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1

Piotrowicz, Karolina, Katrin Fähling, Claire Roubaud-Baudron, Dolores Sánchez-Rodríguez, Jürgen Bauer i Jerzy Gąsowski. "Highlights of the 14th International Congress of the European Geriatric Medicine Society". European Geriatric Medicine 10, nr 6 (9.09.2019): 995–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s41999-019-00238-5.

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Abstract Purpose To report the most important messages of the 2018 EuGMS Congress in Berlin. Methods Review based on an on-site attendance in the sessions by the European Academy for Medicine of Aging graduates. Results The 14th Congress of the European Geriatric Medicine Society which took place in Berlin, Germany, from 10 to 12 October 2018, addressed the issue of challenges and opportunities associated with a fast changing modern world. Covering among other topics social issues, new technologies and the much-awaited new European definition of sarcopenia, the meeting streamed with important information. Conclusions Attended by more than 1800 participants from Europe and from across the world, it was one of the most successful geriatric events in 2018. In the following text, in preparation to the next, 15th Congress in Kraków, Poland, we briefly describe the highlights of the Berlin Congress.
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Burešová, Iva, i Jarmila Štruncová. "Open Access at the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic and Czech Digital Mathematical Library". Digital Presentation and Preservation of Cultural and Scientific Heritage 4 (30.09.2014): 155–64. http://dx.doi.org/10.55630/dipp.2014.4.17.

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We explain the principles the Open Access Policy of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic adopted as a consequence of its accession to the Berlin Declaration on Open Access. The Policy is implemented by means of Academy’s Institutional Repository. An example of a subject specialized open access repository is the Czech Digital Mathematics Library (DML-CZ) and the European Digital Mathematics Library. We discuss a special feature of the DML-CZ represented by the highly heterogeneous collections devoted to eminent personalities of the Czech mathematics.
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Matei, Oana. "Sur le progres des sciences". Journal of Early Modern Studies 8, nr 2 (2019): 81–101. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/jems20198213.

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This paper investigates the Baconian roots of Maupertuis’s Lettre XIX. Sur le Progrès des Sciences (1752). The Letter was published almost a decade after Maupertuis had accepted Frederick II’s invitation to move from Paris to Berlin and become the new President of the Prussian Academy of Sciences. Contrary to the secondary literature that identifies a distinction between Maupertuis’s Parisian and Berliner phases, this paper argues that there is in fact greater continuity between the two. Based on a reading that empha­sizes the programmatic and methodological commonalities between Bacon’s project in De augmentis scientiarum (1623) and Maupertuis’s Lettre XIX, this paper argues that, in a Baconian fashion, Maupertuis combines the roles of the “scientist” and the “natural philosopher” into an integrated plan of action with both intellectual an institutional aims. One of Maupertuis’s aims was to highlight the importance of observation and experiment not only in the development of natural philosophy but also for some aspects of speculative philosophy, while another of his aims was to reinvigorate the structure of the Berlin Academy and to model it the fashion of other similar European intellectual projects of that time.
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Earnest, Steve. "The East/West Dialectic in German Actor Training". New Theatre Quarterly 26, nr 1 (luty 2010): 81–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x10000096.

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In this article Steve Earnest discusses contemporary approaches to performance training in Germany, comparing the content and methods of selected programmes from the former Federal Republic of Germany to those of the former German Democratic Republic. The Hochschule für Musik und Theater Rostock and the University of the Arts in Berlin are here utilized as primary sources, while reference is also made to the Bayerische Theater-akademie ‘August Everding’ Prinzregententheater in Munich, the Hochschule für Musik und Theater ‘Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy’ in Leipzig, and Justus Leibig Universität in Giessen. The aim is to provide insight into theatre-training processes in Germany and to explore how these relate to the national characteristics that have emerged since reunification. Steve Earnest is Associate Professor of Theatre at Coastal Carolina University in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. His publications include The State Acting Academy of East Berlin (Mellen Press, 1999) and articles in Performer Training (Harwood Publishers, 2001), New Theatre Quarterly, Theatre Journal, and Western European Stages.
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Enyedi, György, i Krisztina Keresztély. "Love and hatred: Changing relations between the city governments of Budapest and the national governments". Ekistics and The New Habitat 70, nr 420/421 (1.08.2003): 218–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.53910/26531313-e200370420/421289.

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Professor Enyedi obtained his M.A. in Economics (1953) and his Ph. D in Economic Geography (1958) at the Budapest University of Economics. He worked for the Institute of Geography, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1960-1983 , head of department, deputy director); in 1983, he founded the Centre for Regional Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences (general director, 1983-1991; chairman of the scientific council, 1991-to date). He was elected member of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (1982) and of Academia Europaea (London). Professor Enyedi has participated in a number of international research projects organized by UNESCO, ICSU, International Geographical Union, European Science Foundation, etc. He was the chairman of the IGU Commission on Rural Development (1972-1984), and the Vice President of the IGU (1984-1992). He is an honorary member of the British Royal, Finnish, French, Croatian, Hungarian and Polish Geographical Societies. Professor Enyedi has authored 24, and edited 15 scientific books, and over 300 scientific papers. He is a member of the World Society for Ekistics. Dr Keresztély is Head of the Department at the Centre for Regional Studies, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest. Her studies include an MA in Hungarian and International History, University Eötvös Lórùnd Tudomány Egyetem, Budapest; Diplome d'Études Approfondies in Urban Geography, University of Nanterre, Paris-X; and PhD in Urban Geography, École Normale Supérieure, Paris. Her main activities focus on research in urban geography, urban policies, and urban culture; presentation of papers at major international conferences in Seoul, Korea; Berlin, Germany; Montreal, Canada; and Vienna, Austria, and a substantial number of publications. Dr Keresztely is a member of the World Society for Ekistics.
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Earnest, Steve. "Justus Leibig Universität Giessen: a New Direction in German Theatre Training". New Theatre Quarterly 19, nr 3 (sierpień 2003): 278–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266464x03000174.

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Since the post-war reorganization of education that began in 1949, the purpose and nature of German theatre training has perpetuated a division between performance and technical training, provided by vocational schools (or Hochschulen), while university programmes offer degrees in Theatre Science (Theaterwissenschaft), theory, or other academic areas. The course of studies at Justus Leibig Universität Giessen is one of the first to break away from this established model, offering a hybrid programme combining the study of theory and practice. Having featured a number of international guest artists as teachers, including Robert Wilson, Heiner Müller, John Jessurun, and Heiner Goebbels, the programme continues to be a centre of innovation in the changing landscape of German theatre education. Steve Earnest is an Assistant Professor of Theatre Arts at California State University, San Bernardino. His published work includes The State Acting Academy of East Berlin (Mellen Press, 1999), and articles in Performer Training (Harwood Publishers, 2001), Theatre Journal, Western European Stages, and The Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. He is also active in southern California professional theatre.
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Schulte-Wülwer, Ulrich. "Deutsch-dänische Kunstbeziehungen 1820 bis 1920". Nordelbingen: Beiträge zur Geschichte der Kunst und Kultur, Literatur und Musik in Schleswig-Holstein, nr 89 (grudzień 2023): 115–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.38072/2941-3362/p6.

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In the last decade of the 18th century, the Danish state experienced a period of prosperity, which was characterized by a German-Danish cultural transfer in all intellectual fields. The first clouds were cast by the rise of an artistic self-confidence. Asmus Jacob Carstens from Schleswig and Ernst Meyer from Altona, who felt disadvantaged in the awarding of medals and protested vehemently, were expelled from the art academy in Copenhagen in 1781 and 1821. Nevertheless, the Copenhagen Art Academy had a strong attraction for numerous artists from northern Germany. In this respect, Caspar David Friedrich, Philipp Otto Runge and Georg Friedrich Kersting are primarily worthy of mention. The Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen was a strong link between the Germans and Scandinavians living in Rome throughout his life. The first cracks in the good bilateral relationship came with the strengthening of the national liberal movements. In 1842, the influential teacher at the Copenhagen Art Academy, N.L. Høyen, drew up a program aimed at repressing influences from abroad, especially from Germany. Not all artists heeded Høyens call for a return to national themes of history, folk life, and nature, so that two groups confronted each other in Denmark: the nationalists and the Europeans. With the German-Danish War of 1848/51 there was a rift, and with the war of 1864 the final break. Only after twenty years did the academies of Copenhagen and Berlin resume contact. From 1883 onwards, there were reciprocal visits, which led to Danish artists once again taking part in representative exhibitions in Berlin or Munich. Conversely, however, German artists were denied participation in exhibitions in Copenhagen, an exception being the International Art Exhibition on the inauguration of the Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen in 1897. A spirit freed from all academic constraints also emanated from the artist colonies in Europe. In particular, the works of the Skagen painters were enthusiastically celebrated at exhibitions in Munich and Berlin, which led to some German painters traveling to the Danish artists' colony, where they were received without prejudice. However, at no time was there a balance in the official acceptance and appreciation of the art of the respective neighbouring country. While painters such as Michael Ancher and Peder Severin Krøyer sold works to renowned collectors and museums in Germany, no Danish Museum acquired the work of a German artist during the period under study. The Berlin painter Walter Leistikow, who was married to a Danish woman, worked hard to stimulate a German-Danish art transfer and succeeded in getting the leading Danish gallery owner Valdemar Kleis to offer German painters the opportunity to exhibit in Copenhagen for the first time in 1894, most of whom belonged to the group Die XI, a precursor of the Berlin Secession. The appreciation of the Skagen painters was replaced at the turn of the century by admiration works by F.J. Willumsen and Vilhelm Hammershøj. Hammershøj filled a room of his own at the Great Berlin Art Exhibition in 1900 with 14 works, and the Schulte Gallery in Berli While German admiration for Danish art peaked between 1890 and 1900, people in Denmark continued to look past the German art scene. This was also experienced by the artists' group Die Brücke, which sought foreign members soon after its founding. When Kleis presented works by the Brücke artists in Copenhagen in 1908, they too received only negative reviews. In March 1910, the time seemed ripe for a change of mood. The Berlin gallery owner Herwarth Walden strove to make his Sturm-Galerie a rallying point for the European modernist art movements. In July 1912, he rented the exhibition building of the secessionist group Den Frie in Copenhagen and held an exhibition of Italian Futurists there. When Walden was celebrated by the Danish press as a cosmopolitan who had brought modernism to Copenhagen, he showed works by the French Henri le Fauconier and Raoul Dufy, as well as the painters Marianne von Werefkin and Gabriele Münter, but the tenor of the press was again dominated by anti-German resentment. After the outbreak of World War I, Walden allowed himself to be abused by the German propaganda department of the German Secret and Intelligence Service, which strove to correct the image of Germans abroad as cultural barbarians. Walden showed works by Kandinsky, Klee, Kokoschka, Marc, and again Gabriele Münter at the Copenhagen artists’ cabaret Edderkoppen in the fall of 1917. He also planned an exhibition of Danish avant-garde in his Sturm Gallery in Berlin, but the artists had become suspicious in the face of German propaganda, which was celebrating a last military success. The exhibition was canceled. This did not prevent Walden from organizing an exhibition at Kleis’ art shop in Copenhagen shortly before the end of the war, under the guise of internationalism. This was Walden's largest and most ambitious project in Scandinavia. Of the 133 works exhibited, almost half came from Germany. The attempt to convince the Danes of the excellence of German art failed miserably, because the basic conviction was still: Everything that comes from Germany is bad. The opening took place on November 28 and ended on December 16, 1918, by which time the war was already over.
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Polenakovic, Momir H. "Artificial Organs 2000 ESAO". PRILOZI 41, nr 3 (1.11.2020): 77–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/prilozi-2020-0049.

