Thursday, April 25, 2019

Zonta Club of Pinellas - USFSP Global Initiatives - Macedonia Fulbright Presentation - April 2019

Tampa Bay area followers --

Please join us at USFSP for my presentation about my Fulbright in Macedonia - now the Republic of North Macedonia - on Tuesday, April 30th at 6:00 PM



Wednesday, April 24, 2019

Faculty Development Workshop at Eckerd College

It was a pleasure meeting with faculty at Eckerd College to share my experiences with the Fulbright Program and to provide insights for those considering applying.


Thanks for the invitation!  I always appreciate the opportunity to speak about Fulbright.




It was also a nice opportunity to display posters about my Fulbright that I prepared for other presentations.  (One of the posters was about "The Multiplier Effect: How my Fulbright to Macedonia Inspired Many New Initiatives" and the other was specifically about "Rule of Law and Civil Society: My Fulbright to Macedonia, 2017")


Saturday, April 20, 2019

The 3 Candidates Running for President of North Macedonia are All Academics!

The three candidates running for President of North Macedonia are professors -- two of whom I had the opportunity to work with when on my Fulbright --

Professor Blerim Reka was my host while I was teaching US Constitutional Law at SEEU, and we subsequently worked together on an MOU between USFSP and SEEU and also had our students work together collaboratively (creating a virtual classroom linking Macedonians with Floridians).  Here are a few posts from this blog:

https://jainmacedonia.blogspot.com/2018/03/seeu-usfsp-cooperation-constitutional.html

https://www.usfsp.edu/home/2018/05/25/usf-st-petersburg-signs-first-american-university-collaboration-agreement-with-south-east-european-university/

https://jainmacedonia.blogspot.com/2017/01/welcome-to-south-east-european.html

 https://jainmacedonia.blogspot.com/2017/06/macedonian-hospitality-dinner-with-seeu.html

And I was a guest lecturer in Professor Gordana Siljianovska's Constitutional Law class --

 http://jainmacedonia.blogspot.com/2017/03/skopje-guest-lecture-at-ss-cyril-and.html


 https://jainmacedonia.blogspot.com/2017/05/us-supreme-court-oral-argument.html


Here's an article in Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty:

https://www.rferl.org/a/all-academics-when-it-comes-to-north-macedonian-vote/29893477.html?fbclid=IwAR2yq9KOH1ge7_9n5LVnyJyFCQXNrvi7ZztJ6iVOM58hgDkue_vZKdUgm44

"It's All Academics When It Comes To North Macedonian Vote"

by Alan Crosby

April 20, 2019

 



Imagine an election campaign run among candidates who aren't politicians. Macedonians can.
As an April 21 presidential vote approaches, the race between three candidates, all academics and none career politicians, has been dominated by debate on issues such as integration into Western structures.
In a country where previous election campaigns have been marked by violence, dirty tricks, and sharp nationalist rhetoric, Macedonians appear happy to be choosing candidates based on their opinions, not leaked wiretapped recordings, accusations of electoral fraud, or rumors on social media.
Those candidates are Stevo Pendarovski, the country's coordinator for NATO accession, who is backed by the ruling Social Democrats; conservative university professor Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova, the country's first female candidate; and Blerim Reka, a long-shot candidate and former ambassador to the EU who is backed by two smaller ethnic Albanian parties.
All three signed a code for fair and democratic elections before the start of the campaign, signaling a new page in the country's election history.
"It's high time that we have the opportunity to choose a person who will be consistent at a time when we are about change in the new era we live in," says Ibrahim Hazimi from the capital, Skopje.
Heading Westward
On the heels of its historic agreement with Greece to change its name to North Macedonia and end a decades-long dispute that had blocked the Balkan state's path to NATO and the EU, the election is unlikely to see the country change course.
North Macedonia signed an accession protocol with NATO in February and the government of Prime Minister Zoran Zaev has named EU membership as its main foreign-policy goal.
Though the office has limited powers, the president has the final signature on legislation and is the leader of the army.
Outgoing President Gjorge Ivanov has kept the name issue alive during the final months of his five-year term by refusing to sign laws that contain the name North Macedonia, including some that are critical to enacting reforms sought by the EU.
Pendarovski, a 55-year-old former political-science professor, has strongly supported the so-called Prespa deal signed with Greece last year to change the country's name, while Siljanovska-Davkova has been critical of it, though the opposition has said it will not cancel the accord.
"My vote will be guided by the candidate who offers a perspective on the future and who will guide us through the doors now opening," Skopje resident Gligor Stojmenov says.
Overcoming Disappointment
Opinion polls show that candidate may be Pendarovski, who lost to Ivanov in the last presidential ballot in 2014.
A survey conducted by the Rating agency between April 8 and April 14 put him in the lead with 38.3 percent, five percentage points ahead of the 64-year-old Siljanovska-Davkova and almost 36 points in front of Reka.
If no candidate wins more than 50 percent of the vote, the two candidates with the most ballots will enter a runoff on May 5 where turnout must be at least 40 percent of the 1.8 million-strong electorate for the result to be valid.
"A large number of citizens are disappointed in general with politics, and have been exhausted by political battles and electoral processes the past few years," Marko Trosanovski of the Institute for Democracy says. "It will be extremely difficult to get out and motivate those who are undecided and those who are disappointed."
Once a part of Yugoslavia, North Macedonia left Belgrade's umbrella when it seceded peacefully in 1991.
But it veered close to civil war in 2001 when ethnic Albanians launched an armed insurgency seeking greater autonomy, and subsequent elections have been stormy.
Florian Bieber, a professor of Southeast European studies at the University of Graz in Austria, agrees with Trosanovski on the critical importance of turnout, especially given that there are no concurrent local or parliamentary elections being held.
"While the level of polarization between government and opposition is high, the candidates are less confrontational," he tells RFE/RL. "With the name dispute resolved, the main polarizing issue over of the past year is also not much of a topic.... The main worry is that turnout will become an issue, considering the required turnout for the election to be valid."