Skip Navigation

News

icon-story

China's Democratic Future: How It Will Happen and Where It Will Lead

Bruce Gilley discusses his new book, China's Democratic Future

 
icon-story

China's Foreign Policy under New Leadership

Yang Jiemian, Vice President of the Shanghai Institute of International Studies, analyzes the likely path of China's foreign policy in the years ahead

 
icon-story

Japanese Brazilian Return Migration and the Making of Japan's Newest Immigrant Minority

Dr. Takeyuki Tsuda (UC San Diego) asks: Are Japanese Brazilian Migrants in Japan a Transnational Community?

 
icon-story

Crisis Management and U.S.-China Relations

Jiemian Yang, vice president of the Shanghai Institute of International Studies, analyzes crises in U.S.-China relations: why they arise, how they are managed, and what can be done to forestall them.

 
icon-story

National Public Radio Interviews UCLA Scholar on President Bush's Meeting with China's Premier

Richard Baum tells NPR's Day to Day show that trade and Taiwan head U.S. agenda with China, as China emerges as Asia's central power.

 
icon-story

A Conversation with Yu Hua

Noted Novelist Speaks at UCLA

 
icon-story

Sexual Abuse and Human Trafficking in Japan

UCLA Anthropologist reports that one injured woman in seven who is hospitalized in Japan is the victim of spousal violence, while 100,000 women a year are imported as sex workers from poor Asian countries.

 
icon-story

Sammy Yukuan Lee Lecture Explores the Self-Images of Buddhist Monks over the Centuries

Raoul Birnbaum delivers 16th lecture in venerable series at UCLA's Fowler Museum of Cultural History

 
icon-story

SARS and Asia: Public Health, Political, Social, and Economic Implications

Having taken the lives and livelihoods of many, SARS reminds the rest of us of how interconnected our lives and economies have become. This Asia Institute-sponsored symposium helped many learn more about SARS and how it is affecting Asia -- and us.

 
icon-story

China, Taiwan, and the U.S. since 9/11: Old Problems, New Opportunities

A Symposium with UCLA Center for Chinese Studies Visiting Fellows from China, Taiwan, and the U.S.

 
icon-story

Visiting Scholar Writes Book on Human Rights & Constitutionalism in China

Yu Haocheng completes massive treatise on democratic politics and the rule of law in China

 
icon-story

Bush Administration Risks Second Korean War, Historian Warns

Distinguished historian of Korea James Palais tells UCLA audience that Washington misreads North Korea's intentions and endangers Koreans in South as well as North.

 
icon-story

Economic Theory and Economic Reform in China: Neo-Classical Economics vs. Neo-Socialist Economics?

Justin Yifu Lin discusses his policy recommendations

 
icon-story

Two Panels Debate U.S.-North Korea Nuclear Options

Chancellor Carnesale, other experts, examine the history and future of Korean Peninsula.

 
icon-story

Distinguished Chinese Political Activists Discuss Constitutionalism & Political Reform

Noted "neo-Liberals" ponder the choices facing China

 
icon-story

Bush Administration Demands Higher Standard for North Korea than for Itself

Mark Caprio tells UCLA audience that both parties failed to live up to the 1994 agreement between North Korea and the United States.

 
icon-story

Searching for Punk Rock in Korea with Tim Tangherlini

Meg Sullivan's faculty profile on Tangherlini, a UCLA folklorist, originally appeared in UCLA Today.

 
icon-story

Engineers Learn from Powerful Quakes

UCLA engineering faculty traveled to study the Sept. and Nov. 1999 earthquakes that struck Taiwan and Turkey.

 

Page:  First  Prev  8  9  10  11  12 13

13 of 13 pages. Total Records: 318. Displaying 25 records per page.