Υποδοχή του Ξένου Εταίρου κ. Philippe C. Schmitter, 14 Ιουνίου 2022


Τελετή υποδοχής του Ξένου Εταίρου κ. Philippe C. Schmitter, 14 Ιουνίου 2022

Την Τρίτη 14 Ιουνίου 2022 και ώρα 19.00 έλαβε χώρα η συνεδρία υποδοχής του κ. Philippe C. Schmitter, Καθηγητή Πολιτικής Επιστήμης στο Ευρωπαϊκό Πανεπιστημιακό Ινστιτούτο στη Φλωρεντία, ως Ξένου Εταίρου της Ακαδημίας Αθηνών. Κατά τη διεξαγωγή της τελετής υποδοχής, ο Ακαδημαϊκός κ. Νικηφόρος Διαμαντούρος παρουσίασε τον Καθηγητή Schmitter, ο οποίος ακολούθως έδωσε ομιλία με θέμα "Making the European Union into a Post-liberal Democracy and Why bother?

Η μαγνητοσκόπηση της συνεδρίας είναι διαθέσιμη παρακάτω.

 

Ακολουθεί η σύνοψη της ομιλίας του και σύντομο βιογραφικό σημείωμα στα Αγγλικά.

 

Synopsis: "Like virtually all national liberal democracies at the present moment, the supra-national one at the European level is also in crisis.  There is, of course, nothing new about this.  The EU has suffered and, indeed,  profited from many crises in the past ... except that this time it has to face multiple and more serious  challenges at the same time, not sequentially and incrementally as before.  In this talk, I will first analyze the nature of these coincident crises and then explore some suggested changes in institutions and practices that might be sufficient to make of the European Union, the world's largest-scale 'post-liberal' democracy."

Philippe C. Schmitter is the 2009 recipient of the Johan Skytte Prize, the ‘Nobel in Political Science’, ‘for his path-breaking work on the role of cor­poratism in modern democracies, and for his stimulating and innovative ana­lysis of democratization’. He was Professor of Political Science at the European University Institute in Florence, Department of Political and Social Sciences until September 2004. He was then nominated Professorial Fellow and later also Professor Emeritus at the same institution. Previously he was Professor in the Politics Department of the University of Chicago (1967–1984), at the European University Institute (1982–1986) and at Stan­ford (1986–1996). He has published books and articles on comparative pol­itics, on regional integration in Western Europe and Latin America, on the transition from authoritarian rule in Southern Europe and Latin America, and on the intermediation of class, sectoral and professional interests. His current work is on the political characteristics of the emerging Euro-polity, on the consolidation of democracy in Southern and Eastern countries, and on the possibility of post-liberal democracy in Western Europe and North America.