“Weapons of Power and Tools of Management: Alliances in the Past
Transcription
“Weapons of Power and Tools of Management: Alliances in the Past
The University of Bonn cordially welcomes you to its 12TH TRANSATLANTIC SUMMER ACADEMY (TASA) “Weapons of Power and Tools of Management: Alliances in the Past and in the Present” June 13 – July 9, 2005 Academic Director: Prof. Dr. Joachim Scholtyseck Organization: Christian Klöckner Holger Impekoven Thomas Freiberger TASA is kindly supported by: Contact: T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY (TASA) University of Bonn – International Office Poppelsdorfer Allee 53 53115 Bonn Germany Phone: Fax: Email: Internet: +49-(0)228-73-5944 or -2062 +49-(0)228-73-5891 [email protected] http://www.tasa.uni-bonn.de 2 The Transatlantic Summer Academy (TASA) For more than ten years, the University of Bonn has been host to students and graduates from North America and Europe participating in the annual T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY (TASA). Founded in 1994 by Prof. Lothar Hönnighausen, then director of the North American Studies Program at the University of Bonn, the T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY has always been dedicated to fostering an understanding of the importance of the transatlantic relations amongst future leaders and decision makers. The academy’s aim is to develop an understanding of the common heritage of the people on both continents and of the common challenges they are facing. With its focus on “Alliances in the Past and in the Present,” the 12th T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY once again offers an interesting and intensive interdisciplinary program. Participants will find a supportive and stimulating environment in which to explore their academic interests, and they will have plenty of opportunities to gain first-hand insights in their field of study. The practical experience and theoretical knowledge gained in the course of the summer academy will foster an understanding both of the nature and the importance of transatlantic relations and the European integration process in the 21st century. Such an understanding is needed more than ever in a world of rapid social change and new security challenges for the transatlantic community. In the aftermath of 9/11, the member states of NATO invoked the famous Article 5 of the Washington Treaty for the first time in the history of the alliance. Only three years after this pointed gesture of unity there are signs of a transatlantic rift. In the recent past, the United States and Europe sometimes seemed to have lost the fragile knowledge that “[t]here is no alternative to the transatlantic community of values and action; there is no replacement for the North Atlantic Alliance. The major security problems of our time are international terrorism, failed states and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction. These are challenges on a global scale. Just for that reason they can only be resolved if North America and Europe are pulling in the same direction. If the events of recent times have taught us anything, it is that neither America nor Europe are able alone to overcome these new problems. American action without allies is just as much a dead end as illusions about Europe as counterweight to the USA. Perhaps these mind games can sell books. But they don’t make for successful security policy.” (“The Future Of the Atlantic Alliance”, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer at the Manfred Wörner Lecture, Konrad-Adenauer-Foundation, 7 Oct. 2004) Prof. Dr. Joachim Scholtyseck, Academic Director 3 In the Focus of this Year: Alliances From the days of the Peloponnesian War to the formation of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and beyond, alliances have always played a crucial role in the field of international relations. Yet, despite this obvious observation alliances as such have not received much attention in the historiography nor in the political analysis of international relations. Alliances are not only clear-cut treaty systems, but they also evoke certain expectations among their member states which can reach far beyond the original contractual commitments. These expectations sometimes create invisible forces of