Conversations on Europe


November 2009 Events

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December 10, 2009
4:00PM - 5:30PM, 1636 International Institute/SSWB

9s Conversations on Europe/CREES Lecture. "Plus ça change? The Romanian Revolution of 1989 and its Aftermath."

Description:
Grigore Pop-Eleches, assistant professor of politics and public and international affairs, Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, Princeton University. Sponsors: CES-EUC, CREES, WCED.

Further Information:

This lecture assesses Romania's transformation in the two decades since the dramatic events of December 1989. In particular, it tries to address the seeming paradox between the country's significant post-communist achievements, including the January 2007 EU accession, and the pervasive sense of cynicism and disappointment with the country's trajectory among Romanian elites and ordinary citizens. I argue that much of the frustration is due to the gap between unrealistic expectations – fueled by the hopes of a moral renaissance in the wake of the 1989 revolution and the growing salience of Western comparisons – and the much more mundane reality of a fledgling democracy that still bears noticeable traces of the country's difficult communist and pre-communist legacies.

 

Grigore Pop-Eleches is the author of From Economic Crisis to Reform: IMF Programs in Latin America and Eastern Europe (Princeton University Press 2009). He has published a number of journal articles about the role of historical legacies and international factors, including EU enlargement, in shaping post-communist political transformations in Eastern Europe. He is interested in the dynamics of political liberalization and deliberalizations in the post-Cold War era, and in the role of elections in triggering these changes. He is currently working on a book manuscript about the mechanisms through which the communist past affects post-communist political behavior, and is  involved in a series of public opinion surveys in Romania, Moldova, and Bulgaria, which probe several distinctive features of post-communist politics, including the prevalence of protest voting and widespread distrust in political leaders and institutions.

 

Part of “The Nines: Brinks, Cusps, and Perceptions of Possibility—from 1789–2009”


December 15, 2009
12:00 PM - 01:30 PM, 1636 International Institute/SSWB

CES-EUC End-of-Semester Luncheon. "Rethinking European Urbanism for the 21st Century"

Description:
A roundtable discussion. Moderator: Dario Gaggio, CES-EUC director and associate professor of history, U-M. Presenters: Henco Bekkering, professor and chair of Urban Compositions, TU Delft, and Netherlands Visiting Professor of Urban Planning, U-M; Scott Campbell, associate professor of urban planning, U-M; Lydia Soo, associate professor of architecture, U-M. Free and open to the public. European Union Center at the University of Michigan is a European Commission designated Center of Excellence.

Further Information:

In the past the European city has influenced much of the development of the American city--what can the American point of view provide for rethinking the future of the European city? This discussion will be based on the reciprocal viewpoints of the participants: a European urban designer from Rotterdam who is currently studying Detroit, and two Americans, an urban planner who studies Berlin and an architectural historian who examines Florence. The panelists use these three cities as prototypes of larger challenges in American and European urban life: reconciling historic preservation with contemporary global redevelopment pressures, the transformation of former industrial cities, the emergence of mega-projects as an economic growth strategy, and the challenge of shrinking cities.