From jsis@u.washington.edu Tue Jan 23 11:01:35 2001 Received: from jason01.u.washington.edu (root@jason01.u.washington.edu [140.142.8.10]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW00.05/8.9.3+UW00.12) with ESMTP id LAA87238 for ; Tue, 23 Jan 2001 11:01:33 -0800 Received: from homer32.u.washington.edu (jsis@homer32.u.washington.edu [140.142.8.42]) by jason01.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW00.05/8.9.3+UW00.12) with ESMTP id LAA33836 for ; Tue, 23 Jan 2001 11:01:30 -0800 Received: from localhost (jsis@localhost) by homer32.u.washington.edu (8.9.3+UW00.05/8.9.3+UW00.12) with ESMTP id LAA123308 for ; Tue, 23 Jan 2001 11:01:22 -0800 Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2001 11:01:21 -0800 (PST) From: Jackson School of International Studies To: jsis-uw@u.washington.edu Subject: The Jackson School Calendar, January 22, 2001 Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII the JACKSON SCHOOL CALENDAR JANUARY 23, 2001 ALL EVENTS ARE FREE & OPEN TO THE PUBLIC UNLESS OTHERWISE INDICATED. *New Events (or changes) not previously listed are indicated by an asterisk* At the end of this calendar is a list of abbreviations and a list of Web sites where you can find more detailed information. _________________________________________________________________ Janaury 23 * Young Poland: Art on the Periphery, ca. 1900. 12:00 noon, Communications 126. Speaker: Jan Cavanaugh, art historian. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. * What Future for Russia? Liberal Economics and Illiberal Geography. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Allen Lynch, Director, Center for Russian & East Asian Studies, Univ. of Virginia (Candidate for the position of Director, Jackson School of International Studies). Sponsor: JSIS. January 24 Bodies of Subjects, Bodies of Texts: Reconfiguring the Metaphoric Networks (Part of the series "Rethinking Nature and Identity in a Dematerialized World). 3:30 - 5:00 pm, HUB 200AB. Speaker: Katherine Hayles, Dept. of English, UCLA. Sponsors: Taylor Institute for Transnational Studies/JSIS; Dept. of English; Women's Studies. Info: 616-1190. Films: "For Luck", "The 1002nd Ruse" and "Daydreams" (Evgenii Bauer, Russia, 1915-17). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Film: " Matador" (1986). Part of the Pedro Almodovar Film Series. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Odegaarde Library, Room 220. Almodovar takes on another Spanish cultural icon, the bullfight. Sexuality and death are made explicit as they swirl around the fiesta nacional. Sponsors: Depts. Of Spanish and Portugues and Comparative Literature. Info: tgeist@u.washington.edu January 25 New Website of the Central Asian Program in NELC (II). 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Talgat Imangaliev, graduate student, NELC. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. January 26 Deterrence Now: Theory and Practice after the Cold War. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Parrington Hall, The Commons. Speaker: Patrick Morgan, Tierney Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies, Univ. of California, Irvine. Sponsors: International Studies Program/JSIS; Pacific Northwest Colloquium on International Security; Institute for Global and Regional Security Studies. Info: 685-2354. * In Search of a Korean Civil Society. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Yong-Chool Ha, Dept. of Political Science, Seoul National University. Sponsors: Korea Studies Program/JSIS; Institute for International Policy. Info: 543-4391. January 27 Canadian Multicultural Stories, First Nations and Quebecois Literature - Teaching Diversity and Cross-Cultural Understanding through Canadian Stories and Myths. All-day workshop for K-6 educators/librarians - 8 clock hours available. 8:30 am - 4:30 pm, Thomson Hall 234. Cost: $40 (includes coffee, muffins, and box lunch). Sponsors: Pacific Northwest National Resource Center for the Study of Canada. Info: 543-6269. January 29 Foreigners and Fanatics: Assessing the Impact of Extremist Parties on Immigration Control (Part of the CWES Politics and Society Colloquium Series "Transforming Europe: Movements of People, Products and Ideas"). Noon - 1:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Jeanette Money, Univ. of California, Davis. Sponsor: CWES/JSIS. Info: 543-1675. Transitions to Independence and Commitments to Minorities. 