enormous power. Also, alliances are ambivalent political structures because they can be – in the words of Paul W. Schroeder – used as “weapons of power and tools of management.” This is why the 12th T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY will focus on alliances and alliance politics as a historical phenomenon in its own right. Since their development are subject to personal as well as to structural influences, the analysis and discussion of alliances and alliance politics will be guided by several central questions. One central complex will be the role alliance politics play for political decision makers: are their decisions guided by a sort of unwritten set of rules, an ‘alliances’ code of conduct’? The personal influence on an alliance system is complemented by a number of factors which are conditioned by a given organization as much as they in turn form these structures. These structural influences constitute another central complex of questions: Do alliances generate certain modes of expectation? Do these expectations go beyond the purely contractual obligations? How do consultations within the alliance work? Do the forms of communication allow for conclusions regarding the balance of power within the alliance? Do members of an alliance perceive threats homogeneously or is their threat perception heterogeneous? How do the members deal with the so-called ‘Alliance Security Dilemma’ – the tension between fear of being forced to take part in an armed conflict by an aggressive partner on the one hand and of being abandoned by one’s partners during a crisis? Is there a reciprocal effect between a state’s allicance policy and its domestic policies? These and related questions will be analyzed and discussed in the course of a four-week-long interdisciplinary program of lectures, tutorials, panel discussions and briefings in the fields of politics, economics, law, history and culture. The program is developed and conducted by a wide range of experts from government, politics, economics, academia and the media. The schedule allows for a sustained contact with those experts and for the opportunity of discussing issues of particular interest to the participants. 4 Briefings, Lectures, Panel Discussions The program is made up of a series of lectures, panel discussions, and briefings. Lectures focus on specific issues in the areas of politics, economics, law, history or culture. After a short introduction the participants will have the opportunity to discuss with the distinguished speakers issues of particular concern to them. In a panel discussion a specific issue will be discussed from different political perspectives. In briefings government officials will discuss, after a brief introduction, a specific issue with the participants. The academy will end with three simulation games in the areas of politics, economics and law. In the course of these simulations, participants will get an opportunity to apply the knowledge they have gained during the summer cademy in practice: put into the shoes of decision makers, they are asked to provide proper advice to their national governments or international organizations about how to manage an emerging international crisis. Excursions and Field Trips Excursions are a central pillar of the program. Participants of the 12th T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY will travel to Berlin, Strasbourg, Luxembourg, and Brussels to visit political institutions of Germany and the EU. Participants will meet officials of the Council of Europe, the European Parliament, the Court of Justice of the European Communities, the EU Commission, NATO and the German government. The excursions are supplemented by field trips to Cologne, Aachen and Düsseldorf during which the Rhineland will be explored. In Düsseldorf, participants will also meet with representatives of the state government of Northrhine-Westfalia and of the German Bundesbank. Participants Participants are graduate and Ph.D. students from North America and Europe with a strong background in European Studies, International Relations, Political Science, History, Sociology, Economics, Law, or Cultural Studies. In exceptional cases, senior year undergraduate students will be accepted if they can demonstrate exceptional academic achievements and a sound knowledge in the subject areas of the summer academy. As in previous years, a particular effort will be made to give students from Central and Eastern Europe the opportunity to meet and discuss the challenges facing Europe and North America in the age of globalization and interdependence with their counterparts from North America and Western Europe. 