Synopsis
The mission of the Center for the Study of Europe at Boston University is to promote understanding of Europe through its cultural heritage; its political, economic, and religious histories; its art, literature, music, and philosophy; as well as through its recent emergence as a new kind of international form through the European Union.
Episodes
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EU Futures - Episode 53 - Robert Socha
19/06/2017 Duration: 24minIn this episode, Robert Socha focused on the growing income gap in Europe and the United States, and the disconnection between elites and average citizens. Talking about his childhood in communist Poland, Socha expressed his love for the democratic, borderless European project and his pride in his home country advancing since the fall of the Iron Curtain. He admitted, "the EU is not a perfect place – it is often too bureaucratic, lacks vision, too distant to ordinary people,” but ended the conversation by explaining his belief that European identity is based upon a shared past, but that the continent's complicated history has taught Europeans the necessity of communication. [Date of interview: April 3, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 52 - Isabel Schayani
19/06/2017 Duration: 32minIn this episode, Isabel Schayani explained how she transformed a Facebook page into a platform for communicating directly with migrants, describing how her WDR project offers news, education, and entertainment for refugees entering Germany. The discussion moved toward a conversation about the situation facing asylum-seekers in Europe, as Schayani condemned the treatment of refugees in Eastern Europe and how she believes journalists are in the unique position to teach Europeans to avoid xenophobic assumptions and help migrants orient themselves once settled in the EU. She ended by emphasizing the global dimension of migration in the 21st century and the need for Europeans to provide adequate information about legal channels of entry to refugees trapped on the periphery of the EU. [Date of interview: April 3, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 51 - Jacqueline Cramer
19/06/2017 Duration: 23minIn this episode, Dr. Jacqueline Cramer discusses her belief that EU Member States can pursue common goals at 'different speeds', allowing countries to act as frontrunners in fields such as sustainability and circular economic practices. Cramer emphasized the need for Brussels to reconnect with and engage citizens in order to foster a community of Europeans within an increasingly globalized world. She emphasized the threat of populism, arguing that “democracy is the key of European culture - it should be nourished all the time in order to show what the enormous merits are of our democracy." Cramer ended by commenting on the strength of diversity and the need for Europeans to find a balance between national identity and common EU values of democracy and socioeconomic stability. [Date of interview: March 6, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 50 - Bernard Dubois + Pol Esteve
19/06/2017 Duration: 27minIn this episode, architects Bernard Dubois and Pol Esteve talk about the turning point Europe faces today, specifically highlighting the imbalances between the supranational institutions of the EU and the national-based governments. Given their backgrounds growing up in Catalonia and Belgium, the two men agreed that there are many schisms in Europe - at the EU, national, and regional levels - but that integration can occur as a result of finding commonalities beyond geographical borders. They emphasized the radical modernization of Europe and role of younger generations in participating in the European project. They concluded that artists in Europe should promote a better understanding of EU institutions, promote transparency, and defending human rights and diversity. [Date of interview: March 5, 2017] Photo Bernard Dubois: Valextra
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EU Futures - Episode 49 - Alberto Alemanno
20/03/2017 Duration: 35minIn this episode, Olya Yordanyan talks to Alberto Alemanno about European democracy and how citizens might engage politically to regain some power and influence over their own futures. They discuss Alemanno's new book, Lobbying for Change: Find Your Voice to Create a Better Society, as well as the recent white paper on the future of Europe, and the threat to democracy presented by the populist parties. [Date of interview: March 5, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 48 - Esther De Lange
20/03/2017 Duration: 19minIn this episode Olya Yordanyan talks to Dutch politician Esther de Lange, Vice-Chair of the European People's Party (EPP) in the European Parliament. De Lange focuses on the big challenges Europe faces, challenges she believes will require cooperation across borders. She stresses the need for Europe to reinvent itself: “We need a different Europe in the 21st century than we did in the 1950s and 60s.” The debate now, she says, is about global issues and Europe's role in the world. Europe, she says, is stronger together. But people need a ”smart Europe.“ And Europe needs to find more ways to engage citizens at the local and supranational levels. The lack of leadership paralyzes citizens, she adds. [Date of interview: March 4, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 47 - Aleksandra Sojka
