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Ukrainian Migration to Germany after 2022 and German Experiences of Expulsion after 1945

26.03.2026 18:00 Uhr Munich Discussion

Katrin Boeckh

Prof. Dr. Katrin Boeckh is a Senior Researcher at the Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies in Regensburg (Germany) and a Professor of East and Southeast European History at LMU Munich. Within “Denkraum Ukraine” / “Think Space Ukraine”, she coordinates the thematic field Flight, Migration and Value Transfer.

Tanja Hoggan-Kloubert 

Tanja Hoggan-Kloubert is an Akademische Rätin (Associate Professor) in Adult Education at the University of Augsburg, Germany. She is co-editor of The Good Society: A Journal of Civic Studies and the International Journal of Lifelong Education, and co-director of the Institute of Civic Studies and Learning for Democracy. Having migrated from Ukraine to Germany, her research focuses on adult and civic education in diverse migration societies and in post-totalitarian contexts. She is also co-founder and head of Deutsch-Ukrainischer Dialog e.V. and Vice-Chair of the City of Augsburg’s Integration Advisory Council.

Jana Osterkamp

Jana Osterkamp has a degree in law and is a qualified historian. She has been Professor of the History of Germany's Relations with Eastern Europe at the University of Augsburg since 2023. She also heads the Bukovina Institute there.

Winter School 2026 “Ukrainian Migration in Europe and Globally in the 20th and 21st Century”

This event is part of the Winter School 2026 “Ukrainian Migration in Europe and Globally in the 20th and 21st Century” in Munich, organized by “Denkraum Ukraine” / “Think Space Ukraine” at the University of Regensburg, financed by the DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) through the funds from the Federal Foreign Office (AA), the Ukrainian Free University (UFU, Munich), the Bukovina Institute at the University of Augsburg, the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Slavic Department) and the Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies (IOS) Regensburg. 

The Winter School addresses the issue of Ukrainian migration within its manyfold dimensions. Over 25 international speakers will deepen into a larger historical perspective of Ukrainian migration in the 20th and 21st century. They will discuss how Ukrainian culture, in particular literature, mirrors migration, explore how Ukrainians have experienced flight and migration, considering their age and gender. The legal and political dimensions of the phenomenon, including the regional dynamics of migration, as well as the perception of Ukrainians and Russia’s war against Ukraine will also be in the focus of the event.