3:30-5:30 pm, Parrington Hall, The Forum, Speaker: David D. Laitin, Stanford University. Sponsors: The Center for the Study of Ethnic Conflict and Conflict Resolution and the International Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 685-2354. January 30 Globalization in the Public Interest: Business, the World Bank and Voices of the Poor. 11:45 am registration, noon luncheon, Columbia Tower Club, 701 Fifth Avenue. Speaker: Jan Piercy, US Executive Director, The World Bank. Sponsors: World Affairs Council; Puget Sound Business Journal; US Bank; Grant Thornton LLP. Cost: $32 members, $40 non-members. Registration & info: 441-5910. * The European Union's Common Foreign and Security Policy. 3:00 - 4:30 pm, Parrington Forum. Speaker: Johan Lilliehook, European Commission official and visiting European Union Fellow at USC. Sponsor: European Union Center/JSIS. Info: 616-2415. * Environmental Philosophies: How Sustainable Are They? 6:00 pm, Kane Hall 130. Speaker: Dr. Ramachandra Guha, writer and activist. Sponsors: Anthropology; Geography; History; JSIS; Program on the Environment. Info: 616-1825. * Steven Spielberg and Survivor Testimonies: The Methodology and Politics of Holocaust Post Memory. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Diane Wolf, Department of Sociology, University of California, Davis. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4243. January 31 The Euro R.I.P.? (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Robert C. (Rocky) Higgins, School of Business. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. Globalization, the Asian Way, and Dichotomous Development: Who is to Blame for the Asian Crisis and Persistent Poverty (with a special emphasis on Indonesia). 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Geoff Hainsworth, Director, Centre for SE Asia Research, Univ. of British Columbia. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. Issues of Gravity/A Study in Collaboration. 6:30 pm, Architecture Hall Auditorium 147. Speakers: Elizabeth Shotton, School of Architecture, University of British Columbia; Jim Nicholls, UW School of Architecture. Sponsors: College of Architecture and Urban Planning; Canadian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-6269. Films: "Turksib" (Viktor Turin, USSR, 1929) and "Salt for Svanetia" (Mikhail Kalatozov, USSR, 1930). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Film: "The Law of Desire" (1987). Part of the Pedro Almodovar Film Series. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Odegaarde Library, Room 220. Mistaken identity, homosexual love, theater and film come together in Almodovar's kinky mix of film noir and soap opera. Sponsors: Depts. Of Spanish and Portugues and Comparative Literature. Info: tgeist@u.washington.edu * Environmental Philosophies: How Sustainable Are They? 6:00 pm, Kane Hall 130. Speaker: Walker-Ames Lecturer Ramachandra Guha. Sponsor: South Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4800. February 1 Conference: The European Union and Scandinavia. Begins at 9:00 am in HUB 310. Speakers: Eric Einhorn, political scientist, U-Mass/Amherst; Christine Ingebritsen, political scientist, UW; Paulette Kurzer, political scientist, Univ. of Arizona; Lars Svasand, political scientist, Univ. of Bergen; Lykke Friis, EU expert, Danish Institute of International Affairs; Baldur Thorhallsson, political scientist, Univ. of Iceland; Robert Rinehart, diplomatic historian, US Foreign Service Institute; Annica Kronsell-Young, political scientist, Univ. of Lund; Ann-Catherine Jungar, political scientist, Univ. of Uppsala. Sponsor: European Union Center/JSIS. Info: 616-2415. The Azerbaijan Turks in Iran and in the Republic of Azerbaijan. 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Alireza Jabbarpour, graduate student, JSIS. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. Understanding the Decline of State Ownership in China's Corporate Sector. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Prof. Zhang Chunlin, Senior Enterprise Restructuring Specialist, The World Bank Office, Bejing. Sponsor: China Studies Program. Info: 543-4391. * India's Love-Hate Relationship with the West. 3:30 pm, Music Room, Faculty Club. Speaker: Walker-Ames Lecturer Ramachandra Guha. Sponsor: South Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4800. February 2 Contemporary North West Coast Art & the Work of Susan Point, Coast Salish Artist (a dinner/lecture). 6:30 - 9:30 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Gary Wyatt, Curator, Spirit Wrestler Gallery, Vancouver, B.C., and editor of "Susan Point: Coast Salish Artist, 2000." Cost: $30 (includes dinner, wine and lecture). Sponsors: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; Center for Canadian-American Studies, Wester Washington University; the Canada-America society; the Pacific North West Canadian Studies Consortium. Info: 543-6269. New Publications on Central Asia (I). 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Mark Reese, graduate student, NELC. