Friday 3 19:00-21:00 Title Speakers Organizers Location Language from to Interpreters Id S (All Or Spoken)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Friday 3 19:00-21:00 Title Speakers Organizers Location Language from to Interpreters Id S (All Or Spoken) Friday 3 19:00-21:00 Title Speakers Organizers Location Language From To Interpreters Id s (all or spoken) The antiwar movement <p>Tariq Ali (writer) F 15 EL Yannis Charitos 11852 and the resistance in Iraq George Martin (United for Peace and Justice-USA) Greek Social Forum Turkish EL Aggeliki Chalkia 12047 and Palestine Ahmed Shawki (International Socialist Review-Usa) Liberazzione (Italy) Greek EN M Bain 5154 Piero Bernocchi (Cobas-Italy) International Socialist Review (USA) Italian EN J Hogan 4912 Fabio Amato (Rifodazzione Communista-Italy) Confederazione COBAS (Italy) French TR Y Aksu 12058 Peter Grant (Vietnam Veterans Against War/Anti-imperialists-USA), English TR M Duran 7144 Figen Yuksekdag (Anti-war and anti-occupation movement of Turkey) FR I Marcou 2415 Arielle Denis (Mouvement de la paix, France) FR J Stoll 10695 Mania Barsevski (Greek Social Forum)</p> ES A Rollan 11745 ES M Pardo 6810 Europe at a crossroads, <p>Ingrid Baltzersen (AKP, Norway) E 101 EU Kepa Blazquez 11978 for a Europe without EU Marco Santopadre (RdC, Italy) Anti-imperialist Space Greek EU Enara Hurtado 10768 Associate Professor Dr Haluk Gerger (Turkey) Turkish RU M Senencher 6746 Representative of Batasuna, Basque Country) Italian RU l Barabanova 11675 Christos Karamanos (newspaper “Left!” Greece) English IT l Vigini 3413 Alp Altınörs (Editor of newspaper &quot;Atılım&quot;, Turkey) Russian IT A Castellani 10115 Coordinator: Tzaferis Yiorgos</p> EN S Naran 6572 EN S Tramonti 7029 TR Hacimirzaoglu 11370 TR B Yuldurum 11617 Alternative European &lt;p&gt;Gérald Ryser (Scop, France) E 102 EL Anna Holloway 2817 economic policies: the Alfonso Gianni (PRC, Italy) Charter of our common principles of another Europe German EL Maro Kalantzopoulou 11760 European social Marika Frangaki (Board of Poulantzas/Euromemo Group, Greece) ATTAC (France) Greek DE M Dabic 10840 model(s), labour and Joerg Huffschmid (Euromemo Group, Germany) Euro memo group, French DE B Kohler 12037 macro economics Christophe Ventura (Attac, France) ATTAC (Germany) English FR S Von brodowska 973 Gerold Schwarz (Attac, Germany) Espaces Marx (France) FR M Benghazi 649 EN T Bowring 6733 11735 EN M Jordan Fighting for legalization El Hadj (Sos Racismo, Spain) E 103 EL Dimitra Alevizou 12035 and equal rights Behija Benkouka (9eme collectif France) Greek Social Forum Greek EL Phillip Prodromos 12028 Isabelle Saint Saens (Gisti/Migreurop France) 9eme Collectif Arabic AR D Fakih 10488 Stefano Galieni (PRC/Italy) Antiracist Initiative of Thessaloniki French AR D Heshmat 11906 Andres Barreto (Comitato Immigrati in Italia) Sos Racismo (Grenade) Italian FR ML Veilhan 10882 Anouar Iqbal (Greek Migrants Forum, Greece) Frassanito English FR D Zafeira 12101 Efi Telli (Antiracist Intitative Thessaloniki, Greece) ARCI IT M Zilio 7204 Thanasis Kourkoulas (Sunday school for immigrants, Greece) Migreurop IT F Gallai 10832 Timorhy Abdoul (YRE) Sunday School for Immigrants (Greece) EN M Thiel 2570 Reanato Franzitta (COBAS) ATMF EN R Turrckson 6998 Ashley Smith (US antiracist movement/ISR) Confederazione COBAS (Italy) coordinator: Olga Lafazani (Network for Social Support to Refugees Greek Migrant’s Forum and Immigrants)</p> Youth Against Racism in Europe Network for Social Support to Immigrants and Refugees ISR (USA) Social movements, left &lt;p&gt;Νeurri Rosetto (Brasil, MST) E 104 Greek, EL Dimitri Malafecas 1934 political parties and Michael Lowy (Project K) Venezuela Information Center English, EL Antonis Gacidis 11955 progressive governments Claudio Katz (Argentina, academic) Transform Spanish ES Lorena Boca in Latin America. Daniel Libreros (Colombia, FSP) Project