What are the near- and long-term prospects for the establishment of democratic polities in the Soviet successor states? In seeking to answer this question the best indicator would be the healthy development of civil societies of the region, with a growing capacity to assume social responsibility and exact government accountability.
Conferinţele „Monica Lovinescu” din cadrul departamentului „Ideologie şi Propagandă” al noului institut, IICCMER (Institutul de Investigare a Crimelor Comunismului şi Memoria Exilului Românesc) presupun un set de 20 de conferinţe anuale, conferinţe care se vor desfăşura săptămânal, câteva luni pe an, la noul sediu IICCMER, strada Alecu Russo, nr. 13-19, din Bucureşti, care dispune de [...]
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The year 1989 was simultaneously a moment of grandeur and one of sublime finale for Central and Eastern European intellectuals. For more than four decades, they could be described as belonging in a particular sociological and political category. They shared characteristics that made them distinct from their peers in the West: affirming the existence of moral values, reluctant to endorse utopian chiliasm, skeptical redemptive paradigms, and rejecting collectivism in any of its varieties. In many cases, politics as such was regarded as a degrading exercise in hypocrisy. I speak here, of course, of those intellectuals who resisted and/or subverted the region’s Leninist regimes. I am mainly thinking of those who fuelled democratic anti-communist culture and revisionism, those individuals who ultimately created the dissident movement.
Ultima actualizare în Vineri, 23 Octombrie 2009 11:17