Tuesday, 26 May 2026

CFP: Life Reform Movements in the Baltics and East Central Europe: Local and Global Perspectives, c. 1860–1930

Call for Papers

Life Reform Movements in the Baltics and East Central Europe: Local and Global Perspectives, c. 1860–1930


A joint conference organized by the Centre for Baltic and East European Studies (CBEES) at Södertörn University, the Herder Institute for Historical Research on East Central Europe, the Institute for the Culture and History of the Germans in Northeast Europe (IKGN e.V.),

and the Martin Opitz Library

Venue: Södertörn University (Stockholm, Sweden)

Date: February 18–19, 2027


In the last decades of the 19th century, a wave of issue-driven life reform movements emerged across Europe and America, particularly in the areas of nutrition, clothing, consumption, housing, healthcare and moral reform. These movements both accompanied and critiqued processes of industrialization, urbanization, mass communication, and broader societal change. The rapidly evolving modern ways of life, especially in large cities, were often perceived as flawed or problematic. In response, life reform movements promoted alternative ways of living. Campaigns for animal welfare and temperance, as well as tobacco abstention and vegetarianism, combined countercultural agendas with a strong commitment to social reform. Abolitionist movements, meanwhile, criticized bourgeois double standards and condemned trafficking and prostitution as consequences of poverty and wider social inequalities. More broadly, life reform movements responded to the environmental challenges posed by industrialization and urban growth by advocating a return to nature.


This conference approaches these developments as transimperial, translocal, and transnational—if not global—phenomena. While they emerged in multiethnic and multicultural societies of Eastern and Central Europe, they were also shaped by regional and local particularities. We understand life reform movements as responses to political, socioeconomic, and cultural transformations, while at the same time reflecting the specific trajectories of modernity in Eastern Europe. They were closely intertwined with processes of imperial decline and nation-building that accompanied the collapse of the German, Habsburg, and Romanov Empires. As a result, national modes of thinking both influenced these movements and were, in turn, reshaped by them, alongside the impact of Soviet ideology.


The conference examines these movements in their horizontal entanglements and their transnational and transimperial dimensions, viewing them as social and cultural phenomena shaped by the specific contexts of different societies and communities. Through the lens of life reform movements, it also focuses on people, non-human actors, ideas, practices, infrastructures and materialities, including art, literature and media. We aim to explore the circulation, transfer, and fusion of life reform ideas and practices across boundaries—whether national, cultural, imperial, ideological, social, physical, or environmental.


We also want to highlight interactions and (dis)connections, as well as tensions and conflicts, between different life reform movements, paying particular attention to their broader societal effects and to the ways in which they were shaped by specific spatial and contextual settings.

Moreover, the conference aims to advance the discussion on the epistemological dimensions of knowledge production about life reform movements by reflecting on conflicting interpretations of sources, silences in the archives, and the challenges posed by overlooked or marginalized historical sources and phenomena.


We warmly welcome proposals on these and other topics closely related to the conference’s themes, and invite contributions drawing on a wide range of disciplines, theories, methodologies, and primary sources.

Topics and fields

- gender / sexual / moral reform

- social conditions and hygiene

- youth / education

- environment (housing, interiors, including living conditions)

- animal welfare, anti-vivisection

- consumption: temperance, dietary reform, vegetarianism

- garden cities and their aesthetics

- life reform and science, religion, vernacular knowledge, beliefs.


Please send your abstract of max. 500 words and a brief CV of 300 words until July 30, 2026 to: forum@herder-institut.de

We will inform the selected participants until September 1, 2026.

To facilitate discussion, we kindly ask participants to submit an extended abstract (5–10 pages) outlining their main arguments until February 1, 2027.

Participants are invited to submit a chapter up to 9000 words including references and annotations following the conference until July 30, 2027.