K ES Eduardo Escolar 9951 Strategic problems and Gustave Massiah (France, CRID) Ospaal EN A Freeman 4926 the power G.Migliore (Rifodazzione Communista) Greek Social Forum EN I Stobbart 8547 Pedro Marset (Spain) Fal FR V Mior 7843 Jacobo Torres (Venezuela, union FENTRASEP) Initiatives pour un autre monde FR F Guerrien 4255 moderator: Ariadni Lelaki (Greek Social Forum) IT A Grosso 1544 IT N Dliso 5857 "Free trade": A recipe for &lt;p&gt;Andrea Baranes, Tradewatch Italy E 105 IT G Donu 387 mass unemployment and Rafael Alegria, Via Campesina, Central America ATTAC (France) Spanish IT G Franco 4583 the degradation of Iara Pietricovsky, REBRIP Brazil Seattle to Brussels Network Italian FR G Seither 29 worker's rights Raoul-Marc Jennar, URFIG, Belgium Espaces Marx (France) French FR V Hellstern 4650 Antoine Math, GISTI, France CGIL (Italy) English EN K Ackerman 5697 Paolo Nerozzi, CGIL, Italy EN B Blackett 6856 Alessandro Pelizzari, attac Switzerland I Baixauli 10389 ES Alexandra Strickner, IATP, Switzerland P Duran 5510 ES For a new European &lt;p&gt;Rene Louel E 201 EL Alex (FR <>EL) X agricultural policy based George Benatos Union of Chambers of Turkish Architects and Turkish EL X X on food sovereignty, Michel Buisson Engineers Greek TR X X legitimacy, solidarity Gianni Fabbris Rouge & Vert - les alternatifs Italian TR X X Huseyin Yesil NEAK-New Agricultural Movement of Greece French IT M Dal sasso 287 Thierry Kesteloot CPE (European Farmers Coordination) English IT A Vetrone 3738 FR A Yannopoulos 11550 L Scrimgeour l 6281 FR A Papadopoulos 11547 EN Vanviet 3028 EN Women in struggle Sonia Mitralias (coordinator) E 202 EL, TR, EL Thetis Athzi 10065 against gender violence Montserrat Vila, Unitary Platform of Catalonia Against Gender Observatoire des violences envers les femmes, Turkish ES, FR, EL Maria Giannakopoulou 11843 Violence, France, Greek EN + TR N Aksu 5186 Fersen Gjendoubi, Collectif 13 Droits des Femmes de Marseille, Women’s group of Thessalonika, Spanish passive TR Y Senak 5051 CIDF, Women for another Europe (Greece) French HU ES M Rodrigo 5290 Keti Papariga-Kostavara, National coordinator of the Observatory Institute for Globalization Studies (Russia) English ES J Roda 10536 Confronting the Violence against the Women of (Greece), European Women's Lobby (EWL) FR A Ottoman 3561 Georgia Tsaklanganos, Policy Action Centre on Violence Against Unitary Platform of Catalonia against gender violence 10154 FR T Dussart Women, European Women's Lobby, (Catalonia) 11555 EN S Anderson Eva Britt Svensson, member of the European Parliament (Sweden) El-Fem, Women network of the European Left 7855 EN G Guimaraes Marina Malysheva, Institute on Socio-Economic Party,Germany, A Bozsoki (HU>EN) 11302 Studies of Population, (Russia), European Women's Lobby EN Suna Parlac, Demokratik Ozgur Kadin Hareketi of Kurdistan, Longway Program for Health Defence Association of Veronica Volentics, Longway Program for Health Defence Association Hungary (Hungary) of Hungary, Feminist Center of Athens, Christiane Reymann, El-Fem, Women network of the European Left Feminist networks of Ierapetra, Serres and Party, Patra,Greece, Bojura Pavlova, Association GERT (Bulgaria) GERT, Bulgaria, Natasa Dokovska, World March of Women, (Republic of Macedonia), World March of Women (World Network) Menou Watine, SOS femmes battues national of France National Observatory Confronting the Violence against the Women (Greece) Collectif 13 Droits des Femmes (France) CIDF - Centre d'information des femmes (France) World March of Women (European Network) Democratic Ozgur Kadin Hareketi (Kurdish women) SOS femmes battues of Marseille, France, Policy Action Centre on Violence Against Women World March of Women of Macedonia, European assembly of Evelyne Perrin E 203 EL Passive X the unemployed and Alain Villain Bijstandsbond Amsterdam (NL) German EL X X precariously employed in Daniel