice, the 2014 protests and plenums in BiH emerged as a response rejecting both ethnic division and the corruption of post-Dayton political economy. While for

“The Political Life of Exported Steel” a talk by Zoran Vuckovac

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Over 20 years after the war, Omarska iron mine still lacks any formal marking that shows its infamous history as a former concentration camp for non-Serb population during the 1992-95 Bosnian war. The apparent lack is only a symptom of the silence actively produced around historical events constitutive of what is now known as Republika

“The Political Life of Exported Steel” a talk by Zoran Vuckovac

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Over 20 years after the war, Omarska iron mine still lacks any formal marking that shows its infamous history as a former concentration camp for non-Serb population during the 1992-95 Bosnian war. The apparent lack is only a symptom of the silence actively produced around historical events constitutive of what is now known as Republika

CES Open House

CES Main Office 3324 Turlington Hall, Gainesville

CES Open House

CES Main Office 3324 Turlington Hall, Gainesville

Brexit: A Roundtable

Pugh Hall Ocora

On Thursday, September 15th, 2016, the University of Florida Center for European Studies, Jean Monnet Center for Excellence and Bob Graham Center for Public Service will host a roundtable with distinguished US political science and economics scholars, entitled "Brexit: A Roundtable - On the UK and Europe's Politico-Economic Future" Participants: Dr. Patrick Crowley, International Economist

Brexit: A Roundtable

Pugh Hall Ocora

On Thursday, September 15th, 2016, the University of Florida Center for European Studies, Jean Monnet Center for Excellence and Bob Graham Center for Public Service will host a roundtable with distinguished US political science and economics scholars, entitled "Brexit: A Roundtable - On the UK and Europe's Politico-Economic Future" Participants: Dr. Patrick Crowley, International Economist

“Moving Together, Moving Apart: Party Convergence and the Rise of Extreme Right Parties in Europe” – A Lunchtime Symposium with Jae-Jae Spoon

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

In recent years, we have seen two simultaneous phenomena in Europe: Significant vote losses of mainstream parties and the rise of the extreme right. How are these two related? Dr. Jae-Jae Spoon is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh Lunch will be provided.  

“Moving Together, Moving Apart: Party Convergence and the Rise of Extreme Right Parties in Europe” – A Lunchtime Symposium with Jae-Jae Spoon

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

In recent years, we have seen two simultaneous phenomena in Europe: Significant vote losses of mainstream parties and the rise of the extreme right. How are these two related? Dr. Jae-Jae Spoon is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh Lunch will be provided.  

Rethinking Europe and Its Borders: Adriatic Multi-Nationalism in Habsburg Dalmatia, Trieste, and Venice – A talk by Dominique Reill

Dominique Reill is an Associate Professor of Modern European History at the University of Miami. Her talk is part of an ongoing series entitled "Empire, Religion and Ethnicity in Europe and Beyond" She will also be giving a lunch seminar the following day, Friday, September 22nd from 12 to 1pm on  "Rebel Citizens: ‘Belonging' in a

Rethinking Europe and Its Borders: Adriatic Multi-Nationalism in Habsburg Dalmatia, Trieste, and Venice – A talk by Dominique Reill

Dominique Reill is an Associate Professor of Modern European History at the University of Miami. Her talk is part of an ongoing series entitled "Empire, Religion and Ethnicity in Europe and Beyond" She will also be giving a lunch seminar the following day, Friday, September 22nd from 12 to 1pm on  "Rebel Citizens: ‘Belonging' in a

Yiddish on the Battlefields of Spain: Reportage During the Spanish Civil War – A CES Lunchtime Symposium with Jack Kugelmass

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

L. Shneiderman and T. Elski were both Polish Jewish emigres living in Paris when the Civil War erupted in Spain and who covered the war for the world Yiddish press. Elski wrote for communist Yiddish publications and the reportage was assembled into a book Oyf di frontn fun Shpanye published in Paris after World War

Yiddish on the Battlefields of Spain: Reportage During the Spanish Civil War – A CES Lunchtime Symposium with Jack Kugelmass

