From jsis@u.washington.edu Fri May 14 13:53:53 2004 Received: from mxu9.u.washington.edu (mxu9.u.washington.edu [140.142.32.174]) by lists.u.washington.edu (8.12.11+UW04.02/8.12.11+UW04.03) with ESMTP id i4EKrqED052270 for ; Fri, 14 May 2004 13:53:52 -0700 Received: from mxout1.cac.washington.edu (mxout1.cac.washington.edu [140.142.32.134]) by mxu9.u.washington.edu (8.12.11+UW04.02/8.12.11+UW04.05) with ESMTP id i4EKrpqx025972 (version=TLSv1/SSLv3 cipher=EDH-RSA-DES-CBC3-SHA bits=168 verify=NO) for ; Fri, 14 May 2004 13:53:51 -0700 Received: from mailhost1.u.washington.edu (mailhost1.u.washington.edu [140.142.32.141]) by mxout1.cac.washington.edu (8.12.11+UW04.02/8.12.11+UW04.03) with ESMTP id i4EKroBj023534 for ; Fri, 14 May 2004 13:53:50 -0700 Received: from BEVERLYW (D-128-95-200-98.dhcp4.washington.edu [128.95.200.98]) by mailhost1.u.washington.edu (8.12.11+UW04.02/8.12.11+UW04.03) with SMTP id i4EKroie028351 for ; Fri, 14 May 2004 13:53:50 -0700 Message-ID: <022501c439f5$327585b0$62c85f80@BEVERLYW> From: "Jackson School of International Studies" To: "JSIS - Calendar" Subject: the JACKSON SCHOOL CALENDAR Date: Fri, 14 May 2004 13:51:14 -0700 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2800.1409 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2800.1409 X-Uwash-Spam: Gauge=IIIIIIII, Probability=8%, Report='CLICK_BELOW 0.089, __OUTLOOK_MSGID_1 0, __SANE_MSGID 0, __TO_MALFORMED_2 0, __MIME_VERSION 0, __EVITE_CTYPE 0, __CTYPE_CHARSET_QUOTED 0, __CT_TEXT_PLAIN 0, __CT 0, __CTE 0, __HAS_X_PRIORITY 0, __HAS_MSMAIL_PRI 0, __OUTLOOK_MUA_1 0, __HAS_X_MAILER 0, __ANY_OUTLOOK_MUA 0, __HAS_OUTLOOK_IN_MAILER 0, __HAS_MIMEOLE 0, __CLICK_BELOW 0, __PORN_PHRASE_15_0 0, __CHILD_PORN_NOT_1 0, __NEW_DOMAIN_EXTENSIONS_2 0, __NIGERIAN_BODY_15 0, __MIME_TEXT_ONLY 0, __OUTLOOK_MUA 0, __HAS_MSGID 0' the JACKSON SCHOOL CALENDAR May 14, 2004 A brief look ahead. Scroll down for complete details. * Unless stated otherwise, all events will take place on the main campus of the University of Washington, Seattle. The Jackson School sponsorship of an event does not imply that the School endorses the content of an event. Click here to receive the JSIS Calendar by email April 1 - June 23 Vision of India May 14 The Thai Court and Its Subjects: The Administration of Corvee, 1827-1885 May 15 Images of India: New Perspectives on India May 17 Making Global Development Work: The Commission for Africa Famous Russian Sociologist to Speak at the University of Washington Neverending Wars: The Perpetuation of Civil War since 1945 Islam and Democratic Reform in Indonesia: After the 2004 Election May 19 2004 Latin American Film Festival: La Ley De Herodes The Changing Dynamics of U.S. - Japan Relations: Facing Global Environmental Challenges Together May 20 Engendering Feudalism: The Indian Modes of Production Debates Revisited The structural sources of organizational isomorphism: Some reflections on power and the flow of information May 21 Performing Beggar To Professional Storyteller May 25 Current Issues Facing Latin America: Perspectives from Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Peru President of Fetzer Vineyards to Speak abt. Sustainable Winemaking May 27 Go Down Moses: African-American Slaves and the Promised Land. May 28 Reputation and War: Government Responses to Self-determination Challenges June 2 Reinventing Business, Government and Infrastructure to Embrace Emerging Trade Partnerships with China and Other Asian Countries June 4 The Cultural Logics and Political Economy of Transnational Families June 7-July 31 Jewish Costumes in the Ottoman Empire Full Listings 2004 April 1-June 23 Vision of India. Photographs from Robert Arnett's prize winning book "India Unveiled" will be on display Spring Quarter 2004 (April 1-June 23) on the second and third floors of Odegaard Undergraduate Library. This exhibit is a collection a photographs taken during his travels to many of the different pradesha [or states] in India and features some the rich diversity of India's peoples and places. Accompanying this exhibit is a selection of travelogues and pictorial works on India collated from the Libraries' collection. They are on reserve on the first floor of Odegaard. This exhibit is made possible with the support of the Indian American Education Foundation and is co-sponsored by the University of Washington Libraries and the South Asia Center. May 14 The Thai Court and Its Subjects: The Administration of Corvee, 1827-1885. 