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. February 3 International Cultural Documentary - Using Film to Teach About International Education (Workshop for Middle/High School Teachers). 8:30 am - 4:30 pm, Thomson Hall 235. Workshop Leaders: Carol Hermer and Mary Barber. Cost: $40 (includes coffee, muffins & box lunch). Sponsors: JSIS Educational Outreach Centers. Info: 543-6269. February 6 * Strategic Alliances and the Human Factor: Migration for Marriage in Two Medieval Jewish Societies. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Judith Baskin, Director, Harold Schnitzer Family Program in Judaic Studies and Professor, Religious Studies at the University of Oregon. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4243. February 7 Film: " Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown." (1988). Part of the Pedro Almodovar Film Series. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Odegaarde Library, Room 220. Almodovar's first hit in the US features an unfaithful advertising executive, his suicidal girlfriend, his homocidal wife, spiked gazpacho and a singing taxi driver in a madcap comedy. Sponsors: Depts. Of Spanish and Portugues and Comparative Literature. Info: tgeist@u.washington.edu Film: "Chapayev" (S. and G. Vasilyev, USSR, 1934). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. February 8 Wise Use: A Late Capitalist Moral Economy (Part of the series "Rethinking Nature and Identity in a Dematerialized World"). 3:30 - 5:00 pm, HUB 209A. Speaker: James McCarthy, Dept. of Geography, Pennsylvania State University. Sponsor: Taylor Institute for Transnational Studies/JSIS; Dept. of Geography; Dept. of Histroy; Dept. of Anthropology. Info: 616-1190. New Publications on Central Asia (II). 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Mark Reese, graduate student, NELC. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. * To Market, To Market To But a Clean Spirit: What Happens to the Spiritual in a Material World? 7:00 pm, Kane Hall 120. Speaker: Martin Marty, The Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus, Univ. of Chicago. Sponsors: Comparative Religion Program/JSIS; University Congregational United Church of Christ. Audience members are invited to join Prof. Marty for coffee and discussion in the church lounge (4515 16th Ave. NE) following the lecture. Info: davidmcc@u.washington.edu February 9 Water in Central Asia: Root of Conflict or Tool for Cooperation? 12:30 - 2:00 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Philip Micklin, Dept. of Geography, Western Michigan University. Sponsors: REECAS/JSIS, CASG/NELC. Info: 543-4852. February 10 Asia-2-O: Water Issues Across Asia (A workshop for K-12 educators and the general public. 8:00 am - 4:00 pm, Thomson Hall. Speakers will include a number of UW faculty and professionals/specialists from the community. Sponsors: East Asia Program; REECAS; South Asia Center; Southeast Asia Center/JSIS; Program on the Environment. Cost: $45 (clock hours and lunch included). Registration & info: 543-9606. February 14 Sexuality in Scandinavia - Myth and Reality: A Cultural Perspective (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Ia Dubois, Dept. of Scandinavian Studies. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, CWES. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. Film: "The Red and the White" (Miklos Jancso, Hungary, 1968). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Religion, State, and Society during the Independence Struggle, 1918-23. 1:30-3:20 pm, Parrington Hall, The Commons. Speaker: Hasan Kayali, Associate Professor of History, UC-San Diego. Sponsors: Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities, Middle East Center/JSIS, and International Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 685-2354. The Omer Mithun Endowment Lecture: "That was Then, This is Now." 6:30 pm, Architecture Hall auditorium 147. Speaker: John Patkau, Patkau Architects, Vancouver, BC. Sponsors: College of Architecture and Urban Planning; Canadian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-6269. Film: " Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down!" (1989). Part of the Pedro Almodovar Film Series. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Odegaarde Library, Room 220. Rikki is released from a mental institution and searches out Marina, a porn star with whom he has fallen in love. After a number of escapes from each other, they wind up driving off into the sunset. Sponsors: Depts. Of Spanish and Portugues and Comparative Literature. Info: tgeist@u.washington.edu February 15 Towards a Just and Viable Peace? A View from the Ground. 