5 Faculty The faculty of the T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY consists of experts and personalities from academia, think tanks, international organizations, business, and the media as well as representatives of governments and parliaments. With their professional and academic experience they will provide a broad overview of current issues in the areas of politics, economics, law, history, and culture. Tutors At the beginning of the academy, tutors will give an orientation lecture which will provide the participants with an overview of each of the three focal areas of the academy (political science, economics, law). They will give a tutorial at the end of the academy to prepare the participants for the three simulation games which will be run under their guidance. Political Science: • Dr. Victor Mauer, Senior Researcher and Head of the ESDP Program, Center for Security Studies, ETH Zurich, Switzerland Economics: • Michael Evers, Bonn Graduate School of Economics and Center for European Integration Studies, University of Bonn Law: • Katharina Irmen, Research Associate, Institute for Air & Space Law, University of Cologne. Credit Upon request, credit certificates will be given to those who participate in all program events including the writing of three position papers as part of the three simulation games at the end of the academy. For successful participation in TASA, 4 ECTS credits will be awarded. Library and Internet During the academy participants can use the library of the Center for European Integration Studies (ZEI) and have free access to computer labs in Bonn and at the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus where they can send and receive E-Mail messages. Readings Upon arrival, participants will receive a reader with relevant texts for tutorials and lectures. For those who would like to prepare for the academy in advance, we strongly recommend: 6 General: Hans Binnendijk and Richard Kugler, Transforming European Forces (Survival, Autumn 2002); Francis Fukuyama, The US versus the Rest (New Perspectices Quarterly, Fall 2002); David C. Gompert and F. Stephen Larrabee (eds), America and Europe: A Partnership in a New Era (Cambridge University Press, 1997); Philip H. Gordon, Reforging the Atlantic Alliance (The National Interest, Fall 2002); Robert Kagan, Paradise and Power – America and Europe in the New World Order (Alfred A. Knopf, 2003); Charles Kupchan, The End of the American Era (Alfred A. Knopf, 2002); Michael Mandelbaum, The Ideas that Conquered the World (PublicAffairs, 2002); Andrew Moravcsik, The Choice for Europe: Social Purpose and State Power from Messina to Maastricht (Cornell University Press, 1998); Joseph S. Nye, The Paradox of American Power (Oxford University Press, 2003); Trevor C. Salmon and Sir William Nicoll (eds), Building European Union: A Documentary History and Analysis (Manchester University Press, 1997); Peter M. R. Stirk and David Weigall (eds), The Origins and Development of European Integration: A Reader and Commentary (Cassell Academic, 1999); Paul Taylor, The European Union in the 1990s (Oxford University Press, 1996); Ronald Tiersky, Europe Today: National Politics, European Integration, and European Security (Rowman & Littlefield, 1999/2004); David S. Yost, NATO Transformed: The Alliance’s New Role in International Security (United States Institute of Peace, 1999). For this year’s main focus: Paul W. Schroeder, “Alliances 1815-1945: Weapons of Power and Tools of Management,” in: Klaus Knorr (ed), Historical Dimensions of National Security Problems, Lawrence 1976, 227-262; Stephen M. Walt, The Origins of Alliance, Ithaca/London 1987; Glenn H. Snyder, Alliance Politics, Ithaca/London 1997. John H. Herz, “Idealist Internationalism and the Security Dilemma,” World Politics 2,2 (1950), 157-180; Robert Jervis, “Cooperation Under the Security Dilemma,” World Politics 30,2 (1978), 167-214; Glenn