Programme 2014 (110 KB)

January 6, 2018 | Author: Anonymous | Category: Social Science, Political Science, International Relations
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Sixth  Annual  European  Summer  School  on  Cold  War  History   Trento,  September  4-­6,  2014  

-­  PROGRAMME  -­   THURSDAY,  4  SEPTEMBER   15:30:  Opening  Remarks   15.45  –  18:45:  Panel  1:  The  Developing  and  Non-­aligned  World   Chair:  Leopoldo  Nuti   ! Claudia  Pina  (Colegio  de  México)  Breaking  the  Bipolar  Constraints:  Mexico’s  Encounter  with   the  Non-­Aligned  Movement,  1961-­  1964   Comment:  Sara  Lorenzini   ! Miguel  Serra  Coelho  (EUI):  A  Valuable  ‘Friend’:  Portugal,  Brazil  and  the  Crisis  of  Goa,  1954-­ 61   Comment:  Antonio  Varsori   ! Martin  Deuerlein  (University  of  Tübingen):  The  Birth  Pains  of  Interdependence  –   Interpretations  of  Global  Change  and  Soviet-­American  Relations,  1968-­1983   Comment:  Sara  Lorenzini   ! Roberto  Cantoni  (University  of  Manchester):  Diplomacy  and  the  Geosciences:  Fifth  Columns,   Parallel  Diplomacies  and  the  Secret  Battle  for  Algerian  Oil     Comment:  Kaeten  Mistry    

FRIDAY,  5  SEPTEMBER   9:00-­‐  Panel  2:  Holes  in  the  Curtain   Chair:  Antonio  Varsori   ! Peter  Svik  (University  of  Tartu):  Exporting  Communism  or  Earning  Money?  The  Twisted   Rationale  for  the  Eastern  Bloc  Airlines’  Expansion  in  the  Third  World  in  Early  1960s   Comment:  Silvio  Pons   ! Paul  Lenormand  (Sciences  Po):  Importing  Models,  Maintaining  Traditions:  International   Connections  and  Foreign  Influence  in  the  Czechoslovak  Military  (1938-­1950)     Comment:  Silvio  Pons   ! Iwa  Nawrocki  (Princeton):  Cold  War  Catholic  Transnationalism:  Brazilian-­Polish  Intellectual   Exchanges,  1978-­1989   Comment:  Sara  Lorenzini   11:30:  Coffee  Break   12:00  -­  Panel  4:  American  Influence   Chair:  Leopoldo  Nuti   ! Una  Bergmane  (Sciences  Po):  The  US  Congress  and  the  Fall  of  the  Soviet  Union:  The  Case  of   the  Baltic  states  1989-­1991   Comment:  Kaeten  Mistry  

! Marina  Pérez    de  Arcos  (Oxford):  Last  in.  First  out?  Spain  and  the  NATO  Permanence   Referendum  (1982-­1986)   Comment:  Piers  Ludlow   13:45  Lunch   15:00  –  Panel  4:  People  as  Political  Props   Chair:  Federico  Romero   ! Sherzod  Muminov  (Cambridge):  Cold  War’s  First  Victims:  Kan  Sueharu’s  Sacrifice,  the  Red   Purge  and  the  Returnees  from  the  Soviet  Union  in  Japan     Comment:  Silvio  Pons   ! Emmanuel  Comte  (Sorbonne):  Managing  East-­West  Migration  during  the  Cold  War,  from   1949  to  1956   Comment:  Oliver  Rathkolb   !  Lorena  De  Vita  (University  of  Aberystwyth):  The  Mistake  of  Dr  Seydewitz:  The  Two  German   Foreign  Policies  Towards  Israel,  1955-­1960   Comment:  Oliver  Rathkolb   15:30:  Coffee  Break   16:00  –  Panel  3  Comment  and  Discussion  

SATUDAY,  6  SEPTEMBER   9:30  –  Panel  5:  Definitions  of  Peace  and  Neutrality   Chair:  Piers  Ludlow   ! Emma  Rosengren  (University  of  Stockholm):  From  Nuclear  Protection  to  Nuclear  Danger  –   Gender  in  Sweden’s  Nuclear  Renunciation   Comment:  Leopoldo  Nuti   ! Jelena  Glisic  (University  of  Tsukuba):  Reaching  out  to  the  East:  Japan’s  Trade  with   Yugoslavia  during  the  Cold  War     Comment:  Federico  Romero   ! Ned  Richardson-­Little  (University  of  Exeter):  Cracks  in  the  Façade  of  Unity:  The  Failure  of   the  Socialist  Declaration  of  Human  Rights  1985-­1989   Comment:  Federico  Romero     11:15  Coffee  Break   11:30-­‐13:00  Comment  and  Discussion   Closing  remarks  