7:30 - 9:30 pm, Kane Hall 110. Speakers: Jeff Halper, Coordinator, Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions; Salim Hassan Shawamreh, Palestinian Ministry of Industry. Sponsors: Middle East Center/JSIS; American Friends Service Committee; Palestinian Concerns Task Force; Palestine Solidarity Committee; Northwest Coalition for a Just Peace in Israel/Palestine; Pursue the Peace; St. Marks Cathedral-Palestine Concerns Group. Info: 543-4227. New Publications on/in Kazakhstan. 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Talgat Imangaliev, graduate student, NELC. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. February 16 Modern Beauty: Limits to the Globalization of Femininity (Part of the Speaker Series "Modern Girl Around the World"). 2:30 - 4:00 pm, HUB 309. Speaker: Richard Wilk, Dept. of Anthropology, Indiana University. Sponsor: Taylor Institute/JSIS. Info: 616-1190. New Publications on/in Kirghizstan. 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Jipar Duyshembiyeva, graduate student, NELC. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. "Courtesan saiken records and courtesan culture in Edo Japan." 2:30 - 3:50 pm, ART Room 3, Lower level. Speaker: Professor Allen Hockley. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. * The Question to my Answer. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Mary Gates 228. Speaker: Dubravka Ugresic, Croatian writer and visiting scholar. Sponsor: Slavic L&L; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. February 17 Third Annual Afrassiabi Distinguished Lecture in Persian Studies: " From Word to Image: The Case of Shahnameh Illustrations." 6:30 - 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 220, with reception to follow in Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Jerome W. Clinton, Princeton University. Sponsor: NELC. Info: 543-6033. February 20 - 23 European Studies Symposium. Seattle Pacific University. Includes outside and student speakers, films, symposia, art exhibits and more. Sponsors; College of Arts and Sciences and Dept. of Foreign Languages and Literature, Seattle Pacific University. Info: 281-2209. February 21 Marking and Marketing Identities: Filipino American Spaces and the Practice of Locating. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Rick Bonus, UW American Ethnic Studies. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. Film: "Pretty Village, Pretty Flame" (Srdjan Dragojevic, former Yugoslavia, 1996). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. Film: " Kika." (1993). Part of the Pedro Almodovar Film Series. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Odegaarde Library, Room 220. Almodovar reprises his major themes of sexuality and women's subjectivity, this time filtered, literally, through the lens of fashion photographer Ram^n. Sponsors: Depts. Of Spanish and Portugues and Comparative Literature. Info: tgeist@u.washington.edu February 22 "Living First" in Downtown Vancouver - The Glittering Spectacle of a Contemporary City Shaped for People in Residence. 6:30 pm, Architecture Hall Auditorium 147. Speaker: Larry Beasley, Director of Planning, City of Vancouver. Sponsors: College of Architecture and Urban Planning; Canadian Studies Center/JSIS. 543-6269. New Publications on/in Uzbekistan. 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Ilse D. Cirtautas, NELC. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. Title TBA. 3:30-5:00 PM, Thomson 317. Speaker: Professor Cai Feng, Director and Professor, Institute of Population Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. Sponsor: China Studies Program. Info: 543-4391. February 23 Researching Local History in Kazakhstan's Archives. 12:30 - 1:30 p.m., Denny 215. Speaker: Gregory Tomasin, Ph.C., Dept. of History. Sponsor: CASG/NELC. Info: 543-9963 or 543-6033. February 24 Teaching Canadian History & Culture Through Canadian Art - A Workshop for Middle/High School Teachers/Librarians (8 clock hours available). 8:30 am - 4:30 pm, Thomson Hall 235. Workshop Leaders: Dr. Nancy Pagh and Dr. Douglas Jackson. Cost: $40 (includes coffee, muffins and box lunch). Sponsors: Pacific Northwest National Resource Center for the Study of Canada. Pre-registration required. Info: 543-6269. February 26 "Kimono." 2:30 - 3:50 pm, ART Room 3, Lower level. Speaker: Professor Liza Dalby. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. * The Sassoons and John Singer Sargent: an Anglo-Jewish Collection. 3:30 pm, location tba. Speaker: Peter Stansky, the Francis and Charles Field Professor of History at Stanford. Co-sponsoreed by History and Jewish Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-5790. February 27 Malaysia's Mad magazines: Images of Females and Males in Malay Culture. 12:30 - 2:00 pm, location tba. Speaker: Ron Provencher, Northern Illinois Univ. