Austrian & Central European Program
The Europe Center Program2006-Present
The Europe Center's Austrian & Central European Program seeks to advance relations between the United States and Austria and Central Europe. This program brings together students and faculty from Stanford University and universities in Austria and Central Europe to broaden understanding and research.
At Stanford University, The Europe Center is the formal Stanford program, through the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, to host the annual Distinguished Visiting Austrian Chair Professor at Stanford University. The annual Distinguished Chair Professorship is nominated and awarded by the University of Vienna. The Chair is formally appointed to Stanford University as a visiting professor at the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies and in one of Stanford's academic departments. The Distinguished Chair Professorship is open to faculty in all fields represented by Stanford University's seven schools, including Law, Medicine, Business, Earth Sciences, Education, and Humanities and Sciences. The Europe Center and the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies facilitate the Chair's teaching in the appropriate School and department at the University.
Persons interested in applying for the Distinguished Visiting Austrian Chair Professorship should visit the University of Vienna webpage for more information on the application process.
Past and current Chair Professorships have been affiliated at Stanford in a wide range of schools and departments including the School of Law, German Studies, Comparative Literature, Music, and Sociology. The Chair also works closely with the Europe Center.
In addition, short-term fellowships may be awarded for faculty, researchers, and occasionally pre-doctoral advanced students, for research and study exchange. The emphasis of the exchange is to support research conducted directly with members of the faculty at Stanford University, and nominating universities in Austria and Central Europe. The program also initiates workshops in which faculty from one host university will travel overseas to work with their colleagues.
Projects
Austria in the Postwar World
FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Project- FIW – Research Centre International Economics
FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Project - Linkages between Services and Manufacturing
FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Project - Semantic Information Systems and Visualization
The Europe Center Project - The Role of Multinational Companies and Supply Chains in Innovation
FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Project - What Trade Economists Should Know About Their Data
FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Project
Publications
Proliferation of International Dispute Settlement Mechanisms: The Threat of Fragmentation vs. the Promise of a More Effective System? - Some Reflections from the Perspective of Investment Arbitration
August Reinisch
Martinus Nijhoff Publishers in "International Law between Universalism and Fragmentation - Festschrift in Honour of Gerhard Hafner", J. Crawford/A. Pellet/I. Buffard/S. Wittich (eds.) (2008)

Peaceful Coexistence or Iron Curtain? Austria, Neutrality, and Eastern Europe in the Cold War and Détente, 1955-1989
Arnold Suppan, Wolfgang Mueller

Events & Presentations
Only 5 recent/upcoming are displayed. More events & presentations »
Gender Relations in Transition: Austria and Europe in Comparative Perspective
May 25, 2011 The Europe Center Seminar
Max Preglau
Audio transcript available
presentation available
From Hegemony to Demise: The Politics of Lustration and the Crisis of the Church in Post-Communist Poland
May 21, 2009 FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Seminar
Mikolaj Kunicki
Austria and Central Europe Since 1989: Legacies and Future Prospects
March 5, 2009 - March 6, 2009 FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Conference
Audio transcript available
conference agenda available
The USSR and European Integration
February 12, 2009 FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Seminar
Wolfgang Mueller
Audio transcript available
flyer available
Freedom Fighters or Terrorists? Collaboration, Resistance, and Retribution as Illustrated by the Incidents at Oradour in France, Via Rasella in Rome, and Ujvidék/Novi Sad in Hungary/Yugoslavia
December 2, 2008 FSI Stanford, The Europe Center Seminar
Istvan Deak
Audio transcript available
2 papers available



About CISAC
Mailing List
@StanfordCISAC
Facebook