Deadlines:

- Abstract of max. 500 words: July 30, 2026

- Extended abstract: February 1, 2027

- Book chapter: July 30, 2027


CFP: Parallel Memories: People, Place and Environments in the Baltic States

 Call for Papers

Fourth Annual BASEES Baltic Study Group Workshop

Parallel Memories: People, Place and Environments in the Baltic States

Online, 30-31 October 2026


More: https://creeca.wisc.edu/academic-opportunity-fourth-annual-basees-baltic-study-group-workshop/

Sunday, 24 May 2026

CFP: Into the larger world: global ventures of the Eastern Bloc automotive industry in late socialism & early post-socialism

 Call for Papers:

Into the larger world: global ventures of the Eastern Bloc automotive industry in late socialism & early post-socialism

DL: 30.06.2026// Conference date: 5-6.10.2026

Venue: Villa Noel-CEREFREA, Bucharest

https://sites.google.com/view/globv/cfp?authuser=0

Fourth Baltic Conference on the Environmental Humanities and Social Sciences, BALTEHUMS IV: Worlds in Relation

 We are pleased to announce that the Fourth Baltic Conference on the Environmental Humanities and Social Sciences, BALTEHUMS IV: Worlds in Relation, will take place in Riga, Latvia, on 1-3 December 2026, hosted by the University of Latvia and the Baltic Studies Centre. The call for contributions is now open!


This year’s theme, Worlds in Relation, invites us to think with the Baltic Sea region as a landscape of transitions and intertwined histories and to explore how changing relations between humans, nonhumans, and environments are narrated, negotiated and tended across time. We welcome contributions from environmental humanities, social sciences, and related fields, including work on environmental histories and memories; seasonal rhythms and winter histories; water cultures and hydrosocial perspectives; climate change and biodiversity loss; human-animal relations and multispecies commons; everyday environmental practices and ecological knowledges; infrastructures and interventions in land and water; environmental philosophy and ethics of care; and artistic, literary, and sensory engagements with more‑than‑human worlds.

Abstracts of up to 300 words should be submitted via the online platform by 15 June 2026. The conference will be held on‑site in Riga, at the House of Science of the University of Latvia, and in keeping with BALTEHUMS tradition, there is no conference fee.  Further details, including submission links, can be found on the conference website: https://eztf.lu.lv/baltehums-iv/ 

We are currently finalising the keynote programme and other event details, including opportunities for more informal exchanges during the conference days and will share updates with you over the coming months. 

We would be very grateful if you could circulate this call through your networks and encourage colleagues, students and collaborators who work on the Baltic region (broadly understood) to submit proposals.

With warm greetings,

Anita Zariņa

Kati Lindström

on behalf of the BALTEHUMS IV organising committees

Wednesday, 20 May 2026

Szabolcs László: Cold War Brokers. Hungarian-American Cultural Exchanges and Transnational Mobility, 1956-1989. Bloomsbury 2026

 Szabolcs László: Cold War Brokers. Hungarian-American Cultural Exchanges and Transnational Mobility, 1956-1989. Bloomsbury 2026. ISBN 9781350454996


Examining Cold War encounters between Hungary and the US during the 1960s-80s, this book explores how academic and cultural mid-level mediators brokered official and informal ties between these separate geopolitical 'worlds' and identifies how their interactions shaped the cultural and scholarly environment of both countries.


Cold War Brokers follows the transnational adventures of writers, academics and teachers as they crossed the Iron Curtain literally and figuratively, facilitating the circulation of knowledge between the global centre and periphery. From Hungarian writers who toured the US with the International Writing Program, to music teachers who transferred the acclaimed Kodály-method to the US, and experts on Uralic and Altaic languages who introduced a separate branch of area studies to the US national security paradigm, these transnational mediators ushered in processes of inter-reliant modernization in cultural policy, education and science in both countries. Arguing that their collaboration could not merely undermine ideological dichotomies, but rewrite the history of the Cold War period and the imbalances of centre-periphery relations, László shows how non-state actors were able to use the opportunities presented by the Cold War for professional development and network building to achieve agency in Cold War encounters.


