Liridona Veliu | Law and Government
Research Interests
(Western) Balkans, Balkanization, Southeast Europe, EU and NATO enlargement, Euro-Atlantic integration processes, Russia’s soft power, (poststructuralist) discourse analysis.
Background & Qualification
Liridona is a PhD student at the School of Law and Government, Dublin City University. On January 25, 2022, she successfully defended her thesis titled “Back to the Future: ‘Balkanization’ and the Euro-Atlantic processes of the (Western) Balkans”. Liridona holds a Master of Advanced Studies in Peace and Conflict Transformation from the University of Basel in Switzerland, and a Master of Arts Degree in Peace, Development, Security and International Conflict Transformation from the University of Innsbruck, Austria. She holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Sciences from the South East European University in North Macedonia and completed an undergraduate Erasmus+ visit at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Liridona has provided administrative, editorial and research assistance for Swedish institutions such as the University of Malm?; Swiss institutions such as the Swisspeace Foundation in Switzerland, the Training and Advice Center for Immigrants (ABSM) in, and the Swiss multinational pharmaceutical company Novartis; for institutions in North Macedonia such as the Center for Community Development, and the IPA Cross Border Cooperation Program. For three years, Liridona undertook the role of Project Assistant and Researcher, Teacher, and Trainer within the framework of Erasmus+ European Commission funded project on the Creation of the Graduate Curricula in Peace Studies in Georgia (PESTUGE). She is currently an Editor for the Palgrave Encyclopedia of Peace and Conflict Studies (PEPCS).
Publications
? Veliu, L. (2021). The sounds of silence: Democracy and the referendum on (FYRO)/(North) Macedonia. New Perspectives. 29(2), 165–186.
? Veliu, L. (2019). Balkanization. The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Peace and Conflict Studies: Springer.
? Veliu, L. (2018). #Balkanization: A Critical Study of Otherness through Twitter. Wiesbaden: Springer.
? Mcdonagh, K., & Veliu, L. (2017). Europe’s new Balkan problem or the Balkan’s new Europe problem: Terrorism and Radicalisation in the EU’s South Eastern borderlands. Dublin: Defence Forces Ireland.
? Veliu, L. (2019). “What’s in a Name: The Republic of North Macedonia, the Empire Strikes Back”. IICRR blog. Accessible online: https://iicrr.ie/whats-in-a-name-the-republic-of-north-macedonia-the-em….
? Veliu, L. (2018). “What’s in a Name: The Republic of (North) Macedonia”. IICRR blog. Accessible online: https://iicrr.ie/whats-name-republic-north-macedonia/.
Submissions in Progress
? Veliu, L., & Cuppuleri, A. (2022) “The Multidimensional Soft Power of Illiberal States: Russia in the Western Balkans”. European Journal of International Relations.
Education
2017 – 2022 PhD in Politics and IR, Dublin City University, Ireland.
2014 – 2018 Master of Arts degree in Peace, Development, Security and International Conflict Transformation, University of Innsbruck, Austria
2013 – 2015 Master of Advanced Studies degree in Peace and Conflict Transformation, University of Basel, Switzerland.
2010 – 2013 Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Sciences, South East European University, North Macedonia.
Visiting fellowships
August – December 2019 Visiting scholar under the supervision of Prof. Maria Todorova, University of Illinois, US.
February – June 2019 Visiting scholar under the supervision of Prof. Lene Hansen, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
February 2013 – June 2013 LLP Erasmus Exchange student, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia.
PhD Research Overview
The discourse of balkanization constructs a disintegrated Western Balkan ‘other’ who stands juxtapositionally to the Western ‘self’. The thesis explores how ‘balkanization’ underpins policies of the EU and NATO towards the Western Balkans through shaping and being shaped by ideas of ‘selves’ and ‘others’. The study demonstrates how Euro-Atlantic policies towards the (Western) Balkans being underpinned by ‘balkanization’ have historically emerged from and led to the constant reinvention of the unity of the West through ‘balkanizing’ the Western Balkans.
Supervisors
Dr G?zim Visoka: gezim.visoka@dcu.ie
Dr Kenneth McDonagh: kenneth.mcdonagh@dcu.ie
Contact Details
liridona.veliu2@mail.dcu.ie
liridona.veliuashiku@gmail.com