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  1. The UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies is the UCL department which leads the IMESS programme. It is the largest national centre in the UK for the study of Central, Eastern and South-East Europe and Russia and one of the leading centres globally in this field.

  2. The Slavonic and East European Review (SEER) Founded in 1922, SEER is the oldest English-language journal of its kind. It is published quarterly for the School and is managed and edited by an Editorial Board comprising academic staff from the School and from other British universities, and an Editorial Secretary.

  3. UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES) Dr Sarah Young; UCL Home; ... Dr Sarah Young Associate Professor School of Slavonic and East European Studies Faculty of Arts & Humanities. Sarah Young's full research profile on UCL Profiles. Contact Email s.young@ucl.ac.uk Address University College London SSEES, UCL 329 16 Taviton Street

  4. Once your proposed supervisor(s) has agreed to supervise you and you have completed your research proposal, you should formally apply via the UCL Online Portal. Please note any deadlines for funding and application requirements for certain funding schemes, as some may require earlier submission dates and additional documents ( See Funding pages )

  5. Heavy Metal Music Studies and Popular Culture, Leisure Studies in a Global Era, edited by Bryan Bardine, Gabby Riches, Dave Snell, and Brenda Gardenour Walter (2016), 1, London, Palgrave Macmillan UK, 214, 978-1-137-45667-0, Metal Music Studies, Volume 3, Number 1. March, 2017, pp. 157-160 (1).

  6. UCL is consistently ranked as one of the top ten universities in the world (QS World University Rankings 2010-2022) and is No.2 in the UK for research power (Research Excellence Framework 2021). SSEES events | UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SSEES) - UCLUniversity College London

  7. East looks west: engaging European publics with ideas of constructed difference. Professor Wendy Bracewell’s collaborative, cross-disciplinary project focuses on Europe’s limits and divisions as depicted and debated in East European travel writing from 1550 to the present day. The research she has led has had an impact in two distinct areas.