FACULTY   Sara  Lorenzini  (co-­‐organiser)  is  Senior  Researcher  and  Associate  Professor  of  International   History   at   the   School   of   International   Studies   of   the   University   of   Trento.   Her   research   interests   include   the   history   and   foreign   policy   of   post   WW2   Germany   (especially   East   Germany),   North-­‐South   and   East-­‐South   relations,   Italian   foreign   policy   after   1945.   She   is   currently  working  on  a  book  project  on  the  history  of  development  aid  during  the  Cold  War.   She   has   edited   the   collection   of   speeches   and   writings   of   Alcide   De   Gasperi   (Il   Mulino)   and   authored   several   books   and   articles   in   Italian   and   in   English.    Among   her   books:   L’Italia   e   il   trattato  di  pace  del  1947,  il  Mulino,  Bologna  2007;  Due  Germanie  in  Africa.  La  cooperazione   allo   sviluppo   e   la   competizione   per   i   mercati   di   materie   prime   e   tecnologie,   Polistampa,   Firenze  2003.   Piers  Ludlow  is  Reader  in  International  History  at  the  LSE  and  head  of  the  LSE  IDEAS  Cold   War   Studies   Programme.   His   main   research   interests   lie   in   the   history   of   Western   Europe   since  1945,  and  in  particular  in  the  historical  roots  of  the  European  integration  process  and   the  early  stages  of  development  of  the  EU.  He  is  also  interested  in  the  history  of  the  cold  war   in  Europe  and  is  an  editor  of  Cold  War  History.  He  has  written  two  books:  Dealing  with  Britain:   The  Six  and  the  First  UK  Membership  Application  (Cambridge  University  Press,  1997)  and  The   European   Community   and   the   Crises   of   the   1960s:   Negotiating   the   Gaullist   Challenge   (Routledge:  2006).    He  is  now  at  work  on  two  more  books,  the  first  a  detailed  study  of  the  Roy   Jenkins’   presidency   of   the   European   Commission   (1977-­‐81),   the   second,   a   study   of   how   the   top-­‐level  transatlantic  dialogue  between  the  US  and  its  principal  European  allies  evolved  over   the  course  of  the  Cold  War.   Kaeten  Mistry  is  Lecturer  in  American  History  at  the  University  of  East  Anglia,  specialising  in   U.S.  foreign  relations,  the  international  history  of  the  cold  war,  and  intelligence.  Previously,  he   was   a   Leverhulme   Fellow   at   the   University   of   Warwick   and   IRCHSS   Fellow   at   University   College   Dublin.   He   studied   at   the   University   of   Birmingham,   University   of   California,   Los   Angeles,  and  University  of  Padua,  as  well  as  holding  visiting  fellowships  at  NYU,  Bologna,  and   Oxford.   His   first   book   The   United   States,   Italy   and   the   Origins   of   Cold   War:   Waging   Political   Warfare  was  published  by  Cambridge  University  Press  in  2014.  He  has  published  articles  in   journals  including  Diplomatic  History  and  Cold  War  History,  and  guest  edited  a  special  issue  of   Intelligence   and   National   Security.   He   is   currently   working   on   two   projects,   the   first   on   dissenting  voices  to  U.S.  foreign  relations  in  the  twentieth  century,  the  second,  exploring  the   rise  of  transnational  national  security  whistle-­‐blowers  since  the  1970s.   Leopoldo  Nuti  is  Professor  of  History  of  International  Relations  at    Roma  Tre  University,  Co-­‐ Director  of  the  Nuclear  Proliferation  International  History  Project,  and  President  of  the  Italian   Society  of  International  History.  He  has  published  extensively  in  Italian,  English  and  French  on   US-­‐Italian   relations   and   Italian   foreign   and   security   policy.   His   latest   books   are   La   sfida   nucleare.   La   politica   estera   italiana   e   le   armi   nucleari,   1945-­1991   (September   2007)   [The   Nuclear   Challenge:   Italian   Foreign   Policy   and   Atomic   Weapons,   1945-­1991]   and,   as   an   editor,   The   Crisis   of   Detente   in   Europe.   From   Helsinki   to   Gorbachev,   1975-­1985   (London:   Routledge,   2008).      