Snyder, “The Security Dilemma in Alliance Politics,” World Politics 36,4 (July 1984), 461-495. Geir Lundestad, The United States and Western Europe since 1945, Oxford/New York 2003; Geir Lundestad (ed), No End to Alliance. The United States and Western Europe: Past, Present and Future, London 1998, [Nobel Symposium 105]; V. Kathleen Burk and Melvyn Stokes (eds), The United States and the European Alliance since 1945, Oxford/New York 1999; Beatrice Heuser, Transatlantic Relations. Sharing ideals and costs, London 1996; John L. Gaddis, Surprise, Security, and the American Experience, Cambridge/London 2004. Accommodation All participants will be staying at the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus in Königswinter near Bonn. Participants will be housed in double-bed rooms, which will be available from Monday, June 13, until Saturday, July 9, 2005; they will also share double-bed rooms during the excursions. Upon request the AdamStegerwald-Haus may provide a room for those participants who need accommodation before or after the summer academy. These participants have to cover the additional expenses. The address of the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus is: Hauptstraße 487 53639 Königswinter Phone: +49 (0)2223 706-0 (reception) Fax: +49 (0)2223 706-45 (reception) E-Mail: [email protected] http://www.adam-stegerwald-haus.de 7 Breakfast will be served at the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus. Lunch, unless otherwise indicated, will be offered at the cafeteria of the Center of European Integration Studies (ZEI). Generally, participants will buy their own dinner. Participants should budget about EUR 15,00 per day for incidental expenses. Should a participant have special needs regarding food, she or he should inform the organizer no later than three weeks before the beginning of TASA. Public Transportation / Travel Information The Adam-Stegerwald-Haus is within easy access of downtown Bonn, where the Center of European Integration Studies (ZEI) is located. If you arrive at Cologne/Bonn Airport you take the “Airport Shuttle”-Bus (# 670) to Bonn Hauptbahnhof (Central Station); the ticket price is EUR 5.80. If you arrive at Frankfurt (Main) Airport you take the train from the airport station Frankfurt Flughafen Fernbahnhof either to Bonn Hauptbahnhof (directly every hour, EUR 29.00, 105 minutes travel time, or via Cologne, EUR 59.00, 90 minutes travel time) or to Siegburg/Bonn Bahnhof (EUR 45.00, 37 minutes travel time). Door-to-door train schedules are available at http://www.bahn.de (-> “International Guests”). From Düsseldorf Airport train station (Düsseldorf Flughafen) there is a regular train service to Bonn Hauptbahnhof, travel time is around 70 minutes. Door-todoor train schedules are available at http://www.bahn.de (-> “International Guests”). The Adam-Stegerwald-Haus can be reached by tram # 66 to Königswinter/Bad Honnef which departs every 20 minutes from the subway platform both below Bonn Central Station (“U-Bahn, Gleis 4”) and below the Siegburg/Bonn train station. A plan of the subway platforms at Bonn Hauptbahnhof is available at http://www.vrsinfo.de/minis_neu/Lageplaene/u_Bonn_Hauptbahnhof_ZOB.pdf You get off at Königswinter-Fähre (Ferry). Travel time from Bonn Central Station is 30 minutes, from Siegburg/Bonn around 55 minutes. The one-way ticket can be bought within the tram or at the platform (be sure to have coins ready, not all ticket machines accept bills); the ticket price is EUR 2.90 (“CityPlusTicket, Preisstufe 2b”) from Bonn Hauptbahnhof or EUR 3.80 (“RegioTicket, Preisstufe 3”) from Siegburg/Bonn Bahnhof. A schedule for the tram # 66 is available at http://www.vrsinfo.de/minis_neu/Stadtbahn/s_Linie_66.pdf. At the stop in Königswinter you cross the Rheinallee and turn into JacobKaiser-Straße at the Hotel Maritim. The Adam-Stegerwald-Haus is at the corner of Jacob-Kaiser-Straße/Hauptstraße, around two minutes from the tram stop. To reach the Center of European Integration Studies (ZEI) where all classes will be held, take tram # 66 to Siegburg. You get off at the stop Heussallee /Museumsmeile. Allow for 20 minutes travel time. Exit the station towards “Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle” and follow the signs reading “Zentrum für 8 