Monday, 18 May 2026

CFA: Borders, Sovereignties, and Environments in Eastern Europe (16th–20th Centuries)

 CALL FOR PAPERS • "Borders, Sovereignties, and Environments in Eastern Europe (16th–20th Centuries)” • Titles and abstracts submission deadline: June 25, 2026


Call for papers for a special issue of Cahiers d’histoire russe, est-européenne, caucasienne et centrasiatique to be released in 2028

Coeditor: Jawad DAHEUR (CNRS-EHESS, CERCEC)


Long conceptualised within the stable framework of nation-states, interactions between societies and their environments take on a renewed significance when examined in spaces marked by unstable territorial frameworks,  multiple authorities and changing political regimes. Eastern Europe—understood here in a broad yet concrete sense, stretching from the eastern Baltic region and Polish periphery to the Black Sea, and including  present-day Baltic states, Belarus, Ukraine and Moldova—offers a particularly rich field of study in this respect. Over the long term, it has been characterised by highly mobile borders, overlapping and competing claims to sovereignty, and diverse forms of governing territories and populations.

Since the sixteenth century, this region has been shaped by the interaction of political formations, each with its own distinct logic. The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, an elective and composite monarchy, coexisted with the expansion of the Grand Duchy of Moscow, which eventually became an empire, while the northern shores of the Black Sea remained under Ottoman influence through flexible provincial structure and vassal entities such as the Crimean Khanate. These configurations were further complicated by the integration of certain territories into more western political entities, such as the Habsburg Monarchy in Galicia from the late eighteenth century, or the longstanding German presence on the Baltic shores.

These dynamics gave rise to differentiated and often competing forms of governance. Borders functioned as multifaceted arrangements—military, fiscal, legal and social—that structured access to resources, regulated mobility and created territorial hierarchies. The borderlands of the Pontic steppe, shaped by Crimean Tatar incursions and Cossack mobility, exemplify this enduring porosity, while other areas were subject to attempts at stricter territorial control through military or administrative means. River basins—the Dnieper, Dniester, Dvina and Neman—structured spaces of circulation that extended beyond political boundaries. External borders were complemented by numerous internal ones: differentiated legal statuses, specific fiscal regimes, internal customs boundaries and systems of mobility control. The Pale of Settlement imposed on the Jewish population of the Russian Empire from the late eighteenth century onwards, the privileges granted to Cossack communities, and special legal regimes applied to colonists in the southern steppes all illustrate a complex spatialisation of statuses and mobility.

Such configurations make Eastern Europe a particularly fertile ground for a mixed  approach drawing at once on the history of sovereignties and on environmental history. They invite us to move beyond national frameworks by highlighting the mismatch between political borders and ecological, social and cultural dynamics. Environments—forests, wetlands, agricultural land and steppe regions—developed according to their varied biophysical logic cutting across institutional discontinuities. At the same time, successive shifts in sovereignty brought about sometimes rapid transformations in legal frameworks, property modes and modes of resource exploitation. The partitions of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in the late eighteenth century, Russian expansion towards the Black Sea, and the political and territorial changes  of the twentieth century all exemplify these processes. The key issue, therefore, is not simply to measure the impact of political power on environment, but to analyse the gaps, frictions and adjustments between state projects and ecological dynamics.

The history of this region can be understood as a series of reconfigurations in which relationships between territory, resources and authority are constantly reshaped. The nineteenth century saw an intensification of state intervention in the environment: colonisation of the steppe, agricultural expansion, agrarian reforms, forest regulation and hydraulic engineering. The development of urban and port centres such as Odessa, Riga, Königsberg and Warsaw reflects the growing integration of these spaces into regional and international economic circuits. These processes transcended political borders without rendering them irrelevant, while each change in sovereignty redefined legal frameworks and modes of natural resource exploitation without fully homogenising these practices.

The twentieth century marked a major turning point. The collapse of empires and their subsequent integration into the Soviet sphere profoundly transformed the relationship between power and environment. Centralised planning—collectivisation, industrialisation and large-scale infrastructure projects—reflected an ambition to master natural environment, even as these efforts ran into material constraints. Post-Soviet developments  have prolonged these tensions, combining the redrawing of borders, territorial conflicts and transformations in environmental governance within contexts shaped both by the legacies of the twentieth century and by uneven integration into broader international frameworks.

