Southeastern Europe (SEEU) is a peer-reviewed journal that aims to publish innovative research on contemporary developments in Southeastern Europe.
Southeastern Europe embraces multi- and interdisciplinary scholarship and comparative approaches. The journal publishes thematic issues that contain essays, articles, interviews, debates, reviews, and news.
Editor-in-Chief: Anna Krasteva,
New Bulgarian University, Sofia
Executive Editor Stefano Bianchini,
University of Bologna
Associate Editors Marco Puleri,
University of Bologna Marco Zoppi,
University of L’Aquila
Book Review Editor Vjeran Pavlaković,
University of Rijeka
Book Review Assistant Katarina Damčević,
Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies (IOS), Regensburg, Germany (katarinadamcevic@gmail.com)
Editorial Assistant Silvia Cittadini,
University of Bologna
Editorial Board Sara Barbieri, IECOB, Bologna
Vesna Bojicic-Dzelilovic, London School of Economics and Political Science
Dejan Jovic,
University of Zagreb Joseph Marko, University of Graz
Sergiu Miscoiu, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj
Nermin Oruc,
Centre for Development Evaluation and Social Science Research, Sarajevo Francesco Privitera, University of Bologna
Irena Rajchinovska Pandeva,
University Cyril and Methodius, Skopje Sabrina Ramet, The Norwegian University of Science & Technology
Nikolaos Tzifakis,
University of the Peloponnese, Corinth Milica Uvalic,
University of Perugia Ilija Vujacic,
University of Donja Gorica
ArticleFirst
Current Abstracts
Electronic Collections Online
Emerging Sources Citation Index (Web of Science)
ERIH PLUS Historical Abstracts (Online)
Historical Abstracts with Full Text
International Review of Biblical Studies
MLA International Bibliography
PubMed
Russian Academy of Sciences Bibliographies
SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)
SCOPUS
[
Scopus Citescore]
TOC Premier
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Anna Krasteva is director of CERMES (Centre for Refugees, Migration and Ethnic Studies) at the New Bulgarian University in Sofia. She is doctor honoris causa of University Lille 3, France. She has edited 21 books and published numerous articles in Bulgaria, USA, France, the UK, Belgium, Russia, Switzerland, Germany, FYROM, Slovakia, Greece, Serbia, Turkey, Italy, the Netherlands, and Romania. She worked as fellow at the Institute for advanced studies in Nantes, France (January-June 2010) and lectured at several universities in Europe. Her main fields of research are post-communist democratization, migration, ethnicity, e-citizenship, digital democracy. She is member of the editorial boards several journals, including Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, (USA), REPCEE (France) and 欧洲评论/Europeana (China). She is member of a number of international scientific boards, e.g. of the Institute of Central, Eastern and Balkan Europe of the University of Bologna, of the Reseau des Maisons des Sciences de l’homme in France (2008-2012). She has been awarded the Palmes Academiques of France and is president of Amopa-Bulgarie (Association of the members of the Palmes academiques). Anna Krasteva is member of the National Board of the Diplomatic Institute.
Stefano Bianchini is Professor of Politics and History of Eastern Europe at the University of Bologna, Forlì Campus and coordinator of the
Europe and the Balkans International Network. As an expert of Balkan issues and particularly on Yugoslavia and its successor states in politics (particularly nationalism, weak states and security, transition, EU enlargement), he has coordinated several international projects for the EU and the Italian governments, giving lectures in a number of prominent US (among others, Harvard and Yale) and European Universities. He is co-directing and regularly teaching in the European Regional Master on Democracy and Human Rights, in Sarajevo. Among his publications:
From the Adriatic to the Caucasus: Viable Dynamics of Stabilization (Ravenna, 2003),
Partitions: Reshaping States and Minds (London, 2005) and
Regional Cooperation, Peace Enforcement, and the Role of the Treaties in the Balkans (Ravenna, 2007). A new book on the challenges of modernity in Eastern Europe in the 19th and the 20th centuries is forthcoming.