Couy Collectifs SDF Charleroi Solidarités nouvelles (BE) English IT M Gonzalez 5818 struggle Christine Tellier ALI-Thüringen (DE) French IT L Jaime 11075 Bernd Reissmann Collective unemployed (Poméranie-Poland) Greek FR M Fischer 3064 Herman Hoffman Stop Precarite Spanish FR A Von maltitz 6563 Christiane Maigre Collectif Marches (BE) Italian EN L Ferraz 4364 Anke van der Wliet Euromarches (DE) EN A Schiavone 11513 Denis Uvier MNCP (FR) R Laber 3750 DE Annie Thomas Stop a la chasse aux chomeurs (BE) M Giannoutsou 11522 Despina Tossonidou</p> AC! (FR) DE World March of Women (European Network) APEIS (FR) Occupation of Iraq, Walden Bello (Focus on the Global South, Phillipines) E 204 EL Ivi Rocou 3189 resistance and the global Chris Nineham (STWC- UK) Stop the War Coalition (UK) Greek, EL Violetta Petridou 11625 antiwar movement Kate Hudson (CND-UK) BAK (Turkey) English, EN M Bain 5154 Seih Al Zarkani (Iraq) Stop the War Coalition (Greece) Arab, EN J Hogan 4912 Saad Bayent Joda (vice president of Union of Oil Workers-Bashra) Athens Labour Center Turkish, TR Amaryllis (passive) X Salam Ismael (doctor from Falluja) French TR X George Martin (United for Peace and Justice, US) FR L Marcou 2415 Yildiz Onen (BAK, Turkey) J Stoll 10695 FR Masum Naz (Action Iran), Gregoris Felonis (president Athens Labour A Rollan 11745 ES Center) M Pardo 6810 Stefanos Linaios (actor STWC-Greece) ES Maria Styllou (Genoa 2001) Yiannis Sifakakis (STWC- Greece)</p> Financing local Vincent Drezet E 205 EL Hélène (passive) X authorities and local Daniel Monteux ADEDY-Supreme administration of greek civil EL X X public services and tax Gérard Pezeau Bezouille servants trade union EN J Sanders 11429 harmonisation in Europe Maire italien European public services cofederation EN R Maubrey 3549 Eric Wry, European Attac network (Attac France, Attac Italie, FR H Vernerey 7052 Pierre Bauby</p> Attac Allemagne, Attac Wallonie Bruxelles…) FR D Leye 1871 Confederation of Trade Unions of public sector workers in Turkey Forum social belge (Attac Vlanderen
Recommended publications
  • The Turkish Cypriots from the Ottoman Era to the British Colonial System (1856- 1931): from a Muslim-Ottoman to a Turkish Cypriot Community
    RESEARCH PROGRAMME 2013-2014 The Turkish Cypriots from the Ottoman era to the British colonial system (1856- 1931): from a Muslim-Ottoman to a Turkish Cypriot community The research project will be focusing on the Turkish Cypriots from 1856 to 1931, trying to illustrate the process through which, during these crucial years for the history of Cyprus, the island’s Muslim-Ottoman community is shaped into a Turkish Cypriot community. Research will be conducted along four main axes: 1. The 19th century “Ottoman modernity”. Its manifestation in Cyprus through the Tanzimat reforms, and its consequences (social, economic and political) for the Muslim-Ottoman community. The transition from an Ottoman power group to a “religious community”; 2. The first period of the implementation in Cyprus of “British modernity” (1878- 1914) and the deep transformations (both social and political) that it causes to the “Muslim-Ottoman community”. The two tendencies that develop within the community: on the one hand the Evkaf, as a carrier of a British-Ottoman modernization, and on the other hand a religious tendency, carrier of an Ottoman- Turkish modernization, with Istanbul as its centre of reference; 3. The second period of “British modernity” (1914-1925) and the social, political and demographic transformations that take place within the Muslim community. The gradual formation of a Turkish group within the community and the organization network developed by this group within the community. From an Ottoman-Turkish to a Turkish community; 4. Cyprus as a British colony (1925-1931). The radicalization of social and political forces within the community: a. the reorganization of the Evkaf; b.
