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Past Events: public talk
The University of Texas at Austin Department of Asian Studies presents Ann Waltner of the University of Minnesota. She will speak about Jean-Antoine Fraisse's 1735 book of images from China.
Professor Vladimir will give speech on "Chinese in Pre-Colonial and Colonial Korea" in Institute of East Asian Studies at University of California, Berkeley.
Join Asia Society Northern California and the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco for a panel of leading analysts and businesspeople for a discussion of China's digital transformation.
UC Berkeley presents Ming Sing, Yun Chung Chen, and Hsin-Hsing Chen's talk on student movements in Hong Kong and Taiwan.
The last few years have seen a vigorous public policy debate emerge over a “second-generation” ethnic policy (di'erdai minzu zhengce) which, if implemented, would constitute a major revision of ethnic politics in China. This lecture first explores the main positions in the ongoing policy discussion, then goes on to argue that, rather than comparing China's non-Han peoples to minority immigrant populations in the industrialized democracies, a better comparison is to indigenous peoples.
Asia Society is pleased to present a top-level discussion examining the ways in which the South China Sea dispute might be disentangled while avoiding disastrous conflict between its major players.
The UCLA Center for Chinese Studies presents three speakers who are experienced academic-activists with deep knowledge about Hong Kong, Taiwan and the two student movements for democracy that have galvanized international attention.
Jamie Metzl, who worked in the Clinton National Security Council and State Department and is the former executive vice president of the Global Asia Society, will discuss how the U.S.-China rivalry is heating up around the world.
The Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies presents Eleanor Goodman and Ao Wang speaking on the topic of contemporary Chinese poetry. Ling Zhang of Boston College will be moderator.
The Center for East Asian Studies at Stanford University presents a talk with Professor Vladimir Tikhonov to discuss perceptions of Chinese residents in pre-colonial and colonial South Korea.