Annual Newsletter of the Slavic Research Center,
Hokkaido University |
SRC Home |
|
No.11
, December 2003 |
back to INDEX>> |
Nigel Swain |
Alexandre Bobrov |
Andrei Znamenski |
A New Program Starts for the
Rejuvenation of Slavic Area Studies
|
IEDA Osamu |
A new
five-year program entitled "Making a Discipline of Slavic Eurasian
Studies: Meso-areas and Globalization" was launched this year under the
initiative of the Slavic Research Center, Hokkaido University on a
special scientific research fund granted by the Japanese Ministry of
Education's 21st Century COE (Center of Excellence) Program Committee.
More than ten
years have passed since the socialist regime collapsed in the East
European countries and the Soviet Union. The 1990s were witness
to the disintegration of the communist countries and to major
transformations of the socialist systems. Following these
changes, however, the 21st century seems to be seeing, in contrast to
the previous decade, ensuing integration pressure within and toward
this area.
Although
globalization is one of the most influential factors in the background
of these integration processes, it is also true that each integration
pressure on these post-communist regions is very unique: for example,
EU enlargement from the west, Islamic revival from the south, and East
Asian vital economic growth from the east. Revival of a "strong"
Russia led by Vladimir Putin, on the other hand, may work as one of the
counter integration forces against these external pressures.
Slavic
Eurasia, the space of the former communist countries, may be a
Mega-area in this historical context, loosely combining several
Meso-areas inside. Meso-areas are shaping themselves under the
agencies of external integration forces from their neighboring regions:
for example, an emerging Central East European Meso-area under the
integration forces of EU enlargement; a Central Eurasian Meso-area
(mainly Central Asia and the Caucasus) under that of the Islamic
revival as well as "new Silk Road" projects for transport corridors;
and a Far-East & Siberian Meso-area under that of the East Asian
vital economic growth. We suppose that the Meso-area could be a
notion definable by interrelationships between external and counter
integration forces.
Since the
1980s the Slavic Research Center has been organizing annual
international symposia in Sapporo, and from the mid-1990s onward
carrying out comprehensive and interdisciplinary joint research
projects regarding changes in the Slavic Eurasian world. Through
these academic activities, the institution is now not only the national
center for Slavic Eurasian area studies in Japan, but also an
internationally recognized research engine.
On these bases
the Slavic Research Center has started this research program in order
to make contributions to rejuvenating and advancing international
Slavic Eurasian area studies in accordance with the new historical
environments of regional integrations, globalization, and re- and
multi-identification of peoples. Furthermore, we hope this
project and its analytical concepts would suggest a new imaginative
perspective to area studies in general which are in a blind alley.
Our program
includes various kinds of research and graduate education projects,
such as research projects of Meso-area studies; foreign visiting
fellowships; doctoral candidate scholarships; and post-doctorate
fellowships. We announce these projects on our Web site and
invite applicants for these fellowships and scholarships, while at the
same time distributing notices to major institutions throughout Japan
and all over the world.
We would like
to involve you and your colleagues in this program and to create closer
and deeper cooperation with overseas and domestic scholars. In
accordance with the Center's academic heritage created by our former
and senior staff members, we are convinced that nation-wide and
international cooperation is the only way to survive and develop our
academic studies on Slavic Eurasia in the age of globalization.
IEDA
Osamu
Director of the SRC