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MA Program in European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies
Table of contents: handbook.htm
Faculty Members Teaching in 2011/12
(For a full list of CERES Faculty, please go to http://www.utoronto.ca/ceres/faculty)
V. AMBROS: http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Ambros.shtml
R. AUSTIN
Robert Clegg Austin (PhD University of Toronto) is a specialist on East Central and Southeastern Europe in historic and contemporary perspective. In the past, Dr. Austin was a Tirana-based correspondent of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty; a Slovak-based correspondent with The Economist Group of Publications; and a news writer with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Toronto. Austin has written articles for The Globe and Mail, The Toronto Star, Orbis, East European Politics and Societies and East European Quarterly along with numerous book chapters. He has lectured widely in Europe and North America. He is now Senior Lecturer at CERES and coordinates the Undergraduate Program in European Studies and the Hungarian Studies Program. His book on Albania's interwar experience is due out with the University of Toronto Press in Spring 2012.
C.J. BARNES: http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Barnes.shtml
H. BATHELT: http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=12
D. BERGEN:
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/bergen.html
M. BOBEK
Michal Bobek (michal.bobek@iecl.ox.ac.uk) is Anglo-German Fellow in the Institute of European and Comparative Law, University of Oxford Faculty of Law. He studied law and international relations in Prague, Brussels, Brisbane, Oxford, and completed his doctoral thesis at the European University Institute in Florence. He has qualified as a judge in the Czech Republic. He worked as legal assistant to the Chief Justice and served also as the head of the Research and Documentation Department at the Supreme Administrative Court of the Czech Republic.
A. BRAUN: http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=18
R. BRYM: http://www.sociology.utoronto.ca/people/faculty/robertbrym.htm
R. DAY: http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=27
M. DIMNIK: http://medieval.utoronto.ca/faculty/faculty.html
W. DOWLER: http://www.history.utoronto.ca/faculty/facultyprofiles/dowler.html
A. FENNER:
german.utoronto.ca/~fenner/index.html
W. GOETSCHEL:
german.utoronto.ca/~goetschel/index.html
J-Y. HAINE: http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=39
M. HAGER:
german.utoronto.ca/~hager/index.html
O. HAVRYLYSHYN
Oleh Havrylyshyn (PhD Massachusetts Institute of Technology) is currently a Visiting Fellow at CERES. He is a regular participant of the Annual Dubrovnik Economic Conference, serves as member of the Editorial Board, Comparative Economic Studies, and has been guest co-editor of the special issue volume on Transition Economies, IMF Staff Papers. He was Professor of Economics at Queen's University and George Washington University, and has been a Visiting Professor at Université Libre de Bruxelles, University of Geneva, and the Institute of World Economy, Kyiv. In his academic career, he first focused on international economics and development issues, writing many articles and books on these topics, and serving as consultant on development to the World Bank, UNDP, UNCTAD, and CIDA in Canada. He has traveled extensively to over fifty countries and headed numerous development missions and projects. Since 1988, he has focused on post-communist transition, both in policy positions and doing analytical research. He served as Deputy Minister of Finance, International Affairs, in the first independent Government of Ukraine, and then became Ukraine's representative as Alternate Executive Director of the Board at the IMF. He has been a senior staff member of the IMF since 1996, including most recently as Deputy Director, European II Department, responsible for operations in countries of the former Soviet Union.
J. JENKINS:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/jenkins.html
R. JOHNSON / ON LEAVE FOR FALL TERM 2011:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/johnson.html
J. KIVIMÄE:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/kivimae.html
E. KLEIN
Edith Klein (PhD University of Toronto) is a specialist on the politics of the Balkans, and more
specifically on the successor states of ex-Yugoslavia. Her research interests and publications lie in the areas of gender politics,
community-based conflict resolution, and the impact of international presence in conflict zones. In addition to her training in political
science, Dr. Klein completed the certificate program in community-based conflict resolution through St. Stephen’s Community House (Toronto),
and training in program evaluation with The Initiative on Conflict Resolution and Ethnicity at the University of Ulster, Magee Campus, in
Northern Ireland. She is currently the Program Advisor for CERES.