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. February 28 Challenges of Democracy in an Undemocratic Culture: The Case of Iran (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Ahmad Karimi-Hakkak, Dept. of Near Eastern Languages and Civilization. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, Middle East Center. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. Film: "Underground" (Emir Kusturica, former Yugoslavia, 1995). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852.' Film: " All About My Mother" (1999). Part of the Pedro Almodovar Film Series. 7:00 - 9:00 pm, Odegaarde Library, Room 220. Almodovar achieves in this Academy Award winning film the domestication of the outrageous, "normalizing" transexuality while questioning the absolute categories of father and mother. Sponsors: Depts. Of Spanish and Portugues and Comparative Literature. Info: tgeist@u.washington.edu March 1 Putin's Foreign Policy: Challenging the U.S. with a Practical Approach (part of the lecture series "Putin and the New Russian Foreign Policy"). 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speaker: Celeste Wallander, Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations. Sponsors: Henry M. Jackson Foundation; World Affairs Council; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. March 2 In the Eye of the Revolution: A Symposium on Early Soviet Film. 8:45 am - 5:30 pm, HUB Room 310. Speakers include Anthony Anemone (College of William and Mary), Zoran Kuzmanovic (Davidson College, North Carolina), Anne Nesbet (University of California, Berkeley) and UW faculty. Sponsors: REECAS/JSIS, Slavic L&L, Simpson Center for the Humanities, College of Arts and Sciences, Comparative Literature and interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences (UW Tacoma). Info: 543-4852. Oyoshitoshi and Meiji Visual Culture. 2:30 - 3:50 pm, ART Room 3, Lower level. Speaker: John Stevenson. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program. Info: 543-4391. March 3 * South Asia Colloquium of the Pacific Northwest (SACPAN). 9:00 am - 4:00 pm, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. Presenters include Priya Kapoor, Portland State University. Info: 543-4800. March 7 Film: "Prisoner of the Mountains" (Sergei Bodrov, Russia, 1996). 6:00 p.m., Mary Gates Hall 271. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. March 8 The Promotion of Democracy in Putin's Russia: Myths and Realities (part of the lecture series "Putin and the New Russian Foreign Policy"). 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speaker: Sarah Mendelson, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University. Sponsors: Henry M. Jackson Foundation; World Affairs Council; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. March 14 >From Genocide to Reconciliation: Varieties of Ethnic Conflict in Today's World (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Daniel Chirot, Jackson School of International Studies. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, International Studies Center. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. Ho Xuan Huong: Recovering Vietnam's Lost Literature. 1:30 - 3:00 pm, location tba. Speakers: John Balaban, Univ. of North Caroline; Ngo Thanh Nhan, NYU computational linguist and developer of digital font that has enabled the printing of the Nom script. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. March 19 * The Palaces of Herod the Great (palaces excavated at Masada, Herodium, Jericho and Caesarea Maritima, together with a short survey of the Hasmonean winter palace at Jericho). 7:00 pm, Center for Urban Horticulture, 3501 NE 41st St. Speaker: Professor Ehud Netzer, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For more information: (206) 622-3363. March 24 Experience Canadian Art: An Educator's Field Trip to the "Cornelius Krieghoff: Images of Canada" Exhibit at the Vancouver Art Gallery. (Two clock hours available). 7:30 am - 10:00 pm. Trip leaders: Dr. Douglas Jackson and Nadine Fabbi. Cost: $60 includes Amtrak round-trip to Vancouver, lunch at the Gallery Cafe, and admission to the exhibit including a guided tour. Sponsors: Pacific Northwest National Resource Center for the Study of Canada. Pre-registration required. Info: 543-6269. March 28 The Coming Collapse of Russian Education? Demographics and the Fate of Schooling in the Former Soviet Union (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Stephen T. Kerr, College of Education. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, REECAS. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. March 29 * Women in Pakistan. 3:30 pm, location tba. Speaker: Farzana Bari, Quid-I-Azam University, Islamabad, Pakistan. Sponsors: South Asia Center/JSIS; American Institute of Pakistan Studies. Info: 543-4800. April 2 The Strange Case of Bruno Manser: Transnational Environmental Activism and Claims to Nature. 