| Events
List - Spring 2004 |
|
Spring
2004 ESA events are listed below.
Alternatively, click on a month to see a more extensive calendar of Europe-related
events on the UW-Madison campus:
August '03 |
September
| October
| November
| December
January '04
| February
| March
| April | May
| June
- 17 February
Michael Bernard-Donals
Professor of English and Jewish Studies, UW-Madison
"The
War over Memory: Genocide and 9/11"
7:00 p.m., Stoughton Public Library, 304 S. 4th Street, Stoughton
- 25 February
Peter Baldwin
Professor of History, UCLA
"Can
There Be a Democratic Public Health: Fighting AIDS in Europe"
4:00 p.m., 6102 Social Science Building
- 27 February
Laird Boswell
Associate Professor of History and Director, Center for European
Studies, UW-Madison
"Right Wing Extremism in Frontier Regions: The French National
Front and the Crisis of Alsatian Identity"
Contribution to the Symposium: "New
European Frontiers"
2:30 p.m., Curtin Hall 118, Center for 21st Century Studies, University
of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
- 1 March
Ingrid Miethe
Professor, Department of Social Work and Social Pedagogy, Evangelische
Fachhochschule Darmstadt, Germany
"Feminism
and Postsocialism in Germany: Experiences and Perspectives
from East Germany"
12:00 p.m., 8108 Social Sciences
- 1 March
Daniel Troehler
Pestalozzianum, University of Zürich, Switzerland
"History
and Language of Education. The Challenges and Distinctions of
the German And American Traditions"
1:30 p.m., 220 Teacher Education Building, 225 North Mills St.
- 1 March
Marc Abélès
Directeur du Laboratoire d'Anthropologie des Institutions et des
Organisations Sociales, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(CNRS), Paris
"Identity
and Borders: An Anthropological Approach to the European Union's
Institutions"
4:00 p.m., 206 Ingraham
- 2 March
Ingrid Miethe
Professor of General Education, Department of Social Work and
Social Pedagogy, Evangelische Fachhochschule Darmstadt, Germany
"The
Eastward Enlargement of the European Union: Opportunity or Obstacle
for European Women's Movements?"
3:30 p.m., 336 Ingraham
- 3 March
Hélène Clark Dageville
European Commission Directorate General for Employment and Social
Affairs, and European Union Fellow in Residence at the University
of Washington
"Toward More and Better Jobs for All: A Realistic Agenda
for the European Union?"
3:30 p.m., 206 Ingraham
- 4 March
Rebecca Rogers
Maitre de Conférences in History, Université Marc Bloch, Strasbourg,
France
"Women's
Voices From the Margins: The Colonial Civilizing Mission in Early
19th Century France"
4:00 p.m., 336 Ingraham
- 5-6 March
Annual Symposium of the University of Wisconsin International
Law Journal: "Speaking
Law to Power: International Law and Foreign Policy"
Fluno Center, 601 University Avenue
- 8 March
Serguei Oushakine
Associate Professor of World and Russian Culture, Altai State
Technical University, Barnaul, Siberia, Russia
"Replacing
a Loss: Memories in Books and Stone"
12:00 p.m., 336 Ingraham
- 9 March
Kim Scheppele
Professor of Law and Sociology, University of Pennsylvania
"Other
People's PATRIOT Acts: The EU and European Nations Respond to
9/11"
12:00 p.m., 7200 Law School (Lubar Commons)
- 10 March
Ulrike Liebert
Director of the Jean Monnet Centre for European Studies and Professor
of Political Science, University of Bremen, Germany
"Widening
without Deepening? Predicaments and Prospects in the European
Constitutional Experiment"
12:00 p.m., 336 Ingraham
- 10 March
Daniel Wincott
Senior Lecturer in Political Science and International Studies,
University of Birmingham, and Managing Editor of the Journal
of Common Market Studies
"The
Role of Law in the Creation of the European Market: Choice, Fate
or Chance?"
3:30 p.m., 336 Ingraham
- 11 March
Berel Lang [CANCELLED!]
Professor of Humanities, Trinity College
"Undoing
Certain Mischievous Questions about the Holocaust"
1:00 p.m., 206 Ingraham
- 11-13 March
"Improving
the Effectiveness and Legitimacy of EU Governance?"
Roundtable chaired by Jonathan Zeitlin at the Council for
European Studies' 14th International Conference of Europeanists,
"Europe and the World: Integration, Interdependence, Exceptionalism?"
