Scholar

Iveta Silova

H-index: 25
Political science 42%
Education 33%

Reposted by: Iveta Silova

aaup.org
AAUP President Todd Wolfson and AFT President Randi Weingarten on Trump’s Loyalty Pledge for Colleges and Universities.

Now is the time to unite in defense of democracy and higher education!

Read full statement below 👇

@aft.org
@proftwolf.bsky.social
@rweingarten.bsky.social
isilova.bsky.social
Farewell, Jane Goodall 🌿 You reminded us that hope is a daily choice — to care, to connect, to keep planting seeds even in dark times. May your next great adventure be as extraordinary as the light she left behind. 💚
isilova.bsky.social
Each tide sketches a forest, each wave erases it — what the sea remembers may include us, too. 🌊 Read more in "A Tree in a Wave, a Wave in a Tree: What the Tide Remembers" #Ecomemory #PlanetaryFutures www.linkedin.com/pulse/tree-w...
A tide-drawn forest, branching across the sand like living memory — erased and redrawn with each returning wave. Solana Beach, 2025.

by Iveta SilovaReposted by: Zsuzsa Millei

isilova.bsky.social
What can Cold War childhood memories teach us about living in the Anthropocene and its uncertain futures? 🌍✨
(An)Archive: Childhood, Memory, and the Cold War by Mnemo ZIN is out now! Join the online launch Oct 1st at 8am MST! RSVP & Register 👇
tinyurl.com/2ju6syz3 @microbial-child.bsky.social
(An)archive: From Cold War Childhoods to the Anthropocene
Mnemo ZIN
open.substack.com
isilova.bsky.social
… Shonna White
Writing all night?
isilova.bsky.social
Excited for this book talk with Gita Steiner-Khamsi on Time in Education Policy Transfer. How do different temporalities shape global school reform—past, present, and future? A timely and important conversation. Join us! ⏳
norrag.bsky.social
Discover how time shapes global school reforms—from its historical roots to its contemporary tempo.
Join us for a hybrid book talk
🗓️ 15 Sept 2025 | 16:00 CEST / 10:00 EST
🌍 Online & Teachers College, NY
👉 Register now buff.ly/bFG4QZM
#edusky @isilova.bsky.social @teacherscollege.bsky.social
isilova.bsky.social
Authoritarianism doesn’t just thrive on control. It thrives on silence. My essay in Comparative Education Review reflects on three forgotten books - The Abuse of Learning, Hitler’s Professors, The Making of Nazis - and what they teach us now. 🔗https://lnkd.in/gJgq-xrH
#CIES @gesigcies.bsky.social

Reposted by: Iveta Silova

norrag.bsky.social
Discover how time shapes global school reforms—from its historical roots to its contemporary tempo.
Join us for a hybrid book talk
🗓️ 15 Sept 2025 | 16:00 CEST / 10:00 EST
🌍 Online & Teachers College, NY
👉 Register now buff.ly/bFG4QZM
#edusky @isilova.bsky.social @teacherscollege.bsky.social

Reposted by: Iveta Silova

theatlantic.com
There’s a way to respond to Donald Trump’s brutal and reckless funding cutbacks—and it doesn’t need Washington’s permission, L. Rafael Reif argues.
How States Could Save University Science
There’s a way to respond to Trump’s brutal and reckless funding cutbacks—and it doesn’t need Washington’s permission.
bit.ly

by Iveta SilovaReposted by: Zsuzsa Millei

isilova.bsky.social
🌀 What if education isn’t saving the world—
…but scripting its collapse?

In our new article, we ask whether global calls for “more education” are reinforcing the very systems driving ecological collapse.

📖 journals.sagepub.com/doi/epub/10....

#Unlearning #PlanetaryFutures #SDGs #MoreThanHuman
isilova.bsky.social
Thanks. In the spirit of reciprocity and mutual learning, I’d suggest The Road to Terror (Getty & Naumov) and The Whisperers (Figes)—both offer valuable perspectives on repression, dissent, and life under Stalinism. Worth reading alongside Losurdo.
isilova.bsky.social
We clearly disagree—but denying Stalin’s repression or treating criticism as “fascist revisionism” doesn’t make history go away. I’m stepping out of this thread.
isilova.bsky.social
The pact didn’t just buy time—it enabled the invasion and partition of Poland and let the Nazis roll into Western Europe without fear of a second front. Acknowledging that isn’t “revisionism.” It’s part of understanding how authoritarian regimes operate pragmatically, not just ideologically.
isilova.bsky.social
Losurdo challenges Cold War myths, but acknowledging Stalin’s purges, gulags, and Trotsky’s murder isn’t “fascist revisionism”—it’s history. The Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact shows the USSR aligned with fascism when it suited power. Authoritarian regimes always crush dissent—starting with intellectuals.
isilova.bsky.social
I’m not equating ideologies. I’m examining how institutions collapse under authoritarian pressure—from Nazi control to Stalin’s Great Purge, which saw 700,000–1.2 million executions and mass Gulag imprisonment. That’s not revisionism, it’s history.
isilova.bsky.social
It’s possible to oppose fascism and still take seriously the harms of Stalinist repression—especially in education.
isilova.bsky.social
Stalin defeated Hitler, but not fascism’s logic—he replaced it with repression of his own: gulags, purges, censorship. The article compares how universities surrendered under authoritarian pressure, not the regimes themselves. The lesson isn’t who was better or worse—but how institutions collapse.
isilova.bsky.social
Equating with Stalinism - there’s a big difference.
rbreich.bsky.social
A grassroots movement is calling on all Americans to abstain from shopping with major retailers tomorrow, February 28, as part of an “economic blackout.”

I encourage you to join. https://robertreich.substack.com/p/boycott
maddow.msnbc.com
38 of the 43.

"38 of 43 experts cut last month from boards that review science and research in NIH laboratories are female, Black or Hispanic.

"The scientists typically serve five-year terms and were not given a reason for their dismissal..."

www.washingtonpost.com/science/2025...
Women, minorities fired in purge of NIH science review boards
Scientists, with expertise in fields that include mental health, cancer and infectious disease, typically serve five-year terms and were not given a reason for their dismissal.
www.washingtonpost.com

Reposted by: Iveta Silova

theatlantic.com
A new book about Argentina’s disappeared shows how difficult it can be to reckon with atrocities of the past. Julia M. Klein on lessons from a nation caught between "the drive to forget and the obligation to remember":
How to Recover From State Terror
A new book about Argentina’s disappeared shows how difficult it can be to reckon with atrocities of the past.
bit.ly

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