Europäische Integrationsforschung (ZEI) / Zentrum für Entwicklungsforschung (ZEF)”. The ZEI is at the end of the Walter-Flex-Straße on the left side. Upon arrival, participants will receive a ticket for the public transportation system in Bonn for the duration of the academy. Visa Requirements for Non-EU Citizens Depending on your nationality, you may need a visa that will be valid for the Federal Republic of Germany as well as for Belgium, France, and Luxembourg. For detailed information, please contact the respective consular sections of these countries in your home country. Participation Fee The participation fee is EUR (€) 2,350. The fee includes registration, accommodation, half-board, tuition, public transportation in Bonn, documentation, excursions and regional field trips. Travel expenses to and from Bonn are to be covered by the participant or his/her institution. Insurance Travel to and from Bonn as well as medical insurance during the program will be in the responsibility of the participant. 9 How to Contact TASA Participants Personal mail for TASA participants may either be sent to the AdamStegerwald-Haus or the TASA office at the University of Bonn: T RANSATLANTIC S UMMER A CADEMY Adam-Stegerwald-Haus z. Hd. <participant’s name> Hauptstraße 487 53639 Königswinter Germany z. Hd. <participant’s name> University of Bonn – International Office Poppelsdorfer Allee 53 53115 Bonn Germany TASA Program Coordinator Please contact Mr. Christian Klöckner in case of any queries and emergencies. Office phone: +49-(0)228-73-2062 Mobile phone: +49-(0)178-358-1725 Dial +49 from abroad; from within Germany, start with the “0”. 10 PROGRAM The program officially begins on Tuesday, June 14, 2005, at 11:00AM and will end on Saturday, July 9, 2005. The conference language is English. TASA reserves the right to alter or cancel any aspect of the program. Monday, June 13 Arrival in Bonn Address: Adam-Stegerwald-Haus Hauptstraße 487 53639 Königswinter Phone: +49 (0)2223 706-0 (reception) Fax: +49 (0)2223 706-45 (reception) E-Mail: [email protected] http://www.adam-stegerwald-haus.de Tuesday, June 14 Welcome and Keynote Lecture 11:00AM Welcome at the University of Bonn’s Center for European Integration Studies (ZEI), Presentation of Participants and TASA Staff Address: Zentrum für Europäische Integrationsforschung (ZEI) Walter-Flex-Straße 3 53113 Bonn Phone: +49 (0) 228 73-72 49 Fax: +49 (0) 228 73-50 97 E-Mail: [email protected] http://www.zei.de 12:30PM Lunch 02:00PM - 04:00PM Opening Ceremony, Senatssaal, University of Bonn Welcome Address given by Prof. Dr. Matthias Winiger, Rector of the University of Bonn “The Transatlantic Alliance – A Relic of the Cold War?”, Keynote Address, Prof. Dr. Andreas Rödder, History Dept., University of Mainz 04:30PM Reception at the Historic City Hall with Peter Finger, Mayor of the City of Bonn 05:30PM Boat Trip on the Rhine 11 Wednesday, June 15 Introductory Lectures 09:00AM - 10:45AM “NATO and the European Union: Strategic Actors, Partners, Rivals”. Dr. Victor Mauer, Center for Security Studies, ETH Zurich, Switzerland (Introductory Lecture Political Science) 11:15AM - 01:00PM "Of Sugar, Steel and Aircraft: Strategic Trade Policies in the Transatlantic Relations". Michael Evers, Bonn Graduate School of Economics, Center for European Integration Studies (ZEI), University of Bonn (Introductory Lecture Economics) 01:00PM Lunch 02:00PM - 03:45PM "Regional Arrangements and the Use of Force – the Story of the Security Council's Waning Power?" Katharina Irmen, Research Associate, Institute for Air & Space Law, University of Cologne (Introductory Lecture Law) Thursday, June 16 Cultural and Domestic Dynamics of Transatlantic Relations (I) 09:00AM - 10:45AM “I’m lovin’ it, ich liebe es (nicht): American Popular Culture and Contemporary Germany”, PD Dr. Christoph Ribbat, North American Studies Program, University of Bonn 11:15AM - 01:00PM “Transatlantic (Dis-)Connections?”, Prof. Dr. Sabine Sielke, Professor for North American Literary and Cultural Studies and Director, North American Studies Program, University of Bonn 01:00PM Lunch 02:00PM - 03:45PM ”The Vietnam Protest Movement and the Western Alliance“,PD Dr. Marc Frey, Center for Dutch Studies, University of Muenster Friday, June 17 Cultural and Domestic Dynamics of