The World Order in the 19th Century: Implications for the Present

Type: 
Conference
Audience: 
Open to the Public
Category: 
Friday, October 2, 2015 - 9:00am
Add to Calendar
Date: 
Friday, October 2, 2015 - 9:00am to Saturday, October 3, 2015 - 7:00pm

COCONFERENCE PROGRAM

FRIDAY, 2ND OF OCTOBER
Central European University, Popper room

09.00-9.15 Arrival and registration

09.15-09.30 Welcome by organizers
9.30-11.30 Panel 1
Chair: Thomas Peak, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations, CEU

  • David Williams, Senior Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of London: Time, Place and Progress: 19th Century Liberalism and Contemporary Dilemmas
  • Musab Younis, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations at St. Catherine's College, Oxford: Rethinking 'the Age of Nationalism': Political Imagination and Race in the Nineteenth Century
  • Naim Bro Khomasi, Phd candidate, Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge: Colonial Rule and Post-Colonial Development: Path Dependency and the Problem of Anomalies in India and Africa

11.30-12.00 Coffee break

12.00-13.10 Panel 2
Chair: Constantin Iordachi, Professor, Department of History, CEU and Co-Director of Pasts, Inc. Center for Historical Studies

  • Andrei-Dan Sorescu, PhD candidate, School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, UCL: National History as a History of Compacts: Jus Gentium and Jus Publicum Europaeum in Mid-Nineeteenth-Century Romania
  • Viktor Friedman, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations, CEU: Extra-European International Governmentality beyond Empire: Sino-British Relations in the Early 19th Century

13.10-14.30 Lunch

14.30-16.30 Panel 3
Chair: László Kontler, Professor, Department of History, CEU

  • Kinga Sata, Lecturer, Political Science Department, Babes-Bolyai University: Peripheral Images of a 19th Century European Great Power: Hungarian and Romanian Assessments of the Habsburg Monarchy
  • Mladen Medved, PhD candidate, Department of History, CEU: Empire at the Crossroads: Uneven and Combined Origins of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise
  • Adrian Brisku, Research Fellow, Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University: Thomas G. Masaryk on Empire, Nation and Political Economy in the Late Long Nineteenth Century

16.30-17.00 Coffee break

17.00-18.30 Keynote address
Duncan Bell, Senior Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge: Thinking Utopia: Dreamworlds of Empire in the Fin de Siècle Angloworld

19.00 Dinner

SATURDAY, 3RD OF OCTOBER
Corvinus University, Room C 510

09.00-11.00 Panel 4
Chair: Attila Melegh, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Corvinus University and Director of Karl Polanyi Research Center of Global Social Studies

  • Jamie Allinson, Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Edinburgh: The Transformation of the 19th Century and the 'Eastern Question' Revisited: Uneven and Combined Development and the Ottoman Steppe
  • Nikola Zečević, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations, University of Montenegro: The Idea of Balkan Union in the 19th Century: National vs. Supranational
  • Ana-Teodora Kurkina, PhD candidate, University of Regensburg : Romanticism and the Rum Millet: Imperial Legacy and the Nation in Bulgaria in the Second Half of the 19th Century.

11.00-11.30 Coffee break

11.30-13.30 Panel 5
Chair: Alfred Rieber, University Research Professor, CEU

  • Alexander Astrov, Associate Professor, Department of International Relations, CEU: The Dialectics of Containment
  • Viacheslav Morozov, Professor, Department of International Relations, Tartu University: How Does Stigmatisation Work in IR? Russia, the West, and 'the Return to the Nineteenth Century'
  • Nikolai Vlasov, Associate Professor of the History and Theory of International Relations, Saint-Petersburg State University: Russian Empire in the Modern World: a Return to the 19th Century Foreign Policy

13.30-14.45 Lunch

14.45-16.15 Keynote address
Neil Davidson, Lecturer, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow:
Between Permanent Revolution and Uneven and Combined Development: 1848-1917-2011

16.15-16.45 Coffee break

16.45-18.00 Roundtable discussion and closing remarks

18.30 Dinner

The conference is supported by Pasts Inc., Department of History and Department of International Relations at CEU, and Karl Polanyi Research Center of Global Social Studies