Editor-in-Chief: Anna Krasteva,
New Bulgarian University, Sofia
Executive Editor Stefano Bianchini,
University of Bologna
Associate Editors Marco Puleri,
University of Bologna Marco Zoppi,
University of L’Aquila
Book Review Editor Vjeran Pavlaković,
University of Rijeka
Book Review Assistant Katarina Damčević,
Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies (IOS), Regensburg, Germany (katarinadamcevic@gmail.com)
Editorial Assistant Silvia Cittadini,
University of Bologna
Editorial Board Sara Barbieri, IECOB, Bologna
Vesna Bojicic-Dzelilovic, London School of Economics and Political Science
Dejan Jovic,
University of Zagreb Joseph Marko, University of Graz
Sergiu Miscoiu, Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj
Nermin Oruc,
Centre for Development Evaluation and Social Science Research, Sarajevo Francesco Privitera, University of Bologna
Irena Rajchinovska Pandeva,
University Cyril and Methodius, Skopje Sabrina Ramet, The Norwegian University of Science & Technology
Nikolaos Tzifakis,
University of the Peloponnese, Corinth Milica Uvalic,
University of Perugia Ilija Vujacic,
University of Donja Gorica
ArticleFirst
Current Abstracts
Electronic Collections Online
Emerging Sources Citation Index (Web of Science)
ERIH PLUS Historical Abstracts (Online)
Historical Abstracts with Full Text
International Review of Biblical Studies
MLA International Bibliography
PubMed
Russian Academy of Sciences Bibliographies
SCImago Journal Rank (SJR)
SCOPUS
[
Scopus Citescore]
TOC Premier
Anna Krasteva is director of CERMES (Centre for Refugees, Migration and Ethnic Studies) at the New Bulgarian University in Sofia. She is doctor honoris causa of University Lille 3, France. She has edited 21 books and published numerous articles in Bulgaria, USA, France, the UK, Belgium, Russia, Switzerland, Germany, FYROM, Slovakia, Greece, Serbia, Turkey, Italy, the Netherlands, and Romania. She worked as fellow at the Institute for advanced studies in Nantes, France (January-June 2010) and lectured at several universities in Europe. Her main fields of research are post-communist democratization, migration, ethnicity, e-citizenship, digital democracy. She is member of the editorial boards several journals, including Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, (USA), REPCEE (France) and 欧洲评论/Europeana (China). She is member of a number of international scientific boards, e.g. of the Institute of Central, Eastern and Balkan Europe of the University of Bologna, of the Reseau des Maisons des Sciences de l’homme in France (2008-2012). She has been awarded the Palmes Academiques of France and is president of Amopa-Bulgarie (Association of the members of the Palmes academiques). Anna Krasteva is member of the National Board of the Diplomatic Institute.
Stefano Bianchini is Professor of Politics and History of Eastern Europe at the University of Bologna, Forlì Campus and coordinator of the
Europe and the Balkans International Network. As an expert of Balkan issues and particularly on Yugoslavia and its successor states in politics (particularly nationalism, weak states and security, transition, EU enlargement), he has coordinated several international projects for the EU and the Italian governments, giving lectures in a number of prominent US (among others, Harvard and Yale) and European Universities. He is co-directing and regularly teaching in the European Regional Master on Democracy and Human Rights, in Sarajevo. Among his publications:
From the Adriatic to the Caucasus: Viable Dynamics of Stabilization (Ravenna, 2003),
Partitions: Reshaping States and Minds (London, 2005) and
Regional Cooperation, Peace Enforcement, and the Role of the Treaties in the Balkans (Ravenna, 2007). A new book on the challenges of modernity in Eastern Europe in the 19th and the 20th centuries is forthcoming.
Southeastern Europe (SEEU) is a peer-reviewed journal that aims to publish innovative research on contemporary developments in Southeastern Europe.
Southeastern Europe embraces multi- and interdisciplinary scholarship and comparative approaches. The journal publishes thematic issues that contain essays, articles, interviews, debates, reviews, and news.