    [Show full text]
  • Nikos Christofis – Curriculum Vitae [email protected]; Mob
    Nikos Christofis – Curriculum Vitae [email protected]; mob. +35799-203664 or visit www.nchristofis.com PERSONAL DATA Name: Nikos Christofis Date of Birth: 29.5.1981 Citizenship: Cypriot and Hellenic Affiliation: PhD Candidate, Leiden Institute for Area Studies (LIAS), Leiden University Supervisors: Prof. Dr. Erik-Jan Zürcher (primary) and Prof. Dr. Sia Anagnostopoloulou Dissertation Topic: EDA – TİP. Socialist Contest on Cyprus. From Anti-Imperialism to Nationalism. EDUCATION 2009 – (in progress) PhD Candidate, Turkish Studies Department, Leiden Institute for Area Studies (LIAS), Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands Status: Writing the final chapter of my dissertation 2009 – 2010 Erasmus Program (research), The Atatürk Institute for Modern Turkish History, Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, Turkey Status: Research in the Turkish Archives of Tarih Vakfı and TÜSTAV. “The Turkish Left on Cyprus” 2007 – 2009 MPhil, Turkish Studies Department, Institute for Area Studies (LIAS), Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands (advanced to PhD) 2003 – 2004 M.A., Middle Eastern Studies Department, University of Manchester, Manchester, Great Britain Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Ferozee Yasamee Thesis: “Some Greek Views on Turkey, 1919-1922” [based on archival research in the newspapers of Greece during the period 1919-1922] 1999 – 2003 B.A., Turkish Studies Department, University of Cyprus, Nicosia, Cyprus Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Niyazi Kızılyürek Thesis: “Constitutional Development in Turkey, 1876-2000” PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE June 2012 Research Assistant, Cyprus Critical History Archive project (CCHA), Association for Historical Dialogue and Research (AHDR), Nicosia, Cyprus April 2012 Subtitling (Cyprus Film Days, 2012) March 2012 Educational Seminar concerning the State Examinations for Foreign Languages, Thessaloniki, Greek Ministry of Education in cooperation with the University of Athens, 4 March 2012 1 Nikos Christofis – Curriculum Vitae [email protected]; mob.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Thought and Practice in the Ottoman Empire
    INSTITUTE FOR MEDITERRANEAN STUDIES Halcyon Days in Crete IX Symposium Political Thought and Practice in the Ottoman Empire Rethymno, 9-11 January 2015 Organising Committee: GÜLSÜN AKSOY-AIVALI ANTONIS ANASTASOPOULOS CHRISTOS HADZIIOSSIF ELIAS KOLOVOS MARINOS SARIYANNIS Symposiarch: Linda T. Darling Friday, January 9 Chair: Elizabeth A. Zachariadou 17:00-17:20 Addresses 17:20-18:00 Linda T. Darling (Tucson), Ottoman Political Thought and the Critique of the Janissaries: Perceptions and Evidence 18:15-18:35 Break 18:35-18:55 Virginia Aksan (Hamilton), The Ottoman Empire, Military Manpower and Political Bargains 1750-1850 19:10-19:30 Yannis Spyropoulos (Rethymno), Janissary Politics in the Ottoman Frontier: Crete, 1669-1826 Saturday, January 10 Chair: Virginia Aksan 10:00-10:20 Marc Aymes (Paris), Of Fakes and Forgeries as Political Utterances 10:35-10:55 Ariel Salzmann (Kingston), Where did the “Tanzimat” Come From? Ideas, Policies and Systemic Change in the Later Ottoman Empire 11:10-11:30 Break 11:30-11:50 Antonis Hadjikyriacou (Rethymno), Revisiting the Millet Debate: Community and Representation in Pre-Tanzimat Cyprus 12:05-12:25 Sia Anagnostopoulou (Athens), Political Thought of the Young Turks: Nationalism and Imperialism Chair: John C. Alexander (Alexandropoulos) 17:00-17:20 Nicolas Vatin (Paris), Le pouvoir des Barberousse à Alger d’après les Ġazavât-ı Hayre- d-dîn Paşa 17:35-17:55 Denise Klein (Mainz), Negotiating Power in the Crimean Khanate, Sixteenth-Eighteenth Centuries 18:10-18:30 Break 18:30-18:50 Elias Kolovos (Rethymno),
    [Show full text]
  • Political Parties I Discourse & Ideology
