Internal News – CISS https://ciss.eu Young Initiative on Foreign Affairs and International Relations (CISS) Tue, 11 Oct 2022 20:28:19 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.9 wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/cropped-android-chrome-512x512-2-32x32.png Internal News – CISS https://ciss.eu 32 32 An informative afternoon: CISS’s event on “Russia and its Invisible Puppet States” 2022/07/06/an-informative-afternoon-cisss-event-on-russia-and-its-invisible-puppet-states/ Wed, 06 Jul 2022 18:23:43 +0000 ?p=15843 On June 25th, CISS’s co-director for ‘Eastern Europe to Central Asia’ Lance Bradley hosted and moderated the event “Russia and its Invisible Puppet States” at the Gesellschaft für Europabildung in Berlin. Our attendees got to hear an in-depth introduction to the so-called “People’s Republics” in Eastern Ukraine by Nikolaus von Twickel (Zentrum Liberale Moderne) with important insights on agency in these regions vis-à-vis the Kremlin. Keith Harrington from Maynooth University presented (virtually) his expertise on Transnistria and also spoke about the role of separatism and minority voting blocks on domestic politics in Moldova, as well as in relation to broader Russian foreign policy and the war in Ukraine. Following both presentations, an engaging and fruitful discussion ensued around European policy towards de facto states, their parent states, and their patron in Moscow. Thank you to all guests and attendees for a memorable experience!

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CISS event: “Russia’s Invisible Puppet States” on June 25th in Berlin 2022/06/22/15831/ Wed, 22 Jun 2022 19:20:43 +0000 ?p=15831 Why is propping up separatist regimes an integral part of Russian foreign policy? How do de facto states function and what do they have to do with the war against Ukraine? Should the EU reevaluate its relation to separatism?
Find out at CISS’s event “Russia’s Invisible Puppet States” on June 25th from 14:00-17:00!

Join us for interactive presentations, hear critical stances on Europe’s reactionary foreign policy and relation to Russian-backed separatism in Eastern Europe and discuss Russian-backed separatism, the role of de-facto states in the war against Ukraine, and the EU’s reactionary policy towards separatism in its backyard.

The event will kick off with a presentation by Nikolaus von Twickel (Zentrum Liberale Moderne) on the Donetsk and Luhansk so-called ‘People’s Republics’ – how did they come to be, and how were they instrumentalized for the war against Ukraine.
Continuing, PhD candidate Keith Harrington (Maynooth University) will present a much older case: Transnistria. How does such an isolated place persist over time despite all odds? Why is Transnistria different than other de-facto states? Is Transnistria really the next front of Russian aggression?
Following these presentations, we will hear two critical analyses of European policy toward Russian-backed separatism over the years by Prof. Andrey Makarychev (University of Tartu).

Following all blocks, we will have a Q&A session. Presentations and Discussion in English.
We look forward to learning and discussing with you on June 25th at 14:00 in person at the Gesellschaft für Europabildung – Petersburger Straße 94, 10247 Berlin – (U-Frankfurter Tor).

Registration via E-Mail only at 
Location: Gesellschaft für Europabildung, Petersburger Straße 94, 10247 Berlin (U-Frankfurter Tor)

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Call for Applications: Regional Director for the “North America” region 2021/04/11/call-for-applications-regional-director-for-the-north-america-region/ Sun, 11 Apr 2021 11:28:36 +0000 ?p=15580 You are interested in international relations and foreign policy? You would like to be part of a young team with a start-up atmosphere and actively shape a successful and rapidly growing organization? You want to take over responsibilities in an international project? Then join us and become a member of CISS’s core team on a voluntary basis.

More information can be found here.

Please apply by May 9th, 2021 by sending your application to Anne Laible (anne.laible@ciss.eu).

