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Courses and Lectures

Courses

The development and teaching of these courses are funded by the Jean Monnet Program of the European Union and the Center for European Studies at the University of Florida.

Spring 2021

EU Cultural Policy: Beyond ‘Masters’ and Museums

Spring 2020

Achieving Sustainability in the EU: Beyond the “three Rs”

Spring 2019

EUS4932/6932: European Security: Beyond Guns and Soldiers
-Dr. Zachary Selden

Spring 2015

EUS4932/EUS6932: Media, Citizenship and Participation in Europe
-Ginette Verstraete

Spring 2014

EUS4932/EUS6932: European Security and the Atlantic Alliance
-Dr. Karl-Heinz Kamp, Dr. Zachary Selden

Spring 2013

EUS 4932/EUS 6932: Capitalism in Europe After 1945
-Dr. Sheryl Kroen, Dr. Dorothee Bohle

Spring 2012

EUS 4932/EUS 6932: Democracy in the EU After the Lisbon Treaty
-Dr. Giovanni Piccirilli, Prof. Amie Kreppel

Spring 2011

EUS 4932/EUS 6932: Comparative Minorities in the EU
-Dr. David Galbreath

Fall 2010

EUS 4212/POS 4931: European Economic Integration: Politics and Policy
-Dr. Conor O’Dwyer

Spring 2010

EUS 4931: History of Europe and Turkey, and the Future of Turkey in the EU
-Dr. Amie Kreppel
EUS 4212/POS 4931: European Economic Integration: Politics and Policy
-Dr. Petia Kostadinova & Dr. Conor O’Dwyer
EUS 4932/EUS 6932: Understanding the EU: A Comparative Perspective
-Dr. Sergio Fabbrini

Spring 2009

EUS 4212/POS 4931: European Economic Integration: Politics and Policy
-Dr. Petia Kostadinova & Dr. Conor O’Dwyer
EUS 4905/EUS 6905: Islam in Europe
-Dr. Anne Sofie Roald

Fall 2008

EUS 4211/POS 4931: European Union and Its Enlargements
-Dr. Amie Kreppel & Dr. Petia Kostadinova

Lectures

Randall Halle

Professor Randall Halle, University of Pittsburgh, “Creative Europe: Visual Culture From National to European Style”

Monday, November 17, 2014, 4:00pm, Pugh Hall 120

Abstract:

Europeanization is a term of social scientific analysis, largely ignored by the humanities; moreover Europeanization has been largely a term associated with economic and political transformations within the expanding EU and not an explicit question of culture. However with the start of 2014 the new Creative Europe program has come into effect and it has already had a deep impact on cultural production across the EU and well beyond its borders. The program seeks to harmonize and synergize the cultural and creative sectors across Europe, recognizing them as playing a “big role in the European economy.”  This cultural policy produces what we can identify as culture industry 2.0. Thus attention to the program calls upon both social scientists and humanists to develop new paradigms of understanding European culture.

Randall Halle is the Klaus W. Jonas Professor of German Film and Cultural Studies at the University of Pittsburgh. He has published The Europeanization of Cinema: Interzones and Imaginative Communities (2014),  German Film after Germany: Toward a Transnational Aesthetic (2008), Queer Social Philosophy: Critical Readings from Kant to Adorno (2004). He has co-edited After the Avant-garde: New Directions in Experimental Film (2008), Light Motives: German Popular Film in Perspective (2003), and Marginality and Alterity in Contemporary European Cinema, two special two volumes of Camera Obscura (2001). The lecture is funded by the Jean Monnet Chair and the European Union funded Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence at the University of Florida and the Waldo W. Neikirk Term Professorship.

For questions, please contact Barbara Mennel at mennel@ufl.edu or Amie Kreppel at kreppel@ufl.edu.

Gordon Adam

Lecture: “External Policies of the European Union”
(April 8, 2008)
Remarks: “Florida University 2008”

Paul Turner

Lecture: “Afghanistan: Policy for European Union Engagement”
(April 15, 2008)
Remarks: “Brussels to Gainesville: Some Impressions”