The Origins and Impact of World War I

(Day 2)

Friday 18 October, 2013
9:15am - 6:45pm, $0

Columbia University, International Affairs
420 West 118 Street, Room 1501

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As the centennial of the outbreak of the First World War approaches, the Polish Cultural Institute is proud to participate in an international conference on "The Origins and Impact of World War I" at the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in New York. Poland did not exist as a political state in 1914, but Poles fought as citizens of the German, Russian, and Austro-Hungarian empires. Bolsheviks, Tsarists, and Germans attempted to win the hearts and minds of the Polish population, while Jozef Pilsudski and other Polish leaders saw the war as a means to an independent Poland. Lines were drawn that would dictate the geography of World War II, and ideologies were articulated that formed the basis of Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism. In this manifestation of violence on a scale unprecedented in Europe, Poles suffered over one million civilian and military casualties, out of a total of approximately 20 million deaths on both sides.

With panels on the experience and consequences of violence in the war, speakers will devote particular attention to the Eastern Front, where much of the violence took place. There will be additional discussion of the origins of the war and the war's legacy in the realm of international law. Prof. Dominic Lieven (Cambridge Univ.), author of Russia and the Origins of the First World War (Harvard 1983) and Russia Against Napoleon: The Battle for Europe, 1807-1814 (Viking 2009), will deliver the keynote address.

The Polish Cultural Institute New York presents two scholars from Poland. Dr. Jan Szkudlinski completed his doctorate in history at the University of Gdansk on German Maneuvers in the Vistula Curve in 1914 and currently works as Chief Specialist at the new Museum of World War II in Gdansk. Prof. Kazimierz Lankosz is Chair of International Public Law at the Jagiellonian University and Professor at the University of Economics in Krakow, and has been named Doctor Honoris Causa at Gutenberg University in Mainz. He serves as Director of the Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Center at the Jagiellonian University and as a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague.

As the centennial of the outbreak of the First World War approaches, the Polish Cultural Institute is proud to participate in an international conference on "The Origins and Impact of World War I" at the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in New York. Poland did not exist as a political state in 1914, but Poles fought as citizens of the German, Russian, and Austro-Hungarian empires. Bolsheviks, Tsarists, and Germans attempted to win the hearts and minds of the Polish population, while Jozef Pilsudski and other Polish leaders saw the war as a means to an independent Poland. Lines were drawn that would dictate the geography of World War II, and ideologies were articulated that formed the basis of Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism. In this manifestation of violence on a scale unprecedented in Europe, Poles suffered over one million civilian and military casualties, out of a total of approximately 20 million deaths on both sides.

With panels on the experience and consequences of violence in the war, speakers will devote particular attention to the Eastern Front, where much of the violence took place. There will be additional discussion of the origins of the war and the war's legacy in the realm of international law. Prof. Dominic Lieven (Cambridge Univ.), author of Russia and the Origins of the First World War (Harvard 1983) and Russia Against Napoleon: The Battle for Europe, 1807-1814 (Viking 2009), will deliver the keynote address.

The Polish Cultural Institute New York presents two scholars from Poland. Dr. Jan Szkudlinski completed his doctorate in history at the University of Gdansk on German Maneuvers in the Vistula Curve in 1914 and currently works as Chief Specialist at the new Museum of World War II in Gdansk. Prof. Kazimierz Lankosz is Chair of International Public Law at the Jagiellonian University and Professor at the University of Economics in Krakow, and has been named Doctor Honoris Causa at Gutenberg University in Mainz. He serves as Director of the Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Center at the Jagiellonian University and as a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague.

As the centennial of the outbreak of the First World War approaches, the Polish Cultural Institute is proud to participate in an international conference on "The Origins and Impact of World War I" at the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in New York. Poland did not exist as a political state in 1914, but Poles fought as citizens of the German, Russian, and Austro-Hungarian empires. Bolsheviks, Tsarists, and Germans attempted to win the hearts and minds of the Polish population, while Jozef Pilsudski and other Polish leaders saw the war as a means to an independent Poland. Lines were drawn that would dictate the geography of World War II, and ideologies were articulated that formed the basis of Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism. In this manifestation of violence on a scale unprecedented in Europe, Poles suffered over one million civilian and military casualties, out of a total of approximately 20 million deaths on both sides.

With panels on the experience and consequences of violence in the war, speakers will devote particular attention to the Eastern Front, where much of the violence took place. There will be additional discussion of the origins of the war and the war's legacy in the realm of international law. Prof. Dominic Lieven (Cambridge Univ.), author of Russia and the Origins of the First World War (Harvard 1983) and Russia Against Napoleon: The Battle for Europe, 1807-1814 (Viking 2009), will deliver the keynote address.

