November 5 2018
09:00-17:00
Central European University
(1051 Budapest, Nador street 15, Tiered Room 103)
The year of 2018 marks the centenary of the end of the First World War when the principle of self-determination entered center stage and led to the creation of several European soverign entities. This international conference centers upon the comparative evolution of the nation state – as both concept and lived-in reality – in contemporary Europe. By focusing on reconcilliation, scholars and practitioners will discuss the trajectory of the nation state, since the Trianon Treaty and throughout 100 years of transformations, including but not limited to the effects of EU integration on re-shaping political communities.
Draft Agenda
9:00-9:30 Registration
9:30
Opening adress
Péter Balázs (Director, Center for European Neighborhood Studies)
Beate Martin & Jörg Bergstermann (Co-Heads of Office, Friedrich Ebert Foundation Budapest)
Gábor Egry (Director, Institute of Political History, Hungary)
10:00 – 12:00
Panel I
Empires and nation states – a historical perspective
Chair: Mária M. Kovács (CEU)
Gábor Egry (Institute of Political History, Hungary):
Nation-states-in-the-building and imperial legacies
Johannes Feichtinger (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria):
Imperial past – How the Republic of Austria commemorated the Habsburg Monarchy
Stanislav Holubec (Czech Academy of Sciences, Czech Republic):
Dealing with the Habsburg past in the interwar Czechoslovak Republic
12:00-13:00 Lunch break
13:00-14:30
Panel II
The nation state in Eastern Europe after 100 years (roundtable discussion)
Chair: Valerie Safir-Hopkins (Financial Times)
Silvia Marton (University of Bucharest, Romania)
Balázs Péter (CENS CEU, Hungary)
Dagmar Kusa (Bratislava International School of Liberal Arts, Slovakia)
14:30 – 14:50 Coffee break
14:50 – 16:20
Panel III
New ideas, new research, new historiography? Presentation of the ERC Nepostrans and the Trianon100 (Lendület Grant, Hungarian Academy of Sciences) projects
Chair and discussant: Réka Krizmanics (CEU, Hungary)
Balázs Ablonczy (Trianon100 Research Group, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Hungary)
Gábor Egry (ERC Nepostrans, Institute of Political History, Hungary)