Katana VentraIP

Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies

The Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES) is a scholarly society "dedicated to the advancement of knowledge about Central Asia, the Caucasus, Russia, and Eastern Europe in regional and global contexts."[1] The ASEEES supports teaching, research, and publication relating to the peoples and territories within this area.

Founded

1948 (1948)

Academic Association (Non-profit)

National and International

Slavic Review and NewsNet

ASEEES Annual Convention (every fall)

c. 3,000

American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (AAASS)

ASEEES has cultivated the field's intellectual landscape for over fifty years through its chief publication, Slavic Review, Annual Convention, book prizes, and organizational newsletter. The Slavic Review scholarly journal has c.3,800 subscribers around the world. It features articles that can take any disciplinary approach, and are deemed to be original and significant to the field by peer-reviewers. The journal also features reviews and critiques of recent research within the field.


In addition to providing access to current research and scholarship through Slavic Review, ASEEES has also held an Annual Convention for decades. These conventions focus on intellectual vitality in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian studies as an international forum for 2,000 attendees (scholars, professionals, and graduate students—both domestic and international) to exchange new research and information face-to-face on an annual basis. The convention lasts four days and features approximately 500 panels and round-tables and 40 meetings.


The Annual Convention also awards prizes to works of merit published in the field within the preceding year. ASEEES awards nine book prizes, a dissertation prize, and a graduate essay prize.


ASEEES' organizational newsletter serves as the informal medium for coverage of the news of the field and profession. Distributed to their 3,000 members five times a year, it reports the activities of members and affiliates, notes members' recent publications, provides a calendar of conferences, features articles and speeches, lists summer programs and fellowship/grant opportunities, and job postings from their over fifty institutional members.

About[edit]

Background and formation[edit]

In the aftermath of World War II, the face of Europe was greatly changed. A number of countries of central and eastern Europe fell under the influence or control of the Soviet Union following the defeat of Germany. Throughout the non-communist world, political decision-makers felt a need for additional academic analysis of the politics and history of the USSR and the Soviet bloc nations as well as improved facilities for language training for a new generation of foreign affairs specialists.


A number of American universities established area studies programs and research institutes in the immediate postwar period, including notably Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Columbia University in New York City, and the University of Washington in Seattle.[2] These institutions successfully produced the leading scholars of Slavic studies in North America. A number of graduates and professors from these programs were instrumental in forming the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (AAASS)[2] from its conception between the Joint Committee on Slavic Studies (JCSS) and the American Council of Learned Societies' professional journal to being its own membership organization.


The organization's precursors—the Joint Committee on Slavic Studies (JCSS) and the American Slavic and East European Review (ASEER)—were two entities already in the field. The JCSS—a joint committee of the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) and the Social Science Research Council (SSRC)—supported scholarly conferences and publications, disbursed research and fellowship grants, and sponsored bibliographic and other projects. In 1938, the JCSS set up a subcommittee specifically for the review of Russian studies, whose chief activity was to prompt and finalize a proposal for a national professional organization. This subcommittee joined forces with ACLS's professional journal ASEER—American Slavic and East European Review, a scholarly magazine launched in 1941 by John Hazard of Columbia University.[3] By that point, ASEER had already created a corporation named the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Inc. (AAASS). They did so, in 1948, so as to have an "owner" (but was merely a “legal umbrella”) so that they would be permitted to print their journal in the State of New York—that year is still considered the association's official date of establishment.


