From jsis@u.washington.edu Fri Nov 3 10:02:17 1995 Return-Path: Received: from saul6.u.washington.edu by lists.u.washington.edu (5.65+UW95.10/UW-NDC Revision: 2.33 ) id AA19346; Fri, 3 Nov 95 10:02:16 -0800 Received: by saul6.u.washington.edu (5.65+UW95.10/UW-NDC Revision: 2.33 ) id AA12395; Fri, 3 Nov 95 10:02:16 -0800 X-Sender: jsis@saul6.u.washington.edu Date: Fri, 3 Nov 1995 10:02:16 -0800 (PST) From: Jackson School of International Studies To: JSIS-UW@u.washington.edu Subject: JSIS Calendar Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII THE JACKSON SCHOOL ELECTRONIC CALENDAR FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1995 NOTE: ALL EVENTS ARE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC & ARE FREE UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATED. NEW ITEMS Since Last Issue (10/27/95): NOV. 9: NATO BRIEFING TEAM. 1:30-3:30 p.m., Smith Room, Suzzalo Library. Capt. Wayne Smith, US Navy, and Lt. Col. Jerome Church, United Kingdom Army. Sponsor: Pacific Northwest Colloquium on International Security (International Studies Center, JSIS), & the World Affairs Council. Information: 543-9831. RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTH AFRICA: AGRARIAN REFORM IN THE FRUIT GROWING AREAS OF THE WESTERN CAPE. 2:30 p.m., 304 Smith. Michael de Klerk, Senior Lecturer, School of Economics, University of Cape Town, South Africa. Sponsors: Depts. of Geography and Anthropology, UW. Information: 543-7933. NOV. 30: FATHERS, SONS, & RHINOCEROSES: PSYCHOANALYTICAL VS. ETHNOSOCIOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO THE MAHABHARATA. 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Dr. William S. Sax, Dept. of Religious Studies, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. Sponsor: South Asia Colloquium, JSIS. Information: 543-4800. UPDATE (to DEC. 5 listing below): GENEALOGIES OF RELIGION -- DISCIPLINE AND REASONS OF POWER IN CHRISTIANITY AND ISLAM. 3:30-5 p.m., 317 Thomson. Selected chapters on Medieval Christian monasticism from Talal Asad's "Genealogies of Religion." Faculty & graduate students, Comparative Religion Program, JSIS. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program, Faculty Colloquium Series. Information: 543-4835. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Repeated from last issue: NOV. 3: WORKING IN THE RUSSIAN FAR EAST. 12:30-2 p.m., 334 Thomson. Peter Christiansen, former JSIS student, current Port Operations Manager for Sea-Land International, Vostochny. Sponsor: Russian, Eastern European & Central Asian Studies, JSIS. Information: 543-0176. REPRODUCTION, RISK & REALITY IN VIETNAM. 12:30 p.m., 4000 NE 41st (van leaving at 12:15 from Savery Hall loading zone, UW). Pamina Gorbach, Senior Fellow Trainee, Dept. of Health Services, UW. Sponsor: Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology, UW; Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation. Information: 543-5412. REVIEWS OF RECENT UZBEK PUBLICATIONS. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Students' Reports (IN UZBEK; translations will be provided). Sponsor: Uzbek Circle, Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. NOV. 4: SOUTHEAST ASIA MOSAIC: THE ISLAND CULTURES. 8:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. All-day teacher training program for K-9 teachers. FEE: $35; pre-registration required. Keynote Address: Karl Hutterer, Director, Burke Memorial Washington State Museum, UW. Sponsor: Jackson School of International Studies & Washington State Council for the Social Studies. Information: 543-9606; or maureenj@u.washington.edu. NOV. 7: SAINTS & THEIR SOCIETIES IN MEDITERRANEAN LATE ANTIQUITY: SOME GOVERNING RESEARCH PARADIGMS. 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Faculty & Graduate Students of the Comparative Religion Program, JSIS. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program, JSIS, Faculty Colloquium Series. Information: 543-4835. THE RISE OF THE SOCIALIST PARTIES IN EAST CENTRAL EUROPE. 