Home Contact

News

May 2012 Education Capacity Building Tour in Albania and Serbia. In cooperation with Education Forum from Serbia and the Center for Democratic Education from Albania, Professor Lorin Anderson from the University of South Carolina gave a series of talks at the University of Tirana, the University of Durrës and the University of Belgrade on the revision of Bloom's Taxonomy and the new dynamic teaching methodology tool which he is developing together with the CDRSEE and an international team of education experts. This talented, multi-faceted group will ultimately publish a manual that will provide teachers with the latest research on teaching methods and ideas on how these methods can be used in their classrooms. Present at these talks were the State Secretary from the Ministry of Education and Science in Serbia Ms Tünde Kovàcs-Cerovic, the Director of the Institute for Educational Development Ms Tidita Abdurrahmani from Albania, PHD students, professors and educators.

14 May 2012 – European Union Enlargement Process. CDRSEE board member Dušan Reljić has co-authored a research paper on the hiatus in the European Union Enlargement Process. Together with the co-authors, Andrea Despot and Günter Seufert, he argues that in the wake of Croatia's EU accession in mid-2013, it is probable that the Union's enlargement process towards Turkey and the Western Balkans will initially grind to a halt, possibly for a decade or more. How can the EU nonetheless safeguard its position as the driving force behind conflict transformation in the Western Balkan states, and how can it prevent European influence in Turkey, an increasingly important player on the international stage, from dwindling? It should ensure candidates' integration within as many EU policy areas as possible prior to accession, so that the stabilising and democratising effects of the EU's enlargement policy remain intact. For the full text of the analysis, please click here: http://www.swp-berlin.org. The paper is also available in Turkish and Bosnian / Croatian / Montenegrin / Serbian language.

Click to enlarge
Click image for photo gallery

6 May 2012 – International Expectations Following Elections in Serbia. CDRSEE Board member Dusan Reljic participated in a panel at the Media Centre in Belgrade on election night May 6th to discuss the expectations of the international community regarding Serbia's future EU membership and the difficult economic and political changes it will need to pursue. The discussions were moderated by CDRSEE Executive Director Nenad Sebek.

Read all news

Publications

National Identities and
National Memories in the Balkans

edited by Maria Todorova

The themes of memory and memorisation have emerged in recent years as phenomena which need to be understood at the collective, cultural level, and not merely as traces of individual experience. Consensus about the importance of these issues extends widely across the social sciences and humanities. This enterprise has been of particular interest in recent years in relation to Eastern Europe, as the collapse of the former Soviet imperium has allowed and demanded a substantial re-evaluation of authorised accounts of the past, and a recasting of these in view of the need to re-assess the relationship of the countries of the region to powerful outsiders. These processes have spanned the spectrum from the formal writing of history to the informal memorisation of the past in popular culture.

We are entering a ‘new era’ in that the tendency to portray identity-formation in the countries of these regions as taking place under the cultural hegemony of a powerful ‘West’ is now being partly replaced by a recognition that identities here are not only to be understood as constructions initiated by significant measure of responsibility for the creation and dissemination of identities. What is more, these indigenous creations are hardly less in need of demystification and deconstruction than those of outsiders.

The task of challenging these ideological ‘phantasmagoria’ (to use Marx’s term) is actually made more difficult because they are presented in the guises of ‘history’ and ‘memory’––often claiming to provide ‘authentic’ narratives of the past, validated in either personal or collective experience, to replace the ‘ideological’ confection of the Communist period. ‘History’ and ‘memory’ need to be understood as equally in need of critical scrutiny so that the latter state of the peoples of the region will not be worse than the former state.

The present volume contributes to a wider discussion about the nature of identity-construction in relation to the past, and to the vigorous debate already taking place within South-Eastern Europe. Its appearance is therefore timely.

MARIA TODOROVA is Professor of History at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Information about all the contributors can be found at the beginning of the book.

 

 
  About us | News | Projects | Publications | Media | SEE JHP | Contact | Home