12:00-1:30PM, Location tba. Speaker: Constance Wilson (UW). This paper represents an attempt to reconstruct the process of administrating corvee between 1827 and 1885 based on records from the National Library in Bangkok. For the past three decades Professor Wilson has been working with this material in an effort to find out how corvee was administered and supervised, and to see just what services and types of work the corvee laborers performed. The study covers the process of the registration of eligible men as well as the ways in which workers were organized for specific tasks: assisting in central or local administration; participating in royal ceremonies; construction of royal and local projects; collecting and transporting goods for state revenue; guard duty; and serving as military forces in time of war. May 15 Images of India: New Perspectives on India. 12:30-5:00 PM, Walker-Ames Room, Kane Hall. IAWW Youth Choir singing Saare Jahan se achcha - Hindustan hamara and Mere Jutay Heh Japani; Speakers: Hon. H.H.S. Viswanathan, Consul General of India, San Francisco; Dr. Anand Yang, Director of Jackson School of International Studies; UW Vice Provost Susan Jeffords; South Asia Center Director K. Sivaramakrishnan; IAWW President Lakshmi Gaur; Indian American Education Foundation Executive Director Prem Kumar; preview of Vision of India Photo Exhibit; and Presentation of the India Association of Western Washington Scholarship. There will also be presentations by: Richard Salomon, Professor of Asian Languages and Literature, University of Washington. Prabhudev Konana, Associate Professor of MIS, Distinguished Teaching Professor Assistant Director, Center for Research in Electronic Commerce, McCombs School of Business, The University of Texas at Austin. Milind Kandlikar of University of British Columbia. Sponsored by the South Asia Center, the India Association of Western Washington, the Indian American Education Foundation and the Indo-American Friendship Forum. For further information contact the South Asia Center at 206-543-4800 or see May 17 Making Global Development Work: The Commission for Africa. 12:00 PM-1:30 PM, 309 Parrington Hall (The Forum). Speaker: Dr. James Quilligan, advisor to the Blair Commission for Africa. Recently convened by British Prime Minister Tony Blair, the Commission for Africa is charged with developing recommendations on global aid, debt relief, AIDS, trade, monetary, financial, and governance issues. Dr. Quilligan has been an analyst and administrator in the field of international development since 1975. In addition to his work as an advisor to the Brandt Commission in the early 1980's, he is one of the founders of the Brandt 21 Forum and has served as a policy advisor and writer for many international politicians and writers, including Pierre Trudeau, Francois Mitterand, Julius Nyerere, and Jimmy Carter. Co-sponsored by the Marc Lindenberg Center, Program on the Environment, and the Jackson School of International Studies. For more information, contact mlcenter@u.washington.edu. May 17 Famous Russian Sociologist to Speak at the University of Washington. 3:30-5:00 PM, Thomson 317. Speaker Yuri A. Levada. Yuri A. Levada is a leading figure of Russian social sciences. In 1967-69 he gave the first course on sociology in the USSR. He is the author of several books and articles on theory and methodology of sociology, sociology of religion and social anthropology, including There is an Opinion! (1990), Articles in Sociology (1993), The Ordinary Soviet Man (1993) and From Opinions to Understanding (2000). During perestroika, Levada founded the All Russian Centre for Public Opinion Research, VTsIOM, and became its director in 1992. Currently he is director of the Russian polling company VTsIOM-A. VTsIOM-A was founded after the Russian authorities changed the structure of the state-owned VTsIOM and replaced Levada with a new director. VTsIOM's polls were considered very reliable. The takeover has been seen as a measure to increase state control over public opinion polls, especially in sensitive issues such as the war in Chechnya and the recent elections. The staff of the company reacted to the takeover by resigning and founding the new, independent VTsIOM-A. Its polling results are available in Russian at http://www.vciom-a.ru/index.html. May 17 Neverending Wars: The Perpetuation of Civil War since 1945. 