I've been a longtime foreign correspondent of
The Chronicle of Higher Education, for which I covered Eastern Europe for much of the 1990s. On the occasion of this, the 20
th anniversary of the collapse of Communism there, I put together
this feature on how some prominent university professors see their professional lives then (underground classes, listening devices in the walls, etc.) as compared to now (as European Union citizens with academic freedom, university autonomy, and more conventional challenges.)
At this writing, at least, the piece is freely available online. If that changes, it's also in the Chronicle Review section of the print edition.
I was actually an exchange student in Eastern Europe in 1989 and saw many of the historic events of that fall firsthand; I've been
posting about that here at World Wide Woodard.
My last piece for
The Chronicle was on
the role of Iceland's universities in addressing that country's economic meltdown.
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