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AbstractArtificial Organs 2000 Satellite Symposium of European Society for Artificial Organs (ESAO) was organized by the Macedonian Society for Nephrology, Dialysis, Transplantation and Artificial Organs (MSNDTAO) and the Macedonian Academy of Sciences and Arts (MASA) on November 25-26, 2000 on the occasion of the 25th Anniversary of the Department of Nephrology of the Ss. Cyril and Methodius University, Skopje, R. Macedonia.The main topics of this symposium were: Blood-purification techniques, Artificial Kidney, Metabolic- and Cardiac-Assist Systems as well as Biomaterials to be used for Artificial Organs.H. Klinkmann (Glasgow, United Kingdom), D. Falkenhagen (Krems, Austria), U. Baurmeister (Wuppertal, Germany), V. Bonomini, S. Stefoni (Bologna, Italy), R. Vanholder (Ghent, Belgium), S. Stiller (Aachen, Germany), H. Mann, H. Melzer (Aachen, Germany), J. Pop-Jordanov, N. Pop-Jordanova (Skopje, R. Macedonia), B. Stegmayr (Umea, Sweden), M. Mydlik, K. Derzisova, O. Racz, A. Sipulova, J. Boldizsar, E. Lovasova, M. Hribikova (Kosice, Slovak Republic), A. Jörres (Berlin, Germany), M. Polenakovic (Skopje, R. Macedonia), J. Vienken (Bad Homburg, Germany), S. Bowry (Bad Homburg, Germany), E. Piskin (Ankara, Turkey), J. Klinkmann, W. Schimmelpfennig, H. Lantow, W. Rigger. (Teterow, Germany), A. Sikole (Skopje, R. Macedonia), A. Oncevski, P. Dejanov, V. Gerasimovska, M. Polenakovic (Skopje, R. Macedonia), J. Wojcicki (Warsaw, Poland), K. Affeld (Berlin, Germany), G. Rakhorst et al. (Groningen, The Netherlands), Z. Mitrev (Skopje, R. Macedonia), S. Kedev, G. Guagliumi, O. Valsecchi, M. Tespili (Skopje, R. Macedonia, Bergamo, Italy) have presented their papers at the Symposium. The presentations provoked a fruitful discussion and it was concluded that they should be published.The papers were published in the International Journal of Artificial Organs of the European Society for Artificial Organs (ESAO) as a special issue on “Artificial Organs 2000 ESAO Satellite Symposium -Skopje, R. Macedonia”, Guest Editors: M. H. Polenakovic, Skopje and J. Vienken, Bad Homburg; Vol. 25, No. 5, 2002.
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Solleveld, Floris. "Expanding the comparative view". Historiographia Linguistica 47, nr 1 (16.10.2020): 52–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/hl.00062.sol.

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Summary Wilhelm von Humboldt’s Über die Kawi-Sprache auf der Insel Java can be seen as the first comparative grammar of non-Indo-European languages. While Humboldt’s practice of collecting and re-assembling linguistic information has been documented extensively in the Berlin Academy edition of his Schriften zur Sprachwissenschaft, this article puts his work in perspective by tracing it back to its sources and treating it as part of a wider parallel process of expanding the comparative view. In three sections, this article discusses (1) the research agendas of the three British colonial scholars upon whose works Humboldt drew for Malayan languages; (2) to which extent his Polynesian language material was ‘rawer’ than these compendia; and (3) how he reworked this material into a comparative Malayo-Polynesian grammar. Finally, a comparison is drawn with the work of his assistant and continuator Eduard Buschmann, and with Horatio Hale’s slightly later survey of the languages of the Pacific.
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ERICH, Agnes Terezia. "DIMITRIE CANTEMIR PROMINENT REPRESENTATIVE OF ROMANIAN ENCYCLOPEDISM". International Journal of Theology, Philosophy and Science 7, nr 12 (12.05.2023): 5–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.26520/ijtps.2023.7.12.5-11.

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This year was declared the Dimitrie Cantemir Cultural Year in Romania, taking into account that 350 years have passed since the birth, respectively 300 years since the death of the most famous encyclopedist of Romanian culture. The work of the Moldavian savant contributed to an extraordinary cultural development, also marking the beginning of the theorizing of new ideas in literature, history and philosophy. His works were appreciated by contemporaries of his time in European countries with advanced culture, for which international recognition came to him in his lifetime through his election as a member of the Berlin Academy. Having real qualities of analysis and synthesis of events, as well as the desire to verify any information he referred to, all this led to the creation of an impressive work. In this work we want to point out his main contributions to the cultural edification of the Romanian nation, emphasizing the innovative initiatives of his main writings.
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Paksiutov, G. "“Soft Power” and “Cultural Capital” of Nations: the Case of Film Industry". World Economy and International Relations 64, nr 11 (2020): 106–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.20542/0131-2227-2020-64-11-106-113.

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The article showcases the similarities between Joseph Nye’s concept of soft power and Pierre Bourdieu’s theory of capital, and attempts to draw upon the latter to deepen the understanding of the role of culture as a source of soft power. This approach is applied to study the role of a national film industry as a soft power tool. First, based on the existing academic literature, some key concepts relevant to the film industry are conceptualized in terms of Bourdieu’s theory of capital. After that, Bourdieu’s research frameworks – particularly, the concept of cultural capital – are used to describe how national film industry contributes to a nation’s cultural influence on the global stage. The author specifically highlights the importance of consideration of “institutionalized cultural capital” (or institutional recognition) and presents some evidence on film awards, namely, the awards from three large European film festivals (Berlin, Venice and Cannes) and Academy Award for Best Foreign Language film. It is emphasized that European countries (such as Italy and France) and the U.S. are in advantageous position in regard to this component of cultural influence: motion pictures produced by these countries receive awards very frequently, while, for instance, African and South American films are awarded scarcely. Such tendencies demonstrate unequal possibilities of countries for the use of national cinema as a tool of cultural influence. The author asserts that a national “soft power strategy” can be seen, in terms of Bourdieu’s theory of capital, as a capital conversion strategy, and discusses the implications of such approach. Furthermore, the applicability of Bourdieu’s theory of capital for the analysis of Russian cinema as a soft power tool is discussed. In conclusion, the author summarizes theoretical and practical implications of the proposed approach, draws attention to some of possible directions for further research.
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Blikharskyi, Roman. "Publications of the Shevchenko Scientific Society in the evaluation of european scientific journals: the communication aspect". Presoznavstvo. Press Studies, nr 3 (2023): 3–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.37222/2786-7552-2023-3-1.

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The article examines reviews dedicated to the works of the Shevchenko Scientific Society published in scientific journals in Vienna, Berlin, Budapest, Prague, Warsaw, Lviv, and others. The collected empirical material is analyzed in terms of the issues surrounding the history of communication among scholars within the broader European intellectual space from the late 19th to the early 20th century. To address the research question, the article formulates the concept of scientific communication, characterizes general features of the development of scientific communication in Europe as a whole, and outlines the peculiarities of historical socio-political circumstances against which the formation of Ukrainian scientific culture took place. The historical circumstances of the initiation of scientific activities by the Shevchenko Scientific Society are depicted, including the reasons and prerequisites for the Society’s foundation, its functioning at the initial stages, and the names and orientations of the main publications and journals under the auspices of the Society. A brief description of the journals containing reviews were included: «Kievskaia Staryna», «Etnograficheskoe Obozrenie», «Lud», «Kwartalnik historyczny», «Wisła», «Biblioteka Warszawska», «Národopisný Sborník Českoslovanský», «Századok», «Zeitschrift des Vereins für Volkskunde», «Archiv für slavische Philologie», «Zeitschrift für österreichische Volkskunde» etc have been given. A number of facts from the biographies of some authors have been revealed, among them prominent European historians, ethnologists, philologists, literary experts, linguists, and lawyers. The trends in the assessment were analyzed, the features of rhetoric were revealed, the attitude of the authors of the researched publications to the publications of the National Academy of Sciences was revealed, and their thematic spectrum has been determined. Keywords: Shevchenko Scientific Society, scientific commu­nication, scientific journals, review.
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Radyshevskyi, Rostyslav, i Ivan Zymomrya. "A WORD ABOUT CREATIVE PROGRESS: MYKOLA ZYMOMRYA IS 75". Polish Studies of Kyiv, nr 37 (2021): 394–424. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/psk.2021.37.394-424.

