2,009 search results for “politics in island” in the Public website
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    media: 'Collapse of Dutch Government Highlights Europe’s New Migration Politics’
        
    
The numbers of asylum seekers and the direct family members hoping to join them were not the problem, says Mark Klaassen. The stumbling block was the housing market. He says the asylum crisis is being used for electoral gain.
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    Leiden Leadership Lunch: Political leadership and the COVID-19 crisis
        
    
Even though the COVID-crisis continuously evolves and is marked by new realities and uncertainties, we can carefully begin to take stock looking back on the first phases of Dutch crisis management. What can we learn reflecting on the crisis strategies of this extraordinary and transboundary crisis that…
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    Politics and the Holocaust in Modern Poland: A seminar with Prof. Edyta Gawron
        
    
On Monday, April 24 the Austria Centre Leiden and the Leiden Jewish Studies Association hosted a special seminar with Prof. Edyta Gawron entitled “Politics and the Holocaust in Modern Poland.” Gawron is a historian and professor of Jewish Studies at Jagiellonian University in Kraków and a noted expert…
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    Building land tenure systems: The political, legal, and institutional struggles of Timor-Leste
        
    
Bernardo Almeida will give a webinar on Building land tenure systems in Timor-Leste on February 18, 2021, from 15.30 - 17.00. This webinar is organised by the KITLV.
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    Pieter Slaman on NOS.nl on political support for Dutch student loan system
        
    
The student loan system, implemented in 2015 in part to improve the quality of Dutch education, is facing political backlash. Despite having signed the student loan system agreement in 2015, both GroenLinks and PvdA have had a change of heart.
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    Armin Cuyvers speaks in Sydney on reconciling political drama and legal realities in Brexit
        
    
On 18 October, Armin Cuyvers, Associate Professor of European Law at the Europa Instituut, spoke at the Law School of Sydney University on reconciling political drama and legal realities in Brexit.
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    Natália KubalováSocial & Behavioural Sciences
n.kubalova@fsw.leidenuniv.nl | +31 71 527 2727
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    Interview Tom Theuns in IQ Magazine: “NATO Resembles a House of Cards”
        
    
The rise of authoritarianism, the strengthening of the radical right, and the role of the EU in defending democracy—these are just a few of the issues causing concern today. Is the EU capable of defending democratic values within the Union and beyond its borders? In an interview from the Lithuanian…
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    Hans MolFaculty of Humanities
h.mol@hum.leidenuniv.nl | 071 5271646
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    Vishwesh SundarSocial & Behavioural Sciences
v.sundar@fsw.leidenuniv.nl | 070 8009512
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    The storming of the Mexican Embassy in Ecuador: Inviolability and Political Asylum
    
    
On Friday, April 5, the Ecuadorian police stormed the Mexican Embassy in Quito to arrest former Ecuadorian vice president Jorge Glas Espinel.
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    Justice for Syria is possible, but only if political will exists
        
    
Atrocities have been the order of the day in Syria since war broke out in 2011, but the perpetrators are rarely tried. According to PhD candidate Elizabeth Van Schaack, the international community could bring justice in Syria, but only if there is political will. PhD defence on 29 April 2020.
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    Where does the hegemony lie in the 21st century?
        
    
The book: Hegemony and World Order: Reimagining Power in Global Politics will be published this week. Jan Aart Scholte: 'We hope that students, lecturers and policy makers will start to think differently because of this book'
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    van Staalduinen receives Best Dissertation Award from the American Political Science Association
        
    
Assistant Professor Briitta van Staalduinen has received the Best Dissertation Award from the American Political Science Association, Section on Class and Inequality. Her dissertation, Ethnic Inequality in the Welfare State, aims to reconcile the persistence of ethnic inequalities in expansive welfare…
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    New book by Wim Voermans on Dutch political & governance culture: past and present
        
    
The past decade, against the backdrop of a fragmented political landscape, has witnessed the greatest changes to the Netherlands since the aftermath of the Second World War. The labour market, the housing market, the energy market, the bank system, the pension system, the healthcare system, to name…
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    Patterns of Politicization in 14 Democracies
    
    
Under what circumstances is politicization more likely to occur than others, and what impact does politicization have on government legitimacy and performance?
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    The Arts of Memory. The Remembrance of the Armenians in Turkey.
    