3:30 PM, Parrington Hall, The Forum (Room 309). Speaker: Ann Hironaka, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Minnesota. Dr. Hironaka will address the role of the international system in influencing war and conflict within and between states. Whereas the typical 19th century civil war was a short affair, many contemporary wars drag on and on, never coming to an end. This increase in the duration of civil wars is a historically new phenomenon that has attracted little attention from scholars. She argues that the conventional literature on civil war has failed to understand the crucial ro le that the international system has played in the creation and maintenance of war-prone states that are susceptible to lengthy civil wars. Sponsored by the International Studies Center and REECAS/JSIS. This event is free and open to the public. For more information, please call 206 685-2354 or email tleonard@u.washington.edu May 17 Islam and Democratic Reform in Indonesia: After the 2004 Election. 3:30-5:00 PM, Faculty Club Conference Room. Speaker: Goenawan Mohamad. Indonesia seems to be an oddity for political theorists who see poverty and Islam as being at odds with the creation of a liberal democracy. This republic of 240 million people, 85% of whom are Muslims (making Indonesia the biggest, albeit unrecognized, Muslim country in the world), has the lowest economic growth in the region. Corruption is rampant, violent communal conflicts are still a problem, and the judiciary is often like a series of sick jokes. Yet it has a free media, free elections, and a constitution that guarantees basic human rights. The outcome of the recent election so far promises a more 'secular' trend in the country's politics and a pronounced rejection of 'illiberal' temptations. Writer, editor, activist, poet, for more than 30 years Goenawan Mohamad has set standards for journalists around the world. Mr. Mohamad is founder and Editor of Tempo Magazine, Indonesia's most widely circultated weekly. His magazine was officially banned in 1994, but reopened in October, following the ousting of Indonesian President Suharto. Goenawan Mohamad writes critical remarks on the press, on the massive corruption and lack of human rights and of democratic tradition in Indonesia. His ongoing struggle for freedom of expression has led to the foundation of several new media organizations and made the Indonesian Press one of the most free in Southeast Asia. Co-sponsored by the Simpson Center for the Humanities Critical Asian Studies program. For more information contact the SE Asia Center at 206-543-9606. May 19 2004 Latin American Film Festival: La Ley De Herodes (1999) 123 Min., 3:30 PM, 101 Thomson Hall. Presented by Cynthia Steele, UW Department of Comparative Literature. Directed by Luis Estrada, Mexico. Sundance film festival 2000 - best IberoAmerican film! The mayor of a small town is killed for his greed and abuse of power. The local authorities name Juan Vargas, a janitor and old militant of the party, to take over. Vargas soon discovers the sweet taste of money and corruption, turning into a tyrant willing to do anything to remain in power. Estrada's black comedy about the inevitability of corruption in Mexico tells a blunt tale of a small-town politician from the ruling pri who discovers that graft, extortion and even murder can all pay handsomely. Sponsored by the Latin American Studies Program. For More Info: lasuw@u.washington.edu May 19 The Changing Dynamics of U.S. - Japan Relations: Facing Global Environmental Challenges Together. 