Discussion
UCLA School of Law Room 1347On the Terrorist Attacks in Paris- Panel Discussion with Caroline Ford, James Gelvin, Asli Bali and Dominic Thomas For more information and to RSVP, please visithttp://www.isop.ucla.edu/euro/event/11614.
On the Terrorist Attacks in Paris- Panel Discussion with Caroline Ford, James Gelvin, Asli Bali and Dominic Thomas For more information and to RSVP, please visithttp://www.isop.ucla.edu/euro/event/11614.
Matthew Sargent, Digital Humanities, University of Southern California: “Marriage institutions and the formation of cross-cultural knowledge networks in early modern Southeast Asia”
"Urban Removal: Police, Prisons, and Domestic Policy After Civil Rights"
"The Lives (and Deaths) of Caged Birds: Wild Animals and their Transatlantic Circulation from the Americas to Spain During the Eighteenth Century." Martha Few, Dept. of History, University of Arizona
“The Turkic Challenge to Persian Supremacy in Premodern Central Asia”
A symposium featuring Peter Nabokov, James Brooks and Ross Frank, which will focus on Nabokov’s recent books, How the World Moves: the Odyssey of an American Indian Family, and The Origin Myth of Acoma Pueblo
"Population movements in the South Atlantic - the case of Benguela and Rio de Janeiro, c. 1700-1850" José Curto is a Professor in the Department of History at York University. His research Interests include Modern Africa, Social and Economic History. This events is co-sponsored by the Brazilian history seminar and the Atlantic history cluster.
Michele Wallace and Ellen Dubois
Jean Pierre Beaud (CIRST, Université de Québec à Montréal) “What is a population? Reflections on two Statistical Descriptions of Canada”
Pamela J. Fuentes is a postdoctoral fellow at El Colegio de Mexico. She received a PhD from York University (Toronto, Canada) in 2015, an MA in Mexican History from the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (2008) and BA from the Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa in Mexico City (2002). Her research focuses on modern Mexican history, with […]
Winston James is a Professor in the Department of History at University of California, Irvine. His research interests include Caribbean, African-American, Black Britain, and the African Diaspora.