Silvio  Pons  is  Full  Professor  of  History  of  Eastern  Europe  at  the  University  «Tor  Vergata»  in   Rome  and  Director  of  the  Foundation  Institute  Gramsci.  He  extensively  worked  on  the  Soviet   Union   as   well   as   on   Italian   and   international   communism.   His   last   publications   include   "Berlinguer   e   la   fine   del   comunismo"   (2006);   "Il   Dizionario   del   comunismo"   (2006)   and   "Georgi  Dimitrov,  Diario.  Gli  anni  di  Mosca  1934-­‐1945"  (2002).   Oliver  Rathkolb  is  Professor  at  the  Institute  for  Contemporary  History  and  the  Department   of   Contemporary   History   at   the   University   of   Vienna.   He   was   a   Schumpeter   Fellow   at   the   Minda  de  Gunzburg  Center  for  European  Studies  at  Harvard  University  from  2000-­‐2001  and   Visiting   Professor   at   the   University   of   Chicago   in   2003.   He   is   author   of   several   books   focusing   on   contemporary   history   as   well   as   editor   and   co-­‐editor   of   several   studies   concerning   interdisciplinary  questions  of  contemporary  history  and  communications/media  history.  His   prize-­‐winning   study   “The   Paradoxical   Republic.   Austria   1945-­‐2005”   was   published   by   Berghahn   Books   (New   York/Oxford)   in   2010.   He   is   the   managing   editor   of   “Zeitgeschichte”   (Contemporary   History)   and   member   of   the   advisory   board   of   the   House   of   European   History   (European  Parliament,  Brussels).   Federico   Romero   is   Professor   of   History   at   the   Department   of   History   and   Civilization,   European  University  Institute,  where  he  is  pursuing  a  research  project  on  “The  integration  of   post-­‐imperial   Europe   in   a   globalizing   world,   1968-­‐1991”.   He   received   his   Ph.D.   from   the   University  of  Torino  and  subsequently  taught  at  the  London  School  of  Economics,  Bologna  and   Florence   universities.   A   specialist   on   20th   Century   international   and   transnational   history,   he   worked  on  various  aspects  and  moments  of  Trans-­‐Atlantic  relations,  particularly  the  Marshall   Plan   and   postwar   reconstruction,   on   US   foreign   policy,   on   migration   and   European   integration.  His  latest  book  is  Storia  della  guerra  fredda  (Einaudi,  2009)     Antonio   Varsori   is   full   professor   of   history   of   international   relations   at   the   University   of   Padua,  where  he  is  also  the  head  of  the  Department  of  Politics,  Law  and  International  Studies.   He  is  the  chairman  of  the  liaison  committee  of  historians  of  contemporary  Europe  at  the  EU   Commission.   He   has   published   extensively   on   topics   such   as   the   cold   war,   the   European   integration,   Italy’s   foreign   policy,   and   Britain’s   foreign   policy.     Among   his   most   recent   publications     are   in   the   volume:   “La   Cenerentola   d’Europa   ?   L’italia   e   l’integrazione   europea   dal   1947   a   oggi”   (2010),   “European   Union   History   Themes   and   Debates”   ed.   with   W.   Kaiser   (2010),   “Europe   in   the   International   Arena   in   the   1970s:   Entering   a   Different   World”   ed.   with   G.  Migani  (2011),  “L’Italia  e  la  fine  della  Guerra  fredda.  La  politica  estera  dei  governi  Andreotti   1989-­‐1992”   (2013).   He   is   completing   a   general   history   of     international   relations   from   the   Versailles  Peace  conference  until  today.  

ORGANISERS   Simone   Bellezza   received   his   first   PhD   in   2007   from   the   University   Ca’   Foscari   –   Venice   with   a   dissertation   on   the   Nazi   occupation   of   Ukraine   during   WWII,   which   received   the   prize   "Nicola   Gallerano."   In   2010   he   received   a   PhD   in   Historical   Studies   from   the   University   of   San   Marino,  where  he  defended  a  dissertation  on  the  Ukrainian  national  dissent  in  the  1950s  and   1960s.  In  2008  he  was  Shklar  Fellow  in  Ukrainian  Studies  at  the  Harvard  Ukrainian  Research   Institute.   From   February   2011   he   is   temporary   lecturer   of   History   of   Eastern   Europe   at   the  

University  of  Trento,  where  from  February  2012  he  is  also  research  fellow  in  contemporary   history.   Wes   Ullrich   is   a   PhD   Candidate   in   the   LSE   International   History   Department   and   is   in   the   process  of  submitting  his  thesis  on  ‘The  Eisenhower  Administration,  Destalinisation     and  US   Perceptions   of   the   Soviet   Union,   1953-­‐1956’.   He   was   formerly   Pinto   PhD   Fellow  at   LSE   IDEAS   and   a   Marshall/Baruch   Fellow.   Before   starting   his   PhD   he   taught   various   history   and   government  courses  at  the  secondary  school  level.    He  currently  teaches  ‘International  History   Since  1890’  and  ‘The  US  and  the  Wars  in  Korea  and  Vietnam’  at  the  LSE.  He  has  published  in   Cold  War  History,  The  Journal  of  Translatlantic  Studies,  and  H-­Diplo.    

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