News
Video: James Miller on China's Green Religion
Professor James Miller of Queen's University discusses the contribution of Daoism to modern-day China.
Video: Xiao Lin on Shanghai Free Trade Zone
Xiao Lin, director of the Shanghai Development Research Center, discusses the progress of the "pilot free trade zone" established in Shanghai last year.
The city of the future could lie below your feet
USC Price professor Annette Kim studies Beijing’s underground housing market — a possible sign of things to come.
Video: Media Representations of the Diaoyu/Senkaku Islands
Presentations by Tom Hollihan, Zhan Zhang, and Patricia Riley on how American, Chinese, and Japanese media discuss the islands and the conflict over them and the impact such representations have on prospects for resolving the dispute.
Zhang, Zhan
Visiting Scholar at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, Fall 2014.
Professor Sam Crane Discusses "Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Dao: Ancient Chinese Thought in Modern American Life"
Sam Crane of Williams College talks to USCI about his book examining contentious social issues in the US (abortion, same-sex marriage, euthanasia) using concepts drawn from pre-Qin Confucianism and Daoism.
Video: Sam Crane on Teaching Confucius in China
Sam Crane (Williams College) discusses the limits of the Confucian revival in China.
Video: Enze Han on The Politics of National Identity in China
Enze Han (University of London) examines how five major ethnic minority groups in China, the Uyghurs, Chinese Koreans, Dai, Mongols, and Tibetans, negotiate their national identities with the Chinese nation-state.
Video: Dan Washburn and Karl Taro Greenfeld on "The Forbidden Game"
Award-winning journalists Dan Washburn and Karl Taro Greenfeld discuss Washburn's new book, The Forbidden Game: Golf and the Chinese Dream, which uses the politically taboo topic of golf to paint what critics are calling "an illuminating portrait of modern China."
Chinese newspaper covers USC visits
A longtime academic and professional partner to many experts, students and employers in China, the USC Davis School of Gerontology was featured in Ta Kung Pao, the oldest active Chinese-language newspaper in China.