Georgia’s Hungarian Path: Continuation or Reversal After the Elections? The Heinrich Boell Foundation Tbilisi Office – South Caucasus Region held a discussion titled Georgia’s Hungarian Path: Continuation or Reversal After the Elections. For those who couldn’t attend live, we are sharing the recording of the Boell Talks discussion.
Georgia’s (Anti)Gender Democracy and The Promise of Authoritarianism In July 2024, the Heinrich Boell Foundation South Caucasus Regional Office organized an online discussion aimed at reimagining recent political, civic, and gender politics in Georgia. Lika Jalagania
Environment, Climate, and the 2024 Elections in Georgia Environmental protection and climate change have never been top concern for any elections in Georgia while the political establishment has been not-so-Green. Giorgi Ptskialadze
Boell Talks | Russia’s Strategic Grasp Over Armenia On October 15 2024, Heinrich Boell Foundation-Yerevan office held the Boell Talks on Russia’s Strategic Grasp Over Armenia.
Social-ecological engagement for resilience (2024) In cooperation with the Heinrich Boell Stiftung Yerevan Office – South Caucasus Region, the Centre for Community Mobilization and Support NGO implements a project titled “Social-ecological engagement for resilience.”
Empowering Communities Through Participation and Awareness in Climate Policy Implementation in Armenia (2024) In cooperation with the Heinrich Boell Stiftung Yerevan Office – South Caucasus Region, “Ecolur” Informational NGO implements a project titled “Empowering Communities Through Participation and Awareness in Climate Policy Implementation in Armenia.”
Романтика и практика: Что значит для азербайджанцев принятие «закона об иноагентах» в Грузии Lora Reissner
Romance and Practice: What the passing of Georgian "foreign agents law" means for Azerbaijanis On June 3, the law "On Transparency of Foreign Influence", often referred to as the "foreign agents law", was signed into force in Georgia. Numerous critics both inside the country and in the West hold that the law will decimate civil society and bring about the beginning of the end of Georgian democracy. Their neighbors in the region are no less concerned about the situation than the Georgians themselves. Lora Reissner