Centre for Eastern European and Eurasian Studies (CEEES)

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  • Decolonisation in the history of the Russian Revolution

    January 3 to 5 2024

    This was the Study Group on The Russian Revolution's annual conference. The study group was established in 1973 and its aim is to promote new approaches to the study of the Russian Revolution, focusing on the period between 1880 and 1932. Affiliated to the British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies (BASEES), the Study Group possesses a truly international membership. The Study Group and its annual conferences boast strong representation from scholars based in the UK, EU, the USA and Russia.

    The conference aimed to examine aspects of the history of the Russian Empire, revolutionary Russia and the Soviet Union from 1880-1932, from a variety of (inter) disciplinary perspectives.

    We considered the theme of decolonisation in the history of the Russian Revolution. We wanted to unite well-established and more recent research approaches in pursuit of this aim. To do this, we sought to unite long-standing members of the SGRR and their perspectives on how the field has changed, and scholars at the earlier end of the careers, inviting new perspectives on the history of the Revolution that show cutting-edge research. Among other questions, the SGRR asks how study of the revolution has changed, and how things are likely to develop in the next couple of years against the backdrop of Russia’s continued invasion of Ukraine.
  • The Authoritarian International: Tracing How Authoritarian Regimes Learn in the Post-Soviet Space

    November 29, 2023

    In his new book 'The Authoritarian International: Tracing How Authoritarian Regimes Learn in the Post-Soviet Space,' Stephen Hall argues that democracies can preserve their norms and values from increasing attacks and backsliding by better understanding how authoritarian regimes learn.

    He focuses on the post-Soviet region, investigating two established autocracies, Belarus and Russia, and two hybrid-regimes, Moldova and Ukraine, with the aim of explaining the concept of authoritarian learning and revealing the practices that are developed and the sources of that learning.

    There are clear signs of collaboration between countries in developing best survival practices between authoritarian-minded elites. Learning does not just occur between states, rather it can happen at the intra-state level, with elites learning lessons from previous regimes in their own countries.

    Hall highlights the horizontal nature of this learning, with authoritarian-minded elites developing methods from a range of sources to ascertain the best practices for survival. Post-Soviet regional organisations are crucial for developing and sharing survival practices as they provide 'learning rooms' and training exercises.
  • Masculinity and Postsocialism – Workshop

    September 8 2023

    The aim of this workshop was to generate comparative, inter-disciplinary perspectives on the changing shape of masculinities across post-socialist Eastern Europe and Eurasia, reflecting equally on its shared history and on the divergent developments taking place both between and within countries across the region.

    Its contributors explored, inter alia: the different ways in which masculinity has been re-constructed and mobilised – by states, by markets – across Eastern Europe and Eurasia from the latter years of state socialism and its collapse to the present day; the impact of these constructions on gender and sexual relations and inequalities, including in spheres such as employment, social policy, the family and domestic violence; the ways men with differing social characteristics have negotiated these constructs in their everyday lives, and relations between them; and the various relations between national and global constructions of hegemonic masculinity across the region.
  • Seminar Series – War in Ukraine: Perspectives on the Past, Present and Future

    June 21 2023
    Conversations about research: conducting fieldwork in Ukraine, Russia and Belarus in the context of war

    June 7 2023
    Svitlana Babenko (Malmö University) and Irina Kuznetsova (University of Birmingham)
    Ukrainian refugees in the aftermath of the 2014 and 2022 invasions

    May 10 2023
    Nicola Ramsden (BEARR Trust)
    Supporting the humanitarian front in Ukraine, Poland and Moldova

    April 26 2023
    Natalia Levchuk (National Academy of Sciences, Ukraine)
    Demographic trends in Ukraine: before and after the war

    March 8 2023
    Zbigniew Wojnowski (University of Oxford) and Dana Mattingley (University of Cambridge)
    Ukraine versus Russia: History, Myth, War

    February 23 2023
    Dan Healey (University of Oxford)
    2023 Southampton Stonewall Lecture
    LGBTQ in a Time of War: The Queer History of the Russian-Ukrainian Conflict

    February 8 2023
    Bettina Renz (University of Nottingham)
    Western estimates of Russian military capabilities and the invasion of Ukraine

    December 12 2022
    Jeremy Morris (Aarhus University, Denmark)
    Russian reactions to the war: defensive consolidation and resistance