 

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Annual Report 2020: A Year in Between Challenges and New Perspectives 2021/02/28/annual-report-2020-a-year-in-between-challenges-and-new-perspectives/ Sun, 28 Feb 2021 13:52:18 +0000 ?p=15499 It is almost always impossible to summarize a year that has just passed using only a single label. The year 2020, however, is different. Many people from different parts of the world would certainly agree that it carries the title ‘COVID-19 pandemic’. Events such as the assassination of Iranian military commander Soleimani, the explosion in the port of Beirut, the terrorist attacks of Vienna, or the poisoning of Alexej Nawalny in Russia fade in light of a year amid lockdowns, COVID-19 relief packages, the hope for an effective vaccine and above all: sickness and death, fears, standstill, and social distancing. The pandemic has further unveiled global inequalities and made them even worse. Social divide, as well as polarization, have increased around the globe. In connection to the pandemic, conspiracy theories and disinformation have reached an extent to which constructive discussions and dialogue between different perspectives have become difficult, if not impossible. And yet the year has also initiated positive developments. The most significant among them is the Black Lives Matter movement. Provoked by the death of George Floyd, the movement shifted the topic of racism back into the focus of a broader public – also beyond US borders. We may hope for 2021 that there will not only be a continuation of the discourse on racism but also some noticeable changes and improvements.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, CISS also needed to find new levels of creativity and flexibility, and in some instances had to put things to a halt. Some of our projects as well as our annual meeting had to be canceled or shifted online. Still, we look at 2021 with optimism and hope that we can continue our projects. At this point, we also want to mention that all of our activities and success stories would not have been possible without the support of many different institutions and individuals. Therefore, we want to seize this opportunity to thank everyone who has supported us on our journey so far.

 

Our highlights in 2020:

  • We are happy to report that for the third year in a row, more of our new members are internationals rather than German nationals.
  • We have welcomed eight new members to CISS’s core team.
  • During the COVID-19 pandemic, we started our “CISS Series in Times of Corona”, a series of short stories from around the world, including comments, perspectives and analyses on the pandemic, that we published in our Think Tank.
  • Happy Birthday, CISS! As part of the ten-year anniversary of CISS’s foundation, we celebrated by traveling back in time and publishing a series of articles and short interviews with CISS alumni. Not only did we illustrate CISS’s development as an organization over the past ten years, we also provided future perspectives for the coming year
  • In August 2020, our “Latin America Weeks” took place in the course of which our Think Tank published all analyses and publications written as part of the successful Impact Group LACALYTICS II.
  • We started our own Podcast series called “CISS Hot Seat”. The concept of the podcast is that young people interview and debate with policymakers, academics, and journalists about current hot topics in world politics and what it means to work in the field of international affairs.
  • CISS founded the Impact Group ‘Future of the International Monetary System’ and started recruiting members for its project team. By developing an online tool, the project aims at raising awareness about the structures of the international monetary system and make knowledge available to a broader population.

More information about our highlights, projects and new members can be found in our Annual Report 2020: A Year in Between Challenges and New Perspectives.

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2014 – New cooperations and new perspectives on international relations 2021/02/21/2014-new-cooperations-and-new-perspectives-on-international-relations/ Sun, 21 Feb 2021 14:24:11 +0000 ?p=15485 Fasten your imaginary seatbelts as we travel back to 2014, a year that marked the beginning of one of CISS’s oldest and still active Impact Groups: EU-ASEAN Perspectives. As the name suggests, this travel takes us to Southeast Asia – at least something to calm the Wanderlust, in times of travel restrictions, right?

The Impact Group EU-ASEAN Perspectives brings together young people from the EU and ASEAN to discuss current issues and develop proposals for the future of interregional relations. What emerged as a thought experiment for better use of online opportunities, became a complete success.
With its EU-ASEAN-Perspectives-Dialogue (EUAP), CISS created a network of students and young professionals interested in debating empirical and normative questions of EU-ASEAN relations. Thereby, the Impact Group aims to close the gap between academic and policy discourse. To this end, the participants – a team of master’s students, young researchers, and young professionals from eight different countries in Europe and Southeast Asia – exchanged their perspectives on interregional issues via online formats. This complex project was carried out through communication technologies such as Skype, Facebook, and GoogleDocs with a relatively small financial budget. Therefore, it also served as a pilot project to rethink and implement new and more flexible ways of knowledge transfer and dialogue formats. What seems barely groundbreaking in current times in which remote work and online communication have become the new normal, was back in 2014 innovative and progressive ways to organize dialogue and workshops.