    
This study is an attempt to reconstruct the muted violent past by breaking the monopoly of the Turkish state over the memory of the Armenian genocide.
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    Scarcity and the State
    
    
Managing scarcity to serve the public interest is a classic government task. An important way to execute this task is by allocating individual rights that are only available in limited quantities, such as CO2 emission allowances, gambling licences, subsidies, radio frequencies, public contracts and…
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    Müge Kinacioglu
Social & Behavioural Sciences
m.kinacioglu@fsw.leidenuniv.nl | +31 70 800 9500
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    Patricio SilvaFaculty of Humanities
p.silva@hum.leidenuniv.nl | 071 5271646
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    The Limits of Europe: Membership Norms and the Contestation of Regional Integration
    
    
Where does Europe begin and end? How have the European Union and its precursors decided which countries are eligible to join the community and which are not? Few issues are more hotly debated, more important for the course of European integration, or more consequential for individuals in and around…
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    Thomas, The Return of Intergovernmentalism?
    
    
Citizens, journalists and scholars notice that foreign policy in, and of, the European Union, is ‘de-Europeanising’. Political scientist Daniel Thomas (Leiden University) offers a theoretical exploration of the likely implications. He expects that it will become more difficult for the EU to achieve…
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    Schulhofer-Wohl, Quagmire in Civil War
    
    
Why do some civil wars experience quagmire, a situation in which belligerents are trapped in fighting? To explain this puzzle, Jonah Schulhofer-Wohl (Leiden University Institute of Political Science) analyses the overlapping strategic interactions between foreign powers and the warring parties. Studying…
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    Centre for Art, Literature and Law (CALL)
    
    
The center studies the many ways in which issues of law and justice are dealt with in art and literature with a focus on liminal issues and cases. These are issues and cases where law comes to the limits of what it is capable of dealing with and art and literature explore the implications of what is…
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    Crammed with meaning: what museum collections tell us about our political system
        
    
What does a 19th-century exhibition of traditional utensils from the province of Zeeland tell us about the current rise of populism? A lot, Ad Maas will say in his inaugural lecture.
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    Afshin EllianFaculty of Law
a.ellian@law.leidenuniv.nl | +31 71 527 7652
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    Dennis Broeders in World Politics Review on UN Governance of Cyberspace
        
    
Earlier this week, a working group of the United Nations, comprising all 193 of its member states, adopted a consensus report on norms for responsible state behaviour in cyberspace. Dennis Broeders, full professor of Global Security and Technology at the Institute of Security and Global Affairs, Leiden…
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    ‘War with Russia more likely now Trump has spurned Europe’
        
    
Europe’s security suddenly looks uncertain now President Trump has started negotiations with Putin. What does this mean for the Netherlands? What do we need to do?
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    Contested landscapes in the age of encounter
    
    
Amerindian settlement patterns and early colonial cartography in Northern Hispaniola
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    Biogeochemical Biographies
    
    
A multiple isotope approach to human-animal dynamics in the Lesser Antilles across the historical divide
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    Starchy foodways: surveying indigenous botanical foods during the advent of European encounters in the northern and circum-Caribbean
    
    
How do the starchy botanical foodways reflect upon previous archaeological understandings in the northern and circum-Caribbean?
 - Week 4–5 (1–14 February)
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    Valuing archaeology
    
    
Past, Present and Future of Nubian Communities in Sudan
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    Citizenship: historiography and identity formation
    