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The article is dedicated to the 75-years-old jubilee of a well-known literary critic, translator, educationalist, Doctor hab. of Philological Sciences, Professor Mykola Zymomrya. The article reflects the main milestones of his life and career. Mykola Zymomrya was born in 1946 in Holatyn in Ukraine. Main directions of activity: German studies, Slavic studies, contrastive literary studies, theory of literature, translation studies. Professional career: finished secondary school in Holatyn and graduated from Uzhhorod State University (Departments of Ukrainian and German Philology). After graduating from the Faculty of Foreign Languages (1967) was a teacher of the German language and literature at the Department of German Philology; a doctorate (1969–1972) at Humboldt University of Berlin where his doctoral thesis was written on the topic “Reception of Ukrainian literature in German-speaking countries from its sources until 1917. To the history of Russian-Ukrainian-German mutual literary relations“ (1972). His doctoral dissertation on the topic „International relations and the role of translation in the creative process” was written in the Gorky Institute of World Literature of the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow and was defended in 1984. Academic titles: assistant professor (1976); professor (1987). Head of the Department of German Philology (1974–1979); scientific worker at the Gorky Institute of World Literature (1980–1982); head of the Department of Foreign Languages at Uzhhorod State University (1986–1993); professor at Higher Pedagogical School in Słupsk (1993–1995); professor at Transcarpathian Institute of Postgraduate Pedagogical Education (1996–2002); professor at Baltic High School of Human Sciences in Koszalin (1997–2002); professor at Polonia University in Czestochowa (2002–2012); professor at Drohobych State Pedagogical University of Ivan Franko (since 2000), head of the Department of Theory and Practice of Translation (2003–2010), head of Germanic Languages and Translation Studies Department (since 2010). Over 1000 scientific articles have been published (1970–2021) on issues in literature studies and criticism in newspapers, periodical publications, thematic collections, monographic publications, including in Polish. Membership in associations and organisations: Member of the National Union of Journalists of Ukraine (1980), Member of the National Writers’ Union of Ukraine (2008), Member of the Academy of Sciences of the Higher School of Ukraine in Kyiv (2008), Head of the Commission for Cooperation with Polonia Scientific Societies in Ukraine, USA, European Union and Baltic Countries (2010). Prior awards: state award “Honours in Education in Ukraine” (1996), Honorary Distinction “Deserved for Koszalin Voivodeship” (1998), Award of the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine “For outstanding learning achievements” (2009), award of the National Academy of Pedagogical Sciences of Ukraine “K.D. Ushynski” (2011), award of the Academy of Higher School of Ukraine “Yaroslav Mudry” (2011), Honoured Scientist and Technician of Ukraine (2017).
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Zöllner, Oliver. "Angus Finney: A Dose of Reality. The State of European Cinema. Published by the European Film Academy and Screen International. — London: EMAP Media, distributed by Vistas Verlag, Berlin 1993, 111 Seiten mit zahlr. Abb., DM 30,–." Publizistik 40, nr 3 (wrzesień 1995): 403–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/bf03654108.

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Kazhar, Nina V., Mariusz Zadworny i Nina Sołkiewicz-Kos. "From the History of the Formation of the European Doctrine of Protection and Restoration of Monuments at the End of the 18th — 19th Century (for Example, Marienburg Castle)". Vestnik of Saint Petersburg University. Arts 13, nr 1 (2023): 147–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu15.2023.107.

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The article examines new facts about the beginning of the formation of the European (primarily German) doctrine of the protection of monuments, which also laid the foundations of the modern Polish theory and practice of preserving the architectural heritage and scientific restoration. The role of the aesthetics of romanticism in the formation of historicism and awareness of the importance of cultural heritage is shown. The history of the development of the theoretical, systemic and legal basis for the protection of monuments, based on a new assessment of their role in the formation of the culture of the nation, is presented. The role of the memorandum “Preservation of all monuments and antiquities of our country” (1815) by Karl Friedrich Schinkel in the preservation of German architectural monuments was noted. The authorship of the drawings of Marienburg in 1794 is proved. Evidence is given that he was Friedrich Gilly (1748–1808), i. e. Gilly-a son. It is noted, that the exhibition of these drawings at the Berlin Academy of Arts (1795) played an important role in re-evaluating the culture of the Middle Ages during the period of the “conflict” of the ideas of the Enlightenment and Romanticism at the turn of the 18th–19th centuries (“about 1800”). On the example of the history of the “restoration” of the Marienburg castle (today Malbork) the change in the methods of restoration of the 19th century is shown, the contribution of famous cultural figures and leading architects to the organization and conduct of restoration work is noted.
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Dedinkin, M. O. "Friedrich Wilhelm Brass, Creator of the Genossenschaft for Proletarian Art in Berlin: the First Experience of a Biography". Art & Culture Studies, nr 3 (sierpień 2022): 38–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.51678/2226-0072-2022-3-38-63.

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The purpose of this article is to study the life and activity of Friedrich Wilhelm Brass, founder of Genossenschaft for Proletarian Art in Berlin (1920). Friedrich Wilhelm Brass (1873–1931) throughout his life sought to combine the commercial interests of a contemporary art dealer with the ideas of the social reorganization of the world. One of the first to call himself a communist in Germany, he created in 1920 in Berlin the Genossenschaft for Proletarian Art, the collection of which became the first contemporary western art brought to Soviet Russia. On the basis of this collection kept in the Hermitage and the Russian Academy of Arts, archival materials and work in museum collections in Germany, the history of the emergence of the Genossenschaft in Berlin in 1920, the composition of the participants and the biography of its creator are reconstructed. The relevance and novelty of the article is due to the lack of scientific research on this issue discovered by the author in his works. The life path of F.W. Brass is consistently considered. Trained as a craftsman in Krefeld, Brass made several attempts to establish an art trade there, primarily aimed at the workers’ milieu. A member of the Social Democratic Party of Germany, he tried to interest the party in the prospect of such educational and agitational work. These initiatives proved to be financially untenable. Brass later worked at the German Workshops Hellerau, where the manufacturer Karl Schmidt implemented a project for the mass production of furniture designed by leading European designers and oriented to the widest and most democratic market. During the First World War, Brass was mobilized and spent several years in captivity in Russia, where he met the revolution and returned to Germany in 1919 as a convinced supporter of the communist reorganization of the world. After the November Revolution, several artistic organizations arose in Berlin, whose activities were directed towards the proletariat (the Workers’ Council for Art, the Association of Socialist Artists, the Union for Proletarian Culture, the Proletarian Theatre of Erwin Piscator, etc.). Among them was the Genossenschaft for Proletarian Art of the communist Brass, who collected the works of left-wing artists, mainly expressionists of the first and second generation. Like most of these artistic initiatives, the Brass Genossenschaft could not survive the economic crisis. The unique collection of the Genossenschaft was acquired during a trip to Germany by Comintern Chairman G. Zinoviev in October 1920 and brought to Soviet Russia. Later, during the years of the Weimar Republic, Brass no longer undertook such ambitious projects, continuing to trade in the works of left-wing artists. He worked in Hagen and Düsseldorf, where he died in 1931. The author comes to the conclusion that the figure of Brass represents a new type of entrepreneur for the art market of the 20th century, focused primarily on the promotion of the latest art among the workers, agitation for a new life in the language of art.
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Timokhin, Viktor, Maryna Harbar i Viktoria Shchurova. "Conceptuality and rationality in underground spaces transport interchange hub organization". Current problems of architecture and urban planning, nr 67 (27.10.2023): 382–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.32347/2077-3455.2023.67.382-393.

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The article substantiates the necessity of combining modern methods of underground urban planning in areas of special urban planning value, which include transport interchanges and their adjacent territories. Techniques for the rational organization of service facilities and prospects for the development of accompanying functional areas are formulates. A modern multi-functional complex as part of a transport interchange hubs requires the use of new means of forming the architectural environment: external and internal organization of underground space. The purpose of the publication is to argue for the optimization of the development of public service facilities of transport interchanges due to the organization of underground spaces and to determine the main advantages of rationality. Analysis of the Utrecht and Berlin stations as examples of European experience in the operation and development of transport hubs demonstrates the main advantages of rationality in the organization of underground spaces. The concept, which reorganizes transfer points into small businesses and shopping centers, integrates them into underground spaces: places for holding exhibitions and business events, conference halls. Effective using of land resources helps to free up the territory for pedestrian areas. Using of modern technologies in the field of energy efficiency and ecology correspond to the direction of sustainable development; separation of traffic and pedestrian flows, organization of the shortest paths to various types of transport and evacuation are beneficial when used as a shelter; economic efficiency increases the urban value of the territory. The topic of conceptual design, introduced at the Department of Architectural Environment Design in Kyiv National University of Construction and Architecture when developing a highly urbanized transport hub in accordance with the concept of the location of high-rise buildings in Kyiv, approved by the Academy of Architecture of Ukraine.
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Hofmann, Murad Wilfried. "Leopold Weiss alias Muhammad Asad". American Journal of Islam and Society 19, nr 3 (1.07.2002): 143–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.35632/ajis.v19i3.1934.

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It is now 10 years that Muhammad Asad, the twentieth-century's most influ­ential European Muslim, left us. But aside from his own biographical writ­ings-the best-seller The Road to Mecca (1954) and his 1988 interview with his old employer, the Franlifitrter (Allgemeine) 'ZeJtung- until recently there was no comprehensive biography of this illustrious man. This lacuna has now been filled -at least up to his official conversion to Islam in Berlin (1926) and Cairo (1927). This covers his quest as a student, film librettist, and jour­nalist "from Galicia [his native Lemberg and Czernovitz] to Arabia," ending with his preparations for ha]. The author is an unassuming but enthusiastic research assistant for eth­nology at Vienna's Austrian Academy of Sciences. Working like a detective and a good prosecutor (never taking a confession at face value), he has writ­ten what promises to become the definite biography of the early Leopold Weiss. His pioneering book is welcome for its set of rare (and mostly unpub­lished) photographs. Of these, a 1932 portrait makes the front cover haunt­ingly compelling by showing a Ghandi-like Asad with a shaven head and penetrating yet sensitive black eyes. Even better, it includes a three-page chronology, a complete list of his publications that tracks 45 German news­paper articles, and a three-page list of publications on Asad. And yet, despite its being so uncompromisingly academic, his text reads like a novel. It is no surprise that the author discovered that some of The Road to Mecca is elegantly fictitious and, according to Pola Hamida Asad, essen­ tially a "spiritual autobiography." (Did not Johann Wolfgang van Goethe entitle his Fact and Fiction?) Thus it is now established that his first wife, Elsa Schiemann (nee Sprecht) was not 15 but 22 years older than him, that her little son accompanied them on both "Oriental Journeys" (1922-23 and 1924-26), and that Zayd (their Arab companion) was a literary invention. Windhager reveals other more important facts: details about his moth­er's Feigenbawn family; the fate of his father, stepmother, and siblings (Dr. med. Heinrich Weiss and Dr.jur. Rachel Weiss) under Nazism, and Asad's attempts to save them from the concentration camps; his days at Vienna University, where he not only studied the history of art and philosophy but ...
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Bricage, Pierre. "International Academy for Systems and Cybernetic Sciences (IASCYS): The first awards of the International Prize". Acta Europeana Systemica 8 (11.07.2020): 391–94. http://dx.doi.org/10.14428/aes.v8i1.56583.

