Southeast Europe Events
Odd Couple or Just at Odds? The Future of U.S. - Turkey Relations
September 19, 2006 // 10:00am — 11:30am
European Studies
Professor Soli Ozel, Bilgi University (Turkey) and Southeast Europe Policy Scholar
Euro - Islam: The Dynamics of Effective Integration
June 21, 2006 // 9:00am — 10:00am
European Studies
Economic Diplomacy: Greek Initiatives in Commerce and Conflict Prevention
June 07, 2006 // 10:00am — 11:00am
European Studies
The Honorable Theodore SkylakakisGeneral Secretary for International Economic Relations and Development CooperationHellenic Ministry of Foreign Affairs
EU - Balkan Relations: The Greek Factor
May 02, 2006 // 10:00am — 11:30am
European Studies
Angelos Pangratis, Deputy Head, Delegation of the European Commission to the U.S. Ambassador Alexander Mallias, Greek Ambassador to the U.S.
Live Webcast: Art as the Key to Cultural Identity in Southeast Europe
April 11, 2006 // 12:00am — 1:00pm
European Studies
Helen Evans, Curator for Early Christian and Byzantine Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art
The US, Turkey and Strategic Developments in the Broader Middle East
March 30, 2006 // 1:00pm — 2:30pm
European Studies
Ian Lesser, Public Policy Scholar, Southeast Europe Project
Integration Through Education: Migrant Workers In Greece
March 29, 2006 // 10:00am — 11:00am
European Studies
The Honorable Marietta Giannakou, Minister of Education for Greece
Human Rights Approaches to Religion: Implications for Euro-Islamic Relations
March 27, 2006 // 9:30am — 11:00am
European Studies
with Malcom Evans, Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Law, and Professor of Public International Law at the University of Bristol, School of Law
Cyprus: Beyond The Deadlock
March 21, 2006 // 9:30am — 10:30am
European Studies
Gustave Feissel, Former UN Chief of Mission to Cyprus
Book Discussion: Media Cleansing: Dirty Reporting
Journalism & Tragedy in Yugoslavia, by Peter Brock
March 17, 2006 // 9:00am — 10:30am
European Studies
The book takes aim at the pack journalism that marked much of the mainstream Western and particularly U.S. media's treatment of the wars of the Yugoslav secession. The book dispels any illusions that the reporting from three terrible wars, in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo was impartial, objective and fair, and raises the legitimate question of whether this kind of unprofessional and careless reporting actually helped to prolong and intensify the war.