NFERENCE PROGRAM

 

FRIDAY, 2ND OF OCTOBER

Central European University, Popper room

 

09.00-9.15 Arrival and registration

09.15-09.30 Welcome by organizers

9.30-11.30 Panel 1

Chair: Thomas Peak, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations, CEU

David Williams, Senior Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Relations, Queen Mary University of London: Time, Place and Progress: 19th Century Liberalism and Contemporary Dilemmas

Musab Younis, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations at St. Catherine’s

College, Oxford: Rethinking ‘the Age of Nationalism’: Political Imagination and Race in the

Nineteenth Century

Naim Bro Khomasi, Phd candidate, Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge:

Colonial Rule and Post-Colonial Development: Path Dependency and the Problem of Anomalies in India and Africa

 

11.30-12.00 Coffee break 

 

12.00-13.10 Panel 2

Chair: Constantin Iordachi, Professor, Department of History, CEU and Co-Director of Pasts, Inc. Center for Historical Studies

Andrei-Dan Sorescu, PhD candidate, School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, UCL:

National History as a History of Compacts: Jus Gentium and Jus Publicum Europaeum in Mid-Nineeteenth-Century Romania

Viktor Friedman, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations, CEU: Extra-European International Governmentality beyond Empire: Sino-British Relations in the Early 19th Century

 

13.10-14.30 Lunch

 

14.30-16.30 Panel 3

Chair: László Kontler, Professor, Department of History, CEU

Kinga Sata, Lecturer, Political Science Department, Babes-Bolyai University: Peripheral Images of a 19th Century European Great Power: Hungarian and Romanian Assessments of the Habsburg Monarchy

Mladen Medved, PhD candidate, Department of History, CEU: Empire at the Crossroads: Uneven and Combined Origins of the Austro-Hungarian Compromise

Adrian Brisku, Research Fellow, Institute of International Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University: Thomas G. Masaryk on Empire, Nation and Political Economy in the Late Long Nineteenth Century

 

16.30-17.00 Coffee break

 

17.00-18.30 Keynote address

Duncan Bell, Senior Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge: Thinking Utopia: Dreamworlds of Empire in the Fin de Siècle Angloworld

 

19.00 Dinner

 

SATURDAY, 3RD OF OCTOBER

Corvinus University, Room C 510

 

09.00-11.00 Panel 4

Chair: Attila Melegh, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, Corvinus University and Director of Karl Polanyi Research Center of Global Social Studies

Jamie Allinson, Lecturer, Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Edinburgh: The Transformation of the 19th Century and the 'Eastern Question' Revisited: Uneven and Combined Development and the Ottoman Steppe

Nikola Zečević, PhD candidate, Department of International Relations, University of Montenegro: The Idea of Balkan Union in the 19th Century: National vs. Supranational

Ana-Teodora Kurkina, PhD candidate, University of Regensburg : Romanticism and the Rum Millet: Imperial Legacy and the Nation in Bulgaria in the Second Half of the 19th Century.

 

11.00-11.30 Coffee break

 

11.30-13.30 Panel 5

Chair: Alfred Rieber, University Research Professor, CEU

Alexander Astrov, Associate Professor, Department of International Relations, CEU: The Dialectics of Containment

Viacheslav Morozov, Professor, Department of International Relations, Tartu University:

How Does Stigmatisation Work in IR? Russia, the West, and 'the Return to the Nineteenth Century'

Nikolai Vlasov, Associate Professor of the History and Theory of International Relations, Saint-Petersburg State University: Russian Empire in the Modern World: a Return to the 19th Century Foreign Policy

 

13.30-14.45 Lunch

 

14.45-16.15 Keynote address

Neil Davidson, Lecturer, School of Social and Political Sciences, University of Glasgow:

Between Permanent Revolution and Uneven and Combined Development: 1848-1917-2011

 

16.15-16.45 Coffee break

 

16.45-18.00 Roundtable discussion and closing remarks

 

18.30 Dinner

 

The conference is supported by Pasts Inc., Department of History and Department of International Relations at CEU, and Karl Polanyi Research Center of Global Social Studies