Événement en présentiel
Rural precarity and the politics of climate change discourse in Bolivia
Lieu : Salle S1, 2e étage, 28 rue des Saints-Pères - 75007 Paris
Cette séance est organisée dans le cadre du séminaire Extraire, échanger, empêcher. La mise en ressource des milieux.
Intervenant :
Thomas Perreault, DellPlain Professor, Syracus University
This paper examines the recent drying of Lake Poopó, in the central Bolivian Altiplano. While numerous fishing cooperatives and indigenous campesino communities were negatively affected by the lake’s drying, arguably the greatest impact was experienced by the three communities of Urus indigenous peoples, located on the lake’s eastern shore. As a consequence of their historical marginalization – which began in the pre-Hispanic era, intensified during the Colonial period, and has continued into the present – Urus have virtually no land of their own and have historically depended on fishing, hunting and gathering in the lake and surrounding wetlands. With the drying of the lake, Urus communities have experienced high levels of out-migration and deepening immiseration. This paper examines the causes and consequences of the lake’s drying and considers the broader political economic context of regional socio-environmental transformation. While climate change undoubtedly plays a role in the lake’s drying, it has been exacerbated by large-scale water withdrawals for mining, agriculture, and urban uses. Thus, the power relations involved in contemporary patterns of resource use, in combination with regional environmental change, have combined to magnify the vulnerability of fragile ecosystems and already marginalized populations
Responsable scientifique : Sandrine Revet, Sciences Po-CERI
Organisation du séminaire : Pia Bailleul, Inés Calvo Valenzuela
Online event
Un webinaire organisé par CORRIREF, AURA, Diaspora at War et BIELEXIL
Cliquez ici pour voir l'ensemble des webinaires
Based on the original survey conducted in 2023 among displaced Ukrainians living in the EU member states, Marina Keda examines migrants’ participation in European cultural practices, and their commitment to such values as respect for human rights, freedom and democracy. She studies the evolution of self-identity towards Europe using representative surveys carried out in Ukraine in the past.
Speaker:
Marina Keda, PhD, is a Jean Monnet fellow at the Migration Policy Center of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies of the European University Institute (Florence, Italy), and the Head of the Center for European Studies at the National University “Chernihiv Colehium” (Ukraine). Her research interests include the EU cultural and migration policies, the concept of Europe and the European integration, the European history and identity. Currently she is the academic coordinator of the Erasmus+ Jean Monnet Project SEED ‘Studying Europe – Educational Dimension’.
Scientific coordinator : Thomas Lacroix, Olga Bronnikova, Karine Gatelier et Agnieszka Fihel
Le séminaire aura lieu en ligne via la plateforme zoom.
Vous recevrez le lien de connexion après votre inscription.
Lieu :
Venue : Sciences Po - Salons scientifiques, 1 Place Saint-Thomas d'Aquin, 75007 Paris
In partnership with the Jacques Delors Institute/Grande Europe
Introduction and Welcome (9h15-10h)
Stéphanie Balme, Director of CERI-Sciences Po
Sylvie Mately, Director of Jacques Delors Institute
Keynote Introductory remarks: Eastern Promisses 20 years on
1. EU ‘transformative power’ and Domestic Political Trends in Central Europe (10h – 11h30)
Jacques Rupnik (Sciences Po-CERI)
Daniel Hegedüs (GMF Berlin)
Jaroslaw Kuisz (University of Warsaw)
Ondrej Dytrich (Institute of International Relations, Prague & EUISS
Chair: Lukas Macek , Sciences Po / Institut Jacques Delors
2. Central Europe 20 years later: Foreign Policy Orientations (11h45-13h)
David Cadier (University of Groningen and Sciences Po-CERI)
Jana Kobzova (Office of the President of Slovakia)
Tomas Petricek (Former Foreign Minister of the Czech Republic and Prague Institute of International Relation)
Maria Malksoo (University of Copenhagen)
Chair: Christian Lequesne (Sciences Po-CERI)
--- Lunch break ---
3. Enlargements and Public Opinion in EU and Candidate Countries (14h30)
Bruno Cautrès CEVIPOF - Sciences Po)
Bojana Zoric (EUISS)
4. The “Ukrainian Moment”: Prospects for Future Enlargements (15h45-17h30)
Volodymyr Yermolenko, ukraineworld.org, Kiev
Olga Onuch (Manchester University)
Nikola Dimitrov (Former Foreign Minister of Macedonia)
Florent Parmentier (Sciences Po - CEVIPOF)
Pierre Mirel (Former EU Director of DG Enlargement)
Chair: Anne de Tinguy (Sciences Po-CERI)
Keynote - Conclusions: What rethinking enlargement means for the EU
Jean-Louis Bourlanges (Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, Assemblée Nationale)
Scientific coordinators: Jacques Rupnik and David Cadier
Événement en présentiel
Une séance organisée dans le cadre du séminaire général de Relations Internationales et politiques planétaires du CERI
Multilateral Negotiations, Social Skills and WhatsApp
Lieu : Salle G009 (rez-de-chaussée), 28 rue des Saints-Pères 75007 Paris
Intervenant :
Jérémie Cornut, Simon Fraser University
Responsables scientifiques de l'événement : Thierry Balzacq, Stéphanie Balme, Ariel Colonomos, Carola Kloeck, Christian Lesquesne, Hugo Meijer, Karoline Postel-Vinay, Frédéric Ramel, Chiara Ruffa.
Événément en présentiel
Lieu : Salle BS1.28 (sous-sol), EHESS, 54 bd Raspail - 75006 Paris
Vous retrouverez toutes les informations sur la page de l'atelier en cliquant ici
Interventions :
Si vous souhaitez participer à cette séance de l’atelier doctoral sur la Chine contemporaine, merci de vous inscrire en suivant les liens ci-dessous. Les textes présentés par les intervenants seront distribués aux personnes inscrites uniquement.
Coordinateurs : Jérôme Doyon (Sciences Po/CERI), Sebastian Veg (EHESS)