The results of the online exchange were consolidated in a policy paper on the subject of “Does the EU miss out on the Asian Century?”. In 2014, the results were presented in the German Bundestag as well as in a final panel discussion at the BMW Foundation Herbert Quandt in Berlin.

Another highlight in 2014 was CISS’s participation in the “Review 2014” initiative of the German Federal Foreign Office with the aim to initiate a debate on German foreign policy and its future with citizens. Two CISS team members, Kilian Spandler and Hanna Pfeifer reached the final round of an essay competition with their essay “Building complexity instead of reducing it – Against a policy of new German responsibility”. They were then invited to Berlin for a meeting with Foreign Minister Steinmeier in October to discuss their views. Shortly afterward we dealt with the topic in a more specific way in Munich during a panel discussion on German responsibility in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. We still have great memories from a lively exchange between the more than 200 visitors and the high-level panelists from the German Federal Foreign Office, the Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Munich, and Upper Bavaria, the German-Palestinian Society of Germany, and the Bundeswehr University Munich.

If our imaginary time travel inspired you to become a part of CISS’s EU-ASEAN network: the Impact Group is currently conceptualizing its fourth episode. Stay tuned for more information!

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Five Questions With – Dr. Kilian Spandler 2021/01/17/five-questions-with-dr-kilian-spandler/ Sun, 17 Jan 2021 10:03:37 +0000 ?p=15366 … who is an International Relations researcher at the School of Global Studies at the University of Gothenburg and the first guest of our ‘Five Questions With’–interview series with CISS alumni.

Please describe your activities at CISS:

I first got involved in CISS as an occasional contributor for the Think Tank blog shortly after it came into being. I was friends with two CISS members back then, so I learned quite a lot about the initiative and thought it was a great idea. In 2013, I co-founded the Impact Group EU-ASEAN Perspectives, which brought together students and young professionals from Europe and Southeast Asia to discuss current interregional affairs. Around that time, I also started managing CISS’s regional section for South and East Asia. From 2016 to 2019, I was part of the Executive Board, which is in charge of general strategic decisions and important administrative tasks for the organization.

In your opinion, what makes CISS special? Please describe in three words:

Youth – Drive – Creativity

What have you taken along from your time with CISS?

First, it is amazing what young people can achieve if they put their minds to it. Second, ‘doing’ is sometimes a better way of learning than reading and listening. And finally, running an organization like CISS is hard but also extremely exciting and fun.

What was your most rewarding experience with CISS?

The delegation visits we organized between 2013 and 2016 for the EU-ASEAN Perspectives program were amazing. Having young people from around a dozen European and Southeast Asian countries come to Brussels to discuss issues they were passionate about with experts, policy-makers and civil society organizations was a unique experience. I am still in touch with many of the people I got to know back then, and I know that many friendships have developed thanks to our project.

What do you wish for CISS‘s next 10 years?

It is great to see that CISS continues to inspire people. I wish for the new generation to make CISS their own so the organization can continue to evolve. The most important thing is to keep it fun. Oh, and may all your funding applications be successful!

 

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2015 – Global crises require international cooperation and exchange 2020/12/15/2015-global-crises-require-international-cooperation-and-exchange/ Tue, 15 Dec 2020 11:32:39 +0000 ?p=15347 The global crises of 2015 – Ukraine, Syria, Euro-Crisis, just to name a few – determined not only international politics and public debates but also CISS’s work in promoting the engagement of the young generation in foreign affairs. In the fifth year since its foundation, CISS realized more projects than ever before, increasing its public outreach as well as its professionality as an organization. The number of CISS members increased by 26 percent to a total of 121 and the Think Tank grew to 350 submissions, providing a platform for policy analyses, debates, and perspectives from all over the world.

The three Impact Groups EU-ASEAN Perspectives, Trilateral Peace Talks – Germany, Russia, Ukraine, and Arms Trade were the key projects of 2015. In addition to that, 15 members of CISS held a so-called fire-side-talk with Undersecretary of State Dr. Born to discuss career possibilities in foreign affairs.