20/03/2017 Duration: 32minIn this episode, Olya Yordanyan and Sandra Porcar talk to Aleksandra Sojka, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Political Science, University of Granada, Spain, about political situation in Europe. Sojka discusses the disconnect between European institutions - at both the EU and national levels - and European citizens. She attributes the rise of populist parties to the growing perception of European citizens that they have been denied any say in their political future, stressing the need for policies that address citizens' concerns. She describes the disappointment of many in Central and Eastern Europe, who have not experienced personally the benefits of enlargement. [Date of interview: March 3, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 46 - Markus Brunnermeier
11/03/2017 Duration: 25minIn this episode of the EU Futures podcast, Markus K. Brunnermeier, Edwards S. Sanford Professor of Economics at Princeton University and author of The Euro and the Battle of Ideas (Princeton University Press, 2016), discusses the fundamental differences between the economic policies in France and Germany, presenting their ideological bases and historical contexts. Brunnermeier thinks that the European Union is capable of overcoming the challenges it faces if common ground could be found between the French and German positions. He is hopeful about the future of Europe, and the Eurozone, but believes that Europe needs a common vision and a big goal that can be only achieved together.
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EU Futures - Episode 45 - Chandler Rosenberger
07/03/2017 Duration: 26minIn this episode, Olya Yordanyan and Toria Rainey talk to Chandler Rosenberger, Chair of the International and Global Studies Program at Brandeis University, about the emerging future in Europe. The conversation focusses on the different political cultures in Europe, different conceptions of nationalism, and the relationship between nationalism and democracy. Rosenberger shares his concern over the re-emergence in some states of an undemocratic and ethnic nationalism many thought had been put to rest after the “return to Europe” of the formerly communist nations of Eastern Europe. He describes the need to rethink the cultural and intellectual roots of the European project in order to reawaken a sense of Europe that people will want to belong to. The more successful politicians are in capturing the imagination of citizens, the more healthier the future of Europe will be. [Date of interview: February 28, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 44 - José María Beneyto
07/03/2017 Duration: 34minIn this episode our visiting researcher Sandra Porcar talks to José María Beneyto about the emergence of populism in Europe and what it means for Europe's future. Beneyto discusses the need for European politicians to address citizens' concerns without acquiescing to populist demands. Globalization, he says, has exacerbated feelings of abandonment and anonymity among citizens who long for the security that comes from a sense of embeddedness in culture and in community. He ends with a positive note on the future of the continent, by considering the fact that traditionally Europe has used crises as opportunities and has historically regenerated itself based on the unity of its peoples. José María Beneyto is an academic, an international lawyer, a politician and a writer. He is a visiting professor at the Harvard Kennedy School and a professor of European Law and Politics, International Relations and International Law, a Jean Monnet Chair ad personam of the EU and the Director of the Institute for European Stu
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EU Futures - Episode 43 - Eva Hausteiner
07/03/2017 Duration: 19minIn this episode, Olya Yordanyan talks to Eva Hausteiner [@evahausteiner], political theorist, intellectual historian, and author of "Greater than Rome" (Campus 2015), about the opening of new future(s) for Europe in the aftermath of recent crises. There is, Hausteiner says, despite the narrative of lack of alternatives, a renewed interest on the part of European citizens in revitalizing the European project. We are at a crossroads where multiple futures are possible. Hausteiner also talks about her research on federalism and her interest in competing conceptions of federalism, arguing that the EU is already a federal association. [Date of interview: February 23, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 42 - Emile Chabal
07/03/2017 Duration: 18minIn this episode Olya Yordanyan talks to Emile Chabal [@emile_chabal], Chancellor's Fellow in History at the University of Edinburgh, about the uncertainty in Europe and about how to redefine the European project in a way that addresses people's disillusion and dissatisfaction with current political arrangements. Chabal contrasts the highly individualized conception of "choice" that emerged under neoliberalism with the collective choice on which Europe's future depends. [Date of interview: February 23, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 41 - Georg Diez