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

L. Shneiderman and T. Elski were both Polish Jewish emigres living in Paris when the Civil War erupted in Spain and who covered the war for the world Yiddish press. Elski wrote for communist Yiddish publications and the reportage was assembled into a book Oyf di frontn fun Shpanye published in Paris after World War

CANCELLED – Sokurov Film Screening, a Double feature and Discussion

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Join us at the Harn for an exclusive Film Screening event featuring UF Professor Dragan Kujundzic's Cinemuse: Selfie with Sokurov* followed by Alexander Sokurov's Francofonia. Both films will be followed by a discussion with Dr. Kujundzic and Dr. Laurent Dubreuil, Professor of French at Cornell University. The film screenings and discussion are free and open

CANCELLED – Sokurov Film Screening, a Double feature and Discussion

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Join us at the Harn for an exclusive Film Screening event featuring UF Professor Dragan Kujundzic's Cinemuse: Selfie with Sokurov* followed by Alexander Sokurov's Francofonia. Both films will be followed by a discussion with Dr. Kujundzic and Dr. Laurent Dubreuil, Professor of French at Cornell University. The film screenings and discussion are free and open

Last Words – Film Screening and Discussion with Mark Janse

Last Words - Documentary Screening of Koert Davidse’s film on the Cappadocian language, previously thought to be extinct, and Introduction & Discussion with Mark Janse, Research Professor in Ancient and Asia Minor Greek at Ghent University, Belgium. Dr. Janse is featured in the film. Lunch will be provided. Co-sponsored by the Classics Department and Samuel

Last Words – Film Screening and Discussion with Mark Janse

Last Words - Documentary Screening of Koert Davidse’s film on the Cappadocian language, previously thought to be extinct, and Introduction & Discussion with Mark Janse, Research Professor in Ancient and Asia Minor Greek at Ghent University, Belgium. Dr. Janse is featured in the film. Lunch will be provided. Co-sponsored by the Classics Department and Samuel

Maximum Visuality: How to Look at Pictures of War – A talk with Debbie Lisle

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Debbie Lisle is a Reader in International Relations, School of Politics, International Studies & Philosophy at Queens University Belfast Dr. Lisle will explore three developments in our understanding of the way people read pictures of war. She will examine questions of audience, reception and interpretation; how traditions of semiotic and discursive analysis can help inform the work

Maximum Visuality: How to Look at Pictures of War – A talk with Debbie Lisle

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Debbie Lisle is a Reader in International Relations, School of Politics, International Studies & Philosophy at Queens University Belfast Dr. Lisle will explore three developments in our understanding of the way people read pictures of war. She will examine questions of audience, reception and interpretation; how traditions of semiotic and discursive analysis can help inform the work

Crime, Crime Literature and Society – A Panel

Join us on Halloween Day for a panel on crime and crime literature in European and American societies. Panelists: Jeffrey Adler, Professor of History and Sociology, Criminology & Law at the University of Florida Aida Hozic, Professor of Political Science at the University of Florida Andrew Pepper, Crime Author and Lecturer of English at Queens

Crime, Crime Literature and Society – A Panel

Join us on Halloween Day for a panel on crime and crime literature in European and American societies. Panelists: Jeffrey Adler, Professor of History and Sociology, Criminology & Law at the University of Florida Aida Hozic, Professor of Political Science at the University of Florida Andrew Pepper, Crime Author and Lecturer of English at Queens

Film Screening: Freedom’s Fury

With the help of a grant from the Hungarian Initiatives Foundation, the Center for European Studies is hosting a series of events to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The events will focus on how the failed revolution was reflected in sport, politics, and international relations in Hungary and the United States. This

Free

Film Screening: Freedom’s Fury

With the help of a grant from the Hungarian Initiatives Foundation, the Center for European Studies is hosting a series of events to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. The events will focus on how the failed revolution was reflected in sport, politics, and international relations in Hungary and the United States. This

