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2024
Moving Stories in the Making: An Exhibition of Migration Narratives
How can narratives – visual, textual, and oral -- bridge divides between migrants and the communities in which they settle? Moving Stories in the Making: An Exhibition of Migration Narratives brings together the work of local and national artists who craft narratives of migration and holds space for migrants and those affected by migration to tell their stories.
The Pangdatsang Trading Firm: Politics, Currency Exchange, and Trans-Tibet Business during WWII
A lecture by Dr. Elizabeth Reynolds
Curtis Chin: Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant
Washington University is proud to welcome Curtis Chin to the Hurst Lounge.
Faculty Meeting
Thinking with Infrastructure about Global Development
A talk by Dr. José María Muñoz, a Senior Lecturer in African Studies and International Development at the University of Edinburgh’s School of Social and Political Science
Global Afterlives of America’s First Red Scare: Political Deportees and Transnational Radicalism between the World Wars
A Guest Lecture by Professor Kenyon Zimmer, Associate Professor of History at the University of Texas at Arlington
SIR Cultural Expo
Global Studies Welcome Majors Session
An event to welcome new majors to the program and celebrate this amazing community.
The Eurasian Studies Seminar presents…. "Mnemonic Hybrids in a Hybrid Regime: Remembering the Soviet Past in Putin's Russia"
Sergey Toymentsev, Ph.D., Assistant Professor at Saint Louis University in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures.
Global Studies Senior Thesis Information Session
Are you considering writing a senior thesis in Global Studies?
Global Studies Thesis Conference
Join us for the 2024 Global Studies Thesis Conference. Graduating senior writers will present their work.
The Eurasian Studies Seminar presents "Exiles, Zeks, and Theologians Evaluating Dostoevsky's House of the Dead"
Elizabeth Blake, Ph.D., is Associate Professor at Saint Louis University in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures.
"The International War on Drugs" Sigma Iota Rho Town Hall
Stepping through the Mirror: Identity, Choice, and Dismantling Preconceptions, Seen through the Prism of an Expat American Living in Ukraine during the 1990s
A Eurasian Studies Seminar and Global Studies Speaker Series event
Global Studies Graduation Reception
Global Studies Open House 2024
Faculty Meeting
Join us for our first Faculty Meeting of the semester!
Welcome Back, Global Studies Community!
Exploring Medical History: Spotlight on East Asia
Wayne Tan, associate professor of history, Hope College; Susan Brownell, professor of anthropology, University of Missouri-St. Louis
Breakfast with Ali Wyne
Radiotherapies for Women in Korea, 1930s - 1970s
Soyoung Suh, associate professor, Dartmouth College
War and Fantasy: Russian Aggression in Ukraine and Male Fantasy Narratives
Global Studies Colloquium presents Mariia Kurbak
Research Funding Opportunities in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (SEEES) Field
Global Studies Speaker Series Presents, David Borgmeyer
Rethinking Exile: A Celebration of the Anthology "Exile and the Jews"
Nancy Berg is a Professor of Hebrew Language and Literature for the Department of Jewish, Islamic, and Middle Eastern Studies
Americanist Dinner Forum - Interrogating the Carceral State: Intersections in Native, Black, Latinx, Arab American, Asian American, Muslim American, Pacific Islander, and Gender Studies
All are invited for dinner and conversation on Wednesday, October 30th at 5:30pm.
Tolerance is a Wasteland: Palestine and the Culture of Denial
Saree Makdisi is the Chair of the Department of English at UCLA
The Evolution of Mass Murder: Forensic Archaeological Perspectives on Mass Violence at the Treblinka Labor and Extermination Camps
Caroline Sturdy Colls, Professor of Holocaust Archaeology and Genocide Investigation, and the Director of the Center of Archaeology at the University of Huddersfield (UK) - Annual Holocaust Memorial Lecture
Health Care & Medicinal Disparities between the Developed and Developing Worlds
Humanitarianism, Human Security, and Development: the Careers of Sadako Ogata (1927-2019)
Global Studies Faculty Colloquium presents Lori Watt
Everyday Exploitation: Autonomy and Accumulation in the Mines of Madagascar
Join AFAS' visiting lecturer, Brian Klein, for an engaging exploration of Madagascar’s mineral fields as landscapes of both opportunity and vulnerability. Focusing on the gold diggings of Betsiaka in the island's far northwest, Klein delves into the everyday practices that Malagasy artisanal miners use to secure and sustain access to gold, which serves as a foundation for extended social reproduction. He also examines the mechanisms through which various elites and capital investors extract value from these rural laborers, shedding light on the complex dynamics of labor, power, and resources.
Global Studies Happy Hour
Join Global Studies as we celebrate the end of the semester!