Средњоевропски универзитет (Serbian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Средњоевропски универзитет" in Serbian language version.

refsWebsite
Global rank Serbian rank
low place
low place
2nd place
4th place
3,169th place
7,904th place
729th place
445th place
1,402nd place
4,521st place
234th place
287th place
204th place
221st place
2,117th place
4,761st place
4,246th place
8,989th place
11th place
23rd place
1st place
1st place
low place
low place

ceu.edu

chronicle.com

doi.org

dw.com

europaeum.org

hrw.org

  • Lydia Gall (25. 10. 2018). „Central European University”. Human Rights Watch. „The CEU, one of the most prestigious universities in Central Europe... 

lse.ac.uk

blogs.lse.ac.uk

nature.com

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

  • Laczó, Ferenc (1. 3. 2020). „The Tragedy of Central European University” (PDF). Current History. University of California Press. 119 (815): 83—88. S2CID 219803889. doi:10.1525/curh.2020.119.815.83. Приступљено 7. 8. 2020. „The idea was that this small but highly complex part of the world, whose tragic experiences typically had been studied from a safe distance, would finally come to possess its own international hub of academic excellence in a Western-dominated and increasingly liberal world. After the sudden implosion of communist regimes, the great expectation was that the yawning gap which had opened in the region's scholarship in the twentieth century—between experience and reflection, or perhaps rather between intellects and institutions—could finally be closed. 

topuniversities.com

ucpress.edu

online.ucpress.edu

  • Laczó, Ferenc (1. 3. 2020). „The Tragedy of Central European University” (PDF). Current History. University of California Press. 119 (815): 83—88. S2CID 219803889. doi:10.1525/curh.2020.119.815.83. Приступљено 7. 8. 2020. „The idea was that this small but highly complex part of the world, whose tragic experiences typically had been studied from a safe distance, would finally come to possess its own international hub of academic excellence in a Western-dominated and increasingly liberal world. After the sudden implosion of communist regimes, the great expectation was that the yawning gap which had opened in the region's scholarship in the twentieth century—between experience and reflection, or perhaps rather between intellects and institutions—could finally be closed. 

web.archive.org