The Polish Cultural Institute New York presents two scholars from Poland. Dr. Jan Szkudlinski completed his doctorate in history at the University of Gdansk on German Maneuvers in the Vistula Curve in 1914 and currently works as Chief Specialist at the new Museum of World War II in Gdansk. Prof. Kazimierz Lankosz is Chair of International Public Law at the Jagiellonian University and Professor at the University of Economics in Krakow, and has been named Doctor Honoris Causa at Gutenberg University in Mainz. He serves as Director of the Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Center at the Jagiellonian University and as a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague.

As the centennial of the outbreak of the First World War approaches, the Polish Cultural Institute is proud to participate in an international conference on "The Origins and Impact of World War I" at the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in New York. Poland did not exist as a political state in 1914, but Poles fought as citizens of the German, Russian, and Austro-Hungarian empires. Bolsheviks, Tsarists, and Germans attempted to win the hearts and minds of the Polish population, while Jozef Pilsudski and other Polish leaders saw the war as a means to an independent Poland. Lines were drawn that would dictate the geography of World War II, and ideologies were articulated that formed the basis of Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism. In this manifestation of violence on a scale unprecedented in Europe, Poles suffered over one million civilian and military casualties, out of a total of approximately 20 million deaths on both sides.

With panels on the experience and consequences of violence in the war, speakers will devote particular attention to the Eastern Front, where much of the violence took place. There will be additional discussion of the origins of the war and the war's legacy in the realm of international law. Prof. Dominic Lieven (Cambridge Univ.), author of Russia and the Origins of the First World War (Harvard 1983) and Russia Against Napoleon: The Battle for Europe, 1807-1814 (Viking 2009), will deliver the keynote address.

The Polish Cultural Institute New York presents two scholars from Poland. Dr. Jan Szkudlinski completed his doctorate in history at the University of Gdansk on German Maneuvers in the Vistula Curve in 1914 and currently works as Chief Specialist at the new Museum of World War II in Gdansk. Prof. Kazimierz Lankosz is Chair of International Public Law at the Jagiellonian University and Professor at the University of Economics in Krakow, and has been named Doctor Honoris Causa at Gutenberg University in Mainz. He serves as Director of the Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Center at the Jagiellonian University and as a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague.

 

As the centennial of the outbreak of the First World War approaches, the Polish Cultural Institute is proud to participate in an international conference on "The Origins and Impact of World War I" at the Harriman Institute at Columbia University in New York. Poland did not exist as a political state in 1914, but Poles fought as citizens of the German, Russian, and Austro-Hungarian empires. Bolsheviks, Tsarists, and Germans attempted to win the hearts and minds of the Polish population, while Jozef Pilsudski and other Polish leaders saw the war as a means to an independent Poland. Lines were drawn that would dictate the geography of World War II, and ideologies were articulated that formed the basis of Nazi and Soviet totalitarianism. In this manifestation of violence on a scale unprecedented in Europe, Poles suffered over one million civilian and military casualties, out of a total of approximately 20 million deaths on both sides.

With panels on the experience and consequences of violence in the war, speakers will devote particular attention to the Eastern Front, where much of the violence took place. There will be additional discussion of the origins of the war and the war's legacy in the realm of international law. Prof. Dominic Lieven (Cambridge Univ.), author of Russia and the Origins of the First World War (Harvard 1983) and Russia Against Napoleon: The Battle for Europe, 1807-1814 (Viking 2009), will deliver the keynote address.

The Polish Cultural Institute New York presents two scholars from Poland. Dr. Jan Szkudlinski completed his doctorate in history at the University of Gdansk on German Maneuvers in the Vistula Curve in 1914 and currently works as Chief Specialist at the new Museum of World War II in Gdansk. Prof. Kazimierz Lankosz is Chair of International Public Law at the Jagiellonian University and Professor at the University of Economics in Krakow, and has been named Doctor Honoris Causa at Gutenberg University in Mainz. He serves as Director of the Human Rights and Humanitarian Law Center at the Jagiellonian University and as a member of the Permanent Court of Arbitration, The Hague.

 

4:00-5:30 Panel IV: The Experience of Violence – An Interdisciplinary Dialogue II

Chair: Tarik Amar (Columbia) 

Presenters: Antoon Vrints (Gent), “Beyond Victimization: Violence as a Manifestation of 

Domestic Tensions in Occupied Belgium, 1914-1918” 

Ana Antic (London), “Reading Total War from Psychiatric Patients Files” 

Jan Skudlinski (Warsaw), “’Here Starts Half-Asia.’ German Experiences on the 

Eastern Front in 1914” 

 

 

5:30-6:45 Panel V: International Law and Modern Warfare 

Chair: Michael Doyle (Columbia) 

Presenters: Isabel Hull (Cornell), “International Law and the First World War” 

Kazimierz Lankosz (Krakow), “World War I: Violations of the Laws of War, 

Postwar Developments and Lessons for Today” 

 

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