Conflict and Cooperation in Eastern Europe: The Consequences of the Reconfiguration of Political, Economic, and Social Spaces since the End of the Cold War (KonKoop)
Short facts
Partners: Centre for East European and International Studies (ZOiS); Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies (IOS) in Regensburg: Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography (IfL) in Leipzig, Friedrich Schiller University Jena (FSU Jena); Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development (HNEE); Leibniz Centre for Contemporary History (ZZF) in Potsdam
Lead Principal Investigators: Prof. Dr. Gwendolyn Sasse, Dr. Julia Langbein, Dr. Sabine von Löwis (ZOiS)
Principal Investigators: Prof. Dr. Ulf Brunbauer, Dr. Cindy Wittke (IOS); Prof. Dr. Sebastian Lentz, Dr. Jana Moser (IfL); Prof. Dr. Rafael Biermann (FSU Jena); Prof. Dr. Martin Welp, Dr. Michael Spies, Dr. Henryk Alff (HNEE); Prof. Dr. Jan C. Behrends (ZZF)
Coordination: ZOiS – Dr. Kerstin Bischl
Funder: Federal Ministry for of Education and Research (BMBF)
Project Executing Organisation: DLR-Projekträger
Duration: 2022-2026
Budget: 3 Million Euro
Academic Advisory Board: Prof. Dr. Dorota Dakowska (Sciences PO); Prof. Dr. Georg Gartner (TU Wien); Prof. Dr. Andrea Gawrich (U of Gießen); Prof. Dr. Josip Glaurdić (U of Luxembourg); Dr. Sophie Lambroschini (CMB); Prof. Dr. Jenniver Sehring (IHE Delft); Prof. Dr. Gerald Toal (Virginia Tech);
Description
Within the Research Network KonKoop, we look at conflict and cooperation in Eastern Europe since the end of the Cold War. Nowhere else in the world have there been so many wars of secession – some of them unresolved to this day – and newly founded states. Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine is the latest shocking example. The research network will examine various conflict constellations and dynamics of cooperation in Eastern Europe, Southeast Europe, Central Asia and the Caucasus. Our aim is to understand and explain interactions and integrate the expertise available in Germany.
The project involves several research teams working in six thematic areas in order to identify how conflicts arise in Eastern Europe, which actors are involved and which factors contribute to escalation and de-escalation, but also which conditions guarantee security or enable cooperation. KonKoop is an interdisciplinary project and draws on expertise from the fields of political science, geography, history and environmental sciences. Five doctoral students and three post-docs will collaborate with established researchers from the network and its partner institutions on detailed studies and comparative qualitative and quantitative analyses.
Two laboratories will also be established to make the results of the research available to the professional community: the Multi-method Data Lab based at ZOiS is an interdisciplinary platform that processes and links quantitative and qualitative research data. It also tests novel methods for analysing them. The Multi-perspective Laboratory for Peace and Conflict Cartography located at the IfL explores how cooperation partners and conflict parties represent their specific interests by means of maps. On this basis it develops and tests visualisations (maps, infographics or artistic graphic (online) tools) that represent conflicting or multiple interests.
The project’s thematic fields are: post-imperial nation-building processes; religious and ethnic diversity; economic (dis)integration; environmental change and ecological resources; interactions and interdependencies between conflict and cooperation; and in:security.
Key Questions
- Under what circumstances do political reconfigurations like the dissolution of the Soviet Union or Yugoslavia trigger violent conflicts?
- What role do ethnic or religious identities and economic interests play in the emergence or resolution of conflicts?
- What are the effects of environmental change and resource scarcity?
- What factors influence the scope for peace negotiations and the implementation of peace agreements?
- How can security in Europe be reconceptualised and institutionalised in future?