University Partnership Program in Holocaust Studies
The course helps participants acquire new knowledge about the history and memory of the Holocaust and other genocides, and develop skills related to a scientific approach to these topics.
The course helps participants acquire new knowledge about the history and memory of the Holocaust and other genocides, and develop skills related to a scientific approach to these topics.
The main goal of the project is to gain theoretical insights into the processes through which political affects can become intersubjective and create the potential for social change, particularly within the context of significant social crises such as the 2008 financial crash or the COVID-19 pandemic.
IFDT is implementing the project “Distributed Archiving at the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory (IFDT)” Funded by Filecoin Foundation for the Decentralized Web, the project aims to collect, digitize, preserve, interpret, and distribute information related to cultural heritage that various political and cultural authorities have treated as “undesirable” or “unworthy” of support.
The main objective of the project “Learning Democratic Participation” was to promote democratic innovations as efficient path towards increased participation of informed citizens in the democratic process.
Within the Mapping PhDs in the Diaspora project, organized by the Institute of Philosophy and Social Theory, University of Belgrade and supported by the Westminster Foundation for Democracy, we are conducting a survey for all our most educated experts from the diaspora who have obtained or are in the process of obtaining a doctoral degree abroad. This research is highly important once we look at the statistics about the “brain drain” that has been going on in Serbia for decades.
The terms chosen in this glossary are solidarity, freedom, civil disobedience, social engagement, social justice, inclusivity, xenophobia, violence, feminism, and the public good.
This Action will define and develop an emerging research field that explores the relationships among voluntary associations, families and states in the creation of social welfare in Europe.