7:00 - 8:30 PM, Kane Hall 130. Speaker: Lester Brown, President of the Earth Policy Institute. The Earth Policy Institute was established in May 2001 to provide a vision and a road map for achieving an environmentally sustainable economy. Lester Brown has authored 49 books, which appear in some 40 languages. Trained as an agricultural economist with a Masters in Public Administration from Harvard University, he has garnered numerous international awards and honorary degrees. He is Senior Advisor to the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture and Honorary Advisor to Japan's Institute for Environmental Culture. The Washington Post called Lester Brown "one of the world's most influential thinkers." Professor Saadia Pekkanen, Middlebury College, will moderate a question-and-answer period. Sponsored by the Atsuhiko and Ina Goodwin Tateuchi Foundation and the Japan Studies Program. This event is organized in partnership with the UW Office of International Affairs. http://depts.washington.edu/japan/events.htm May 20 Engendering Feudalism: The Indian Modes of Production Debates Revisited. 3:30 PM, 305 Smith Hall. Speaker: Professor S. Charusheela, Department of Women Studies, University of Hawaii. Sponsored by the South Asia Center. http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/soasia/index.htm May 20 The structural sources of organizational isomorphism: Some reflections on power and the flow of information. (Center for Human-Information Interaction (CHII) Lecture Series). 3:30 PM-5:00 PM, 420 Mary Gates Hall. Speaker: Professor Gary G. Hamilton, UW Department of Sociology and UW Jackson School of International Studies. Professor Gary G. Hamilton specializes in historical/comparative sociology, economic sociology, and organizational sociology. Abstract: Institutional theories of organizational structure routinely overstate the roles of external constraints and incentives on the organizing processes and neglect the internal role structure of organizations, which is related to power and authority. My "reflections" will compare public and private organizations cross-culturally in order to specify a societal dimension of organizational isomorphism that is associated with legitimizing authority within organizations and that influence the use and the diffusion of information in organizations. Arranged by Center for Human-Information Interaction, Information School. For more info contact chii@u.washington.edu, (206) 616-6935, or visit our events calendar at http://www.ischool.washington.edu/chii/ May 21 Performing Beggar To Professional Storyteller. (China Club dinner meeting). Social 6:30 p.m., dinner 7:00 p.m., Doong Kong Lau Hakka Cuisine restaurant, 9710 Aurora Avenue North, Seattle. Speaker: Dr. Jan Walls, Director of Simon Fraser University's David Lam Center for International Communications. Jan Walls did his B.A., M.A. and PhD degrees at Indiana University majoring in Chinese language and literature, with a minor in Japanese and Asian folklore. Since 1970 he has been teaching Chinese and developing Asian Studies programs at U.B.C. (1970-78), the University of Victoria (1978-85), and Simon Fraser University (1987-present). Walls will talk about the history and role of Shulaibao and will give sample performances to spice up his introduction to this lively, humorous folk performance art. In old China, "performing beggars" used to roam from house to house bamboo castanets clacking in rhythm as they recited extemporaneous verses of praise for the potential donor, hoping for a handout. Later, they developed set performance pieces, which they performed on the streets and in the markets of China, much as our buskers (street performers) do today. Later, some gained the status of professional stage performers, working in "Balladry and Storytelling Troupes." Sponsored by the China Club of Seattle. Cost is $20 per person. Payment can be made at the door; RSVP requested. For more information contact the China Club at chinaclub@comcast.net or 206-447-9599 ext. 2 May 25 Current Issues Facing Latin America: Perspectives from Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Peru. 3:30-5:00 PM, Thomson 317. Graciela Keskiskian (Argentina) Environmental Education Coordinator in the Buenos Aires City Government. UW Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow. Topic: Environmental Education in Argentina: A Round Trip To the National Parks. Andres Castro Rojas (Colombia) Senior quality analyst for the