23/02/2017 Duration: 21minIn this episode, Olya Yordanyan talks to German journalist Georg Diez about emerging forms of democracy and his own work to develop platforms in order to promote democratic discourse and to connect citizens around the globe to the promise of the future, something lost in light of recent institutional failures. Diez emphasizes the importance of citizen involvement, and even effort, for democracies to function. [Date of interview: February 15, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 40 - Felix Krawatzek
23/02/2017 Duration: 24minIn this episode, Felix Krawatzek draws on his research on how ideas about the future come into the play in the present in order to describe current trends in Europe, notably, the recent deviation in wake of the Brexit vote, from a linear path of "ever closer union." He shares his belief that European citizens remain committed to - and ready to defend - liberal values. It is therefore important for the EU, as the institutional embodiment of "Europe", to reassert its commitment to values and principles versus what Krawatzek calls "deals", referring to the sorts of metrics that characterized the Brexit debate. [Date of interview: February 13, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 39 - Erik Jones
23/02/2017 Duration: 22minIn this episode, Olya Yordanyan talks to Erik Jones about the idea of "Europe" and why it has losing currency in the face of populist challenges . He describes the failure of European democracy and the need for a compelling vision that to counter the rising nationalism that is keeping Europe mired in the present. He expresses his admiration for the single currency, among other accomplishments of the EU, but admits the need for Europe to communicate better, not only with its own citizens, but with its neighbors. If Europe does not rise to the challenge, he says, it will create an outsized role for the United States, with unfortunate consequences we are already seeing. [Date of interview: February 10, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 38 - Florian Böller
23/02/2017 Duration: 24minIn this episode, German political scientist Florian Böller talks to Olya Yordanyan about the emerging future in Europe. The problems facing Europe, he explains, cannot be solved at the level of the nation state, so it is imperative for Europe to move beyond its current crises and to rebuild trust in European institutions. He describes the the election of Trump in the United States as an opportunity for Europe to assume a larger role in world affairs. [Date of interview: February 6, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 37 - Sofia Perez
23/02/2017 Duration: 32minIn this episode, Prof. Sofia Perez talks to Toria Rainey about the state of democracy in Europe and some of the reasons behind the emergence of far right and "new left" populism. She explains the causes of the fiscal instability plaguing Europe and the current disagreements over the best way forward for Europe: deeper integration or re-establishment of national sovereignty. [Date of interview: February 1, 2017]
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EU Futures - Episode 34 - Bruce Leimsidor
20/01/2017 Duration: 35minIn this episode, Bruce Leimsidor talks to our program assistant Toria Rainey about the emerging future in Europe with a focus on the refugee crisis. Leimsidor explains the importance of differentiating refugees from other migrants to avoid political backlash. From the sociopolitical arrangements in France, to Angela Merkel’s Germany, and from the future of Italy, from Sweden’s growing democratic party, Leimsidor unpacks the immense role the migrant crisis plays in envisioning the future of Europe. [Date of interview: December 1, 2016]
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EU Futures - Episode 36 - Ruxandra Paul
20/01/2017 Duration: 51minn this episode, Ruxandra Paul uses her background in cyber politics and transnational flows of both information and ideas to explain the importance of migration patterns as they pertain to the future of Europe. Paul explains the need for easily traversable borders to allow for access to employment opportunities across country borders, something she deems a facet of the European lifestyle. From coping with transnational issues like terrorism to figuring out how to meet expectations when it comes to democracy, Paul discusses the details of navigating the sociopolitical future of Europe. [Date of interview: December 8, 2016]
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EU Futures - Episode 35 - Peter Verovšek
20/01/2017 Duration: 31minIn this episode, Peter Verovšek shares his opinion on the importance of the EU in age of globalization and uncertainty. He discusses the future of the European Common Security and Defense Policies, in addition to stressing the necessity for a deepening institutions related to the banking system and social policies to counterbalance the rise of populist candidates in European elections. [Date of interview: December 6, 2016]