3:30 - 4:00 pm, Denny 401. Speaker: Peter Brosius, Anthropology, Univ. of Georgia. Sponsor: Southeast Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-9606. April 6 Open Secrets: Edo Era Politics in Their Own Terms. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Location tba. Speaker: Luke Roberts. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. Constructing Primordialism: Old Histories for New Nations in the Post-Soviet Region. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Ronald Grigor Suny, Dept. of Political Science, Univ. of Chicago. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. April 11 Beyond Rangoon: Political Instability in Burma (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Mary Callahan, Jackson School of International Studies. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, Southeast Asia Center. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. April 12 Russia's Relations with Eastern Europe and the Baltic States: A New Divide in Europe? (part of the lecture series "Putin and the New Russian Foreign Policy"). 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speaker: Mark Kramer, Harvard Project on Cold War Studies, Harvard Univ. Sponsors: Henry M. Jackson Foundation; World Affairs Council; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. No Jobs, Lot's of Work: The Rise and Spread of Temporary Work in Canada in an International Context. 7:30 - 9:00 pm, Faculty Club Auditorium. Speaker: Leah Vosko, author and Assistant Professor, Labour Studies and Political Science, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. Sponsors: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS; Women's Studies; Center for Labor Studies; Center for Women in Democrary. Info: 543-6269. April 13 'Great Russians' and 'Little Russians': Russian-Ukrainian Relations and Perceptions in Historical Perspective (The Donald W. Treadgold Lecture). 3:30 p.m., Parrington Hall Forum (Room 309). Speaker: Andreas Kappeler, Institute for East European History, University of Vienna. Sponsors: REECAS, History, Jackson School of International Studies. Info: 543-4852. April 14 REECAS-NW in Olympia: Seventh Annual Northwest Regional Conference for Russian, East European and Central Asian Studies. Evergreen State College, Olympia. Contributions on literature, the fine arts, the environment, post-Soviet foreign policy, historical research, economics, national identity or any other relevant subjects are encouraged. If you would like to join the program, send your name and details, a title and brief abstract to jak@u.washington.edu. Info: 543-4852. April 16 * Ahimsa - Beyond Violent Traditions of Science and Technology. 7:00 pm, Kane Hall 130. Speaker: Vandana Shiva. Sponsor: South Asia Center/JSIS. Info: 543-4800. April 18 Court and City: The Patronage of Culture in 18th-Century Istanbul. 1:30-3:20 pm, Parrington Hall, The Commons. Speaker: Shirine Hamadeh, Fellow, American Research Institute in Turkey. Sponsors: Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities, Middle East Center/JSIS, and International Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 685-2354. April 20 Symposium: "International Health Care in the 21st Century: Health Care Delivery in Canada and the U.S." 9:00 am - 4:00 pm, Thomson Hall 317. Moderator: Kieran O'Malley, Dept. of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. Sponsor: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-6269. April 24 * In the Blood?: Consent, Descent, and the Ironies of Jewish Identity. 3:30 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Susan Glenn. April 25 North-South Interactions on the Korean Peninsula: Implications for the U.S. (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Clark Sorenson, Jackson School of International Studies. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, East Asia Center. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. April 27 Title TBA. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Eleanor Hadley. Sponsor: Japan Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. May 2 International Institutions and Human Rights in Post-Soviet Ukraine. 3:30 - 5:00 p.m., Thomson 317. Speaker: Jeffrey T. Checkel, ARENA, University of Oslo. Sponsor: REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. May 3 Russia's Road to a Market Economy under Putin (part of the lecture series "Putin and the New Russian Foreign Policy"). 