The Center for Advanced Studies Southeast Europe (CAS SEE) is an organizational unit of the University of Rijeka (UniRi) specializing in the social sciences, humanities, and arts. The vision of the Center is to promote freedom of research and ensure the necessary prerequisites for innovative, intellectual, and scientific development. With a decade-long experience in supporting early career scholars as well as promoting exchange and cooperation throughout Southeastern Europe, CAS SEE strives to strengthen regional and transnational scientific ties. In GEO-POWER-EU, UniRi team members will take the lead in coordinating a significant portion of primary data collection by overseeing the work package on Geopolitical Competition and EU Strategic Autonomy, while contributing to all other aspects of the project as well.
Organization Summary
Members
Sonja Stojanović Gajić
Sonja Stojanović Gajić is an experienced researcher and practitioner of security governance and conflict transformation. She has two decades of experience supporting security sector reforms (SSR) and peace-building as a researcher, leader of civil society, and consultant to a number of organizations in Wider Europe, Central Asia and the Middle East. She specializes in participatory research, capacity-building, strategic planning, evaluation and facilitation of multi-stakeholder dialogues among security and justice professionals, civil society and politicians.
Sonja holds a PhD in International Relations from the University of Belgrade. She was the director of the Belgrade Centre for Security Policy (BCSP) (2006-2019) and previously taught security studies at the Faculty of Political Science, the University of Belgrade. Her recent publications include Stojanović Gajić, S. and D. Pavlović (2021), State Capture, Hybrid Regimes and Security Sector Reform, Journal of Regional Security, 16(2):89-126. and editing of Special issue on State Capture and Security, Journal of Regional Security, 16(2); Stojanović Gajić, S. and Ejdus, F. (eds.) (2018). Security Community Practices in the Western Balkans. London: Routledge.
Stefania Petris
Stefania Petris is a Financial Assistant at the Regional Network of Centres for AdvancedStudies in Southeast Europe (RECAS) and a team member at the Center for Advanced Studies (CAS-UNIRI). She graduated from the Faculty of Economics in Rijeka, specializing in Entrepreneurship. Her career began in the private sector, where she gained substantial experience in financial management and analysis. Through her work, she developed expertise in budgeting and strategic planning, supported by a strong analytical approach and a proven ability to foster financial stability and growth.
Dr Tena Prelec
Dr Tena Prelec is Assistant Professor at the Centre for Advanced Studies on South Eastern Europe, University of Rijeka. Her research interests include (anti-)corruption studies, EU politics and geopolitical competition, with a geographic focus on the Western Balkans and Eastern Europe more widely. From 2019 to 2023, she was a Research Fellow at the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford. She obtained her PhD from the School of Law, Politics and Sociology, Centre for the Study of Corruption, University of Sussex. Dr Prelec is a member of the Balkans in Europe Policy Advisory Group and a Marshall Memorial Fellow, GMFUS. She is the author of multiple scientific and policy publications and her first monograph, Indulging Kleptocracy: British Service Providers, Postcommunist Elites, and the Enabling of Corruption, is forthcoming with OUP in autumn 2024. Dr Prelec is work package leader for WP3 (Geopolitical Competition and EU Strategic Autonomy) of GEO-POWER-EU.
Sanja Bojanić
Sanja Bojanić, the Executive Director at the Center for Advanced Studies of South East Europe (CAS SEE) at the University of Rijeka, will serve as an honorary member of the GEO-POWER-EU project. While she will not be involved in the day-to-day work of the project, her expertise in the philosophy of culture, media, and queer studies will continue to provide valuable insights. Sanja Bojanić’s research focuses on contemporary forms of gender, racial, and class practices that drive social and affective inequalities, particularly within modern societal and political contexts. She is also an associate professor at Rijeka’s Academy of Applied Arts.
Tina Perić Lukačević
Tina Perić Lukačević is a program associate at the Centre for Advanced Studies South East Europe, University of Rijeka. She gained her Master’s degree in Cultural Studies at the Faculty of Philosophy at the University of Rijeka (FFRI). During her studies, she investigated the relationship between art, individual/collective memory, and healing in the context of traumatic events which led her to interest in body-related topics including performing arts and gender studies.