A dynamic platform for exchanging knowledge about Georgia.
Wednesday, 27 May 2026, 9.30am to 6.30pm
The Fifth Annual Oxford-Georgia Forum will take place at St Antony's College on 27 May 2026. The annual forum serves as a dynamic platform for exchanging knowledge about Georgia, bringing together scholars, practitioners, and students to share insights, foster dialogue, and deepen understanding of the country’s political, social, and cultural developments. This year’s forum centres on the current political climate in the country, the evolving geopolitical landscape in the region, as well as Georgian cultural and literary studies.
Venue:
St Antony's College - Investcorp Lecture Theatre
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Investcorp Lecture Theatre St Antony's College 64 Woodstock Road Oxford Oxfordshire OX2 6JF United Kingdom
Organiser: OSGA Georgian Studies Programme
Host: Georgian Studies Programme
More info:
9:30-10:00 - Coffee/Tea reception
10:00-10:15 - Welcome remarks
Professor Roy Allison, Director of the Russian and Eurasian Studies Centre
Professor Michael Rochlitz, Associate Professor at OSGA and Georgian Programme Coordinator.
10:15-11:15 - Keynote Speech: ‘Georgia’s Contested Future: A Practical Way Forward’
Speaker: Professor Hans Gutbrod, Ilia State University
Discussant: Professor Maia Chankseliani, University of Oxford
11:15-12:15 - Panel 1: Domestic Political Landscape in Georgia
This panel explores the domestic political climate in Georgia, mass protests, and democratic backsliding. It will examine the role of key actors, including the ruling party, opposition, civil society, media, academia and activists. The discussion will also consider the broader implications for democratic institutions and Georgia’s political trajectory.
Chair: Dr Marnie Howlett, University of Oxford
Speakers:
Davit Jincharadze, Freedom Fund of Georgia - Erti Sakartvelo
Irina Mamulashvili, RUSI
Jody la Porte, University of Oxford
12:15-13:30 - Lunch
13:30-14:30 - Panel 2: Georgia and the New Geopolitical Realities
This panel explores the impact of new geopolitical realities on Georgia’s security infrastructure and foreign policy. The speakers will discuss the implications of shifting global alliances and regional power dynamics for Georgia, with particular attention to the country’s Euro-Atlantic aspirations. They will also examine Georgian Dream’s foreign policy in this evolving context.
Chair: Dr Natalie Sabanadze, Chatham House
Speakers:
Professor Roy Allison, University of Oxford
Dr Teona Giuashvili, London School of Economics
Natia Seskuria, Royal United Services Institute (RUSI)
14:30-15:30 - Panel 3: Eurasian Literary Traversals: Armeno-Georgian Cosmopolitanism in the Caucasus
The speakers will present research on the role of Christian minorities across the Eurasian continent in facilitating cultural exchange between Asia and Europe, through a comparative study of Armenian and Georgian manuscripts of The City of Brass, a tale from the One Thousand and One Nights. Their study focuses on everyday literary contact and processes of transformation that transcend ethnic boundaries in Eurasia, bridging literary and historical approaches. In a region where ethnic conflict persists, this research offers important contemporary insights by illuminating patterns of inter-ethnic exchange prior to the divisions shaped by nationalism and Soviet-era ethnic policies.
Chair: Anna Efimova, University of Oxford
Speakers:
Professor Hirotake Maeda, Tokyo Metropolitan University
Professor Karen Hamada, University of Tokyo
Dr Alex Macfarlane, Independent scholar
15:30-16:00 - Coffee/Tea Break
16:00:17:00 - Panel 4: Studying Georgia at Oxford
The speakers on this panel are researchers and students at the University of Oxford whose work focuses on Georgia. They will present their ongoing research projects, offering fresh perspectives on the country’s politics, society and history. The panel highlights emerging scholarship and provides a platform for new voices contributing to the study of Georgia.
Chair: Michael Rochlitz, University of Oxford
Speakers:
Rohan Dronsfield, University of Oxford.
Talk: Consolidation and Threat: Elites and Foreign Policy in Georgia.Dr Manuchar Guntsadze, Georgian Studies Fellow, University of Oxford.
Talk: The Life of the People in Georgia According to the Archival Materials of the Bodleian Library.
Dr Sophie Kadagishvili, Georgian Studies Fellow, University of Oxford.
Talk: Constructing Ethnic Identity of Georgia and its Comparative Perspective.
Alice Mumford, University of Oxford.
Talk: Diplomacy of Desperation: Medieval Georgian foreign policy under Queen Rusudan (1223-45) prior to the Mongol conquest of Georgia.
17:00-17:20 - Information session: Friends of Academic Research in Georgia
Speaker: Professor Dan Healey, St Antony’s College, University of Oxford
17:20-18:30 - Panel 5: The Oxford Georgian Translation Project: Ten Years’ Journey Through Translation
Speaker Sessions
17:20 - Chair & Opening Introduction
Dan Healey, Emeritus Fellow, St Antony’s College, University of Oxford
17:30 - Special Guest Session: ‘Chronicling a Country’s Past’ — A Conversation with Nino Haratischwili
Nino Haratischwili, Georgian-German writer, author of The Eighth Life (for Brilka), translated into over 30 languages and an international bestseller
Matthew Janney, British-Georgian writer and editor, contributor to the Financial Times and other publications
18:15 - Project Presentation
Lia Chokoshvili, Georgian Language Programme Instructor, Head of the Oxford Georgian Translation Project
Talk: The Oxford Georgian Translation Project is Ten Years Old