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speaker: Anders Aslund, Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Sponsors: Henry M. Jackson Foundation; World Affairs Council; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. May 7, 9, and 14 * Post-Traditional Jewish Identities (Samuel and Althea Stroum Lecture 2001). Speaker: Professor Paul Mendes-Flohr, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Sponsor: Jewish Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4243. May 8 * Colloquium: Professor Paul Mendes-Flohr, Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Thomson 317, 3:30 p.m. May 9 The Emergence of Canadian Cinema: The Making of an Industry through Government Policy (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Darryl Macdonald, Director, Seattle International Film Festival. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, Canadian Studies Center; Canada-America Society. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. May 10 Putin's Nature: A Cautionary Fable (part of the lecture series "Putin and the New Russian Foreign Policy"). 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speaker: Steven Solnick, Dept. of Political Science, Columbia University. Sponsors: Henry M. Jackson Foundation; World Affairs Council; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. May 18 Title TBA. 3:30 - 5:00 pm, Thomson 317. Speaker: Mariam Silverberg. Sponsors: China and Japan Studies Program/JSIS. Info: 543-4391. May 23 The Cultural Politics of Wildlife Policy in India (part of the series "International Updates: Trends and Transitions in Your World") 5:30 - 8:00 pm, Kane Hall, Walker-Ames Room. Speaker: Kalayanakrishnan Sivaramakrishnan, Dept. of Anthropology. Sponsors: Jackson School Outreach Centers/JSIS, CIBER, South Asia Center. Cost for dinner/lecture is $22. Registration & info: 543-1675. Visualizing Power: Illustrated Histories of the Ottoman Dynasty. 1:30-3:20 pm, Thomson Hall, 317. Speaker: Serpil Bagci, Associate Professor of Art History, Hacettept University, Turkey. Sponsors: Walter Chapin Simpson Center for the Humanities, Middle East Center/JSIS, and International Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 685-2354. May 24 Slide Show/Reading: "Labrador: Canada's Forgotten Frontier." 7:30 - 9:00 pm, University Book Store, 2nd Floor Reading Space. Speaker: Lynne Fitzhugh, Author. Sponsor: Canadian Studies Center/JSIS. Info: 543-6269. Russia's Unfinished Revolution: The Protracted Transition from Communism to Democracy (part of the lecture series "Putin and the New Russian Foreign Policy"). 7:30 pm, Kane Hall 210. Speaker: Michael McFaul, Senior Associate, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. Sponsors: Henry M. Jackson Foundation; World Affairs Council; REECAS/JSIS. Info: 543-4852. ______________________________________________________________________________ Abbreviations and Web site addresses for more detailed information: Asian L&L = Department of Asian Languages & Literature CANSTUD = Canadian Studies Program/JSIS http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/canada/canada.html CASG = Central Asian Studies Group/NELC CIBER = Center for International Business Education & Research CSDE = Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology CPHRS = Center for Public Health Research & Evaluation CWES = Center for West European Studies, JSIS http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/cwesuw/index.html GEOG = Dept. of Geography http://depts.washington.edu/geog/news/colloquium.html GTI = George Taylor Institute Depts.washington.edu/tayloruw/seminars.htm GTTL = Global Trade, Transportation & Logistics Studies IIP = Institute for International Policy www.iip.washington.edu IS = Center for International Studies/JSIS http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/is/is-ctr.html JSIS = The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies LAS = Latin American Studies Program/JSIS MEC = Middle East Center/JSIS http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/mideast/events.htm NELC = Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization REECAS = Russian, East European, and Central Asia Studies, JSIS http://depts.washington.edu/reecas SEAS = Southeast Asia Studies/JSIS http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/seasia/seasia.html Slavic L&L = Department of Slavic Languages & Literature SMA = School of Marine Affairs ****************************************************************************** The Jackson School Calendar is updated and e-mailed weekly. There is no charge for subscribing. To subscribe to the on-line Calendar, or for further information, please post a message to: JSIS@u.washington.edu. Thank you 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 Charles Paxton,Secretary to the Director Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies Box 353650, University of Washington Seattle, WA 98195 Ph: (206) 543-4372 .