K. KNOP:
http://www.law.utoronto.ca/faculty_content.asp?profile=31 &cType=facMembers&itemPath=1/3/4/0/0l
A. KOMAROMI:
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Komaromi.shtml
J. KOPSTEIN: individual.utoronto.ca/kopstein/
A. KORTEWEG: http://www.sociology.utoronto.ca/people/faculty/annakorteweg.htm
T. KOZNARSKY:
www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Koznarsky.shtml
N. KREMENTSOV: http://www.hps.utoronto.ca/faculty.htm#krementsov
L.J. KULCSAR
Dr. László J. Kulcsár is an Associate Professor of Sociology at the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work at Kansas State University. His field of expertise is social demography and regional development, with a particular emphasis on migration, urbanization, and spatial inequalities. Dr. Kulcsár participates in interdisciplinary research programs that tie population trends to land use change and the transforming rural landscape in the Great Plains. He also studies the social and demographic transformation of Eastern Europe from a historical perspective, with a particular emphasis on the post-socialist period. Dr. Kulcsár teaches courses on social and spatial inequalities, population dynamics, aging, immigration, and research methodology.
T. LAHUSEN:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/lahusen.html
C. LEHLEITER:
german.utoronto.ca/~lehleiter/index.html
M. LIGHT:
http://criminology.utoronto.ca/home/matthew_light.html
L. LIVAK:
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Livak.shtml
P. MAGOSCI:
http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=60
J. MIKHAILOVA: http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Mikhailova.shtml
J. NOYES: http://german.utoronto.ca/~noyes/index.html
V. OSTAPCHUK: http://www.utoronto.ca/nmc/faculty/ostapchukcv.htm
D. PENSLAR: http://www.history.utoronto.ca/faculty/facultyprofiles/penslar.html
R. PRUESSEN: http://www.history.utoronto.ca/faculty/facultyprofiles/pruessen.html
A. ROSSOS: http://www.history.utoronto.ca/faculty/facultyprofiles/rossos.html
J. SCHALLERT: http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Schallert.shtml
E. SCHATZ / ON SABBATICAL 2011/12: http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=79
D. SCHWARTZ:
http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=80
A. SHTERNSHIS:
german.utoronto.ca/~shternshis/index.html
A. SMITH:
http://www.history.utoronto.ca/faculty/facultyprofiles/smith.html
To make an appointment to talk with Dr. Smith, please go through your Google account at Google calendar.
S. SOLDOVIERI:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/german/~soldovieri/index.html
P. SOLOMON:
http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=85
S. SOLOMON:
http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=86
M. STOCK:
german.utoronto.ca/~stock/index.html
M. SUBTELNY:
http://www.utoronto.ca/nmc/faculty_graduate.htm
M. TARNAWSKY:
http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Tarnawsky.shtml
P. TRIADAFILOPOULOS:
http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=92
T. TROJANOWSKA: http://www.utoronto.ca/slavic/faculty/Trojanowska.shtml
L. VIOLA:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/viola.html
L. WAY:
http://politics.utoronto.ca/faculty/profile/?id=95
R. WITTMANN:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/wittman.html
Z. WOJNOWSKI
The Petro Jacyk Postdoctoral Fellow for 2011/12, Zbigniew Wojnowski holds a PhD from the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University College London, where he wrote on Patriotism and the Soviet Empire: Ukraine Views the Socialist States of Eastern Europe, 1956-1985. Recent publications include "De-Stalinisation and Soviet Patriotism: Ukrainian Reactions to East European Unrest in 1956," Kritika: Explorations in Russian and Eurasian History (forthcoming) and "Communism and Nationalism: Poles' Perceptions of the West and Legitimacy of the Jaruzelski Regime, 1980-1983," Slovo 19:1 (Spring 2007).
P. WROBEL:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/history/faculty/facultyprofiles/wrobel.html
J. ZILCOSKY:
www.chass.utoronto.ca/german/~zilcosky/index.html
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