Past Events

Event Format
to
In person

Russian journalist Yevgenia Albats, a friend of Navalny’s for 20 years, citing his letters from prison, tells the story of the slain Russian opposition leader and what it means for the future of the country.

Editor-in-Chief & CEO, The New Times

Director, Cold War Studies Project, Davis Center

to
In person

This seminar will discuss relations between Yugoslavia and the USSR after the end of World War II.

Recording Available

Scholar-in-Residence, Duquesne University; Founder and President, American Council for Eastern Europe

Professor of International Law and International Relations, Institute for Balkan Studies, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences

Director, Cold War Studies Project, Davis Center

to

This talk will examine the role of IDPs and refugees in the Ukraine conflict, their impact on the war, reintegration challenges, and scenarios for the future of Donbas separatism.

Lecturer in Sociology, Harvard University

Assistant Director, Scholars Without Borders, Davis Center

to
In person

This talk will consist of three parts: the impetus leading to the erection of the statue and the numerous hurdles that had to be overcome, its destruction during World War II and subsequent reconstruction, and its historical and symbolic significance since 1959, when Chopin concerts began to take place around the statue.

Assistant Professor of the Practice, Russian and Slavic Studies, Boston College

Professor Emerita, University of Massachusetts, Boston

to
Online

This seminar will discuss the changing relations between the Soviet Union, the People's Republic of China, and North Korea from 1949 through 1991 and the way these earlier relationships affect the close interactions between Russia, China, and North Korea today.

Recording Available

Senior Managing Director, Brock Securities

Director, Cold War Studies Project, Davis Center