    Continuities and Change in Greek political culture: PASOK’s modernization paradigm 1996-2004 Nikolaos Bilios (MPhil LSE) PhD student UoA- Marshall Memorial Fellow [email protected] [email protected] University of Athens Faculty of Law Department of Political Science and Public Administration Summer 2009 Paper for the 4th Biennial Hellenic Observatory PhD Symposium on Contemporary Greece Session II- Panel 5- Political Parties I: Discourse & Ideology Room : U110, Tower 1 Chair: Prof. Kevin Featherstone 1 ABSTRACT Throughout the 90s, PASOK (Panhellenic Socialist Movement), in common with the other European social democratic parties, has advocated a revisionist approach towards socialism and has placed the 'modernization' of the Greek society high on its political agenda. By focusing on the characteristics of PASOK’s transformation, this paper aims to exemplify the repercussion of this development on its political discourse i.e. the modernization paradigm (eksychronismos). Key questions will be addressed: What is the significance of ‘modernization’ as a political discourse? What is its empirical documentation and how its methodological use will help us to study and to decipher the role of this political ideology in conjunction with PASOK’s new character, ideological agenda, social base. The material composing the analysis of this paper derives from empirical research on the speeches delivered and interviews given by the Prime Minister Kostas Simitis and other members of the ‘modernizers group’ and by articles and texts which have been published in the daily press, periodicals and books. INTRODUCTION The discussion about the ideology, role and organization of political parties is continuous and classic. The scope and intensity of the challenges currently faced in Western European political parties is exceptionally great, threatening the viability of the manner in which they have traditionally operated and causing them to seek new behaviors and strategies.
    [Show full text]
  • Nationalism in the Troubled Triangle
    Nationalism in the Troubled Triangle New Perspectives on South-East Europe Series Editors: Spyros Econmides, Senior Lecturer in International Relations and European Politics, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Kevin Featherstone, Professor of Contemporary Greek Studies, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Sevket Pamuk, Professor of Contemporary Turkish Studies, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Series Advisory Board: Richard Crampton, Emeritus Professor of Eastern European History at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford Vladimir Gligorov, Staff Economist specialising in Balkan countries, The Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies, Austria Jacques Rupnik, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre d’études et de recherches internationales of Sciences Po, France Susan Woodward, Professor, The Graduate Programme in Political Science at The City University of New York, USA. South-East Europe presents a compelling agenda: a region that has challenged European identities, values and interests like no other at formative periods of modern history, and is now undergoing a set of complex transitions. It is a region made up of new and old European Union member states, as well as aspiring ones; early ‘democratising’ states and new post-communist regimes; states undergoing liberalising economic reforms, partially inspired by external forces, whilst coping with their own embedded nationalisms; and states obliged to respond to new and recurring issues of security, identity, well-being, social integration, faith and secularisation. This series examines issues of inheritance and adaptation. The disciplinary reach incorporates politics and international relations, modern history, economics and political economy and sociology. It links the study of South- East Europe across a number of social sciences to European issues of democratisation and economic reform in the post-transition age.
