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Past Events

April 9, 2015 - 5:30pm
Chapel Hill, North Carolina

The Carolina Asia Center presents Professor Graham Allison speaking in its lecture series “The U.S. in World Affairs: the Cold War and Beyond”.

April 9, 2015 - 4:45pm
New Haven, Connecticut

The Council of East Asian Studies at Yale University presents Goncalos Santos. Drawing on historical and ethnographic research on the spread of the flush toilet in rural South China, he will speak about waste management around the world.

April 9, 2015 - 4:00pm
Los Angeles, California

UCLA Asia Institute presents a talk by Martin Powers from the University of Michigan on the political abstractions in Song/Jin Painting.

April 9, 2015 - 12:00pm
Shanghai, Shanghai Shi

Clayton Dube from the USC U.S.-China Institute examines the values, aspirations, and worries of the millennial generation in both China and the United States.

April 8, 2015 - 7:00pm
Los Angeles, California

Outside the Box [Office] and Huayi Brothers Media Corporation invite you and a guest to a special preview screening of Lost and Love hosted at the USC School of Cinematic Arts.

April 8, 2015 - 12:00pm
New York, New York

Columbia University's Weatherhead East Asia Institute and Institute for the Study of Human Rights present a lecture by Li Weidong, Visiting Scholar, Institute for the Study of Human Rights.

April 7, 2015 - 5:00pm
San Francisco, California

Yan Long, postdoctoral fellow at the Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society at Stanford University, presents an analysis of the transformation of repression against AIDS activism in China.

April 7, 2015 - 4:30pm
Chicago, Illinois

The University of Chicago presents a talk on the Jewish Diaspora in China from Professor Xu Xin, dean of the Glazer Institute for Jewish and Israel Studies in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Nanjing University, China.

April 7, 2015 - 4:15pm
Stanford, California

What environmental histories can Mongolian and Manchu archives of the Qing empire tell? This talk by Jonathan Schlesinger, Assistant Professor of History at Indiana University, finds an answer in a curious and forgotten event: the rush for wild steppe mushrooms in nineteenth-century Mongolia.

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