Gwendolyn Sasse
Gwendolyn Sasse is professor of comparative politics at Nuffield College, University of Oxford. Sasse has research interests in post-communist transitions, comparative democratisation, ethnic conflicts; international conditionality; national minorities; the political behaviour of migrants; diaspora politics, and the political in contemporary art.[1]
Sasse won the Alexander Nove Prize of the British Association for Slavonic & East European Studies for her book The Crimea Question: Identity, Transition, and Conflict (2007).
Selected publications
- The Crimea Question: Identity, Transition, and Conflict, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007.
- Europeanization and Regionalization in the EU’s Enlargement to Central and Eastern Europe: the Myth of Conditionality, London: Palgrave, 2004 (co-authored with James Hughes and Claire Gordon).
- Ethnicity and Territory in the Former Soviet Union: Regions in Conflict, London: Frank Cass, 2001 (co-edited with James Hughes).
References
- ↑ Prof Gwendolyn Sasse. Nuffield College. Retrieved 28 May 2015.
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