Topics public
[search 0]
Plus
Téléchargez l'application!
show episodes
 
La chaire de Microbiologie et Maladies Infectieuses dont Philippe Sansonetti est le titulaire a pour objectif de présenter les grands problèmes et les principaux défis posés par les maladies infectieuses dans un monde globalisé et de procurer aux auditeurs une capacité de lecture et d'analyse de ces problématiques complexes. L'approche prise est essentiellement fondamentale. Elle vise en particulier à présenter l'état de la recherche en cours dans des domaines divers mais complémentaire comm ...
  continue reading
 
Loading …
show series
 
Bonjour, Natasza Styczyńska, very pleased to have you back at Euradio. Today, in 2024, you are Professor at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow. But what were you doing when Poland became a member of the European Union, twenty years ago, on the 1st of May 2004? I was a student, in my fourth year of political science studies! Membership negotiatio…
  continue reading
 
Bonjour, Ramūnas Vilpišauskas, you are Jean Monnet Professor at the Institute of International Relations and Political Science of Vilnius University, in the capital of Lithuania. How old were you when your country became a member of the European Union, twenty years ago, on the 1st of May 2004? In 2004, I was 32 years old, working as an associate pr…
  continue reading
 
Petr Kaniok, you are professor of political science at the Masaryk University of Brno, beautiful city in the South-East of the Czech Republic. And you recall the moment when your country became a member of the European Union, twenty years ago, on the 1st of May 2004. May 2004 – that is a long time ago! Twenty years is a small step for mankind, but …
  continue reading
 
Simon Usherwood! I’m very pleased to welcome you back on Euradio. Your are professor at the Open University in Britain, and Chair of our partners UACES. Less than three months left until the elections to the European Parliament. What are your expectations? Do you think these elections actually matter? Whether these elections matter is a great quest…
  continue reading
 
Bonjour, Emilija Tudzarovska, you are Lecturer in Contemporary European Politics at Charles University, in Prague, and your research focuses on the democratic legitimacy of the European Union. How do you evaluate it today? Let me start with going back to the economic crisis that struck the world in 2008. This crisis revealed deeper problems plaguin…
  continue reading
 
It has learnt some painful lessons, but I also think there is hope in this learning process. To start with, it was forced to rediscover that war is not a faint memory or a minor disturbance that happens in some distant countries on other continents. And the war that has been raging for two years now in its immediate neighbourhood brought with it a …
  continue reading
 
Camila Villard Duran, you are a law professor at ESSCA School of Management, and as a lawyer, you would like to take the defence of a not very popular “suspect”. Yes, I would like to speak in defence of the trade agreement between the European Union and Mercosur. You realise that many European farmers are protesting against such an agreement right …
  continue reading
 
Dorina Baltag, you are researcher at the Institute for Diplomacy and International Governance of Loughborough University, in London. And you speak to us about Moldova today, our future EU partner we know so little about. Yes, it’s a historic moment for Moldova. Together with Ukraine, it is now taking part in accession negotiations initiated by the …
  continue reading
 
Daniele Saracino, good to have you back in our programme! You are lecturer in European Studies at the University of Essex, working on migration, asylum and solidarity. We can say that these three topics have given rise to much contention for almost a decade now. During the migratory movements to Europe in 2015/2016, the dysfunctionality of the so-c…
  continue reading
 
Lisa Janssen, you are a PhD candidate at Ghent University, and you are working on a topic that is of crucial importance in a year that is full of elections in democracies around the globe. That’s right. And one crucial element of a democratic election is “loser’s consent”, the losing party’s willingness to voluntarily accept the election result, ev…
  continue reading
 
Eva Saeva, You are researcher at Newcastle Law School, in the UK, and a specialist in cybersecurity. Tell us about this area of research. It is a fascinating field of study that I have researched for over 6 years now. Let me focus today on the European Union's legal approach to cybersecurity. It’s been 10 years since the EU adopted its first Cybers…
  continue reading
 
Gesine Weber, you are PhD candidate at King's Collège in London, and researcher for the Paris office of the German Marshall Fund. And you have followed closely the recent EU-China summit in Beijing. Yes, the first in-person summit since 2019, which took place on December 7 and 8. From the beginning, expectations were low: the relations between the …
  continue reading
 
Kathryn Cassidy, You are professor at the University of Northumbria in Newcastle, and currently working on a project analysing the response to the Ukrainian refugee crisis, especially with regard to the “Temporary Protection Directive”. That’s correct. As a quick reminder, the European Union introduced the Temporary Protection Directive in 2001, fo…
  continue reading
 
Francesco Spera, your research, at the University of Salento, in Lecce, looks, among other things, at the legal framework of the EU collective memory. Yes, we all know that collective memory in the European Union has always been built on the ethical lessons of World War II. From the start, EU institutions have capitalised on a moral commitment to o…
  continue reading
 
Very pleased to welcome you back on Euradio. Simon Usherwood, you are Professor at the Open University, and Chair of our partners UACES. A few days ago, you co-organised a conference in London on the state of EU-UK relations. But who still speaks about Brexit? That’s the big question. While a lot of people think that Brexit is ‘done’, it is clear t…
  continue reading
 
ery pleased, Amelia Hadfield, to welcome you back on “Ideas on Europe”. It’s been already four years since you launched the “Centre for Britain and Europe” at the University of Surrey. That’s right. And in the meantime, we have been granted a Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence, which has allowed us to develop our activities further, form strong bonds…
  continue reading
 
Filiz, you have been working for several years on the security of the European Union, first for your doctorate, and now as guest researcher, at Leiden University, in the Netherlands. Security has always been one of the most complex and critical issues for the EU. After decades of remarkable success in promoting peace, stability and prosperity on a …
  continue reading
 
Very pleased to have you back with us, Nick. The last time you spoke to us, you talked about how the generational shift taking place in Europe in terms of progressive social attitudes might have a potential negative impact on support for Radical Right parties in the coming years. That’s right. And one of the issues I mentioned in the discussion was…
  continue reading
 
For our weekly “Ideas on Europe” editorial by UACES, the University Association for European Studies, we welcome Patrick Bijsmans, from Maastricht University. The European Higher Education Area is a child of the famous “Bologna Process” launched in 1999, which achieved an unprecedented internationalisation of university studies across the continent…
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Guide de référence rapide