The Impact Group EU-ASEAN Perspectives – Part 2 took place in March 2015 in cooperation with the European Institute for Asian Studies and the EU Centre in Singapore.
Pioneering the online-meetings that become normal in today’s world, we at CISS already made use of such tools back in 2015. As part of the Impact Group, 20 students and young professionals from South & East Asia and Europe met online for a workshop to discuss current issues of EU-ASEAN relations. The policy paper which they developed in the course of the virtual meeting was later presented to representatives from politics, diplomacy, Academia, and civil society during a delegation trip to Brussels. The paper was also taken up and discussed by several public institutions and governments within the EU and ASEAN.

Together with the Friedrich Ebert Foundation, the Hertie Foundation, and the Foundation West-Eastern Encounters, the Trilateral Peace Talks brought together 30 young academics and civil society representatives from Russia, Ukraine, and Germany in Berlin for open exchange about the crisis in Ukraine. The four-day event aimed to work on common grounds regarding origins, media coverage, and possible solutions for the armed conflict between Ukraine and Russia. The results of the project were presented to the public in an innovative format at BMW-Stiftung Herbert Quandt in Berlin.

In the light of the controversies about German arms support for the Kurdish Peshmerga, the Impact Groups Arms Trade and the Chair for Empirical Political Research and Policy Analysis of the University of Munich put together an expert panel to discuss decision-making and ethical dimensions of weapon trade.

Siemon Wezeman, a senior researcher with the Arms and Military Expenditure Programme of Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), and Jan Grebe, a researcher on arms exports controls at Bonn International Center for Conversion (BICC) were the keynote speakers of the debate. Together with Prof. Dr. Paul W. Thurner, professor for Empirical Political Research and Policy Analysis at the University of Munich, and Lukas Hafner, student and author of the winning contribution to CISS’s essay competition, they held an insightful debate in front of 95 people.

With so many projects, CISS broadened its network in 2015 and therewith set the foundation for further projects in the years after.

 

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Call for Applications: Regional Director Sub-Saharan Africa and Regional Director Eastern Europe & Eurasia 2020/11/23/call-for-applications-regional-director-sub-saharan-africa-and-regional-director-eastern-europe-eurasia/ Mon, 23 Nov 2020 17:18:29 +0000 ?p=15327 Are you interested in international relations and foreign affairs? Do you want to become part of a young team and actively shape a successful and fastly growing organization? Do you want to take over responsibility of an international project? Then join us and become a member of CISS’s core team on a voluntary basis.

More information can be found here.

Please apply until 23rd December, 2020 by sending your application to Anne Laible (anne.laible@ciss.eu).

 

 

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2016 – Four Impact Groups amid global challenges and political crisis 2020/11/23/2016-four-impact-groups-amid-global-challenges-and-political-crisis/ Mon, 23 Nov 2020 11:21:22 +0000 ?p=15313 Syria, Colombia, Brexit, the election of Donald Trump – 2016 remarks a year full of challenges for the global order and foreign affairs. For CISS, these events presented an even greater motivation to promote the engagement of the young generation in international relations, which led to the formation of four Impact Groups: EU-ASEAN Perspectives, Memory as a Tool of Change, United Nations Parliament, and LACalaytics.

In cooperation with the German Federal Foreign Office, the European Institute for Asian Studies, and the KANITA Center for Research on Women and Gender, the Impact Group EU-ASEAN perspectives brought together a delegation of 13 participants to discuss gender equality with civil-society and political actors in Brussels, Belgium. The developed policy paper included recommendations for politicians of both the European Union and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

With the European University Viadrina, the memorial Deutscher Widerstand, the memorial Sachsenhausen, the Yugra State University, and the memorial Topographie des Terrors as project partners, the Impact Group Memory as a Tool of Change brought together 13 Russian and 13 German students. During the eleven-day exchange program in Berlin, the students developed strategies to deal with the memory culture of the Holocaust in Germany, finding also transfer points to the history of violence in totalitarian Russia. In the course of the program, the students visited the European University Viadriana,
performed a research trip to the memorial place Sachsenhausen and held a panel discussion at the memorial Deutscher Widerstand.

