Museums and migrations
emigration from Polish lands in the 19th and 20th centuries;
Polish-Scandinavian contacts;
Museology;
emigration from Polish lands in the 19th and 20th centuries;
Polish-Scandinavian contacts;
Museology;
Research area (areas): Latin Epigraphy, Administration of the Roman Empire, History of Roman Provinces (especially Proconsular Africa during Principate), History of Historiography, Methodology of History
Research area: The economy (trade, shipping, economic policy, economic thought), and material culture of Sweden in the 17th and 18th c.; Swedish-Polish relations in the modern era; The formation of public opinion in the modern era (16th-18th c.): Polish opinions on Sweden and the image of Poland and its inhabitants in Sweden.
Displaced Persons memoirs project, community archives: With UG PH.D. STUDENTS: Iwona Flis. https://polishamericanstudies.org/text/180/memoirs-.html
with UG PhD student Jarosław Zawada
With UG PhD student Anna Podciborska
Assoc. Prof., Dr hab.Magdalena Nowak works in the Department of the Contemporary Polish History in the Institute of History, University of Gdańsk. In 2019 she has successfully completed her habilitation at the Faculty of History, University of Gdańsk. She specializes in Polish-Ukrainian relations in the 19th and 20th century. Her academic interests have been recently focused on the relations between the Catholic Churches of the Greek and the Latin rite.
Cultural, social and political changes in the broadly defined Northern Europe, the Baltic Sea region and the Arctic. Our research addresses current and past changes taking place in these parts of Europe and the world, includi
The Centre de recherche bretonne et celtique (CRBC) is a multidisciplinary research laboratory whose 43 members (historians, linguists, Anglicists and Celticists, enthnologists, sociologists...) explore topics and areas of research within Breton and Celtic cultural domains. They also lead individual or collective research in other fields, across Europe, the Atlantic and beyond.
The Physical Oceanography Research Group (PO-Res.Grp) of the University of Malta has a long track record of participation in joint collaborative projects in some cases as lead partner such as in the case of the Interreg Italia-Malta CALYPSO projects which led to the operational HF radar network for the Maltese Islands and the Malta-Sicily Channel. Through these projects strong links exist with both local and regional stakeholders. It is also a partner in several European and Mediterranean networks including MonGOOS (the GOOS Regional Alliance for the Mediterranean) and MedGLOSS.