By Georgiana-Cătălina Marcu
In the last nine weeks we were witnesses to the thawing of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. This is a decades-long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which has escalated sharply in the last weeks.
a journal of research & art
By Georgiana-Cătălina Marcu
In the last nine weeks we were witnesses to the thawing of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. This is a decades-long conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, which has escalated sharply in the last weeks.
By Dragoș Ioniță
In order to get a clear understanding of the political climate and the impact of recent developments on the country’s relationship with the EU, one must first delve deeper into Serbia’s democratic track record beyond 2020.
By Vlada Șubernițchi
Belarus, 2020 Presidential elections: What could have been another ordinary rigged election won by the unchangeable leader of Belarus since 1994, Aleksander Lukashenko, this time turned out to be a promising chance to remove the “last dictator of Europe.”
By Mario Love
In discussing race in America, author James Baldwin suggested that “God gave Noah the rainbow sign, no more water, the fire next time.”
By William Bowden
EuropeNow features a selection of scholarly articles and books on topics pertinent to the teaching of Europe or teaching in Europe that were published within the last 5 years.
By Nicholas Ostrum
The course is based on a Postwar Europe course I had taught in the traditional classroom. Although I preserved the primary texts and films, converting the in-person course to a digital, the asynchronous format required rethinking the flow of the course.
Reviewed by Johanna Schuster-Craig
Czollek’s books fall neatly in line with a genre of political nonfiction that has steered German political commentary at least since the 1990s.
By Nancy Ruther, Sarah Rabke, and Alexa Jeffress
For over twenty years, virtual exchange (VE) has been a growing part of international higher education practice and policy, harnessing the power of increasingly user-friendly and low-cost technologies.
By Julia Fullerton-Batten
I felt numb but I knew that I couldn’t stand around and do nothing, I decided to document today’s existence as lived now by many people.