Free

Another Hungary: The Nineteenth-Century Provinces in Eight Lives — a talk by Dr. Robert Nemes

Dr. Robert Nemes of Colgate University will give a talk on his recent book, "Another Hungary: The Nineteenth Century Provinces in Eight Lives." This is a fascinating portrait of economic underdevelopment, ethnic diversity, and Christian-Jewish relations in the small towns and villages of the Habsburg Empire. This will be the final lecture of the semester

Free

Another Hungary: The Nineteenth-Century Provinces in Eight Lives — a talk by Dr. Robert Nemes

Dr. Robert Nemes of Colgate University will give a talk on his recent book, "Another Hungary: The Nineteenth Century Provinces in Eight Lives." This is a fascinating portrait of economic underdevelopment, ethnic diversity, and Christian-Jewish relations in the small towns and villages of the Habsburg Empire. This will be the final lecture of the semester

Free

Père de la Croix and the Challenges of Christian Archaeology in Late 19th Century France – A CES Lunchtime Symposium with Bonnie Effros

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Dr. Bonnie Effros is a Professor of History and Director of the Center for the Humanities in the Public Sphere at the University of Florida. Despite growing anti-clerical sentiment in the late nineteenth century, a few intrepid clerical scholars and their allies both inside and outside of France sought to draw attention to material evidence for the

Père de la Croix and the Challenges of Christian Archaeology in Late 19th Century France – A CES Lunchtime Symposium with Bonnie Effros

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Dr. Bonnie Effros is a Professor of History and Director of the Center for the Humanities in the Public Sphere at the University of Florida. Despite growing anti-clerical sentiment in the late nineteenth century, a few intrepid clerical scholars and their allies both inside and outside of France sought to draw attention to material evidence for the

Film Screening and Q&A with filmmaker-activist Fred Kuwornu: Blaxploitalian: 100 Years of Blackness in Italian Cinema.

Pugh Hall 170

#DiversityinMediaMatters is a transnational dialogue format led by filmmaker-activist Fred Kuwornu, based on the screening of his documentary Blaxpolitation 100 Years of Blackness in Italian Cinema (2016), a disaporic, hybrid, critical, and cosmopolitan dimension documentary that uncovers the careers of a population of entertainers seldom heard from before: Black actors in Italian cinema. Blaxploitation cleverly

Film Screening and Q&A with filmmaker-activist Fred Kuwornu: Blaxploitalian: 100 Years of Blackness in Italian Cinema.

Pugh Hall 170

#DiversityinMediaMatters is a transnational dialogue format led by filmmaker-activist Fred Kuwornu, based on the screening of his documentary Blaxpolitation 100 Years of Blackness in Italian Cinema (2016), a disaporic, hybrid, critical, and cosmopolitan dimension documentary that uncovers the careers of a population of entertainers seldom heard from before: Black actors in Italian cinema. Blaxploitation cleverly

Sokurov Film Screening, a Double feature and Discussion

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Join us at the Harn for an exclusive Film Screening event featuring UF Professor Dragan Kujundzic’s Cinemuse: Selfie with Sokurov* followed by Alexander Sokurov’s Francofonia. Both films will be followed by a discussion with Dr. Kujundzic, UF The film screenings and discussion are free and open to the public. Cinemuse: Selfie with Sokurov is filmed

Sokurov Film Screening, a Double feature and Discussion

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Join us at the Harn for an exclusive Film Screening event featuring UF Professor Dragan Kujundzic’s Cinemuse: Selfie with Sokurov* followed by Alexander Sokurov’s Francofonia. Both films will be followed by a discussion with Dr. Kujundzic, UF The film screenings and discussion are free and open to the public. Cinemuse: Selfie with Sokurov is filmed

Film Screening and Discussion with the Filmmakers: The Mysterious Mr. Šlomović

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Join us for the screening of a documentary film called "The Mysterious Mr. Šlomović" by two Los Angeles based documentary filmmakers Miodrag and Mia Ćertić. The film was made in 2016 and is narrated by Elliot Gould. The film tells the story of Erich Šlomović, a young Jewish art collector in Paris in the 1930s.