National Federation of Coffee Growers of Colombia. UW Hubert H. Humphrey Fellow. Topic: Colombian culture, social and political challenges. Blanca Rico, Population Leadership Fellow, medical doctor with a masters degree in immunology, and an expert in gender and health issues. Topic: Collaboration between Government and Civil Society through the National Consortium on Health and Women. Carlos Guarnizo, MD, MBA (Peru). Program Manager of the USAID-funded Catalyst Program at Pathfinder International office in Peru. Packard-Gates Fellow in the Population Leadership Program at the UW. opic: Fair Social Trade: The New Emergent Paradigm for North To South Cooperation. Sponsored by the Latin American Studies Program. For more information contact LAS at lasuw@u.washington.edu, (206) 685-3435, or visit the LAS website: http://depts.washington.edu/lasuw/. May 25th President of Fetzer Vineyards to Speak abt. Sustainable Winemaking. 6:30 PM to 9 PM, Kane Hall. Speaker: Paul Dolan, President of Fetzer Vineyards and author of True to Our Roots: Fermenting a Business Revolution. He will deliver a speech on sustainability and corporate responsibility in the winemaking business. There will be a book signing at 6 pm and a reception to follow. Free for students and $5 suggested donation for others. Sponsor(s): UW MBA' s Net Impact Club Contact information: Chris Walvoord (206) 949-4741 or chrisw5@u.washington.edu May 27 Go Down Moses: African-American Slaves and the Promised Land. 7:30 PM, 210 Kane Hall. Speaker: Albert J. Raboteau, Henry W. Putnam Professor of Religion, Princeton University. Part of "The Promised Land: Place and the Creation of Community in Religious Traditions" series supported in part by the Tillie and Alfred Shemanski Foundation. Sponsored by the Middle East Center. Info: 206-543-4227 or The Middle East Center's sponsorship of an event does not imply that the Center endorses the content of the event. May 28 Reputation and War: Government Responses to Self-determination Challenges. Noon, Gowen 1A. Speaker: Barbara Walter, Associate Professor, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego. Discussion Forum. Sponsored by Department of Political Science; JSIS/International Studies Center & Institute for Global and Regional Security Studies. For info, contact Pacific Northwest Colloquia in International Security Chair Terence Lee at tcllee@u.washington.edu June 2 Reinventing Business, Government and Infrastructure to Embrace Emerging Trade Partnerships with China and Other Asian Countries. 2:30-5:30 PM, 225 Kane Hall, the Walker-Ames Room. This is the Global Trade, Transportation, and Logistics Studies Program 10th Annual Conference. The conference will include guest speakers (TBA) and graduate student presentations. Reception will follow. For additional information please visit our website at http://depts.washington.edu/gttl/conference04.htm. The conference is open to all interested individuals, please RSVP by May 28th to gttl@u.washington.edu. June 4 The Cultural Logics and Political Economy of Transnational Families. 206 Communications Bldg. In conjunction with the event we are organizing an interdisciplinary graduate reading group this quarter. Please see below for the meeting dates, times, and reading selections. All readings can be picked up at the Simpson Center front desk (free of charge) and meetings will be held in the adjoining seminar room, 206 Communications Bldg.. The panel discussions examine both privileged and non-privileged modalities of migration that are entangled in transnational circuits of exchange. Figures such as the transnational adoptee and the migrant domestic worker complicate the registers of race, gender, sexuality, citizenship, and identity formation as well as urge us to rethink this unit called "the family." We will examine in what ways these two particular figures through their constitutive labor within the intimate space of domestic life serve to support and destabilize the heteronormative institutions of family and kinship. The conditions that enable both privileged and exploitative migration illuminate how the state through immigration policies secures the boundaries of the nuclear family as a disciplinary site of