Transatlantic Relations (II) 09:00AM - 10:45AM "Italy in the Atlantic Alliance: The Elusive Ally”, Giulia Prati, M.A., North American Studies Program, Dept. of Political Science, University of Bonn 12 11:15AM - 01:00PM “Anti-Americanism – on the Rise?”, Panel Discussion with: • Prof. Dr. Joachim Scholtyseck, History Dept., Academic Director of TASA, University of Bonn • PD Dr. Philipp Gassert, Assistant Professor for American History, Executive Director Heidelberg Center for American Studies • PD Dr. Harald Biermann, Historical Museum of the Federal Republic of Germany (Haus der Geschichte), Bonn • Dr. Ulrich Schiller, journalist and former correspondent in Washington, DC, and book author of Macht außer Kontrolle (Power Out of Control) 01:00PM Lunch 02:00PM Short walk to the Historical Museum of the Federal Republic of Germany (Haus der Geschichte) 02.30PM - 04:30PM Guided Tour of the Museum Saturday, June 18 Berlin 10:00AM Departure from the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus 06:30PM Arrival at the Hotel Ibis Reinickendorf in Berlin Address: Hotel Ibis Berlin Reinickendorf Alt-Reinickendorf 4-5 13407 Berlin Germany Phone: +49 (0)30 49883-0 Fax: +49 (0)30 49883-444 E-Mail: [email protected] 07:00PM Dinner at the Hotel Evening free Sunday, June 19 Berlin 10:00AM - 01:00PM Optional: “The Poetics of 9/11”, Session of the Weekend Seminar “Contemporary American Poetry and Poetics”. Prof. Dr. Sabine Sielke, PD Dr. Susanne Rohr, graduate students from the John F. Kennedy 13 Institute for North American Studies, Free University Berlin, and from the North American Studies Program, University of Bonn Individual Lunch 02:45PM - 06:00PM Guided Tour of the City of Berlin Meeting Point: Bus Parking Lot at the “Löwentor” (Lion’s Gate) Entrance of the Berlin Zoo, Hardenbergplatz. Train and Tram Station “Zoologischer Garten”, follow signs to the zoo. Evening free Monday, June 20 Berlin 10:00AM Departure from the Hotel 10:45AM Visit to the Federal Chancellery (Bundeskanzleramt) 11:15AM Briefing on Germany’s Preparations for the G8 Summit in Gleneagles, Scotland (July 6–8, 2005). Ulrich Benterbusch, Federal Chancellery, Division International Economic Relations 12:15AM Briefing on Germany’s Security Policy, Representative, Federal Chancellery, Division Foreign Affairs 01:30PM - 02:15PM Lunch at the Cafeteria of the Federal Office of the Chancellery 02:15PM - 03:00PM Guided Tour of the Office of the Federal Chancellery Building 03:30PM - 05:00PM Guided Tour of the Reichstag Evening free Tuesday, June 21 Berlin 08:15AM Departure from the Hotel 09:00AM - 10:45AM “NATO and Transatlantic Relations: Driver or Driven?”, Dr. Henning Riecke, Resident Fellow, Research Institute of the German Council on Foreign Relations, Berlin 11:15AM - 12:45PM “German Defense Policy Guidelines for a Changed Security Environment”, Lt Col Jörg Rütten, Division 14 Military Policy and Ministry of Defense Bilateral Relations, Federal 01:00PM Departure to the European Academy Berlin 01:30 PM Lunch at the European Academy Berlin 02:30PM - 03:45PM “Is there a European Identity?“ Dr. Eckart D. Stratenschulte, Director of the European Academy Berlin 03:45PM - 05:00PM “’Transatlantic Trends’ - The Perception of the Transatlantic Relations in Europe and North America”, Thorsten Klassen, Berlin Office of the German Marshall Fund Wednesday, June 22 Berlin 08:15AM Check-out from the Hotel 09:00AM Visit to the Normannenstrasse Research Center and Memorial Site of the former GDR’s Headquarters of the Ministry for State Security 09:00AM - 11:00AM Guided Tour and Briefing on the Stasi Surveillance System, Persecution in the GDR and Resistance 12:00AM Lunch 01:00PM Departure for the Aspen Institute Berlin 02:00PM “Can International Law and the UN Cope with the 21st Century?”, Dr. Jeffrey Gedmin, Director of the Aspen Institute Berlin 03:30PM Departure for Bonn-Königswinter 11:00PM Arrival in Bonn-Königswinter Thursday, June 23 Alliances from Antiquity to the 20th Century 09:00AM - 10:45AM “Alliances in the Past: The Roman Empire”, Prof. Dr. Dr. Klaus Rosen, Institute for Ancient History, University of Bonn 11:15AM - 13:00 PM “A Europe of Alliances? Alliance Politics 1648-1763”, PD Dr. Arno Strohmeyer, History Dept., University of Bonn 01:00PM Lunch 15 02:00PM - 03:30PM “The