    [Show full text]
  • Turkish-Speaking Christians, Jews and Greek-Speaking Muslims and Catholics in the Ottoman Empire
    TÜRK DİLLERİ ARAŞTIRMALARI DİZİSİ: 48 NATIONAL HELLENIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION Turkish-Speaking Christians, Jews and Greek-Speaking Muslims and Catholics in the Ottoman Empire Offprint EREN İstanbul 2011 Between Religion and Language: Turkish-Speaking Christians, Jews and Greek-Speaking Muslims and Catholics in the Ottoman Empire Edited by Evangelia Balta and Mehmet Ölmez Türk Dilleri Araştırmaları Dizisi: 48 Yayımlayan: Mehmet Ölmez E-mail: [email protected] © Evangelia Balta and Mehmet Ölmez 1st Printing: Istanbul, October 2011 Eren Yayıncılık Kitap Dağıtım Ltd. Şti Tünel, İstiklal Cad. Sofyalı Sokak No. 34 34430 Beyoğlu - İstanbul, Türkiye Tel.: +90 - (0) 212 - 252 05 60 Sertifika no: 18497 ISBN 978-975-6372-47-0 TDAD address Mehmet Ölmez Yıldız Teknik Üniversitesi Fen-Ed Fak. T.D.E. Bölümü Davutpaşa Yerleşim Birimi 34210 Esenler-İSTANBUL Tel: (90.212) 383 44 47 [email protected] Printed at “Kitap Matbaası” Davutpaşa Caddesi No 123, Kat 1 Topkapı-İstanbul Tel.: 90.212 482 99 10 Sertifika no: 16053 CONTENTS FORWORD Evangelia Balta: Setting sail, again .................................................... 7-11 TURKISH-SPEAKING CHRISTIANS IN OTTOMAN EMPIRE I. Syro- Turkish Literature Benjamin Trigona-Harany : Syro-Ottoman: a description of Ottoman Turkish in Syriac letters..................... 15-41 II. Cyrillic- Turkish Literature Matthias Kappler : Printed Balkan Turkish Texts in Cyrillic Alphabet in the Middle of the Nineteenth Century (1841-1875): A Typological and Graphematic Approach................................ 43-69 III. Hebrew- Turkish Literature Laurent Mignon : Avram, İsak and the Others. Notes on the Genesis of Judeo-Turkish Literature .................................... 71-83 Tülay Çulha : İbrani Harfli Anonim Tevârîh-i Âl-i Osman Üzerine ........................................................................... 85-99 IV. Armeno- Turkish Literature Börte Sagaster : The role of Turcophone Armenians as literary innovators and mediators of culture in the early days of Modern Turkish literature................................
    [Show full text]
  • Internal Politics and Views on Brexit
    BRIEFING PAPER Number 8362, 2 May 2019 The EU27: Internal Politics By Stefano Fella, Vaughne Miller, Nigel Walker and Views on Brexit Contents: 1. Austria 2. Belgium 3. Bulgaria 4. Croatia 5. Cyprus 6. Czech Republic 7. Denmark 8. Estonia 9. Finland 10. France 11. Germany 12. Greece 13. Hungary 14. Ireland 15. Italy 16. Latvia 17. Lithuania 18. Luxembourg 19. Malta 20. Netherlands 21. Poland 22. Portugal 23. Romania 24. Slovakia 25. Slovenia 26. Spain 27. Sweden www.parliament.uk/commons-library | intranet.parliament.uk/commons-library | [email protected] | @commonslibrary 2 The EU27: Internal Politics and Views on Brexit Contents Summary 6 1. Austria 13 1.1 Key Facts 13 1.2 Background 14 1.3 Current Government and Recent Political Developments 15 1.4 Views on Brexit 17 2. Belgium 25 2.1 Key Facts 25 2.2 Background 25 2.3 Current Government and recent political developments 26 2.4 Views on Brexit 28 3. Bulgaria 32 3.1 Key Facts 32 3.2 Background 32 3.3 Current Government and recent political developments 33 3.4 Views on Brexit 35 4. Croatia 37 4.1 Key Facts 37 4.2 Background 37 4.3 Current Government and recent political developments 38 4.4 Views on Brexit 39 5. Cyprus 42 5.1 Key Facts 42 5.2 Background 42 5.3 Current Government and recent political developments 43 5.4 Views on Brexit 45 6. Czech Republic 49 6.1 Key Facts 49 6.2 Background 49 6.3 Current Government and recent political developments 50 6.4 Views on Brexit 53 7.