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For the first time the International Academy for Systems and Cybernetic Sciences, IASCYS, ( http://iascys.org), has awarded the Charles François International Prize, during the 10thUES-EUS Congress (http://ues-eus.eu), in Brussels, Belgium, Europe. The first step of the procedure was the nomination of interesting papers through asking for the reviewing process by all IASCYS Academicians. So, 6 weeks before the start of the meeting, a booklet of 40 abstracts, all previously anonymously peer-reviewed by the scientific committee of the congress, and each as a 1 page of text, with neither author(s) name(s), nor affiliation(s) or references, was sent to all Academicians. After a 1 month delay, 10 papers of people from 9 Countries (Algeria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Russia), have been nominated by Academicians, by e-mails replies. After the congress organizers have proposed as jurors a team of 3 systems scientists who all are speaking both French and English (the official formal languages of the UES-EUS congress), an equal number of 3 Academicians, who are as well fluent in English, French and other languages, attended as the IASCYS part of the jury. After this key step of peers pre-selection, the second step, during the meeting in Brussels, was for all 6 jurors to listen and participate to the corresponding talks-debate for each of the selected papers, in order to rank the top 3 of the most promising works, and then to reflect on the final ranking for the award. The jurors were anonymous. The listening process was the usual process of talk (20 min) and questions (10 min) with the public as in every congress, but also with personal no-formal discussion of jurors with the nominated persons. The first Charles François International Prize of the Academy (gold medal) was awarded to Julio LABORDE, a young Chilean research engineer who is working in the International industrial firm 'Insight Signals'. He is also a student in the prestigious École Pratique des Hautes Études, in Paris, France. His talk was about "Extraction of Information from Agent Base Models. A new pre-topological metric for controlling the propagation of crises." It took place during the 'Methods and tools for risk management of complex socio-technical systems'session. No discussion, his work was the most promising work of the congress. His work was the most promising work of this congress of the European Union for Systemics.This second step allows also, after a debate, to award 3 second places (3 silver medals). They all got the Charles François tutorial in Systems Science on a USB stick and they all, gold and silver medals (Figure 1), will have a certificate of ranking. But, all of them, will get their certificates of award/ranking only after their paper proof will be corrected and accepted. The other 3 certificated persons, silver medals, are (by alphabetic order): -Mick ASHBY, a research engineer in computing sciences who is working for IBM in Germany. His work was about the application of a new paradigm 'The Ethical Regulator Theorem'; -Tjorven HARMSEN, a very young Swedish women who is in Ph. D. in the Leibniz Institute for Research on Society and Space, in Berlin (Germany). Her work was ab out 'Crisis as Social Autocatalysis. On the emergence and Utilization of Opportunities' (a very promising talk, a young researcher to follow; and -Daniela TERRILE, a women who is Professor in the Department of Design at the Polytechnic Institute of Milano, Italy. Her work was about 'Applications of the Target Constellation Model'. 2 other works were also very interesting but one was not into the book of abstracts (it was not peer-reviewed), the other one was into it but it was not pre-selected. No process is perfect. But the rule is the rule: no peer-reviewing, no preselection, means no competition. The important point is that few of the 'preselected and nominated, but not ranked in the top 3' participants said they will attend the next one edition of the Prize in Morocco. And other young researchers said they will do their best to attend another occurrence of the Prize. The Prize was opened to strengthen multi-disciplinary research and the multi-language communication of recent results, towards a worldwide education in Cybernetics and Systems Thinking (Bricage, 2017), which are aims of the Academy (Bricage, 2014). “Want to influence the world? Map reveals the best languages to speak.” (Ronen et al., 2014). On the IASCYS website you will find the rules of the Prize, in English, Spanish, French and Russian.
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Kovaľ, Tomáš, Petra Lipovová, Tomáš Podzimek, Jaroslav Matoušek, Jan Stránský, Jarmila Dušková, Karla Fejfarová, Tereza Skálová, Jindřich Hašek i Jan Dohnálek. "Eukaryotic zinc-dependent multifunctional nuclease I". Acta Crystallographica Section A Foundations and Advances 70, a1 (5.08.2014): C211. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s2053273314097885.

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Members of eukaryotic nuclease I family are usually zinc, magnesium or calcium dependent, relatively small (about 300 amino acids) glycoproteins with important roles in various apoptotic processes, stress response, DNA repair machinery or sustenance scavenging. They produce 5'-mononucleotides, inorganic phosphate and mononucleosides as end products, have acidic pH optima and are able to cleave different homopolymers with usually no preference for DNA or RNA. P1/S1-like nucleases, a subgroup of nuclease I family, are zinc-dependent, with phospholipase C-like fold. They can be divided to single-strand specific (eg. S1 nuclease from Aspergillus oryzae) or unspecific. TBN1 from Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) is an unspecific P1/S1-like nuclease composed of 277 amino acids with a molecular mass of 37 kDa (when fully glycosylated). TBN1 plays an important role in specific apoptotic functions and cell senescence in plants and also exhibits anticancerogenic properties [1]. For our studies TBN1 was produced recombinantly in Nicotiana benthamiana leafs. Crystals were obtained using a combination of salt and polymer. Datasets for structural analysis were collected at BESSY II (Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin) [2]. The final model was built and refined using data to 2.15 Å resolution. TBN1 is mainly α-helical with fold stabilized by four disulfide bridges and by the catalytic zinc cluster coordinated at the bottom of the active site cleft. Three oligosaccharides bonded on the surface significantly contribute to solubility of the enzyme. Oligomerization of TBN1 is mediated by binding of a peptide chain to the active site of a neighboring molecule and can be induced by inorganic phosphate. Based on the distribution of surface residues the possible binding sites for nucleic acids with secondary structure were identified. The newly discovered phospholipase activity significantly broadens the substrate promiscuity of TBN1 [3]. This work was supported by the Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic (grant No. EE2.3.30.0029), by the project ,,BIOCEV – Biotechnology and Biomedicine Centre of the Academy of Sciences and Charles University (CZ.1.05/1.1.00/02.0109), from the European Regional Development Fund, Grant Agency of the Czech Technical University in Prague, grant No. SGS13/219/OHK4/3T/14 and by Institute of Plant Molecular Biology, Biology Centre, AS CR, RVO:60077344.
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Tratsiak, Katsiaryna, Tatyana Prudnikova, Ivana Drienovska, Lukas Chrast, Jiri Damborsky, Pavlina Rezacova, Michal Kuty, Radka Chaloupkova i Ivana Kuta Smatanova. "Crystal structure of the novel haloalkane dehalogenases". Acta Crystallographica Section A Foundations and Advances 70, a1 (5.08.2014): C1678. http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/s2053273314083211.

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Haloalkane dehalogenases (EC 3.8.1.5; HLDs) are microbial enzymes with catalytic activity for the hydrolytic conversion of xenobiotic and highly toxic halogenated aliphatic compounds to the corresponding alcohols. Biodegradation, biosensing, biocatalysis and cellular imaging are potentially practical applications for the HLDs. Two newly isolated and purified psychrophilic haloalkane dehalogenases, exhibiting interesting catalytic properties, DpcA from Psychrobacter cryohalolentis K5 and DmxA from Marinobacter sp. ELB17, were used for the crystallization experiments and structure determination. Diffracted crystals of DpcA(left) and DmxA(right) (see figure, the scale bar -100μm) were refined up to the 1.05 Å and 1.45 Å resolutions, respectively. Diffraction data for DpcA were collected on beamline 14.2 at the BESSY II electron-storage ring (Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB), Germany) and equipped with a Rayonics MX-225 CCD detector at the wavelengths of 0.978 Å, and for DmxA were collected using Pilatus 6M-F detector at the wavelengths of 0.972 Å on the beamline ID29, at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) in Grenoble (France). Crystals of DpcA belonged to P21 space group with unit-cell parameters: a = 41.3, b = 79.4, c = 43.5 A °, α = β = 90.0, γ = 95.0 and contained 1 molecule in the asymmetric unit. Crystals of DmxA belonged to P212121 space group, with unit-cell parameters: a = 43.371, b = 78.343, c = 150.51; α = γ = β = 90.0 and contained 2 molecules in the asymmetric unit. The structures were solved by molecular replacement with MOLREP from the CCP4 software suite. The coordinates of Xanthobacter autotrophicus (PDB code: 1B6G; 40% sequence identities for 121 residues and 53% sequence similarity was used as search model for DpcA structure and for DmxA from Rhodococcus rhodochrous (PDB entry 4E46; 48% sequence identity for 142 residues and 63% sequence similarity). Belonging to the superfamily of α/β - hydrolases, according to the catalytic pentad, HLDs are subdivided onto the three subfamilies. DpcA belongs to the HLD - I: Asp- His - Asp + Trp - Trp and DmxA to the HLD – II: Asp - His - Glu + Asn - Trp. We thank M. Weiss and S. Pühringer (BESSY). This work is supported by the Grant Agency of the Czech Republic (P207/12/0775).Also by the Ministry of Education of the Czech Republic (CZ.1.05/2.1.00/01.0024 and CZ.1.05/2.1.00/01.0001). The support of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic is acknowledged as well.
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Seadle, Michael. "The European iSchools". Bulletin of the Association for Information Science and Technology 42, nr 4 (kwiecień 2016): 26–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/bul2.2016.1720420408.

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EDITOR'S SUMMARYStarted in the late 1990s by deans of three library schools in the United States, the iSchool movement has grown to include 16 European institutions. The expansion required revision of the original North American model, assumptions about academic positions and funding. Among the European schools, some differences exist in curricular focus, though funding needs may reinforce subject area overlap. As an example, the Berlin School of Library and Information Science offers multiple programs at the bachelor's, master's and doctoral levels, with varying curricula focusing on practical librarianship, computer emphasis or extended research. The curricula at other European iSchools, their research pursuits and employment opportunities for bachelor's and master's program graduates vary widely. Most attaining a doctorate degree go into management since academic positions are limited. European iSchools collaborate through planning, exchange programs and a shared doctoral colloquium, and funding sources reward cooperative institutional efforts and geographic diversity.
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Troebst, Stefan. "On Trying To Be a Historian of Eastern Europe”: A Migratory Interim Balance. Part 2". Slavic World in the Third Millennium 16, nr 3-4 (2021): 165–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2412-6446.2021.16.3-4.10.