Film Screening and Discussion with the Filmmakers: The Mysterious Mr. Šlomović

Harn Museum of Art Chandler Auditorium 3259 Hull Rd, Gainesville, FL

Join us for the screening of a documentary film called "The Mysterious Mr. Šlomović" by two Los Angeles based documentary filmmakers Miodrag and Mia Ćertić. The film was made in 2016 and is narrated by Elliot Gould. The film tells the story of Erich Šlomović, a young Jewish art collector in Paris in the 1930s.

#MyEscape – Film 4 in the Refugees in Film series

Film 4 in the series, #MyEscape is a documentary using cellphone footage taken by refugees fleeing to Germany. In this film, the refugees give their personal accounts of these journeys and videos in extensive interviews and the footage captures the dramatic stories of their journeys. Free and Open to the Public The film will be followed by

#MyEscape – Film 4 in the Refugees in Film series

Film 4 in the series, #MyEscape is a documentary using cellphone footage taken by refugees fleeing to Germany. In this film, the refugees give their personal accounts of these journeys and videos in extensive interviews and the footage captures the dramatic stories of their journeys. Free and Open to the Public The film will be followed by

Terraferma – Film 1 in the Refugees in Film series

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

Film 1: Terraferma with Introduction by Esther Romeyn – An Italian drama that captures the development of empathy. A fisherman and his grandson rescue a pregnant woman and her young son from drowning as they make their way to Italy in search of refuge. Refugees in Film: A Series – A five-part film and post-film

Terraferma – Film 1 in the Refugees in Film series

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

Film 1: Terraferma with Introduction by Esther Romeyn – An Italian drama that captures the development of empathy. A fisherman and his grandson rescue a pregnant woman and her young son from drowning as they make their way to Italy in search of refuge. Refugees in Film: A Series – A five-part film and post-film

Fuocommare/Fire at Sea – Film 2 in the Refugees in Film series

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

Film 2 in the series, Fuocommare is a beautiful, cinematic documentary by Gianfranco Rosi that captures migrants’ dangerous Mediterranean crossing, set against a background of the ordinary life of Islanders on the Sicilian island of Lampedusa. Recently nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Free and Open to the Public The film will

Fuocommare/Fire at Sea – Film 2 in the Refugees in Film series

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

Film 2 in the series, Fuocommare is a beautiful, cinematic documentary by Gianfranco Rosi that captures migrants’ dangerous Mediterranean crossing, set against a background of the ordinary life of Islanders on the Sicilian island of Lampedusa. Recently nominated for the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature Free and Open to the Public The film will

Lunchtime Symposium: Dragana Svraka, UF Political Science PhD Candidate, “Studying Ethnic Politics in Southeastern Europe: Notes from the Field”

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Southeast Europe: After the Wars
A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event Series
March 20-29
Join us for an event series beginning this week that explores Post-War Southeastern Europe through politics, religion and culture. Sponsored by the Center's Getting to Know Europe Grant from the European Union Delegation to the United States.

Lunchtime Symposium: Dragana Svraka, UF Political Science PhD Candidate, “Studying Ethnic Politics in Southeastern Europe: Notes from the Field”

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Southeast Europe: After the Wars
A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event Series
March 20-29
Join us for an event series beginning this week that explores Post-War Southeastern Europe through politics, religion and culture. Sponsored by the Center's Getting to Know Europe Grant from the European Union Delegation to the United States.

