News
Newsletter #58 - Autumn 2016
NEWS
In September Lisl
Biggs-Davison and Katie Gorka had lunch in Oxford. Katie was visiting
her PhD supervisor. Lisl then met Elizabeth Teague for tea at the
Randolph.
Lisl Biggs-Davison attended a Chatham House meeting, Russian Politics after the Elections: Beyond Politburo with Evgeny Minchenko. He discussed the political scene after Russia's recent election, and shared his views on the election results and which emerging politicians to watch.
LEONTIEF INSTITUTE, ST PETERSBURG
Congratulations to all at the Leontief Institute which
celebrated the 110th anniversary of Nobel Prize winner, Wassily
Leontief, and the Institute's 25th birthday.
http://www.leontief-centre.ru/content430&lang=l2
CHRIS CVIIC MEMORIAL LECTURE
This year's lecture, “The One
Belt, One Road Initiative in History: the construction of foreign and
economic policy in the Adriatic in the Middle Ages” was
delivered by. Peter Frankopan, Director, Oxford Centre for Byzantine
Research.
In his talk, the author of Silk Roads: A New History of the World, looked at parallels between past and present and at what lessons could be learned from history. Lisl was in the audience with Simona Bennett, of the British-Slovene Society, and Prof James Pettifer. Joint hosts for the lecture, on 3 October, were the EBRD and British Croatian Society.
POST-COMMUNIST ECONOMIES
In the September issue there are articles on Russia, Kazakhstan,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Poland Slovenia and Estonia. Further
information at: www.tandf.co.uk/journals
A DAY IN HISTORY - NOVEMBER 4TH 1956
Image: Hungarian American Federation
A spontaneous national uprising that began 12 days before in Hungary is viciously crushed by Soviet tanks and troops on this day in 1956. Thousands were killed and wounded and nearly a quarter-million Hungarians fled the country. In October, thousands of protesters took to the streets demanding a more democratic political system and freedom from Soviet oppression. In response, Communist Party officials appointed Imre Nagy, a former premier who had been dismissed from the party for criticising Stalinist policies, as the new premier. Nagy tried to restore peace and asked the Soviets to withdraw their troops, which they did. But Nagy then tried to push the Hungarian revolt forward by abolishing one-party rule. He also announced that Hungary was withdrawing from the Warsaw Pact .On November 4, 1956, Soviet tanks rolled into Budapest to crush, once and for all, the national uprising.…
Read more in Sebastian Gorka's CRCE Briefing Paper written for the 50th anniversary. http://www.crce.org.uk/publications/hungarian-uprising/
Lisl Biggs-Davison attended a Chatham House meeting, Russian Politics after the Elections: Beyond Politburo with Evgeny Minchenko. He discussed the political scene after Russia's recent election, and shared his views on the election results and which emerging politicians to watch.
LEONTIEF INSTITUTE, ST PETERSBURG
Congratulations to all at the Leontief Institute which
celebrated the 110th anniversary of Nobel Prize winner, Wassily
Leontief, and the Institute's 25th birthday.
http://www.leontief-centre.ru/content430&lang=l2CHRIS CVIIC MEMORIAL LECTURE
This year's lecture, “The One
Belt, One Road Initiative in History: the construction of foreign and
economic policy in the Adriatic in the Middle Ages” was
delivered by. Peter Frankopan, Director, Oxford Centre for Byzantine
Research.In his talk, the author of Silk Roads: A New History of the World, looked at parallels between past and present and at what lessons could be learned from history. Lisl was in the audience with Simona Bennett, of the British-Slovene Society, and Prof James Pettifer. Joint hosts for the lecture, on 3 October, were the EBRD and British Croatian Society.
POST-COMMUNIST ECONOMIES
In the September issue there are articles on Russia, Kazakhstan,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Poland Slovenia and Estonia. Further
information at: www.tandf.co.uk/journalsA DAY IN HISTORY - NOVEMBER 4TH 1956
Image: Hungarian American Federation
A spontaneous national uprising that began 12 days before in Hungary is viciously crushed by Soviet tanks and troops on this day in 1956. Thousands were killed and wounded and nearly a quarter-million Hungarians fled the country. In October, thousands of protesters took to the streets demanding a more democratic political system and freedom from Soviet oppression. In response, Communist Party officials appointed Imre Nagy, a former premier who had been dismissed from the party for criticising Stalinist policies, as the new premier. Nagy tried to restore peace and asked the Soviets to withdraw their troops, which they did. But Nagy then tried to push the Hungarian revolt forward by abolishing one-party rule. He also announced that Hungary was withdrawing from the Warsaw Pact .On November 4, 1956, Soviet tanks rolled into Budapest to crush, once and for all, the national uprising.…
Read more in Sebastian Gorka's CRCE Briefing Paper written for the 50th anniversary. http://www.crce.org.uk/publications/hungarian-uprising/
The
CRCE
Newsletter
© Centre
for Research into Post-Communist Economies 2016
Past issues of the CRCE newsletter may be downloaded below
- issue 57 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 56 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 55 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 54 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 53 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 52 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 51 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 50 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 49 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 48 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 47 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 46 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 45 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 44 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 43 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 42 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 41 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 40 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 39 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 38 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 37 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 36 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 35 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 34 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 33 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 32 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 31 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 30 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 29 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 28 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 27 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 26 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 25 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 24 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 23 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 22 (Word format, PDF format)
- issue 21 (Word format, PDF format)