    [Show full text]
  • SYRIZA, Bloco and Podemos
    Transnational networking and cooperation among neo-reformist left parties in Southern Europe during the Eurozone crisis: SYRIZA, Bloco and Podemos Vladimir Bortun The thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy of the University of Portsmouth. March 2019 Abstract European parties to the left of social democracy have always lagged behind the main political families in terms of transnational cooperation at the level of the EU. However, the markedly transnational character of the Eurozone crisis and of the management of that crisis has arguably provided a uniquely propitious context for these parties to reduce that gap. This research project aims to establish whether they achieved that by focusing on three parties that were particularly prone to seeking an increase in their transnational cooperation: SYRIZA from Greece, Bloco de Esquerda from Portugal and Podemos from Spain. For these parties not only come from the member states most affected by the crisis, both economically and politically, but they also share several programmatic and strategic features favouring such an increase. By using a mix of document analysis, semi-structured interviews and non-participatory observation, the thesis discusses both the informal and formal transnational networking and cooperation among the three parties. This discussion reveals four key findings, with potentially useful insights for wider transnational party cooperation that are to be pursued in future research. Firstly, the transnational networking and cooperation among SYRIZA, Bloco and Podemos did increase at some point during the crisis, particularly around SYRIZA’s electoral victory in January 2015. Secondly, since the U-turn of that government in July 2015, SYRIZA’s relationship with both Bloco and Podemos has declined significantly, as reflected in their diverging views of the EU.
    [Show full text]
  • Vangelis Kechriotis Introduction
    Vangelis Kechriotis Experience and Performance in a Shifting Political Landscape : The G reek -O rthodox Community of Izmir/Smyrna at the Turn of the 20th Century 1 To the memory of my father Introduction: historiographical preconditions he study of a non-Muslim community in an urban centre of the TOttoman Empire should normally stem from the field of Ottoman studies. However, it has become an established tradition within Modern Greek studies to investigate Greek-Orthodox (Rum) communities with­ out making use of any Ottoman source whatsoever. Deriving from this academic environment, I initially followed the same path. Having said 1. The research for this article has been part of the study for my PhD dissertation, ‘The Greeks of Izmir at the end of the Empire: a non-Muslim Ottoman community between autonomy and patriotism’, which I eventually defended at the Turkish studies program at Leiden University in 2005. This study was made possible thanks to a scholarship I was granted by the Foundation of the Hellenic World. The research at Public Record Office (henceforth PRO) in London was made possible thanks to a bursary I was granted by the British School at Athens. The research at the Archive du Ministère des Affaires Etrangères at Quai d ’Orsay in Paris and in Nantes was made possible thanks to a bursary I was granted by the Fondation Leventis. I would like to thank the boards of those three institutions for their support. Moreover, I would like to thank professor Re§at Kasaba, professor Fikret Adamr, and professor Sarah Abrevaya Stein for inviting me to the workshop ‘The Ethnic Break-Up of the Ottoman Empire’, which took place within the ‘Second Mediterranean Social and Political Research Meeting’ at the European University Institute in March 2001, to present a first draft of this article.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Demetrios HS Student Refuses to Shake Hands with Tsipras A
    S O C V st ΓΡΑΦΕΙ ΤΗΝ ΙΣΤΟΡΙΑ W ΤΟΥ ΕΛΛΗΝΙΣΜΟΥ E 101 ΑΠΟ ΤΟ 1915 The National Herald anniversa ry N www.thenationalherald.com A wEEKLy GrEEK-AmErICAN PuBLICATION 1915-2016 VOL. 19, ISSUE 990 October 1-7 , 2016 c v $1.50 St. Demetrios HS Student A. Kaloyeros Arraigned on Corruption Charges Refuses to Shake Scientist and Power Broker Connected To Hands with Tsipras Albany Corruption TNH Staff the ocean in Greece wondered, Raised in East Beirut, “Who is the student who refused Lebanon, Alain Kaloyeros was a ASTORIA – Greek Prime Minis - to shake hands with Tsipras?” 19-year-old American University ter Alexis Tsipras visited Saint The student was born and student caught up in that coun - Demetrios in Astoria where a raised in Greece and is one of try’s then-roaring Civil War, join - high school student refused to the 50 students who have ing a Christian militia before im - shake his hand. According to moved to Astoria and enrolled migrating to the United States sources who spoke to the Na - at St. Demetrios School over the and blazing a university trail that tional Herald, the refusal was last two years. Sources told TNH made him one of New York’s top mainly due to religious piety that the student comes from a power brokers, a wheeler and and his beliefs in the sanctity of good family, and was raised dealer who liked frayed jeans and the institution of marriage and with the values and beliefs that a wardrobe by John Varvatos. the family. form the backbone of the Greek- Son of a Lebanese mother and The incident might have American community.