Conflict Cafe on Former Yugoslavia

The UF Culinary Student Union is hosting a Conflict Cafe on Former Yugoslavia sponsored by the Center's GTKE grant: https://www.facebook.com/events/192484137909686 on Tuesday, March 21st at 7pm. Dinner will be provided. Sign-up is required as space is limited. This event is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event

Conflict Cafe on Former Yugoslavia

The UF Culinary Student Union is hosting a Conflict Cafe on Former Yugoslavia sponsored by the Center's GTKE grant: https://www.facebook.com/events/192484137909686 on Tuesday, March 21st at 7pm. Dinner will be provided. Sign-up is required as space is limited. This event is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event

“Women & Politics,” talk by Zana Marjanovic, actress and Bosnian Parliamentarian

Anderson Hall, Room 216

Renowned Bosnian Actress Zana Marjanović, star of Angelina Jolie's directorial debut film In the Land of Blood and Honey (2011) and Snow (2008), and filmmaker Emir Kapetanović will spend 10 days in Gainesville on a GTKE artist visit.  During their stay, Zana and Emir are working with Gabrielle Byam, Education Program Coordinator at the Hippodrome, and

“Women & Politics,” talk by Zana Marjanovic, actress and Bosnian Parliamentarian

Anderson Hall, Room 216

Renowned Bosnian Actress Zana Marjanović, star of Angelina Jolie's directorial debut film In the Land of Blood and Honey (2011) and Snow (2008), and filmmaker Emir Kapetanović will spend 10 days in Gainesville on a GTKE artist visit.  During their stay, Zana and Emir are working with Gabrielle Byam, Education Program Coordinator at the Hippodrome, and

“Post-Conflict Bosnia and Herzegovina: A Difficult Peace?” talk by Dr. Aida Hozic, UF Political Science

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

This event is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event Series March 20-29 Join us for an event series beginning this week that explores Post-War Southeastern Europe through politics, religion and culture. Sponsored by the Center's Getting to Know Europe Grant from the European Union Delegation to

“Post-Conflict Bosnia and Herzegovina: A Difficult Peace?” talk by Dr. Aida Hozic, UF Political Science

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

This event is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event Series March 20-29 Join us for an event series beginning this week that explores Post-War Southeastern Europe through politics, religion and culture. Sponsored by the Center's Getting to Know Europe Grant from the European Union Delegation to

Lunchtime Symposium: book talk on Carved in Stone, Etched in Memory: Death, Tombstones, and Commemoration in Bosnian Islam since c. 1500, by Amila Buturovic, Professor of Humanities at York University

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Amila Buturović, Associate Professor of Humanities at York University, will give a lunchtime symposium on her book Carved in Stone, Etched in Memory: Death, Tombstones and Commemoration in Bosnian Islam since c.1500. (Farham: Ashgate Publishing, 2015). This talk is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event Series

Lunchtime Symposium: book talk on Carved in Stone, Etched in Memory: Death, Tombstones, and Commemoration in Bosnian Islam since c. 1500, by Amila Buturovic, Professor of Humanities at York University

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

Amila Buturović, Associate Professor of Humanities at York University, will give a lunchtime symposium on her book Carved in Stone, Etched in Memory: Death, Tombstones and Commemoration in Bosnian Islam since c.1500. (Farham: Ashgate Publishing, 2015). This talk is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars A Getting to Know Europe (GTKE) Event Series

Roundtable, “Studying Islam from the Margins of Europe,” moderated by Nina Caputo, UF Professor of History. Participants: Amila Buturovic, Professor of Humanities, York University and Emily Greble, Assoc. Professor of History, Vanderbilt University

Amila Buturović and Emily Greble, Associate Professor of History at Vanderbilt University, will participate in a roundtable entitled "Studying Islam from the Margins of Europe," moderated by Nina Caputo, Professor of History, UF.  This event is co-sponsored by the UF Department of History. This event is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars

Roundtable, “Studying Islam from the Margins of Europe,” moderated by Nina Caputo, UF Professor of History. Participants: Amila Buturovic, Professor of Humanities, York University and Emily Greble, Assoc. Professor of History, Vanderbilt University

Amila Buturović and Emily Greble, Associate Professor of History at Vanderbilt University, will participate in a roundtable entitled "Studying Islam from the Margins of Europe," moderated by Nina Caputo, Professor of History, UF.  This event is co-sponsored by the UF Department of History. This event is part of our GTKE series: Southeast Europe: After the Wars

