In the second article of a three-part series on the European refugee crisis — the largest since World War II — USC Dornsife experts Laurie Brand, Robert English and Steven Lamy of international relations look at who is ultimately responsible for this massive exodus from the Middle East, explore potential solutions and consider the wider consequences for Europe and the United States.
USC Dornsife News
As winter looms and Europe struggles to cope with the largest flow of refugees since World War II, USC Dornsife’s experts explore the issues surrounding this unprecedented crisis. In this first of a three-part series, Laurie Brand, Robert English and Steven Lamy of international relations look at the underlying reasons driving Europe’s contrasting reactions to refugees.
Slavic languages and literatures professors Marcus Levitt and Alexander Zholkovsky are honored for their critical work examining Russian culture and literature.
In a recent symposium, USC Dornsife faculty members tackle this question in a discussion analyzing gay rights in Russia and recent protests calling for the separation of church and state.
Renowned Polish film director and writer Ryszard Bugajski visits the classroom of USC Dornsife’s Anna Krakus to discuss the making of his once-banned 1982 film Interrogation.
An art exhibition that opened Sept. 27 in Florence, Italy, co-curated by USC Dornsife's John Bowlt, reveals the influences of Eurasia and the Orient on the Russian Avant-garde.
The Professor Emeritus of Slavic Languages and Literatures and Croatian immigrant founded the Slavic department at USC Dornsife in 1967.
In a Problems Without Passports course, USC Dornsife history majors travel to Kazakhstan to research the building of national identity.
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