Spaces of Opportunities: Expert Networks, Research Collaboration and Science Diplomacy in the Socialist World

Event, 8-10 October 2025
Organisers: Bogdan C. Iacob, Academia Romānā, Insitutul de Istorie "Nicolae Iorga" (Bucharest) / Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, Institut für die Erforschung der Habsburgermonarchie und des Balkanraumes (Vienna); Martin Bemmann, History Department, University of Freiburg (University of Freiburg)
Location: University of Freiburg
Funded by: Fritz Thyssen Stiftung
Postcode: 79085
City: Freiburg
Country: Deutschland
Takes place In person
Dates: 08.10.2025 - 10.10.2025
 

The conference deals with international collaboration of scientists and experts across the 'socialist world' and asks for its scientific, political, economic and social relevance for states, institutions and individuals in the context of the late Cold War.

 

Spaces of Opportunities: Expert Networks, Research Collaboration and Science Diplomacy in the Socialist World

In recent decades, scholars have explored the manifold entanglements between science, applied research and development, expertise and international politics in the context of the Cold War from various perspectives. The emergence of (economic) development policies and practices, the relevance of international organizations as actors, instruments and arenas for (science) diplomacy, or the shaping of international research policies in Western Europe are just few examples of such scholarship. Since a decade or so, the considerable influence technical experts from the socialist countries exerted in the decolonizing Global South has also become a major topic in the specialized literature.

What by now has hardly come into the focus of academics, though, are ‘East-East’-connections and entanglements. Only in recent years, historiographic interest in such entanglements in science, applied research and technological development has emerged. However, we still know relatively little about transnational expert networks within the socialist world, about the forms of competition and cooperation they enabled, as well as about their scientific, political, economic and social relevance for states, institutions and individuals in the context of the Cold War. This conference, generously funded by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation, wants to change this.

Programme

8 Oct 2025

18.00 – 20.00
Public Keynote Lecture

Angela Romano (Bologna)
Cooperation Across, Within and Beyond Cold War Blocs: Structures, Dynamics and Agents

9 Oct 2025

9.00-9.30

Bogdan C. Iacob & Martin Bemmann
Welcome and Introduction

Motives

9.30-11.30

Doubravka Olšáková (Prague)
Global Ambitions, Local Tensions: Expert Networks and Science Diplomacy in the Cold War

Felix Herrmann (Bremen)
Divergent Goals in Building the Socialist Cross-Border Computer Industry

11.30-12.00
Coffee Break

12.00-13.00

Marius Tarita (Freiburg)
Poland’s Institute for Environmental Management and the CMEA during the 1970s and 1980s

13.00-14.00
Lunch Break

Emergence of Spaces of ‘Successful’ Cooperation

14.00-16.00

Jan Zofka (Leipzig)
Cotton in the CMEA: State Socialist Cooperation and Competition during the Early Cold War

Martin Bemmann (Freiburg)
Phosphor Dynamics and Fertilizer Tests: Successful Research Collaboration within the CMEA (1970s and 1980s)?

16.00-16.30
Coffee Break

16.30-17.30

Elena Kochetkova (Bergen)
Food as a Cold War Matter: Industrial Food Manufacturing and European Cooperation in the CMEA

10 Oct 2025

National Interests, Individual Benefits

9.00-11.00

Austin Jersild (Norfolk, VA)
Balancing the Books in the Socialist World: Czechoslovak, Bulgarian and East German Trade Dilemmas in Guinea-Conakry, 1958-1973

Darina Volf (Munich)
“The Enthusiasm is There, the Equipment Not Yet”: Czechoslovak and East German

11.00-11.30
Coffee Break

11.30-13.30

Alexa Geisthövel (Berlin)
“Budapest, We Have a Kidney”: Inter-Socialist Cooperation in Organ Transplantation, 1970-1990

Matthias Kaltenbrunner (Munich)
“Small CMEA”: The Central European Trade Agreement and its Counterhegemonic Legacies

13.30-14.30
Lunch Break

Beyond the Socialist World

14.30-16.30

Dora Vargha (Berlin)
There and Back Again: The World Health Organization and Socialist International Health

Anna Calori (Glasgow)
When Business Met Science: Agroindustry and Genetics between Yugoslavia and Its Non-Aligned Partners

16.30-17.00
Coffee Break

17.00-19.00

Bogdan C. Iacob (Bucharest/Vienna)
Romania, Medicinal Plants and Counter-hegemonic Cooperation in Global Health during the late 1970s and the 1980s

Ylber Marku (Munich)
Knowledge for the Revolution: The Pursuit of Expertise and Its Limits in Communist Albania

19.00-19.30
Concluding Remarks and Discussion

Posted