After the breakdown of state socialism in Europe the societal role of youth changed dramatically
from that of an ideological driving force of communism to that of an agent and carrier of
democratisation and marketisation.
On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin wall in November 1989, a
symbol of both the raising of the Iron Curtain and the end of the Cold War, this seminar takes a
look at how the opening up of these societies to Europe and the world changed the conditions and
experiences of growing up in the area.
The seminar examines the status of young people in these societies before and after 1989, their
living conditions, issues of social participation, the way in which they construct their identity
and constitute and represent current social realities, their cultures and gender constructions as
well as the interplay of continuities and discontinuities beyond this historical separator. In
order to frame the contributions, the seminar focuses on four main topical fields: youth
transitions and their national contexts, youth in the post-communist landscapes of inequality and
uncertainty, and the consequences of social change for the possible convergence of youth across the
former dividing line of the Iron Curtain. A fourth stream addresses the history and activities of
cooperation between youth experts from the East and the West regarding research, policy and
practice.
The seminar will address such questions through a morning plenary session and four parallel
sessions:
- 1. Youth transitions in post-communism
- 2. Inequality and uncertainty
- 3. Western and eastern, or modern youth?
- 4. Cross-border cooperation in research, policy, and practice
Five papers will be selected for presentation in each of the four sessions. Other papers will be
selected for distribution. To the authors of the papers selected for presentation a one day stay in
Budapest (including the night from 19 to 20 November) will be offered.
A one page abstract of papers proposal must be sent before
August 20, 2009 to the scientific committee of the seminar:
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