Resilience and Resistance in Fragile Democracies
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Resilience and Resistance in Fragile Democracies

Historical Perspectives from Germany, Hungary, and Poland

By German Historical Institute Washington

Date and time

Tuesday, May 27 · 6 - 8pm EDT.

Location

German Historical Institute

1607 New Hampshire Ave NW Washington, D.C, DC 200009

About this event

  • Event lasts 2 hours

Panel Discussion organized by the German Historical Institute Washington, DC; Cosponsored by the American Historical Association, and the American-German Institute Washington, DC.

"Civil society, acting through independent initiatives, provides the best guarantee that we will not return to the past." This statement by Václav Havel, the last president of communist Czechoslovakia and the first democratically elected president of the Czech Republic, highlights the crucial role of civic engagement in safeguarding modern democracies.

Historians have long examined the factors contributing to the survival or demise of democracies, whether through gradual erosion or abrupt upheaval. Our panel discussion delves into this scholarship, focusing on Germany, Hungary, and Poland during the 20th and 21st centuries – nations where a significant portion of the electorate empowered illiberal leaders, thereby undermining key democratic institutions.

The panel will explore what room for civil society actors possessed to maintain resilience: How did they utilize – or fail to utilize – opportunities to resist the erosion of democratic structures? What critical junctures were missed in forming a robust democratic opposition to repressive regimes? What forms of resistance emerged from the grassroots, and what were the key tipping points that ultimately undermined societal and political resistance? By placing current global challenges within a strictly historical context, our distinguished panel will provide nuanced insights.

Doors open at 5:30pm; panel discussion will begin at 6pm.

This event will be streamed. For virtual registration please visit our website at ghi-dc.org.

Speakers: Michael Brenner (American University), Christina Morina (Univ. Bielefeld/ New School for Social Research), Robert Nemes (Colgate College), Karolina Wigura (Univ. Warsaw); Moderators: Ken Pomeranz (Univ. Chicago) and Eric Langenbacher (AGI/Georgetown Univ.)

Organized by

The German Historical Institute (GHI) in Washington DC is an internationally recognized center for advanced study. It serves as a transatlantic bridge connecting American and European scholars and seeks to make their research accessible to decision-makers in politics, society, and economy as well as the general public. While the Institute is particularly dedicated to fostering the study of German history in North America and of American history in Germany, its research and conferences range beyond German and American history to encompass comparative, international and global history as well as research in the fields of economics, sociology and political science. The GHI is especially committed to promoting international scholarly exchange and collaboration by bringing together European and North American scholars as well as academics from other parts of the world in its conferences and research projects.