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This autobiographic (and thus highly subjective) text asks what motived a non-Eastern European, born in 1955 in West Germany, to become a historian of Eastern Europe. The answers are, on the one hand, an interest in (Slavic) languages and (Cold War) politics, and, to a lesser extent, family background, and, on the other, coincidence and the opportunities for fellowship. Part 1 of the article traced the author’s biography from his high-school years to his first modest academic achievements. Part 2 covers his professional path till retirement in 2021 – leading not only to universities like Uppsala, Hamburg, and finally Leipzig, but also into international institutions outside academia, such as the Slavic Unit of the British Military Government of Berlin, the CSCE / OSCE missions of long-duration in Macedonia and Moldova (in particular in the Dnestr region and Gagauzia), and – as founding director – to the Danish-German European Centre for Minority Issues (ECMI) in Flensburg.
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Baltag, Ingrid. "Rumänistik in Berlin: die Geschichte einer philologischen Kleindisziplin". Philologica Jassyensia 37, nr 1 (28.06.2023): 273–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.60133/pj.2023.1.19.

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"This study is a short history of the Academic teaching of Romanian language and literature in Berlin since the foundation of the Romance Languages Studies. Romanian appears for the first time as an academic curricula at the beginning of the 20th century at the Friedrich-Wilhelms-University which after WW II was called Humboldt-University and remained in the eastern sphere after the division of the city of Berlin in east and west. In 1949 the Freie University of Berlin will be established in the western part of the city with support of the US-Government. From this moment on, we have two academic institutes for Romance languages in Berlin offering Romanian Studies, one in the Eastern and one in the Western part of the city. This paper highlights the personalities and their activities in the development of the curricula of these studies in the historical context from the social and political standpoint. We give an outline of how the Romanian teaching developed after the Fall of Berlin Wall and at what point we are now today. Hariton Tiktin was the first scholar to found the department of Romanian language at the Berlin University. Despite his valuable contribution through his comprehensive dictionary, his academic personality has gone forgotten. Tiktin was followed in the 1930s by Ernst Gamillscheg, an Austrian with strong sympathies for the upcoming national-socialist and fascist politics. Retrospectively his academic role in the two decades has been subject to controversy. The second half of this period is also marked by the Romanian linguist Sextil Pușcariu, that was active in Berlin as an academic scholar, being a guest lecturer at the University and as a founder of the Romanian Cultural Institute. The Ending of the War was characterized by a denazification of the academic world, and shows that the measures have never been consistent. The case Bucur is just a tragic academic anecdote. The Afterwar finds the Cold War represented by two competing Universities, and each of them had a Romanian department. On one hand in the western Free University Romanian was focused on Eastern European Studies and in the context of the Romance Philology as well, on the other hand in the Humboldt University the emphasis was on Language Studies and Translation. With the Fall of the Berlin Wall there is a slow change in the curricula reducing Romanian Studies in both Universities to the point that Romanian has been given up in the Free University. The Romanian Studies are still vivid at the Humboldt University but not as independent subject. It is part of different Bachelor and Master-Studies and is open to a wide variety of study subjects and also to all German students from other Universities of the region. At the End of the Essay there is a short analysis of the students interested in the subject, which leads to some conclusions about the future development of the Studies."
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Khan, Evgen. "Academic Mobility as One of the Priority Areas in the Process of the Formation of the Common European Educational Space: the Ukrainian Experience of Cooperation". European Historical Studies, nr 8 (2017): 53–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/2524-048x.2017.08.53-73.

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The integration processes, which take place in the world community in all spheres of the human activity have a great influence on the system of higher education. During this period, the common European education space is formed, which expressed particularly through harmonization of education standards, approaches, curricula, and specialties in different countries of the world. The open educational space provides for the increasing of student mobility and co-operation of university lecturers from different countries, which should help to improve the university graduates’ employment system and increase the status of these countries in the field of education. Academic mobility is one of the areas of the Bologna Process, which ensures the integrity of the European Higher Education Area and the European Research Area. At the same time the European space means not only the space of the states of the European Union. This space covers the territories of all member states of the Bologna Process. The course for the development of academic mobility is enshrined in almost all major documents governing the Bologna process. They note that the academic mobility of students, researchers and lecturers allows its participants to take advantage of European educational values (Prague Communiqué of Ministers of Education 2001), which forms the basis for the formation of the European Higher Education Area (Berlin Communiqué 2003), is an essential element of the Bologna process, which creates the new opportunities for personal growth, development of cooperation between people and institutions (London Communiqué 2007), etc. It is very important to find out how much our country is involved in the process of academic exchanges and international cooperation in the field of education, especially with European countries, as far as the international academic mobility is an important factor in the process of European integration.
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Pechar, Hans, Gülay Ates i Lesley Andres. "The “New Doctorate” in Austria: Progress toward a Professional Model or Status Quo?" Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal 2, nr 4 (31.12.2012): 91–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.26529/cepsj.339.

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Until recently, both policy direction and public awareness of the Bologna Process has been focused almost unilaterally on the introduction of the Bachelor’s degree to European universities. This is understandable, as for most European countries, the Bachelor is a new academic degree. However, commencing with the Berlin Ministerial Conference (Realising the European Higher Education Area, 2003), reform of doctoral studies has been highlighted as a second equal pillar in the Bologna reform process. In this paper, we begin by providing anoverview of the general policy background and the rationales that underlie the attempts to restructure doctoral studies in Europe. Next, we focus on the specific situation in Austria, where peculiarities of the status quo collide with uniquely Austrian approaches to reforming doctoral education. Finally, through two case studies, we examine initial attempts – and related challenges – to implement the “New Doctorate” in Austria.
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Kovalenko, Valentyna, Maiia Marienko, Mariia Shyshkina i Alisa Sukhikh. "ASSESSMENT OF THE USE OF CLOUD-ORIENTED OPEN SCIENCE SYSTEMS IN THE DOMESTIC EDUCATIONAL SPACE". Educational Discourse: collection of scientific papers, nr 34(6) (12.06.2021): 62–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.33930/ed.2019.5007.34(6)-6.

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The Budapest Open Access Initiative and the Berlin Declaration are analyzed. The main provisions of the policy of the international movement for open access are given. One of the priorities of science development in Ukraine is integration into the European Research Area. 6 priorities of integration of Ukrainian science into the European Research Area are described. A survey of mathematics teachers of advanced training courses of Kryvyi Rih State Pedagogical University and students of the National University of Life and Environmental Sciences in 2020-2021 academic year were conducted. The current state of the use of cloud-oriented systems of open science is clarified. The main factors to be considered for further implementation of these systems in teacher education and their ICT competence increase are identified.
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Idowu, Adewumi Samuel Idowu. "The Glorification of Academic Imperialism in an African Citadel of Learning: A Textual Analysis of Lekan Are's The Challenge of The Barons". JOURNAL OF ADVANCES IN HUMANITIES 4, nr 4 (27.12.2016): 533–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.24297/jah.v4i2.4543.

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The Berlin Conference of 1884/85 which culminated in the scramble for and partitioning of African continent into various states by some European nations, brought negative implications to the psyche of Africans. The partitioning was seen as aploy devised by western countries to seize advantages by using military forces to cow the Africans, thus carrying away their naturally endowed potential to stage indigenous economic development. This paper therefore, takes a critical look at the various ways by which academic excellence was jettisoned, rubbished to romantic academic mediocrity in order to pave the way for sustaining the illegitimate academic emptiness of the Baron tagged as “experts” in a citadel of learning in an African country. The academic wizardry of the protagonist in the text reveals the bold challenge against the Barons in order to remove academic excellence from the shackles of colonialism.
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Myrosh, Volodymyr. "INTELLECTUAL BIOGRAPHY OF BOHDAN BARVINSKYI: YEARS OF UNIVERSITY STUDIES". Naukovì zapiski Nacìonalʹnogo unìversitetu "Ostrozʹka akademìâ". Serìâ Ìstoričnì nauki 1, nr 35 (25.04.2024): 79–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.25264/2409-6806-2024-35-79-85.

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The purpose of the research is to reconstruct the years of study of B. Barvinskyi at Lviv, Vienna and Berlin universities. The research methodology is based on the application of principles (objectivity, historicism, holism) and methods (generalization, analysis and synthesis, comparison, genetic, psychological and typological) of historiographic research. The scientific novelty of the article lies in the study of the little-known problem of the formation of B. Barvinskyi as a historian during his studies at Lviv, Vienna and Berlin universities. The article has concluded that the professional environment of the Lviv, Vienna and Berlin universities had a significant influence on the intellectual development of B. Barvinskyi. A novice historian was delighted to study history in the "golden" age of European social humanities, when at the same time creators of many historiographical branches and directions – Ukrainian studies, Polonistics, theories and methodologies of history, etc. – worked in different academic centers. The lectures and seminars of O. Redlich, L. Finkel, T. Szymann, B. Dembinsky, E. Mühlbacher, A. Przybram, T. Wojciechowski, H. Bruner, O. Balzer, K. Studinsky, O. Kolessa and many others prominent humanitarians formed the scientific worldview and research tools of the young scientist. However, the most significant for him was the long-term professional communication with M. Hrushevsky, which determined the scientific specialization of B. Barvinskyi in the field of Eastern European medieval studies. After all, persistent self-education had a significant impact on the professional formation of a historian. All this ultimately enabled the young scientist to implement ambitious creative plans and in a short time become one of the prominent representatives of not only Galician, but also all-Ukrainian historiography of the first half of the 20th century.
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Hawkins, Richard A. "Paprika Schlesinger". Journal of Historical Research in Marketing 9, nr 1 (20.02.2017): 66–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jhrm-10-2015-0043.