    
People in Asia increasingly feel the need for a strong identity. This is the consequence of developments such as globalisation and the realisation that Asian countries such as China and India are becoming new world powers. Professor Hilde De Weerdt studies how political ideas and national identity spread…
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    What Determines Perceptions of Bias toward the International Criminal Court? Evidence from Kenya
    
    
What Determines Perceptions of Bias toward the International Criminal Court? Evidence from Kenya. In this article, published on the website SAGE Journals in the Journal of Conflict Resolution, the authors Geoff Dancy, Yvonne Marie Dutton, Tessa Alleblas, Eamon Aloyo examine the attitude towards international…
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    Business Against Markets: Employer Resistance to Collective Bargaining Liberalization During the Eurozone Crisis
    
    
Employer organizations have been presented as strong promoters of the liberalization of industrial relations in Europe. This article, in contrast, argues that the preferences of employers vis-à-vis liberalization are heterogeneous and documents how employer organizations in Spain, Italy, and Portugal…
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    Micro-Blogging and Media Policy in China
    
    
Yuxi Nie defended her thesis on 15 October 2019.
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    Chinese assertiveness and the rise of Xi Jinping: ideational mobilization, elite contestation, and the struggle over regional order
    
    
In 2009-2010, the notion of a more ‘assertive’ China emerged in Western discourse, a viewpoint that China vehemently rejects. Nevertheless, especially after Xi Jinping rose to power in 2012, it is clear that China has abandoned its long-held foreign policy doctrine of ‘keeping a low profile.’
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    Frits Meijerink
Social & Behavioural Sciences
f.g.j.meijerink@fsw.leidenuniv.nl | 071 5272727
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    Theological Speculation in Arabic: What Can We Know about Early Islamic Theology?
    
    
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
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    Featured Review | A Small State’s Guide to Influence in World Politics
    
    
Tom Long (2022). A Small State’s Guide to Influence in World Politics. Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780190926212, 240 pp. (hardback), £19.99.
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    Skłodowska-Curie individual fellowships at Leiden University's Institute of Political Science
        
    
Leiden University invites pre-applications from scholars who wish to spend 12-24 months in the Institute of Political Science as part of the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Individual Fellowship Programme.
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    Mayke KaagAfrican Studies Centre
m.m.a.kaag@asc.leidenuniv.nl | +31 71 527 3375
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    La llamada del pasado: claves de la teoría de la historia
    
    
A Spanish translation of Herman Paul’s 'Key Issues in Historical Theory' has appeared under the title 'La llamada del pasado: claves de la teoría de la historia'.
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    Understanding public support for budget cuts and tax increases
        
    
In her dissertation, political scientist Alessia Aspide explores how public attitudes toward fiscal policy are formed. Her key finding: fiscal preferences are not shaped in a vacuum, but are deeply embedded in institutional, political, and societal contexts.
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    Revolutionary Historiography: How Leftist Debated the Historical Sociology of the Ottoman Empire in Cold War Turkey
    
    
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
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    Digesting the EU elections over a continental breakfast
        
    
The topic of conversation at The Great Continental Breakfast the morning after the EU elections in the Netherlands was the election campaign, the – lacking? – constitutional basis of the EU and the Timmermans effect. ‘These were the most normal EU elections ever!’
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    Glen Newey appointed Professor of Pracical Philosophy
        
    
From 1 September 2014, Glen Newey takes up the post of Professor of Practical Philosophy in Leiden University’s Institute for Philosophy.
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    Facing Society
    
    
A mere day after setting foot ashore in the Bahamas on October 13th 1492, Christopher Columbus notes the broad foreheads of the inhabitants of the Americas. These permanently altered cranial shapes are deliberately created through the application of pressure to the head of the infant in the first years…
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    South and Southeast Asia
    
    
Through language and culture, history, anthropology, and sociology, we delve into the countries, populations, and societies of South and Southeast Asia. From this perspective, we address global issues such as migration, heritage, and colonialism.