3:30-5 p.m., 325 Thomson. Gerd J. M. Meyer, Tubingen Exchange Professor, University of Tubingen. Sponsor: Russian, East European & Central Asian Program. Information: 543-2798. BOEING & THE FUTURE OF INTERNATIONAL AVIATION. Breakfast presentation, 7:30-9 a.m. (Registration 7:15 a.m.), Columbia Tower Club, 75th Floor, 701 Fifth Avenue, Seattle. Robert Dryden, Executive Vice President of Airplane Production, Boeing Commercial Airplane Group. Sponsor: World Affairs Council. COST: $20 Council members, $25 others; $160 for tables of 8. PRE-REGISTER & PRE-PAY by Nov. 3. Information/Registration: 682-6986. NOV. 8: ANARCHISM AS A RESPONSE TO JAPANESE RULE IN KOREA. 3:30-5 p.m., 317 Thomson. Michael Allen, Dept. of History, Brigham Young University and Visiting Professor, UC Berkeley. Sponsor: Korean Studies Program, JSIS. Information: 543-4391. ONOMATOPOETIC WORDS IN UIGHUR & OTHER TURKIC LANGUAGES. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Hamit Zakir, PhD Student, Asian Languages & Literature, UW. Sponsor: Near Eastern Languages & Civilization. Information: 685-3800. NOV. 9: THE CULTURAL CRISIS OF KIRGHIZ INTELLECTUALS. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Dr. Umut Asanova, Fulbright Scholar from Bishkek, Kirghizstan. Sponsor: Kazakh & Kirghiz Studies Group, Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. ADIVASI AUTONOMY MOVEMENTS IN INDIA. 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Ram Dayal Munda, Professor of Tribal Languages & ex-Vice Chancellor, Ranchi University. Sponsor: South Asia Center, JSIS. Information: 543-4800. ASIA RISING: THE ECONOMIC MIRACLE IN EAST & SOUTHEAST ASIA, AND WHY THE WEST WILL PROSPER. Luncheon program, 12 noon (registration 11:45 a.m.), Columbia Tower Club, 75th Floor, 701 Fifth Avenue, Seattle. Jim Rohwer, author of ASIA RISING, Director & Chief Economist for Asia of CS First Boston. Sponsors: Korea-America Trade Club, Washington Council on International Trade, World Affairs Council. COST: $25 Council members, $35 others. PRE-REGISTER & PRE-PAY by Nov. 6. Information and registration: 682-6986. MANAGING TRANSNATIONAL DISPLACEMENT: CONTAINMENT STRATEGIES AFTER THE COLD WAR. 2-3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Prof. Jennifer Hyndman, Dept. of Geography, University of British Columbia. Part of State-Society Relations workshop series on "Transnationalism & the Limits of State." Sponsor: International Studies, JSIS. Information: 543-5174. NOV. 13: WORLD SOCIETY & THE NATION-STATE: INSTITUTIONAL ARGUMENTS & EVIDENCE. 12-1:30 p.m., Peterson Room, Allen Library. John Meyer, Dept. of Sociology, Stanford University. International Political Economy Colloquium Series. Sponsor: International Studies Center, JSIS. Information: 685-2707. MODERN INDIA: CHALLENGING AMERICAN PERCEPTIONS. 7-9 p.m., Alumni House, Fireplace Room, 1415 NE 45th Street, Seattle. Dr. Frank Conlon, Director, South Asian Studies Program, JSIS, and Lewis Macfarlane, advisor to companies with operations in South Asia. COST: $5 UWAA members & students; $8 nonmembers & guests. Sponsor: JSIS Alumni Association. PLEASE R.S.V.P. by Thurs., Nov. 9, UW Alumni Association, 543-0540. NOV. 14: GENDERED BOUNDARIES IN AMERICAN JEWISH EXPERIENCE: "THE GHETTO GIRL" & JEWISH ANXIETY FROM 1900-1930. 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Riv-Ellen Prell, Professor of Anthropology, University of Minnesota. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Colloquium, JSIS. Information: 543-4243. NOV. 15: NAFTA AND CHIAPAS. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Diana Pallais. Sponsor: Latin American Studies Program, Brown Bag Lunch Series. Information: 543-4718. NOV. 16: RECENT DEVELOPMENT IN KAZAKHSTAN LEADING TO THE ABOLISHMENT OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Robert Utter, Justice of the Supreme Court, State of Washington. Sponsor: Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. NOV. 17: PAID LEAVE & THE TIMING OF WOMEN'S EMPLOYMENT SURROUNDING BIRTH. 12:30 p.m., 209 Savery. Jutta Joesch, Senior Research Fellow, Dept. of Health Services, UW. Sponsor: Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology, UW; Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation. Information: 543-5412. TURKISTAN--OUR COMMON HOME. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Students' Reports (IN UZBEK; translations provided). Sponsor: Uzbek Circle, Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. NOV. 20: PEER INFLUENCE ON MALE EXTRAMARITAL SEXUAL RELATIONS IN THAILAND. 