skip to content
 

Call for Applications: Postgraduate Workshop on ‘NATO, the US and the Crisis in Ukraine’

Calling all UK-based graduate students and early career researchers: Cambridge Ukrainian Studies, an academic centre in the Department of Slavonic Studies, is hosting a special workshop entitled 'NATO, the United States and the Crisis in Ukraine’.

The workshop will take place on Monday, 25 January 2016 from 11am to 3pm at King's College, Cambridge. For accepted workshop participants, costs for domestic economy train/coach travel to and from Cambridge will be reimbursed, and coffee and lunch provided.

The workshop will be conducted by one of Ukraine’s foremost International Relations experts, Professor Volodymyr Dubovyk, Director of the Centre for International Studies and Associate Professor in the Department of International Relations at I. Mechnikov National University in Odesa.

To apply, please send a brief CV and statement of interest to Ms Olga Płócienniczak, Department of Slavonic Studies, University of Cambridge, at slavon@hermes.cam.ac.uk by this Friday, 15 January 2016.

Coming up: Cambridge Ukrainian Studies is also organising a postgraduate workshop on ‘The End of the Khazar Yoke’ with Dr Oleksiy Tolochko, Director of the Centre for Kievan Rus' Studies, Institute of Ukrainian History, National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine. The workshop will be held on 12 February 2016; stay tuned for venue confirmation and details.

 

Keep in touch

            

Upcoming events

Latest News

Rory Finnin Wins Two ASEEES Book Prizes

21 September 2023

We are delighted to share that Professor Rory Finnin has been awarded two prestigious prizes by the Association for Slavic, East European & Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) for his book Blood of Others: Stalin's Crimean Atrocity and the Poetics of Solidarity (University of Toronto Press, 2022). These ASEEES prizes follow on from two other awards for Blood of Others announced earlier this year.

New Books in Cambridge Slavonic Studies

30 September 2022

A presentation of five new books by Cambridge researchers in Slavonic and East European Studies.