Past Event
Seminar

The Great WWI Controversy: Who Was to Blame?

Harvard Faculty, Fellows, Staff, and Students

The Great WWI Controversy: Who Was to Blame?
A Panel Discussion on the Centennial

The origins of the First World War have aroused deep controversy for decades. On the centennial of the war, there is renewed interest in revisiting its origins. Was Germany to blame? Did Europe’s statesmen sleepwalk to war? In this panel discussion, leading historians and IR experts will weigh in on the debate and offer lessons for avoiding another great power conflict.

About

The Great WWI Controversy: Who Was to Blame?
A Panel Discussion on the Centennial

The origins of the First World War have aroused deep controversy for decades. On the centennial of the war, there is renewed interest in revisiting its origins. Was Germany to blame? Did Europe’s statesmen sleepwalk to war? In this panel discussion, leading historians and IR experts will weigh in on the debate and offer lessons for avoiding another great power conflict.

 

Graham Allison Director, Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs; Douglas Dillon Professor of Government, Harvard Kennedy School

Peter Gourevitch Professor of Political Science, University of California, San Diego

Charles S. Maier Leverett Saltonstall Professor of History, Harvard University

Thomas Weber Professor of History and International Affairs, University of Aberdeen; Visiting Scholar, CES

Chaired by Alison Frank Johnson Professor of History, Harvard University

Location:

Lower Level Conference Room, Busch Hall, Center for European Studies