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Public Event
Mycal Ford, Eileen Huang, and Dolly Li discuss the history of Black and Asian tensions and solidarity, the impact of “Yellow Lives Matter” on our communities, and tangible acts of solidarity that will help to bridge the divide between these two groups.
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Public Event
Dori Jones Yang's memoir describes her introduction to China as a correspondent during the excitement of the early reform era.
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Public Event
Robert Zoellick describes the history of U.S. foreign policy by analyzing five distinct themes.
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Public Event
Michael Schuman describes how China’s view of itself through history informs its perceptions of its position in the world today.
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Public Event
Paul Pickowicz visited China in 1971 as one of 14 American graduate students with a Committee of Concerned Asian Scholars delegation.
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Public Event
Jennifer Ho and John Pomfret discussed the history of anti-Chinese/Asian racism in the U.S., the impact of coronavirus-related racism, and the importance of uniting across our communities to stand up against all forms of discrimination.
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Public Event
Professor James Carter explores the overlapping and contending worlds of 1940’s Shanghai in Champions Day: The End of Old Shanghai.
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Public Event
M. Taylor Fravel examines the security threats China has faced over the past 70 years, investigating how and why the country’s defense strategies have changed.
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Public Event
Protests were frequent in twentieth-century Shanghai and Bombay (known as Mumbai since 1995). Mark Frazier examines contemporary debates in both metropolises regarding informal housing, displacement of inner-city residents, job scarcity, and questions of unequal citizenship in historical context.