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Purpose This paper explores the development of a luxury retail shoe brand in Belle Époque Vienna. Design/methodology/approach Footwear retailing and marketing history is a neglected area. Unfortunately, no business records have survived from Robert Schlesinger’s shoe stores. However, it has been possible to reconstruct the history of the development of the Paprika Schlesinger brand from its extensive advertising in the Viennese newspaper, the Neue Freie Presse, with the guidance of the founder’s grandson, Prof Robert A. Shaw, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, Birkbeck, University of London, England. This case study would not have been possible without the digitization of some major collections of primary sources. In 2014, the European Union’s Europeana digitization initiative launched a new portal via the Library of Europe website which provides access to selected digitized historic newspaper collections in libraries across Europe. The project partners include the Austrian National Library which has digitized full runs of several major historic Austrian newspapers, including the Neue Freie Presse. Other project partners which have digitized historic newspapers which are relevant to this paper are the Landesbibliothek Dr Friedrich Teßmann of Italy’s Südtirol region, the National Library of France and the Berlin State Library. An associate project partner library, the Slovenian National and University Library’s Digital Library of Slovenia, has also digitized relevant historic newspapers. Furthermore, the City of Vienna has digitized a complete set of Vienna city directories as part of its Wienbibliothek Digital project. Findings This paper suggests that Robert Schlesinger created one of the first European luxury retail shoe brands. Originality/value This is the first academic study of the historical development of the advertising and marketing of a European luxury retail shoe brand.
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Klikauer, Thomas, Norman Simms, Helge F. Jani, Bob Beatty i Nicholas Lokker. "Book Reviews". German Politics and Society 38, nr 4 (1.12.2020): 97–121. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/gps.2020.380406.

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Jay Julian Rosellini, The German New Right: AfD, PEGIDA and the Re-imagining of National Identity (London: C. Hurst, 2019).Simon Bulmer and William E. Paterson, Germany and the European Union: Europe’s Reluctant Hegemon? (London: Red Globe Press, 2019).Susan Neiman, Learning from the Germans: Race and the Memory of Evil (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2019).Stephan Jaeger, The Second World War in the Twenty-First-Century Museum: From Narrative, Memory, and Experience to Experientiality (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2020).Robert M. Jarvis, Gambling under the Swastika: Casinos, Horse Racing, Lotteries, and Other Forms of Betting in Nazi Germany (Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Press, 2019).
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Troebst, Stefan. "“On Trying To Be a Historian of Eastern Europe”: A Migratory Interim Balance. Part 1". Slavic World in the Third Millennium 16, nr 1-2 (2021): 243–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.31168/2412-6446.2021.16.1-2.11.

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This autobiographic (and thus highly subjective) text asks what motived a non-East European, born in 1955 in West Germany, to become a historian of Eastern Europe. The answers are, on the one hand, an interest in (Slavic) languages and (Cold War) politics, and, to a lesser extent, family background, and on the other, coincidence and, not the least, fellowship opportunities. Part 1 of the article traces the author’s biography from his high-school years in Baden-Württemberg to universities and research institutions in Tübingen, West Berlin, Sofija, Skopje, and Bloomington, Indiana, from 1969 to 1981 – including his first modest academic achievements. Part 2 covers his professional path till retirement in 2021.
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Vergote, Ignace, Gabriele Elser, Benedicte Votan, Laura Farrelly, Joke De Roover, Jane Bryce i Andreas du Bois. "Roadmap for the European Network of Gynaecological Trial Groups (ENGOT) Trials". International Journal of Gynecologic Cancer 23, nr 7 (wrzesień 2013): 1339–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/igc.0b013e31829b87da.

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AbstractThe European Network for Gynaecological Oncological Trial groups (ENGOT) is a research network of the European Society of Gynaecological Oncology and was founded in Berlin in October 2007. Earlier, we reported on the ENGOT minimal requirements for trials between academic groups and pharmaceutical companies. In this paper, we summarize the roadmap for performing trials in the ENGOT framework. In this roadmap, we define how an ENGOT trial should be set up and discuss the following items: What are the conditions to classify a study as an ENGOT trial? What is an ENGOT protocol? How are an ENGOT protocol, informed consent (ICF), and case report form (CRF) produced? How is the center selection and feasibility performed in ENGOT trials? How are regulatory and operational tasks handled? How should a confidentiality agreement between the industry and the whole ENGOT network be negotiated? How are contracts made between the industry and ENGOT and between ENGOT groups? How are funding, insurance, and communication flow arranged in ENGOT trials? What are the requirements for conducting substudies and what are the tasks for the leading group in an ENGOT trial? A template of a confidentiality agreement, a checklist of ENGOT criteria for new study proposals, and guidelines for authorship are also provided.
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Turk, Marko, i Jasminka Ledić. "Between Teaching and Research: Challenges of the Academic Profession in Croatia". Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal 6, nr 1 (10.05.2017): 95–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.26529/cepsj.106.

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Discussions about synergy or independence of teaching and research are present in many studies (Bilić, 2009; Brew & Boud, 1995; Enders & Teichler, 1997; Griffiths, 2004; Jakovljević, 2010; Jenkins, 2000; Ramsden & Moses, 1992). Humboldt’s model introduced synergy between teaching and research, thus highlighting the importance of originality in scientific work and of the dissemination of the knowledge stemming from it. The synergy between teaching and research is also referenced in the education policy of the European Union, with the Berlin Communique (2003) introducing a request for the promotion of better synergy between European educational and research areas. However, studies reveal a different understandingof the teaching-research relationship between those who advocate their synergy (Brew & Boud, 1995; Jenkins, 2000; Neumann, 1993) and those who advocate their mutual independence (Hattie & Marsh, 1996; Ramsden & Moses, 1992). Examining different perspectives of the teaching-research relationship, the research presented in this paper focused on understanding how academics see their dominant roles. Its objective was to examine how academics perceive their roles as teachers and researchers. A qualitative approach was used, with data being collected using a standardised semi-structured interview. A total of 60 interviewees participated in the research, all academics from Croatia. The results revealed that the research participants see themselves most frequently as teachers, then as teachers and researchers, and least frequently as predominantly researchers. Their identification is mainly determined by external factors, most frequently negatively connoted, which presents a challenge within the context of job satisfaction. Such results also point to legal, material, personnel and administrative difficulties in the Croatian higher education system.
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35

Klikauer, Thomas, Norman Simms, Marcus Colla, Nicolas Wittstock, Matthew Specter, Kate R. Stanton, John Bendix i Bernd Schaefer. "Book Reviews". German Politics and Society 40, nr 1 (1.03.2022): 104–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/gps.2022.400106.

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Heinrich Detering, Was heißt hier “wir”? Zur Rhetorik der parlamentarischen Rechten (Dietzingen: Reclam Press, 2019).Clare Copley, Nazi Buildings: Cold War Traces and Governmentality in Post-Unification Berlin (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020).Tobias Schulze-Cleven and Sidney A. Rothstein, eds., Imbalance: Germany’s Political Economy after the Social Democratic Century (Abingdon: Routledge, 2021).Benedikt Schoenborn, Reconciliation Road: Willy Brandt, Ostpolitik and the Quest for European Peace (New York: Berghahn Books, 2020).Tiffany N. Florvil, Mobilizing Black Germany: Afro-German Women and the Making of a Transnational Movement (Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 2020).Ingo Cornils, Beyond Tomorrow: German Science Fiction and Utopian Thought in the 20th and 21st Centuries (Rochester, NY: Camden House, 2020).Christian F. Ostermann, Between Containment and Rollback: The United States and the Cold War in Germany (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2021).
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Bulvinska, Oksana. "SYSTEM OF EDUCATIONAL SCIENCES: EXPIRIENCE OF EUROPEAN UNIVERSITIES". Continuing Professional Education: Theory and Practice, nr 1 (2020): 68–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.28925/1609-8595.2020.1.10.

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The article is devoted to the system of science of education in the European Universities. For analyzes were provided 16 European Universities from Finland, Belgium, Netherlands, Norway, which are in top 50 in QA World Rankings 2019, and also Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin and Alma Mater Studiorum – University of Bologna. The main study is the analysis of the study programs about the education in the universities that are listed above. The conclusion, that in most European Universities offered educational programs «Educational studies», which are mainly not for professional, but academic level (especially the Master’s degree). The programs «Educational studies» focused on the study of educational systems and the practical studying in a wide social, cultural, political and economic areas. As usual, this educational program combines the ideas and the study of the educational systems, psychology, sociology, philosophy, history, politics, the management of education, history and culture of education, comparative educational studies, and also the critical analysis of different educational theories and innovative methods. The pedagogical science is one of the educational discipline, which is focused only on the pedagogical problems, which are learning, teaching and development: the educational programs, the measurement and evaluation in education and training, the special pedagogic, which is focused on prevention, research, diagnosis, development and education of children, teenagers or adults with behavioral and emotional problems and their psychosocial consequences. The pedagogical study programs also are focused on development and education of the kids and teenagers in a different social groups (families, schools, groups of friends etc.).
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Palomino Pichihua, Yeimis Milton. "Caracterización físico-espacial de las promociones de nuevos barrios durante la República de Weimar (1919-1933): estudio de casos en las ciudades alemanas de Berlín, Frankfurt y Hamburgo". Territorios en formación, nr 12 (19.12.2017): 55. http://dx.doi.org/10.20868/tf.2017.12.3648.

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ResumenLas primeras décadas del siglo XX mostraron al urbanismo en un proceso de redefinición disciplinar producto de los nuevos requerimientos de habitabilidad de las emergentes ciudades europeas. En este periodo sobresalieron los aportes de la República de Weimar, relacionados a la promoción de vivienda, que marcaron el inicio de las modernas políticas de vivienda social, al mismo tiempo que inauguraban un modelo de crecimiento suburbano. La importancia del modelo alemán de nuevos barrios radicó en la conjunción de factores disciplinares y políticos. Esta particularidad provocó un creciente interés por parte del mundo académico; no obstante, este derivaría hacia interpretaciones sociológicas, dejando de lado el análisis netamente físico. En respuesta, el presente artículo plantea un análisis enfocado en la forma urbana. Busca identificar las cualidades de estos nuevos espacios, atendiendo a indicadores morfológicos de superficie, ocupación, forma y distribución. Asimismo, el estudio coteja casos de promoción de vivienda, con formas tradicionales de ocupación residencial. Con la intención de obtener pruebas de la relación entre la estructura física y los intensos cambios sociales de la época. Confrontando resultados empíricos con relatos históricos vigentes, fortaleciendo así una visión crítica de los mismos. De este modo, cuestiona visiones generalizadoras de la historia del urbanismo, la misma que se reconoce fragmentaria y diversa. Palabras clave Siedlungen, morfología urbana, historia del urbanismo, Berlín, Frankfurt, HamburgoAbstractFirst decades of the twentieth century, showed urbanism in a process of disciplinary redefinition. Result of the new requirements of habitability of emerging European cities. Period in which the contributions of the Weimar Republic, related to the promotion of housing were outstanding. These marked the beginning of modern policies of social housing, at the same time as they inaugurated a model of suburban growth. The relevance of the German model of neighborhoods lay in the conjunction of disciplinary and political factors. This particularity has produced a growing interest on the academic world. However, this has led to sociological interpretations, leaving aside the purely physical analysis. In response, the present article proposes an analysis focused on the urban form. It implies the identification of qualities of new spaces, in terms of morphological indicators like surface, occupation, form and distribution. The study compares cases of housing promotion, with traditional forms of residential occupation. In order to obtain evidence of the relation between the physical structure and intense social changes. Confronting empirical results with current historical accounts, strengthening a critical view of them. By this way, question generalizing visions of the history of urbanism, which is recognized fragmentary and diverse. KeywordsSiedlungen, urban morphology, urban history, Berlin, Frankfurt, Hamburg
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38

Chantrain, Hilde. "Mobility of Students, Academic and Administrative Staff: A Basis for Establishing a European Higher Education Area (Berlin Communiqué 2003)". Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica 62, nr 5 (2010): 234–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000314786.

