Charité Published: 8 July 2015 Malika and Fatima are waiting for me by the entrance to the women’s clinic at the Charité. The women are very quiet; I try to strike up a conversation. I ask them how they lived in Chechnya... An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Marina Naprushkina
Spoon Justice: An allegory of ownership Published: 8 July 2015 It does not help to turn the world around. It does not help to shake the Law as hard as one can. Justice refuses to function in a recognizable manner. An article of the "Berlin Anthology". By Hilde Susan Jægtnes
The Last Days of the United Kingdom? Published: 11 May 2015 Reflections on the Morning After the British General Election of 2015. Will the general election in the UK mark the beginning of the end of the United Kingdom? Read Alex Brianson's reflections on the morning after. By Alex Brianson
Revising Green values Published: 17 April 2015 Medication and water bottles have numerous advantages in a crisis situation, but they cannot be used to stop ISIS. The greatest dilemmas of European Greens are rooted in a conflict of values. They need to work on a political solution. By Tamás Meszerics
Greening our foreign policy: Of visions, principles, and contradictions Published: 27 March 2015 Bloody wars are waged, democracy and human rights are challenged, climate change advances: Within a world out of joint, what are the international norms, political actors and concrete initiatives breathing life into a Green vision for peace, social justice and environmental stability? By Charlotte Beck
Conference documentation: Europe one year after the annexation of Crimea Published: 24 March 2015 At the beginning of March, international experts discussed at the Heinrich-Böll-Foundation in Berlin Europe’s response to Russia’s intervention in Ukraine. They all agreed on Europe lacking a long-term strategy.
How to Achieve Peace in Eastern Europe Published: 16 March 2015 Today, the future of European nations is at stake in eastern Ukraine. If not effectively addressed, the Ukrainian crisis will pose the biggest threat the EU’s member states have experienced since 1945. By Mikhail Minakov
The Future of EU-Russia Energy Relations Under New Political Circumstances Published: 2 March 2015 The conflict in Ukraine has shown that the EU’s energy security depends largely on strengthening its own resilience. By Ernest Wyciszkiewicz
Hannah Arendt, Putin and Today’s Russia Published: 20 January 2015 Hannah Arendt would have found a lot to dislike about today’s Russia. But she would have loved Pussy Riot. An excerpt from the lecture of Ralf Fücks upon the occasion of the 2014 Hannah Arendt Prize. By Ralf Fücks
What's at Stake: The Future of Europe lies in the Future of Ukraine Published: 15 September 2014 Ukrainian author Jurij Andruchowytsch, jointly with numerous intellectuals, calls for solidarity with Ukraine in an open letter to the German government. By Jurij Andruchowytsch
The Impact of the First World War and Its Implications for Europe Today Published: 8 July 2014 Background The First World War proved to be a calamity for both Germany and Europe, and the Second World War magnified this tragedy even further. Without both World Wars the European Union (EU) as we know it today might not exist. This article delves into the consequences of World War I, shedding light on the profound impact it had on shaping the course of history. By Fraser Cameron
What does Germany’s international responsibility mean? Published: 26 June 2014 In his speech at the opening event of the 15th Annual Foreign Policy Conference Prof. Dr. Heinrich August Winkler illustrates the historical development of Europe. The German opening towards the political culture of the West is the most important lesson drawn from the Age of Extremes, according to the historian. By Heinrich August Winkler
Hungary and the EU: in search of respect and solidarity Published: 4 June 2014 The dominant West European narrative according to which Orbán is seeking to move Hungary to Europe’s political periphery is at least partially flawed. What is missing is not a pro-European policy, but rather a vision of Hungary's role in the EU. By Kristóf Szombati
The EU Parliamentary Elections - Views from across the Atlantic Published: 23 May 2014 The upcoming European Parliament elections are overshadowed by the perception of an indecisive European Union ill-prepared to deal with geopolitical challenges. Inferring from that a general indifference towards the European Union or its Parliament, however, is a short-sighted fallacy. By Charlotte Beck
Germany and Russia: as much cooperation as possible; as much conflict as necessary Published: 8 May 2014 The EU cannot give up on the project of a unified and free Europe without giving up on itself. This includes the promise that all European nations on the path to becoming a democracy and constitutional state can become a member of the European Community. Ukraine is the touchstone of this promise today. By Ralf Fücks
The ECJ recognises homosexuality as grounds for asylum Published: 11 March 2014 On November 7, 2013, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) decided that homosexual asylum seekers be granted asylum in EU Member States. An important judgment that is, however, a drop in the ocean in the light of the EU’s policy of closure with regard to asylum and refugee policy. By Caroline Ausserer
The great revenge of the North? TTIP and the rest of the world Published: 10 March 2014 The plans for a Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) caused a controverse debate about food standards and legal privileges to international investors between the U.S. and Europe. However, TTIP's impact on the rest of the world is immense. An analysis by Rainer Falk and Barbara Unmüßig. By Rainer Falk and Barbara Unmüßig
Ukraine: What the EU can do Published: 6 March 2014 Most important now is that the international community responds speedily and clearly to what amounts to a Russian occupation of the Crimea and the additional threat of Russian troops being stationed in Ukraine. Europe is in no way powerless in the face of Russian actions, as Ralf Fücks and Walter Kaufmann illustrate in a ten-point plan. By Ralf Fücks
Emphasis is not being placed on the rule of law Published: 23 August 2013 In an interview, political scientist Vladimíra Dvořáková of the University of Economics, Prague, enumerates the causes of the current turbulence on the Czech political scene.
The grief of Czech politics Published: 31 July 2013 The political crisis in the Czech Republic, which led to the fall of the government, was triggered by police investigation. The prosecution of three former MPs in the country triggered heated debates and reactions. By Václav Láska