Together, ASEER and JCSS coordinated the June 1, 1960, launch of a full-fledged national professional membership organization under the existing AAASS name. This new AAASS combined the activities of both the JCSS's Russian Studies subcommittee and the ASEER. However, ASEER was soon enlarged, revised, and renamed to become AAASS' own quarterly peer-reviewed journal, Slavic Review. Professor Donald Treadgold of the University of Washington was the initial editor of this new official AAASS publication.[3] AAASS had (and continues to have) an interdisciplinary scope, and was to be a means of promoting contact and communication and of encouraging a sense of identification and association among those concerned with Russian and East European Studies. Its main functions were to distribute an annual bibliography, to sponsor professional meetings and scholarly conferences, to provide a non-juried periodic newsletter (published to promote the flow of information among society members regarding the status of ongoing research and other matters of general academic interest), and to promote and sponsor other projects designed to help the field as a whole.[4]

Change of name[edit]

In 2008, the Association's membership voted to change the name of the AAASS, effective in 2010, to the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES). This new name reflects the Association's widened scope, rejecting the dominance of Russian and Slavic studies at a time when other former Slavic studies and Russian centers were renamed "Centers for Eurasian Studies".[5] The change in name coincided with the move of the Association's headquarters from Harvard in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to the University of Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Organization[edit]

ASEEES' national office is located at the University of Pittsburgh. It handles membership, publication subscriptions, NewsNet, and organizes and coordinates programmatic activities like the annual convention.


Six regional affiliates and a geographically wide-ranging committee structure enable members across the country to effectively work together on matters of professional interest. Specifically, regional affiliates sponsor scholarly meetings and activities within their respective regions of the US. ASEEES committees contribute to many aspects of the organization including scholarly ventures, prizes and publications. In addition, ASEEES has organizational ties with scholarly societies within the broad field of Slavic, East European, and Eurasian studies. These affiliates normally sponsor panels and hold meetings at the annual ASEEES convention.

Board of directors[edit]

The ASEEES by-laws establish that the business, property, and affairs are conducted and managed by a Board of Directors. This board currently consists of twenty-four officers—each with different term lengths. Each year, officers cycle off and the ASEEES holds elections to designate a new Vice-President/President-Elect, two members-at-large, and (every other year) a graduate student representative.

Membership[edit]

Individual[edit]

ASEEES has approximately 3,000 members and subscribers in the US and abroad. Members come from the academic community, as well as from the government and private sectors. Membership is open to anyone interested in furthering the scholarly objectives of ASEEES.

Institutional[edit]

Institutions with programs or interests in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian studies are eligible to become institutional members of ASEEES. Over fifty institutions demonstrate their support of the field via membership in the Association. Through their representatives on the Council of Institutional Members, they exchange viewpoints and work together on issues of common concern.

Annual conventions[edit]

The annual convention is one of ASEEES' core activities. It serves as an international forum for encouraging scholarship for an average of over 2,000 attendees each year.


ASEEES (formerly AAASS) has held conventions since 1964. The first convention of the organization was held in New York City in April 1964, under the chairmanship of Professor Holland Hunter of Haverford College.[7] Although the organization initially held these gatherings every third year so as not to sap the strength of the organization,[8] they have been held on an annual basis for decades, hosted in a different city each year.

Distinguished Contributions Award

CLIR Distinguished Service Award

[10]

Book Prize

Wayne S. Vucinich

USC Book Prize in Literary and Cultural Studies

Book Prize in History

Reginald Zelnik

Davis Center Book Prize in Political and Social Studies

Book Prize

Marshall D. Shulman

Ed A Hewett Book Prize

Barbara Jelavich Book Prize

Kulczycki Book Prize in Polish Studies

Book Prize (even-numbered years only)

W. Bruce Lincoln

Graduate Student Essay Prize

Tucker/Cohen Dissertation Prize

The Association annually awards various prizes and awards which are presented at the Awards Presentation during the Annual Convention:[9]

Central Slavic Conference

Midwest Slavic Conference

(formerly Mid-Atlantic Slavic Conference)

Northeast Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Conference

Southern Conference on Slavic Studies

Southwest Slavic Association

(formerly Rocky Mountain Association for Slavic Studies)

Western Association for Slavic Studies

Regional affiliates sponsor scholarly meetings and activities within their respective regions of the US.

American Association of Teachers of Slavic and Eastern European Languages

American Council of Teachers of Russian

Slavistics

Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies official website

Slavic Review Homepage