Palmer House, Chicago, IL
- 12-13 March
2004 International
Education Conference: Education Across Six Continents:
"Teaching
and Curriculum for a Global Society"
Pyle Center, 702 Langdon Street
- 21-23 March
K-12 Outreach Event: Strengthening
Democracy: The Case for the Social Studies
Wisconsin Council for the Social Studies Conference, Madison Marriott
West
- 22 March
Elisabeth Schemla
French journalist and author
"Confronting
Islam: School, State, Society, and the Struggle over Secularism
in France"
5:00 p.m., Pyle Center, 702 Langdon St.
- 24 March
Vivian Cook
Department of Language and Linguistics, University of Essex
"The
Common European Framework, the Second Language User and the Goals
of Language Teaching"
4:00 p.m., 1418 Van Hise
- 25 March
Marcia Meyers
Associate Professor, School of Social Work and Evans School of
Public Affairs, University of Washington
"Families
that Work: Policies for Reconciling Parenthood and Employment"
12:15 p.m., Room 8417 Social Science Building
- 25 March
Olivier Roy
Research Director, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
(CNRS), Paris
"Religious Revivalism among European Muslims: Indigenous
or Middle East Import?"
Keynote address for the International Conference: "East
and West: The Experience of Islam in an Expanding Europe"
4:00 p.m., Pyle Center
Reception to follow
- 26-27 March
International Conference: "East
and West: The Experience of Islam in an Expanding Europe"
206 Ingraham
- 26 March
Robert Harvey
Professor of French, Comparative Literature and Philosophy, SUNY-Stony
Brook
"'Touching
Bottom' and Becoming Witness"
1:30 p.m., 1418 Van Hise
- 26 March
Friedrich Christian Delius
German Author
Readings
and discussion
4:00 PM, 336 Ingraham
- 1-4 April
Wisconsin Film Festival
Including European
film series: “Near and Far: Films From the
New Europe”
and “Danish Cinema Beyond Dogme”
- 1-2 April
Workshop
and Conference on Genetically Modified Crops/Foods, The World
Trade Organization, and the Future of the World Agricultural Economy
(Rescheduled to December 2004)
- 2-3 April
Conference of the UW-Madison's German and Dutch Graduate Student
Association:
"German-American
Connections"
Union South, 227 North Randall Street
- 5 April
Joshua Cole
Associate Professor of History, University of Georgia
"Colonial
Violence and the Borders of French History"
4:00 p.m., 206 Ingraham
- 8 April
Timothy Malchow
Professor of German, Valparaiso University
"'Geistesmenschen'
and 'Staatskinder': Thomas Bernhard and Austrian National Identity"
12:00 pm, 206 Ingraham
- 13 April
World
Languages Day at the UW-Madison
- 13 April
Camille Hamidi
Lecturer, Department of Political Science, Université de Versailles
Saint-Quentin en Yvelines (France)
"Voluntary
Associations and Politics: The Case of Young North African Immigrants
in France"
4:00 p.m., 336 Ingraham
- 22 April
Ambassador John Richardson
European Union Ambassador to the United Nations
"Why
the U.S. and Europe Need a Strong United Nations"
3:30 p.m., The Pyle Center, 702 Langdon St.
- 28 April
John Keeler
Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for
European Studies and the European Union Center at the University
of Washington
"Mapping
EU Studies"
12:00 p.m., Conference Room, La Follette School of Public Affairs,
1225 Observatory Dr.
- 28 April
Andreas Glaeser
Professor of Sociology, University of Chicago
"Emotive
Governmentality: Making Political Subjects in Former East Germany"
6:00 p.m., at the home of Nina Eliasoph and Paul Lichterman (for
directions, contact the Center for German and European Studies
(265-8032 or cges@intl-institute.wisc.edu)
- 29 April
Jeanne Sulzer
International Justice Director, International Federation of Human
Rights (FIDH)
"The
Role of Civil Society in the Fight Against Impunity for the Most
Heinous Crimes: The Example of the FIDH, a Network of 142 National
Organizations"
12:00 p.m., 336 Ingraham Hall
- 29 April
Catherine Kudlick
Professor of History, University of California, Davis
"Should
Blind Girls Marry? Reflections on Gender and Disability in Modern
France and America"
4:00 p.m., 206 Ingraham
- 29 April
Jesus Palacios
"El
Ataque Terrorista sobre Espana: Desbandada de los Espanoles o
Guerra contra el Terrorismo?"
4:00 p.m., 1418 Van Hise
- 29-30 April
Conference: "Out
of Europe: History, Memory and Exile after 1945"
Pyle Center
- 29 April - 2 May
7th annual conference of the National
Council of Less Commonly Taught Languages (NCOLCTL)
- 30 April
Peter Paret
Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities Emeritus, School
of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
"A
German Tragedy: Ernst Barlach's Drawings on the Nibelungenlied"
4:00 p.m., L140 Elvehjem Museum, 800 University Avenue
- 3-4 May
Turkish Festival