governance. Yet, how does ransnational migration enable alternative configurations of familial and kinship relations? The families constituted in the US with the arrival of the transnational adoptee and the families fractured "back home" when mothers leave their own children to work in the homes of privileged families cast into stark light how "the family" and the affective terrain of family life are structured by the greater political economy of human labor, trafficking, and uneven development. Our objective is to explore how the transnational family operates prominently in sexual politics, citizenship rights, and immigration policies. Morning Panel: 10:00 12 noon. Patrolling the Borders of Reproductive Sexuality and Family Life. Panelists: Eithne Luibheid, Dept of Ethnic Studies, Bowling Green University and Melissa W. Wright, Dept. of Geography, Penn State University. Afternoon Panel 1:30-3:30 PM. Multicultural Logics of Transnational Adoption. Panelists: Ann Anagnost, Dept of Anthropology, UW and David Eng, Dept of English, Rutgers University. Roundtable Discussion: 4-5:30 PM. A roundtable with all 4 speakers moderated by Alys Weinbaum, Department of English, University of Washington. Graduate Reading Group Selections: Again, all readings can be picked up at the Simpson Center front desk and all meetings will be in the Simpson Center seminar room, Communications 206. Please come to the meetings prepared and ready for discussion of the articles. Thursday, April 15th 12pm-1:30pm (please feel free to bring your lunch). Susan B. Coutin, Bill Maurer, Barbara Yngvesson. 2002. In the Mirror: The Legitimation Work of Globalization. Law and Social Inquiry 27(4):801-843. Tuesday, April 27th 2:00-3:30 PM. Ann Anagnost, forthcoming. Maternal Labor in a Transnational Circuit and David Eng. 2003. Transnational Adoption and Queer Disasporas. Social Text 21(3):1-37. Tuesday, May 11th 2:00-3:30 PM. Eithne Luibheid. 2002. Introduction: Power and Sexuality at the Border and Birthing a Nation: Race, Ethnicity, and Childbearing In Entry Denied: Controlling Sexuality at the Border. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Thursday, May 27th 2:00-3:30 PM. TBA. Hopefully Melissa Wright's paper presentation and another one of her unpublished ms. For more information, please contact Ta Trang, tta@u.washington.edu, or Jeff Chiu, jeffchiu@u.washington.edu. June 7-July 31 Jewish Costumes in the Ottoman Empire. A selection of illustrations depicting traditional Jewish attire in the Ottoman Empire in the 16th to the 19th centuries. Displayed in the Oedegaard Library. Sponsored by the Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization. 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 CIBERCenter 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 EUC European Union Center http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/programs/europe/euc.html GEOG Dept. of Geography http://depts.washington.edu/geog/news/colloquium.html GTI Institute of Transnational Studies http://depts.washington.edu/tayloruw/seminars.htm GTTL Global Trade, Transportation & Logistics Studies IGRSS Inst. For Global and Regional Security Studies IIP Institute for International Policy http://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 http://depts.washington.edu/nelc 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 "The University of Washington is committed to providing access, equal opportunity and reasonable accommodation in its services, programs, activities, education and employment for individuals with disabilities. To request disability accommodation contact the Disability Services Office at least ten days in advance at: 206-543-6450/V, 206-543-6452/TTY, 206-685-7264 (FAX), or dso@u.washington.edu." Copyright © 2001 University of Washington, including all photographs and images, unless otherwise noted. Questions? Email jsis@u.washington.edu. Send inquiries regarding the website to jsishelp@u.washington.edu.Last Updated:5/14/04 Your browser does not support script AboutNews/ EventsJSIS ServicesDegrees/ AdmissionProgramsResource CentersDirector's WelcomeFacultyStaffComputing ServicesJSIS HistoryAbout Seattle & UWHenry M. 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