Austro-German Alliance in the July 1914 Crisis”, Stephen Schröder, M.A., History Dept., University of Bonn Optional: 04:00PM - 05:00PM Guided Tour of the Beethoven House Friday, June 24 Alliance Politics in the 20th Century 09:00AM - 10:45AM “Alliance Politics in the Suez Crisis”, Thomas Freiberger, M.A., History Dept., University of Bonn 11:15AM - 01:00PM “Alliance Politics in the Cuban Missile Crisis”, PD Dr. Harald Biermann, History Dept., University of Bonn 01:00PM - 02:00PM Lunch 02:00PM - 03:45PM “Alliance Politics and the NATO ‘Double Track’ Decision”, Prof. Dr. Joachim Scholtyseck, Academic Director of the Transatlantic Summer Academy and Professor for Recent History, History Dept., University of Bonn Saturday, June 25 Cologne 09:00AM Excursion to Cologne 10:00AM Guided Tour of Cologne with Prof. Dr. Heijo Klein, Professor (em.) of Art History, University of Bonn Afternoon Free Sunday, June 26 Strasbourg 10:00AM Departure from the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus 02:30PM Arrival in Strasbourg 03:00PM - 05:00PM Guided Tour of the City of Strasbourg with Prof. Dr. Heijo Klein, Professor (em.) of Art History, University of Bonn 05:00PM - 06:00PM Free time 06:00PM Departure for Lautenbach (Black Forrest) 07:30PM Arrival in Lautenbach 16 Address: Gasthof und Pension "zum Kreuz" Hauptstraße 66 77794 Lautenbach Germany Phone: +49 (0)7802 4560 Fax: +49 (0)7802 3983 08:00PM Dinner at the Hotel Monday, June 27 Strasbourg 08:15AM Departure for Strasbourg 10:00AM Visit to the European Parliament 11:15PM “The Role of the European Parliament in European Politics”, Dr. Otmar Philipp, General Direction Information and Public Relations, European Parliament 12:30PM Lunch break 02:00PM Visit to the Council of Europe Visit of the Debating Chamber of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Video Presentation on the European Parliament and Visit of the Chamber 03:00PM “The Role of the Council of Europe in a Greater Europe”, Briefing, N.N. 05:00PM Departure from Strasbourg 08:30PM Arrival in Luxembourg 09:00PM Dinner at the Hotel Tuesday, June 28 Luxembourg 08:15AM Departure from the Hotel Visit to the Court of Justice of the European Communities 08:40AM Welcome at the Court of Justice of the European Communities 09:30AM Attendance of Court Hearing 11:00AM Lecture, Representative of the Court 17 12:30PM End of Visit to the Court of Justice of the European Communities 01:00PM Lunch Optional: 02:30PM Guided tour of the City Center of Luxembourg with Prof. Dr. Heijo Klein, Professor (em.) of Art History, University of Bonn 04:30PM Departure for Bonn-Königswinter 07:30PM Arrival in Bonn-Königswinter 08:00PM Dinner at the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus Wednesday, June 29 The Enlargement of the EU – from the Balkans to Turkey? 09:00AM - 10:45AM “A Growing Europe in a Shrinking World: The European Union and 21st Century Challenges”, Dr. Andrew Denison, Director of Transatlantic Networks, Königswinter 11:15AM - 01:00PM “Old vs. New Europe? European Security and Defense Policy vs. NATO?”, Dr. Franz-Josef Meiers, Center for European Integration Studies, University of Bonn 01:00PM Lunch AFTERNOON FREE 06:00PM - 08:00PM “The Future of Turkey in Europe”, Debate with: • Ece Öztürk-Cil, Deputy Consul General, ConsulateGeneral of the Turkey Republic, Cologne • Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Wessels, Research Institute for Political Science and European Matters, University of Cologne • Ursula Stenzel, Member of the European Parliament for the Group of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats) and European Democrats • Prof. Dr. Joachim Scholtyseck, Academic Director of TASA, History Department, University of Bonn • Baha Güngör, Deutsche Welle-Radio 18 Thursday, June 30 Düsseldorf 08:00AM Departure from the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus 09:45AM Visit to the State Chancellery Westphalia, Düsseldorf 10:00 - 11:30AM “A Regional Perspective of the European Integration Process”, Dr. Herbert Jakoby, Department of European and International Affairs within the State Chancellery 11:45AM Visit to the German Central Bank 12:00AM - 01:30PM “Structure and Tasks of the European Central Bank”, Dr. Harald Loy, Central Direction of the German Central Bank, Düsseldorf 