In the course of the Impact Group United Nations Parliament, a discussion of the practical implementation of a parliamentary assembly at the United Nations, as well as a theoretically driven debate on the pros and cons of a world parliament, took place. During the simulation “Model United Nations Parliament”, 50 international participants slipped into the role of a national ambassador and negotiated possible terms and statutes of a parliamentary assembly at the United Nations. Under the general topic of democratization of international politics, lecturers, students, and representatives of civil society and the church discussed the possibilities and the necessity of a world parliament for the global order. Partners of the Impact Group included UNPA-Campaign, the United Nations‘ student group of the Martin-Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (MLU), Evangelical Academy Berlin, Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes, Deutsche Gesellschaft für die Vereinten Nationen e.V, Vereinigung der Freunde und Förderer der MLU, and Studierendenrat MLU.

The Impact Group LACalytics brought together 46 students and young professionals from 23 European,
Latin-American, and Caribbean countries. As bi-regional teams, they developed and published interdisciplinary policy papers about regional challenges and developments. In October 2016, CISS invited the best authors to a final conference in Hamburg, Germany, organized in cooperation with the EU-LAC Foundation and the Senate Office of Hamburg. During the four-day conference, the participants presented the findings of their articles and had the opportunity to discuss these with actors working in the field of EU-Latin America relations. The twelve best articles were published in the trilingual report “EU-LAC Cooperation in the 21st Century: Combining Efforts in a Globalized World”. Due to its success, LACalytics was repeated twice and a selected number of articles were republished in the course of CISS’s Latin American and Caribbean Weeks in September 2020.

 

 

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2017 – Remembrance and memory for reconciliation and change 2020/10/01/2017-remembrance-and-memory-for-reconciliation-and-change/ Thu, 01 Oct 2020 16:45:10 +0000 ?p=15205 The year of 2017 remarks a special year for both CISS and international politics. In various countries, among them Germany, France, the Netherlands, South Korea, Iran, and Chile, important elections took place. Following an increasing interest in foreign affairs and international relations, the CISS community increased by more than 25 percent and the core team gained many new members In line with CISS’s purpose to promote the engagement of young people in this field, the two Impact Groups “Common Remembrance, Future Relations” and “Memory as a Tool of Change” were founded in 2017.

Impact Group members during an excursion in Armenia

The burden of the past and blind spots in the construction of national historical truths often manifest in obstacles to intergovernmental cooperation. However, the mutual exchange of societies’ experiences and their understanding of past events can facilitate processes of remembrance, reappraisal, and reconciliation. The Impact Group “Common Remembrance, Future Relations” aimed to reduce images of the other to initiate reciprocal learning processes in remembrance, commemoration, and reconciliation work, fostering intercultural cooperation through collaborative projects and exchange. In cooperation with the Nongovernmental Organization (NGO) Armenia Progressive Youth (APY) and
under the patronage of Michael Roth, Minister of State for Europe
at the German Federal Foreign Office,

Participants during the introductory workshop in Yerevan, Armenia in May 2017

CISS brought together twenty NGOs from Armenia, France, Germany, Israel, and Turkey in Yerevan, Armenia. The participants developed their own projects,  exploring various forms of remembrance, and fostering the dialogue between the different cultures. In the course of the project, eight teams were formed, planning their joint projects.
The three-part Impact Group started with an introductory workshop in Yerevan in May 2017, followed by work meetings of the group partners over the summer. In September 2017, the final meeting of the entire Impact Group took place in Berlin. This event provided a forum to exchange ideas about the work shadowing, to discuss challenges of the work of NGOs regarding remembrance, reappraisal, and reconciliation as well as future perspectives.

Participants speaking to contemporary witnesses in Siberia

The second series of CISS’s Impact Group “Memory as a Tool for Change”, supported by the German Federal Foreign Office, brought 14 students from Austria and Germany to Western Siberia. Together with participants from the region, they spent two weeks discussing Russian commemorative culture and today’s reappraisal of Stalinist terror. Visiting different places of remembrance and talking to historians and experts, participants discussed how contemporary Russian society and politics commemorate the terrors of the last century, including forced displacement and the system of prison and labor camps.
The group was particularly interested in learning more about the phenomenon of increasing Stalin nostalgia, and why certain events become part of cultural memory while others are dismissed, often by communities of shared memory themselves. Notable highlights were meetings with contemporary witnesses, an excursion to two labor camps along the Transpolar Railway, and the collection of essays in which participants processed their impressions.

 

 

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