Welcome – Film 3 in the Refugee in Film series

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

Film 3 in the series, Welcome is a French film that depicts the friendship between Simon, a recently-divorced swimming coach, and Bilal, a young Iraqi-Kurd whose only dream is to cross the English channel from Calais to reunite with his love. Free and Open to the Public The film will be followed by a discussion

Welcome – Film 3 in the Refugee in Film series

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

Film 3 in the series, Welcome is a French film that depicts the friendship between Simon, a recently-divorced swimming coach, and Bilal, a young Iraqi-Kurd whose only dream is to cross the English channel from Calais to reunite with his love. Free and Open to the Public The film will be followed by a discussion

Plants, People, the Mountains and the Sea: Ethnobotanical Investigations in Adjara, Georgia – A Lunchtime Symposium with Richard Tate

Richard W. Tate, CES FLAS recipient in Russian and Georgian, is a graduate student in Interdisciplinary Ecology, in the UF School of Natural Resources and Environment. This multi-faceted ethnobotanical research project examines contemporary plant use patterns in the Autonomous Republic of Adjara, a region in southwestern Georgia. Adjara’s complex history and rich flora has woven an

Plants, People, the Mountains and the Sea: Ethnobotanical Investigations in Adjara, Georgia – A Lunchtime Symposium with Richard Tate

Richard W. Tate, CES FLAS recipient in Russian and Georgian, is a graduate student in Interdisciplinary Ecology, in the UF School of Natural Resources and Environment. This multi-faceted ethnobotanical research project examines contemporary plant use patterns in the Autonomous Republic of Adjara, a region in southwestern Georgia. Adjara’s complex history and rich flora has woven an

War & Medicine – A Panel

Charles Hobson, MD, MHA, is a Reseach Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Surgery in the College of Medicine. He worked in Zenica, Bosnia from July 1993 until October 1994, with the International Medical Corps, an American organization that focuses on medical relief in war and disaster areas. Having just finished his surgical residency before

War & Medicine – A Panel

Charles Hobson, MD, MHA, is a Reseach Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Surgery in the College of Medicine. He worked in Zenica, Bosnia from July 1993 until October 1994, with the International Medical Corps, an American organization that focuses on medical relief in war and disaster areas. Having just finished his surgical residency before

Careers in Foreign Affairs with speaker Robin S. Brooks, Ph.D., Human Rights Chief in the State Department’s Bureau of International Organization Affairs

UFIC Large Conference Room

Speaker Bio: Robin S Brooks, Ph.D., is currently the Human Rights Chief in the State Department's Bureau of International Organization Affairs. A Foreign Service Officer since 2004, she has also served at the U.S. Embassies in Moscow, Sofia, and Ankara, at the U.S. Mission to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and as

Careers in Foreign Affairs with speaker Robin S. Brooks, Ph.D., Human Rights Chief in the State Department’s Bureau of International Organization Affairs

UFIC Large Conference Room

Speaker Bio: Robin S Brooks, Ph.D., is currently the Human Rights Chief in the State Department's Bureau of International Organization Affairs. A Foreign Service Officer since 2004, she has also served at the U.S. Embassies in Moscow, Sofia, and Ankara, at the U.S. Mission to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, and as

Options & Challenges for East European Energy Security in a Post-Fact World – a talk by Robin S. Brooks, Ph.D.

Smathers Library East, Rm 100

What if, instead of posturing in Cold War terms about eliminating their "energy dependence” on Russia, European governments could make interest- and facts-based decisions on key economic issues after transparent public debate? This talk tells the tangled tale of how Bulgaria, Russia, and the U.S., played each other over a series of unfulfilled energy deals

Options & Challenges for East European Energy Security in a Post-Fact World – a talk by Robin S. Brooks, Ph.D.