    [Show full text]
  • Uprootedness As an Ethnic Marker and the Introduction of Asia Minor As an Imaginary Topos in Greek Films
    Uprootedness as an Ethnic Marker and the Introduction of Asia Minor as an Imaginary Topos in Greek Films Yannis G. S. Papadopoulos The 'Asia Minor Catastrophe' followed by the influx of Anatolian refugees is a seminal moment in modern Greek history that reshaped to a great extent Greek national identity. In the analysis that follows I will try to trace how the Ottoman past, the 'uprooting experience' and the refugees' effort to integrate into Greek society are represented in some Greek films of the 1960s and 1970s. These films bear testimony to the acculturation process that led to the development of an Asia Minor and Pontic ethnic identity. Moreover, they reflect the construction of divergent collective memories, which accommodated the refugee experience in the framework of twentieth-century Greek history. As various scholars have pointed out, ethnic identity is the result of a group's interaction with the taxonomies imposed on it by state agents and broader society and the fluctuation of the accepted boundaries of difference in a modern national state. Besides, Fredrik Barth noted that 'the nature of continuity of ethnic units depends on the maintenance of a boundary whose cultural features may change and yet the continuing dichotomization between members and outsiders allows us to specify the nature of continuity, and investigate the changing cultural form and content'.1 The Greek Orthodox inhabitants of Anatolia did not form a culturally homogeneous group although they participated in the common Ottoman culture.2 Even among Greek-speaking Christians, customs and dialect varied considerably from place to place and Turkish-speaking Christians often had more in common with their Muslim co-villagers than with the Christians from another village or region.
    [Show full text]
  • The First World War and the Refugee Crisis
    The First World War is at the core of most na- The First tional historiographical narratives, including those of many European countries, the US, World War and Australia and New Zealand. Its centenary has proven that it is a global event.1 Nevertheless, the refugee crisis: is the same event commemorated on the spec- trum of the respective national narratives? A historiography close examination of different national narra- tives that have developed around the Great War and memory in the suggests that it may be more accurate to speak of a range of “great wars” that were fought in Greek context the 1910s rather than of a single, homogenous event that was understood, received and, most importantly, remembered in the same way by all the groups involved. In Greece, one of the major consequences of the First World War was the Greek-Turkish War of 1919–1922, the disaster in Asia Minor and the ensuing refugee crisis. It is a memory that has overshadowed the memory of the Great War, serving as a lens through which both the events that preceded and proceeded the military defeat of 1922 were interpreted. The evacuation of the Greek population of Asia Minor in 1922 is one of Emilia Salvanou the main lieux de memoire in the Greek national Hellenic Open University narrative. Asia Minor refugees are perceived as the archetypical victims of a supposed pri- mordial Greek-Turkish enmity – a concept deeply woven into the founding myths of the Greek nation – that culminated after Greece’s defeat in Anatolia. The way they are constructed histo- riographically does not differ very much: they are contextualised within the framework of Greece’s campaign in Asia Minor in 1919, the ensuing Greek-Turkish War and Greece’s mili- tary defeat.
    [Show full text]