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Past Events: California
Michael G. Chang, Department of History and Art History at George Mason University, gives a talk on political culture at the early Kangxi Court.
One dilemma shared by both China and California is the increased scarcity of water owing to poor resource management and climate change. Dai Qing, one of China's most remarkable public intellectuals and a long-time activist on environmental issues, will explore how China's coming water crisis will affect its economic and political future.
The District Export Council of Southern California, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (US PTO), University of California, Irvine School of Law, and the U.S. Commercial Service will be hosting a conference at UC Irvine School of Law.
Three successful black siblings from Harlem, Paula Williams Madison and her brothers, Elrick and Howard Williams, were raised in Harlem by their Chinese Jamaican mother, Nell Vera Lowe. The three travel to the Toronto Hakka Chinese Conference to discover their heritage by searching for clues about their long-lost Chinese grandfather, Samuel Lowe. As the mystery of their grandfather’s life unfolds, the trio travels to Jamaica, to learn about grandfather’s life.
Jessica Chen Weiss, Yale University assistant professor and MacMillan Center for International and Area Studies fellow, gives a talk on Chinese foreign relations.
The Fudan-UC Center on Contemporary China and the 21st Century China Program present: China's New Agenda: National Governance and Development, featuring a dialogue between two of the most observant and experienced observers of Chinese politics, Susan Shirk and Lin Shangli.
The US Patent and Trademark Office and UC San Diego (IR/PS, 21st Century China Program, and the UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation) present: New Perspectives on Innovation and Intellectual Property Policy in China: What Does the Evidence Say?
Cyrus Chen, Postdoctoral Fellow at Stanford's Center for East Asian Studies, gives a talk on the evolution of Manchuria into Northeast China.
Professor Rebecca Nedostup of Brown University gives a talk on the disorder of war in 20th century China.
Join UCLA's Center for Buddhist Studies as Wei-Cheng Lin explores the widespread practice of burying broken statues in a greater territory of China during the 10th through 12th centuries.