Thematic Axes

Proposals must address environmental history, borders and sovereignties in Eastern Europe across a time span from the sixteenth to the twenty-first century. They should embed environmental analysis within explicit reflection on political, legal and territorial discontinuities, demonstrating how these have shaped relationships between societies and environments. Particular attention will be given to contributions that highlight the plurality of governing frameworks, focus on spaces situated across political borders, or examine territories that have undergone changes in sovereignty. Preference will also be given to contributions based on diverse sources drawing on archives from several states or written in different regional languages—particularly German, Polish, Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian, Russian, Belarusian, Ukrainian, Yiddish, Hungarian, Romanian or Ottoman Turkish—in order to better capture circulation, disjuncture and reconfiguration in spaces shaped by plural sovereignties.

Contributions may address one or more of the following themes, without this list being exhaustive, and may also develop alternative lines of inquiry at the authors’ initiative.

1. Shifting Borders and Environmental Dynamics

This axis welcomes studies of environmental dynamics that traverse, bypass or redefine borders. Contributions may focus on river basins, wetlands or steppe regions, analysing how political discontinuities—territorial redrawing, shifting borders or overlapping jurisdictions—shape (or fail to shape) environmental processes, including natural disasters (climatic hazards, erosion, floods, forest fires) and their management. Particular attention may be paid to the differentiated effects of changing sovereignties, to mismatches between political and ecological temporalities, and to forms of continuity or rupture produced by territorial reconfigurations.

2. Sovereignty and Governance of the Environment

This thematic axis explores concrete ways in which competing powers—empires or nation-states, para-state entities —seek to appropriate, regulate and transform environments through colonisation policies, forest regulation, water management, resource taxation or economic planning, land reforms, ‘modernisation’ development programmes. Contributions may examine the instruments of governance (legal, fiscal, technical and scientific) deployed in contexts of overlapping or successive sovereignties. Particular attention will be paid to frictions between governing projects and local practices, especially in borderlands or newly integrated territories.

3. Internal Borders, Legal Hierarchies and Access to Resources

This thematic axis focuses on forms of internal fragmentation of sovereignty (differentiated statuses, exceptional legal regimes, administrative or fiscal boundaries) and their interactions with the environment. Contributions may analyse how these mechanisms structure access to resources, dynamics of exploitation and mobility, accounting for diverse actors—peasant communities, local elites, military or paramilitary groups, populations subject to specific legal statuses, colonists and migrants, state officials—as well as their practices and modes of engagement with the environment. Attention may also be paid to processes of adaptation, circumvention or resistance, and to the socio-environmental inequalities these arrangements produce.

4. Cross-Border Circulation and Socio-Environmental Reconfiguration

This axis addresses the circulation of resources, people, knowledge and techniques across politically fragmented spaces. Contributions may analyse how borders can restructure flows rather than simply blocking them, and how such circulation is shaped by environmental dynamics that constrain, direct or transform them. Topics may include exchange networks, infrastructure (ports, waterways, rail and road systems), and chains of interdependence linking various environments at many levels. Particular attention may be paid to reconfigurations associated with moments of changing sovereignty, and to the reciprocal adjustments between infrastructure, circulation and their environment.

By bringing together the history of borders, history of sovereignties and environmental history, this issue aims to contribute to a renewed understanding of Eastern Europe as a space of recurrent but unevenly paced recompositions, where environments and forms of power are embedded in relations of interdependence and mutual transformation over the long term. Contributions should explicitly demonstrate how the analysis of borders—understood as lines, zones or territorial arrangements—and sovereignties—in their plurality and reconfigurations—provides a key entry point for understanding these dynamics.

Titles and abstracts submission deadline: June 25, 2026

Short project abstracts (500 words maximum) should be sent to chreecc[at]ehess.fr

Please include name, institutional affiliation and e-mail address in all correspondence.

Authors of selected proposals will be notified by July 15, 2026.

Languages: French, English

Manuscripts submission deadline: March 1, 2027

Maximum article length: up to approximately 70,000 characters (space characters and notes included)

Evaluation: In accordance with the policies of Cahiers d’histoire russe, est-européenne, caucasienne et centrasiatique, the accepted articles will be submitted for double-blind peer review by two external referees.