Smathers Library East, Rm 100

What if, instead of posturing in Cold War terms about eliminating their "energy dependence” on Russia, European governments could make interest- and facts-based decisions on key economic issues after transparent public debate? This talk tells the tangled tale of how Bulgaria, Russia, and the U.S., played each other over a series of unfulfilled energy deals

Brexit & Migration: Challenges for Europe – A Lunchtime Symposium with Horstpeter Kreppel, Retired European Court of Justice Judge

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

In the coming months, post-Brexit exasperation with the political and business establishment over a multitude of grievances from inequality to immigration will likely shape votes in Italy, Austria, the Netherlands, France and Germany, with the outcome increasingly hard to predict.  Issues of economy, trade, security, and foreign and climate policy are at stake, to name

Brexit & Migration: Challenges for Europe – A Lunchtime Symposium with Horstpeter Kreppel, Retired European Court of Justice Judge

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

In the coming months, post-Brexit exasperation with the political and business establishment over a multitude of grievances from inequality to immigration will likely shape votes in Italy, Austria, the Netherlands, France and Germany, with the outcome increasingly hard to predict.  Issues of economy, trade, security, and foreign and climate policy are at stake, to name

Liberté, Egalité, Securité: The 2017 French Presidential Election in Historical, Institutional and Culture Context: A Panel

Anderson Hall, Room 216

On April 6, 2017, three observers of the French presidential election will help shed light on this immensely complicated and critical subject. Dr. Heloise Seailles, professor of French in the UF Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, will discuss the role of corruption in the campaign. Dr. Zachary Selden of the UF Department of Political

Liberté, Egalité, Securité: The 2017 French Presidential Election in Historical, Institutional and Culture Context: A Panel

Anderson Hall, Room 216

On April 6, 2017, three observers of the French presidential election will help shed light on this immensely complicated and critical subject. Dr. Heloise Seailles, professor of French in the UF Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, will discuss the role of corruption in the campaign. Dr. Zachary Selden of the UF Department of Political

Freedom Dance: A Film Screening and Filmmaker Q&A

About the Film Freedom Dance re-tells the dramatic escape of Edward and Judy Hilbert from Communist Hungary to the US amidst the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. During their 4-months as refugees, Edward, an artist, kept a journal of his adventure in cartoon form. Freedom Dance brings this unique journal to life with original, colorful animation. The

Freedom Dance: A Film Screening and Filmmaker Q&A

The Wooly 20 N Main St, Gainesville, FL, United States

About the Film Freedom Dance re-tells the dramatic escape of Edward and Judy Hilbert from Communist Hungary to the US amidst the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. During their 4-months as refugees, Edward, an artist, kept a journal of his adventure in cartoon form. Freedom Dance brings this unique journal to life with original, colorful animation. The

Plants, People, the Mountains and the Sea: Ethnobotanical investigations in Adjara, Georgia – A CES Lunchtime Symposium with Richard Tate, UF Ph.D. Student in Interdisciplinary Ecology

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

This multi-faceted ethnobotanical research project examines contemporary plant use patterns in the Autonomous Republic of Adjara, a region in southwestern Georgia. Adjara’s complex history and rich flora has woven an intricate tapestry of biological and cultural influences.  Ethnobotany, a field aptly described as a crossroads of botany and anthropology, draws from an interdisciplinary methodological toolbox

Plants, People, the Mountains and the Sea: Ethnobotanical investigations in Adjara, Georgia – A CES Lunchtime Symposium with Richard Tate, UF Ph.D. Student in Interdisciplinary Ecology

CES Conference Room, Turlington Hall 3312

This multi-faceted ethnobotanical research project examines contemporary plant use patterns in the Autonomous Republic of Adjara, a region in southwestern Georgia. Adjara’s complex history and rich flora has woven an intricate tapestry of biological and cultural influences.  Ethnobotany, a field aptly described as a crossroads of botany and anthropology, draws from an interdisciplinary methodological toolbox

Film 5 in the Refugees in Film Series: On the Bride’s Side

Hippodrome 25 SE 2nd Pl, Gainesville

About the Film A Palestinian poet and an Italian journalist meet five Palestinians and Syrians in Milan who entered Europe via the Italian island of Lampedusa after fleeing the war in Syria. They decide to help them complete their journey to Sweden – and hopefully avoid getting themselves arrested as traffickers – by faking a