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This event occurs in the past.

History Colloquium – “Alexander Dubček and Czecho-Slovakia in 1968: Reforms, Federation and the UN”

Friday, September 27, 2013 from 12:30 pm to 12:00 am

Departmental Colloquium

“Alexander Dubček and Czecho-Slovakia in 1968: Reforms, Federation and the UN”

Dubcek Colloquium Poster

Info:

In January 1968, the election of Alexander Dubček – “a Slovak, as well as a pragmatist with relatively progressive views,” according to Canadian diplomats – to the leadership of the Communist Party, started reforms for “Socialism with a Human Face” in Czecho-Slovakia. The reforms were interrupted by the intervention from outside in August 1968. The only lasting legacy of the Dubček’s reforms was the federalization of Czecho-Slovakia. The presentation explores the legacy of the Czecho-Slovak Spring of 1968 in Canadian, U. S., Czecho-Slovak, Russian and the United Nations diplomatic documents.

Speaker:          Dr. Marcel Jesenský, Part-time Professor

The event is hosted by the Department of History of Carleton University and co-sponsored by the Embassy of the Slovak Republic in Canada, the Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies (EURUS) and the Norman Paterson School of International Affairs (NPSIA).