Episódios
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For something different in this series finale, we speak with Timothy Garton Ash, Professor of European Politics at Oxford and Director the Europe’s Stories Project. What have we found out about what young Europeans want the EU to be and to do? Why do we need to speak of both synergies and trade-offs? Do we find ourselves more or less optimistic about the future of Europe at the end of this project? Timothy gives us his take on the findings and questions that resulted from the ES Project. He also gives us a sneak peek into his upcoming book, a personal history of contemporary Europe. This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. A huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team. To view the show notes and to find more information about The Europe’s Stories Podcast, check out europeanmoments.com/podcast.
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Ana and Lucas speak with Marianna Lovato and Olivier de France, the team’s experts on foreign policy and international politics. Our polls found that most Europeans want stronger European cooperation—but foreign policy does not rank highly among their priorities, even if they place significant emphasis on Europe as a community of values. Is the EU an anti-geopolitical actor? Should it be a superpower, and if so, which kind? What are the new stories we need to connect the politics of European security with the concerns of Europeans today? This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. Huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team. To view the show notes and to find more information about The Europe’s Stories Podcast, check out europeanmoments.com/podcast.
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Today, we talk with Sophie Vériter and Josef Lolacher about the core of the European project - democracy. How solid is this core? We talk about democratic backsliding, the perceived inefficiency of consensual regimes, and Europe in a changing world of populist and authoritarian tendencies. What can and should the EU do to defend this community of values? How much do most of us really understand about what the EU has achieved and the tools currently at its disposal? This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. Huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team. To view the show notes and to find more information about The Europe’s Stories Podcast, check out www.europeanmoments.com/podcast.
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Ana and Lucas speak today with our team’s specialists on the things that bring quality of life to Europeans - jobs, industry and the welfare state. Coming from North Macedonia, Kristijan Fidanovski has a keen interest in the intersection between social policy and EU enlargement, whereas Guillaume Paugam joins us immediately after a stint at the European Commission. Our polls found that 71% of Europeans believe the state should give all citizens a basic income. Which institutions should be responsible for social policy? Should we consider a European welfare state to be an oxymoron? For young Europeans, how do social agendas sit next to the urgency of climate action? This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. Huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team. ‘To view the show notes and to find more information about The Europe’s Stories Podcast, check out europeanmoments.com/podcast.'
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Ana and Lucas speak today with Victoria Honsel and Reja Wyss, who co-wrote the report chapter on climate action. Both have also been young Europeans actively involved in politics. Our polls found that 58% of Europeans want the EU to be carbon neutral by 2030, with an additional 20% aiming for 2040. What measures are acceptable for managing this transition—for example, should short haul flights be banned? How do democratic regimes fare in comparison with authoritarian governments in tackling climate change? Is there a ‘Generation Greta’ that cares more about climate than older Europeans?
This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. Huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team. Show notes at: europeanmoments.com/podcast -
Ana and Lucas speak today with Luisa Melloh, who manages the project behind this series. Many things flow across borders - capital, goods, ideas - but young Europeans also assume that they themselves can move freely and with ease. One of our polls found that nearly three-quarters of Europeans agree that the EU would not be worth having without freedom of movement. At the same time, Europeans do not all benefit from this freedom in the same way. Why has free movement emerged as such a formative experience? Is its formative impact unique to this generation? This episode was hosted by Ana Martins and Lucas Tse, and edited by Billy Craigan. Huge thanks to the Europe’s Stories team.
To view the show notes and to find more information about The Europe’s Stories Podcast, check out europeanmoments.com/podcast. -
Today, Ana and Lucas speak with Dan Snow and Maeve Moynihan about who young Europeans are. This generation is not used to thinking of Europe as divided by war or wall, but it is living through a pandemic, and its shared experiences will determine the future of the European project. What makes them different from other generations? Will they make up a Generation C(ovid)? How much do they trust the EU on what matters most? See show notes and more information at europeanmoments.com/podcast.
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What Stories Does Europe Tell? Contested Narratives, Complex Histories, Conflicted Union. With Steffen Sammler (Georg Eckert Institute), Constanze Itzel (House of European History, Brussels), Katie Ebner-Landy (Dash Arts), Michael Schwarz (Stiftung Mercator)
Chair: Karl-Heinz Paque (Friedrich-Naumann-Stiftung ftir die Freiheit)
Held in St Antony's College, Oxford 2nd and 3rd May 2019 -
What Stories Does Europe Tell? Contested Narratives, Complex Histories, Conflicted Union. With Ian Kershaw (author of To Hell and Back: Europe, 1914-1949 and RollerCoaster: Europe, 1950-2017), Andreas Wirsching (author of Der Preis der Freiheit: Geschichte Europas in Unserer Zeit), Margaret MacMillan (Toronto/ Oxford) Chair: Paul Betts (Oxford)
Held in St Antony's College, Oxford 2nd and 3rd May 2019 -
What Stories Does Europe Tell? Contested Narratives, Complex Histories, Conflicted Union. With Andras Lanczi (Corvinus University Budapest and A Europe We Can Believe In), Slawomir Sierakowski (Krytyka Polityczna, Warsaw), Damian Boeselager (Volt Europa), Gisela Stuart (Labour Party and Change Britain, UK) Chaired by Rana Mitter (Oxford)
Held in St Antony's College, Oxford 2nd and 3rd May 2019 -
What Stories Does Europe Tell? Contested Narratives, Complex Histories, Conflicted Union. With Isabell Hoffmann (eupinions, Bertelsmann Foundation), Katrin Bennhold (New York Times), Christian Rauh (WZB), Daniel Judt (Oxford). Chaired by Hartmut Mayer (Oxford). Timothy Garton Ash (Oxford) introduces the conference.
Held in St Antony's College, Oxford 2nd and 3rd May 2019 -
The 2019 Leszek Kołakowski Lecture was given by Marci Shore, associate professor of history at Yale University. Her research focuses on European intellectual history, in particularly twentieth and twenty-first century Central and Eastern Europe. She received her M.A. from the University of Toronto in 1996 and her PhD from Stanford University in 2001; and since 2004 has regularly been a visiting fellow at the Institut für die Wissenschaften vom Menschen in Vienna. She is the translator of Michał Głowiński's The Black Seasons and the author of Caviar and Ashes: A Warsaw Generation's Life and Death in Marxism, 1918-1968, The Taste of Ashes: The Afterlife of Totalitarianism in Eastern Europe, and The Ukrainian Night: An Intimate History of Revolution. In 2018 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship for her current project titled “Phenomenological Encounters: Scenes from Central Europe.” The lecture was hosted by the Dahrendorf Programme for the Study of Freedom at the European Studies Centre, St Antony’s College and chaired by Timothy Garton Ash, Professor of European Studies.