01:30PM Lunch at the Central Bank 02:30PM Departure for US Consulate 03:00PM Reception and Briefing at the US Consulate 04:30PM Departure for Bonn Friday, July 1 NATO & EU – Current Issues 09:00AM - 10:45AM “Clash of Legal Cultures? – Constitutionalism and Transatlantic Relations”, Dr. Thilo Rensmann, LL.M., Law Department, University of Bonn 11:15AM - 01:00PM “Current Developments of ESDP”, Lt Col Erik Kränzle, Division European Affairs, Federal Ministry of Defense 01:00PM - 02:00PM Lunch 02:00PM - 03:30PM “Preemptive Strikes – A New Reality in Security Policy”, Dr. Karl-Heinz Kamp, Coordinator European and Foreign Policy, Konrad Adenauer Foundation, Berlin 03:30PM - 05:00PM “Protecting Europe from US Cultural Imperialism? The EU’s Efforts to Preserve Diversity in the Age of Globalization”, Ruth Hieronymi, Member of the European Parliament, Group of the European People's Party (Christian Democrats) and European Democrats of North Rhine Saturday, July 2 No Classes 19 Sunday, July 3 Aachen 11:00PM Departure from the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus 01:00PM Guided Tour of Aachen Cathedral 02:00PM Guided Tour of Downtown Aachen with Prof. Dr. Heijo Klein, Professor (em.) of Art History, University of Bonn 04:00PM Departure for Brussels 08:00PM Arrival at the Hotel Astrid in Brussels Address: Hotel Astrid Zaterdagplein/Place du Samedi 11 1000 Brussels - Belgium Phone: +32 2 219 31 19 Fax: +32 2 219 31 70 E-Mail: [email protected] 08:30PM Dinner at the Hotel Monday, July 4 Brussels 08:15AM Departure from the Hotel Visit to the European Commission, Visitors‘ Center 08:50AM Welcome and Presentation of the Program, N.N., Visits Unit, Directorate-General “Education and Culture” 09:00 – 10:15AM “A Bigger Role in the World? The Impact of the EUEnlargement on Transatlantic Relations”, Briefing, N.N., Directorate-General “External Relations” Coffee Break 10:30 – 11:45AM “Negotiation Processes in the EU”, Lecture, N.N., Directorate-General “External Relations” 12:00PM Lunch at the European Commission Self-Service Restaurant 01:30PM Departure 02:00PM - 04:00PM “Transatlantic Relations in the fields of Security and Defense Policy”, Annette Heuser, Director of the Bertelsmann Foundation Brussels Office 20 “CFSP and ESDP Put to Practice – Negotiating Crisis Management”, Friederike Tschampa, Coordinator Political and Security Committee (PSC), General Secretariat, Council of the EU 04:00PM - 06:00PM Guided Tour of the City Center of Brussels with Prof. Dr. Heijo Klein, Professor (em.) of Art History, University of Bonn 07:00PM Departure from the Hotel 07:30PM - 09:00PM Reception at the Brussels Office of the KonradAdenauer-Foundation Tuesday, July 5 Brussels 08:00AM Departure from the Hotel 09:00AM Visit to NATO Headquarters 09:15AM Briefing and Discussion on NATO’s Transformation with Dr. Knut Kirste, Liaison and Information Officer, Public Diplomacy DIvision 10:30AM Briefing and Discussion on NATO and the Transatlantic Relations with Michael Ruehle, Political Affairs and Security Policy Division 11:45AM Briefing and Discussion on the Relations of NATO and Russia, N.N. 01:00PM Lunch at NATO Headquarters 02:00PM Briefing and Discussion with N.N., Representative of one of the seven new Eastern European NATO member states 03:30PM Departure for Bonn-Königswinter 07:30PM Arrival in Bonn-Königswinter 08:00PM Dinner at the Adam-Stegerwald-Haus Wednesday, July 6 Preparation and Simulation Games 09:00AM - 10:45AM Preparation for Simulation Game Law 11:15AM - 01:00PM Preparation for Simulation Game Economics 01:00PM - 02:00PM Lunch 21 02:00PM - 06:00PM Simulation Game Economics Thursday, July 7 Preparation and Simulation Games 09:00AM - 01:00PM Simulation Game Law 01:00PM - 02:00PM Lunch 02:00PM - 03:45PM Preparation for Simulation Game Political Science Friday, July 8 Simulation Games / Closing Ceremony 09:00AM - 01:00PM Simulation Game Political Science 01:00PM - 02:00PM Lunch 02:00PM - 03:30PM TASA 2004 Review and Evaluation 04:00PM Closing Ceremony of TASA 2004 at the Center for European Integration Studies with the University of Bonn’s Vice-Rector Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Hess 04:30PM Farewell Party Saturday, July 9 by 11:00 AM Departure of Participants from the Adam-StegerwaldHaus 22 Notes: 23 Notes: 24