Publication date: 1st half of 2028

Coeditor: Jawad Daheur

For additional information, please contact:

Coeditor jawad.daheur[at]ehess.fr

And/or the redaction: chreecc[at]ehess.fr 

Sunday, 17 May 2026

CfP: Conference "Switzerland as an Incubator of Political Ideas for the Future of Central and Eastern Europe Between 1848 and 1918"

 CfP: Conference "Switzerland as an Incubator of Political Ideas for the Future of Central and Eastern Europe Between 1848 and 1918"

Over the course of the 19th century, Switzerland became one of the most important destinations for political exiles in Europe, including those from Central and Eastern Europe. Its central geographical location, its democratic constitution and extensive freedoms of the press and assembly made Switzerland an important place of refuge. Cities such as Zurich, Geneva, Lausanne and Bern became hubs for political activity in exile.

Previous research on political exiles from Eastern Europe in Switzerland has long focused on exiles from the Russian Empire – or ‘Russian emigration’ – as well as on anarchist and socialist movements. This narrow focus meant that the ethnic diversity of exile communities from Central and Eastern Europe and the variety of political movements often remained overlooked. However, for many scholars and political activists from the multi-ethnic empires of Eastern Europe, it was precisely life in exile that contributed to the formation of national identities and the establishment of national associations. Armenian, Lithuanian, Jewish, Hungarian, Croatian, Bulgarian, Polish, Ukrainian and Georgian (among many others) exiles founded national associations and publications in Switzerland and, under the protection of exile, developed political visions for a future political transformation of the imperial order in Central and Eastern Europe. These activities intensified particularly during the First World War. In those years, Switzerland developed not only into a laboratory for socialist and anarchist ideas, but also into an incubator for concepts of federal restructuring as well as national emancipation, autonomy and independence. Many individuals who had studied in Switzerland or found refuge there as exiles before the First World War went on to hold key political positions in the restored or newly established nation-states of Central and Eastern Europe after 1918 and had a lasting influence on their development.

What role did Switzerland play during the long 19th century as an incubator of political ideas aimed at reshaping the imperial order in Central and Eastern Europe? In which places and under what conditions did political groups that developed federalist concepts or visions of national emancipation, autonomy or independence form in Switzerland? What role did Switzerland’s political system play as a model for similar systems? How might one describe the relationships between the various political groups of emigrants from Central and Eastern Europe in Switzerland and with other centres of political exile in Europe? What role did Swiss universities play in the education of new elites? What opportunities did exile and study in Switzerland open up for women, and to what extent did these experiences contribute to challenging existing gender orders? Which individuals played a role in the reorganisation of the political landscape in Central and Eastern Europe after the First World War? – These questions form the focus of the planned conference.

The conference is organised jointly by the Chair of Central and Eastern European History at the University of Basel and the Department of Mediterranean, Slavic and Oriental Studies at the University of Geneva. The conference will take place in Basel with English as a working language. The organisers will cover the participants’ travel, accommodation and meal expenses. A publication of selected papers is planned following the conference.

This call for papers is aimed at PhD students, postdoctoral researchers and senior scholars in the field of history and related disciplines. We particularly welcome submissions based on new research or the exploration of new source materials that address one or more of the questions outlined above. We welcome papers on the transnational biographies of individual actors, as well as contributions on political groups, national movements and geographical centres of political exile in Switzerland. Researchers from Central and Eastern Europe are explicitly encouraged to apply.

Application documents: We welcome proposals for conference papers in the form of an abstract in English, not exceeding two pages (max. 5’000 characters). We also ask you to provide a brief CV (including a list of publications) of no more than two pages.

Please send your application as a single PDF file by 30 June 2026 to Sarah Evison (sarah.evison@unibas.ch).

This conference is being organized by Prof. Dr. F. Benjamin Schenk (University of Basel), Prof. Dr. Korine Amacher (University of Geneva) and Sarah Evison (University of Basel).


CFP: Life Reform Movements in the Baltics and East Central Europe: Local and Global Perspectives, c. 1860–1930

Call for Papers Life Reform Movements in the Baltics and East Central Europe: Local and Global Perspectives, c. 1860–1930 A joint conference...