3:30-5 p.m., 317 Thomson. Mark VanLandingham, postdoctoral research fellow, Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology, UW. Part of series, "Focus on Thailand: Gender & Sexuality in a Changing World." Sponsor: Southeast Asian Studies, JSIS. Information: 543-9606. NOV. 22: HUMAN RIGHTS IN SOUTH KOREA: THE NATIONAL SECURITY. 3:30-5 p.m., 317 Thomson. Jonshik Suh & Kiwook Lee, Human Rights Activists. Sponsor: Korea Studies Program, JSIS. Information: 543-4391. NOV. 27: RIGHTS, RELIGION, & WOMEN: ISRAEL'S PERSONAL STATUS LAW. 12:30 p.m., 215A Denny. Patricia Woods, Phd Program in Near & Middle Eastern Studies, UW. Sponsor: Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 543-6033. NEW RELIGIOUS PHENOMENA IN EASTERN EUROPE. 3:30-5 p.m., 317 Thomson. Sabrina Ramet, Professor, Russian, East European & Central Asian Studies (REECAS) & International Studies, JSIS. Sponsor: REECAS. Information: 543-2798. NOV. 28: THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE SEVENTH PLAGUE. 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Dr. Scott Noegel, Cornell University, 1995-6 Hazel D. Cole Fellow in Jewish Studies at the UW. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Colloquium, JSIS. Information: 543-4243. NOV. 29: THE TURKMEN LANGUAGE: CHANGES IN LEXICON & SYNTAX SINCE INDEPENDENCE. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Dr. Murad Begliyev, Head, Foreign Language Dept., Turkmen State University, Ashgabad. Sponsor: Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. NOV. 30: KIRGHIZ TRADITIONAL CULTURE & ART (with slides). 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Dr. Umut Asanova, Fulbright Scholar from Bishkek, Kirghizstan. Sponsor: Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. DEC. 1: HOW DOES TEENAGE CHILDBEARING AFFECT THE HUMAN CAPITAL & WAGES OF YOUNG WOMEN? 4000 NE 41st, Seattle (van leaving loading zone area of Savery Hall at 12:15). Bob Plotnick, Dept. of Public Affairs, Shelly Lundberg, Dept. of Economics, and Dan Klepinger, Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation. Sponsor: Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology, UW, & Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation. Information: 543-5412. ITEMS OF INTEREST IN UZBEK NEWSPAPERS. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 215 Denny. Students' Reports, Uzbek Circle (IN UZBEK, translations provided). Sponsor: Dept. of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization, UW. Information: 685-3800. DEC. 4: PRIME-TIME DRAMAS: TELEVISION, GENDER & DESIRE IN THAILAND'S URBAN NORTH. 3:30-5 p.m., 317 Thomson. Sara Van Fleet, PhD Candidate, Dept. of Anthropology, UW. Part of series, "Focus on Thailand: Gender & Sexuality in a Changing World." Sponsor: Southeast Asian Studies, JSIS. Information: 543-9606. DEC. 5: SELECTED CHAPTERS ON MEDIEVAL CHRISTIAN MONASTICISM FROM TALAL ASAD'S, "GENEALOGIES OF RELIGION." 3:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Faculty & Graduate Students in the Comparative Religion Program, JSIS. Sponsor: Comparative Religion Program, Faculty Colloquium Series. Information: 543-4835. DEC. 6: NARCO-TRAFFICKING & INDIGENOUS POPULATIONS IN COLOMBIA. 12:30-1:30 p.m., 317 Thomson. Jorge Arboleda. Sponsor: Latin American Studies Program (Brown Bag Lunch Series). Information: 543-4718. DEC. 8: EXPLAINING BLACK WHITE DIFFERENCES & THE RISK OF MARITAL DISRUPTION. 12:30 p.m., 209 Savery. Julie Brines, Dept. of Sociology, UW. Sponsor: Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology, UW, and Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation. Information: 543-5412. UPCOMING: February - May, 1996: INTERNATIONAL UPDATES: TRENDS & TRANSITIONS IN YOUR WORLD. A lecture/dinner series sponsored by the Jackson School. Eight Wednesday evening lectures by JSIS faculty. Watch for announcements! ******** To request disability accommodations, contact the office of the ADA Coordinator, at least ten days in advance of the event. 543-6450 (voice); 543-6452 (TDD); 685-3885 (FAX); access@u.washington.edu (E-mail). The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies University of Washington Box 353650 Seattle, WA 98195-3650 .