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Pereira-Martins, Diego A., Juan L. Coelho-Silva, Isabel Weinhäuser, Luisa C. A. Koury, Raul Antônio Morais Melo, Rosane Bittencourt, Katia B. Pagnano i in. "Arsenic Trioxide Abrogate MN1 Mediated RA-Resistance in Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia". Blood 134, Supplement_1 (13.11.2019): 5166. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood-2019-131595.

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Introduction: Described as a well know marker of worse prognosis in acute myeloid leukemia (AML), MN1 overexpression has been associated with inv(16) or EVI1 overexpression (Heuser et al., Blood 2007). The promoter region of the MN1 gene has Retinoic Acid Response Elements (RAREs), and higher levels of MN1 expression have been associated with decreased response to retinoic acid (RA) in vitro. Nevertheless, in the context of acute promyelocytic leukemia, little is known about MN1 gene expression and functionality in vivo. Aims: Here, we investigated the effects of in vitro treatment with RA plus arsenic trioxide (ATO) in APL cell lines and primary blasts overexpressing MN1. Additionally, we quantified MN1 expression and correlated its levels with treatment outcome in a cohort of patients enrolled in the International Consortium on Acute Leukemia (ICAPL2006) study. Methods: Primary leukemic blasts from hCG-PMLRARα transgenic mice (TM; n=2) and APL patients (age, 36-45y; n=2) were transduced with MN1 or empty vector (EV, control) to evaluate cell proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis. Confirmatory assays were performed using transduced NB4 and NB4R2 (RA-resistant) cell lines. After synchronization using double thymidine block, transduced cells were submitted to proliferation and clonogenic (treated with RA and ATO, as well) assays. To evaluate the apoptotic rate, cells were treated with ATO (1 µM) alone or in combination with RA (1 µM each), for 24, 48 and 72 hours. The granulocytic differentiation in response to RA treatment alone (1 µM) or in combination with ATO (1 µM) was evaluated based on the CD11b and CD11c surface levels. In addition, 116 patients (age, 18-82y; 51% males) with newly diagnosed APL enrolled in the ICAPL2006 study were included. To validate our data, Bootstrap resampling procedure with 1000 repetitions from the original database was performed to assess the model bias. Results: Primary APL cells transduced with MN1 (from TM/APL patients) presented higher proliferation rates compared to controls (P<.05). Similarly, the overexpression of MN1 in APL cell lines was associated with increased proliferation (P=.001) and clonogenicity (P<.05). Furthermore, NB4-MN1 cells are able to form colonies in the presence of RA (1 µM) (P<.01) but not under ATO (1 µM) treatment (P>.05), while NB4R2-MN1 cells were able to form colonies in the presence of ATO (P<.05). To investigate whether MN1 promotes resistance to drug-induced apoptosis, we treated lentivirally transduced cells with RA plus ATO for 72 hours. No differences were founded between the MN1-transduced and the EV cells (P>.05). In accordance with our results using primary APL samples, ATO treatment (alone or in combination with RA) does not modulate the drug-induced apoptosis in a time-dependent manner in NB4 and NB4R2-MN1 cells (P<.05). For NB4 cells, the differentiation rate was lower in MN1-expressing cells under RA alone or in combination with ATO for 48 hours (P<.05), although these effects were abrogated after 72 hours of RA and ATO treatment. In contrast, NB4R2-MN1 cells exhibited decreased differentiation rate at 48 and 72 hours in presence of RA alone or in combination with ATO, in comparison with EV cells (P<.05). In the clinical setting, the retrospective analysis of patients enrolled in the ICAPL2006 study revealed that the baseline characteristics were similar between patients with low and high MN1 levels. According to PETHEMA/GIMEMA criteria for predicting relapse, 34% and 46% of patients assigned to the low- and high-MN1 groups were deemed high-risk patients, respectively (P=.045). High MN1 expression was associated with lower 5-y Disease-Free Survival rates (74%; 95% CI: 69-91%)(HR: 2.61, 95% CI: 0.86-8.36) and Cumulative Incidence of Relapse (25%; 95% CI: 13-34%) (HR: 2.27, 95% CI: 0.75-6. 8). Bootstrap analysis for internal validation resulted in an AUC (0.63, 95% CI: 0.57-0.809) very similar to the original described data. Conclusion: We show that MN1 is relevant for RA-induced differentiation both in vitro and in vivo and may be involved in RA-resistance. Additionally, treatment with ATO circumvented the differentiation blockage in MN1 cells. Disclosures Pagnano: Sandoz: Consultancy; Pint Pharma: Consultancy; Abbvie: Consultancy. Tallman:International Conference in Leukemia: Honoraria; 14th Annual Miami Cancer Meeting: Honoraria; New Orleans Summer Cancer Conference: Honoraria; Indy Hematology Review: Honoraria; ADC Therapeutics: Research Funding; Arog Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Cellerant Therapeutics: Research Funding; Orsenix: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; UpToDate: Patents & Royalties; Mayo Clinic: Honoraria; Rigel: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Nohla: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Salzberg Weill Cornall MSKCC Seminar in Hematologic Malignancies: Honoraria; BioSight: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Daiichi-Sankyo: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; KAHR: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Bioline: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; University of Oklahoma Medical Center: Honoraria; AbbVie: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Research Funding; Amgen: Consultancy; Danbury Hospital Tumor Board: Honoraria; Hematology Oncology of Indiana: Honoraria. Dillon:Abbvie: Consultancy, Honoraria; Novartis: Consultancy, Honoraria; Pfizer: Consultancy, Honoraria; TEVA: Consultancy, Honoraria. Heuser:Bayer Pharma AG, Berlin: Research Funding; Synimmune: Research Funding. Löwenberg:Up-to-Date", section editor leukemia: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Abbvie: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Agios Pharmaceuticals: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Astellas: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Astex: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Celgene: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; CELYAD: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Chairman Scientific Committee and Member Executive Committee, European School of Hematology (ESH, Paris, France): Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Chairman, Leukemia Cooperative Trial Group HOVON (Netherlands: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Clear Creek Bio Ltd: Consultancy, Honoraria; Editorial Board "European Oncology & Haematology": Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Elected member, Royal Academy of Sciences and Arts, The Netherlands: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Frame Pharmaceuticals: Equity Ownership; Hoffman-La Roche Ltd: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Royal Academy of Sciences and Arts, The Netherlands: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Supervisory Board, National Comprehensive Cancer Center (IKNL), Netherland: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees.
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Peck, Jeffrey M. "Global Cityscapes of Modernity and Post Modernity: Vienna and Berlin 1900-2000". German Politics and Society 23, nr 1 (1.03.2005): 1–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/104503005780889200.

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The focus of this volume is broad, both historically and topically.Berlin and Vienna, modernity and postmodernity, the twentieth centuryand two incisive Wenden of a tumultuous millennium offer anopportunity to examine central issues in the relationship amongEuropean culture, history, and politics. Cities provide a rich locationto examine expressions of creativity, growth, and change over thecourse of one hundred years. As a transit point of entry and exit, thecity becomes a site for exchange and cross-fertilization of peoples,ideas, and commodities. Cities are nodes in a network whose spokesextend beyond their metropolitan borders and bring intellectual andphysical nourishment to surrounding areas. This European centurywill be known for its great cities and the production of culturalobjects that spread around the globe. Less dramatically, neverthelesssignificant for the transfer of knowledge, academic figures will alsobe remembered for the dissemination of these intellectual traditionsto generations of students who were fortunate to cross their paths.Hinrich C. Seeba, professor of German at the University of California,Berkeley, from 1967 to the present, is one such person.
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Milić, Slobodan. "Serbia between western individualism and orthodox collectivism". Ekonomski signali 18, nr 2 (2023): 33–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.5937/ekonsig2302033m.

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The paper discusses the problems that come with the contradictions between individualism and collectivism. Discussions about these contradictions are still present in academic circles today. In Eastern European countries, individualism became relevant after the fall of the Berlin Wall. Up to then, the collectivist spirit prevailed. By accepting neoliberalism, post-socialist Eastern European countries began economic reform, including further educational reform, health reform, cultural reform, etc. This reform also meant the transition from collectivism to individualism because modern neoliberal capitalism belongs to individualism, in which the main focus is on the individual as the largest consumer. The transition to neoliberal capitalism led to a considerable number of workers losing their jobs after the liberalization, deregulation, and privatization of the Serbian economy, resulting in the lifeless demographic image of Serbia, which worsens significantly yearly. Today, Serbia remains without a working-age population, which, in addition to young and highly educated workers, also consists of artisans of various occupations. For the Serbian political elites, the path to the EU does not lead to the question. We've been on that road for twenty years, and it doesn't seem like we've moved much since the beginning. According to the principle, "one step forward, two steps back."
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Gomilko, Olga. "The Fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and Today’s Challenges of a New Wall Constructing: Basees’ Reflection". Filosofiya osvity. Philosophy of Education 25, nr 2 (4.07.2020): 287–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.31874/2309-1606-2019-25-2-16.

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The conference of the British Association of Slavic and Eastern European Studies (BASEES) in 2019 was dedicated to the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, the event that marked democracy triumph and liberation of communist authoritarianism. The focus was made on the factors of this victory, in particular on the role played in it by intellectuals of that time. The problem of scholars’ public activity was brought to the forefront by the thesis that achievements of science and education are not only theoretical developments and their successful assimilation in the form of knowledge, but also the level of influence science and education have in the society. Transition from instrumental rationality to rationality of values enhances practical importance of intellectual activity. Addressing this issue is particularly important in the context of crisis in the values ​​of liberal democracy and increasing distrust of rational knowledge and culture. Modern technologies of manipulating consciousness contribute to the strengthening of authoritarian regimes. Therefore, the experience of intellectuals under communist authoritarianism must teach contemporary scholars to uphold the values ​​of freedom and democracy and maintain social optimism. The discussion on the fall of the Berlin Wall proved that the scholars’ civic and academic positions reinforce each other, thereby forming a powerful defence against authoritarianism. However, the reincarnation of authoritarian sentiment nowadays provides grounds for accusing intellectuals of their inability to face up the challenges of the present. Among those challenges, we should mention forgetting the horribleness of old walls and illusions on benefits of constructing new ones.
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Virgailaitė-Mečkauskaitė, Eglė, i Velta Lubkina. "INFLUENCE OF INTERNATIONALIZATION PROCESSES IN THE HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTION ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTERCULTURAL COMPETENCE". SOCIETY, INTEGRATION, EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference 1 (9.05.2015): 437. http://dx.doi.org/10.17770/sie2012vol1.63.

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<p>Since integration and globalization processes are accelerating in the world, the demand to internationalize education and studies increases as well as parameters of the activities of higher education institutions change. International competitive ability of European higher education area, international mobility and high level of university graduates’ employment as well as successful integration into international labour market are the main aims of Bologna process. Bologna declaration, various documents of conventions (European convention of higher education institutions, Salamanca) and communiqué documents (of Prague; Berlin; Bergen) related to the declaration devoted to the creation of common European Higher Education Area raise the necessity of higher education policy emphasizing internationalization, the conception of lifelong learning. The documents mentioned above emphasize the development of European dimensions and content internationalization in study programmes, training of a flexible, mobile, constantly improving and public active specialist who will integrate into the competitive labour market, mobility of the academic community and international cooperation. The development of intercultural competence becomes a more topical subject of the research taking globalization processes into consideration. That is why it is important to understand the influence of internationalization processes in the institution on the development of Master’s degree (MA) students’ intercultural competence through their experience gained in the study process. The aim of the research presented in this article is to discuss the influence of internationalization processes in the institution on the development of MA students’ intercultural competence. A scientific problem question raised in the research is how MA students telling their life story reveal the experience gained in the process of higher education internationalization which influenced the development of their intercultural competence.</p>
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Nistor, Ionuț, i Marian Hariuc. "Akademische Mobilität: Rumänische Studierende an deutschen und österreichischen Universitäten". Transylvanian Review 31, nr 3 (19.02.2024): 76–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.33993/tr.2022.3.04.

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Without ever reaching the level of the exchanges recorded before the First World War, the study mobilities in Germany for the Romanian students were still at the top of their list, after those in France, during the interwar period. The decrease in the number of young people who left for studies abroad (a process specific to the first years of the third decade) was due to the post-conflict economic and financial crisis, to the German reluctance to grant mass visas to foreigners, and to the prejudices (identifiable in the political and cultural community) regarding the antagonism highlighted during the war. Eager to regain its influential position in the European academia and in apparent competition with France, Germany made concrete steps from the mid–20s to reprise contacts and create an international system of exchanges. However, the legislative and systemic differences between Bucharest and Berlin made it very difficult to have closer relations. As late as 1935, the two countries concluded bilateral agreements meant to promote academic, cultural, and scientific exchanges. On the other hand, Vienna was almost absent from the Romanians’ list of options. The dissolution of the empire led to the fall of the capital (this process began in the early 1920s, of course). Furthermore, whereas in the early interwar years the Austrian universities still enrolled young people from the former provinces of the dual monarchy or students that used them as a gateway to the German universities, in the early 1930s Bucharest recorded no more requests for this space from the Romanian students.
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Porogi, Dorka. "“In Rome, in Paris, / in Moscow, in Berlin, in London, and in Budapest”: Antal Németh and the European Theatre". Theatron 17, nr 4 (2023): 15–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.55502/the.2023.4.15.

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In this paper, I outline Antal Németh’s career from the perspective of his international connections. Németh was the director-manager of the Hungarian National Theatre between 1935 and 1944. His whole career was significantly shaped by his interest in European theatre and his connections with the international theatrical scene. Renowned foreign directors and theatre influencers served as his role models in the 1920s and 1930s, and his academic performance in the international sphere contributed significantly to his directorial career in his homeland. Following World War II, during the era of state socialism in Hungary, he had to give up his leading position in Hungary’s cultural life. He lost some connections, and his ability to keep contact with the remaining ones was limited. Nonetheless, he maintained a deep interest in scholarly literature and Western theatrical influences.
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Sandberg, Berit. "The EntreComp Bias: A Qualitative Study on Entrepreneurial Competence in Entrepreneurship Training". Proceedings of The International Education Conference 1, nr 1 (30.11.2023): 32–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.33422/ieconf.v1i1.125.

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As entrepreneurship is seen as a catalyst for innovation, economic growth and social progress, European public authorities are promoting entrepreneurial activity through education and training. Despite extensive research on academic entrepreneurship education, entrepreneurship training has received less attention. Entrepreneurship education refers to structured educational interventions designed to equip potential and existing entrepreneurs with the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to start and run successful businesses. Entrepreneurship training is designed to promote the entrepreneurial competences identified in the European Commission’s Entrepreneurship Competence Framework (EntreComp). In a qualitative study of training activities, a content analysis was conducted to assess the compliance of the learning content with this policy standard. An internet search identified 194 courses in the Berlin-Brandenburg metropolitan region, Germany. The course descriptions were systematically analyzed and coded using the EntreComp framework. The results indicate that the courses primarily convey management knowledge rather than an entrepreneurial mindset. More than 50% of the content is related to start-up preparation, legal issues, finance and marketing, with less emphasis on creativity and interpersonal skills. Most courses prioritize knowledge acquisition, often neglecting the development of skills and attitudes. The entrepreneurship training programs studied adhere to a traditional approach to education in terms of educational paradigms. The study highlights a discrepancy between recommended policies and educational practices and suggests implications for the design of entrepreneurship training programs.
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Mueller-Scheessel, Nils. "The Beginnings of Academic Pre- and Protohistoric Archaeology (1890-1930) in a European Perspective, 13-16/03/2003, Humboldt-University, Berlin". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 13, nr 1 (4.05.2003): 19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/bha.13107.

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Immonen, Visa, i Elina Räsänen. "From passion to bereavement". Journal of the History of Collections 32, nr 2 (27.05.2019): 379–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhz018.

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Abstract The Finnish diplomat Harri Holma and his wife Alli, along with their son, art historian Klaus, created a private collection of 554 items. They acquired antique pieces and works of art in Berlin, Paris and Rome from the 1920s to the 1950s. The collection consists of Western and Southern European paintings, sculpture, furniture, textiles and tableware, dating from the Middle Ages to the nineteenth century. Initially the objects were acquired by the Holmas to decorate diplomatic residences, but eventually they came to form a deliberately assembled collection. Following Klaus’s death, Harri and Alli Holma donated the collection to the Lahti City Museum in the 1950s and the 1960s. Here the creation of the collection is first traced then followed on its journey to Finland, with a focus on the developing relationship between objects, family history and museum institution. The shifts in the collection’s narrative from hobby to an expression of grief, and finally to a formal museum assemblage and a subject of academic research generate epistemological tensions.
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Suwala, Lech, Robert Kitzmann i Elmar Kulke. "Berlin’s Manifold Strategies Towards Commercial and Industrial Spaces: The Different Cases of Zukunftsorte". Urban Planning 6, nr 3 (23.09.2021): 415–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.17645/up.v6i3.4239.

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Despite being the third largest industrial agglomeration in the world before World War II, Berlin was faced with an economic void after the partition and reunification of the city with many abandoned and alienated commercial and industrial spaces in a compact urban fabric. What has happened with this commercial and industrial heritage over the last 30 years? The main rationale behind this article is to show how Berlin planned and developed some of these spaces through the Zukunftsorte strategy by preserving its historical sites and modernizing its commercial and industrial base. As part of this undertaking, the article combines insights from urban planning and regional innovation studies. Methodologically, a two-step approach is applied: First, the article conducts an analysis of fundamental planning frameworks and technology/innovation policy trajectories with regard to commercial and industrial spaces; second, a multiple-case study analysis of selected <em>Zukunftsorte</em> (Adlershof, Marzahn, Schöneberg, Siemensstadt) is carried out to test whether and to what extent those spaces are supported by planning frameworks and exhibit components of what we coined territorial ecosystem models. The data compiled stems from 15 years of work engaging in various planning and policy steering committees, individual or joint research projects, personal interviews with relevant stakeholders, and regular field observations. The findings suggest that Berlin’s strategies towards commercial and industrial spaces need to integrate highly contextual approaches since size, progress, operation, means, and timelines of <em>Zukunftsorte</em> vary substantially. Whereas Adlershof is a well-functioning network of business, academia, planners, and policymakers with preliminary attempts to embed those stakeholders in residential neighborhoods and the European Energy Forum in Schöneberg—which can be described as a miniature living lab of Adlershof—the other investigated <em>Zukunftsorte</em> do not yet deserve to carry this name.
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Rados, Leonidas. "A “Dynasty” of Hellenists in twentieth-century Bucharest: Demosthene Russo, Ariadna Camariano-Cioran and Nestor Camariano". Historical Review/La Revue Historique 10 (13.12.2012): 265. http://dx.doi.org/10.12681/hr.314.

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<p>Romanian academic circles became more interested in the study of Greek-Romanian relations towards the end of the nineteenth century and in the early twentieth. Demosthene Russo, a young Greek immigrant to Romania, educated at Constantinople, Athens, Berlin and Leipzig, profited from this favourable trend; he managed to establish at the University of Bucharest, after 1915, a powerful centre for Byzantine and Neohellenic research and to impose his own critical school, based upon a rigorous method, in direct competition with the line directed by the most highly acknowledged Romanian historian, Nicolae Iorga, a researcher with many achievements and famous initiatives in South-East European studies. In the interwar period Russo took on the responsibility for the education of his nephew and niece, Nestor and Ariadna Camariano, to whom he transmitted his appetite for detailed research and critical methods in his field and whom he left to continue his work. The three have deeply marked the study of the history of Hellenism; they distinguished themselves, sometimes under unfavourable circumstances, by their valuable scientific production, opening new directions in the cultural history of South-East Europe.</p>
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