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Legacies of the Occupation

Hilmar Farid (Indonesian Institute of Social History - ISSI)

 
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Legacies of Violence: East Timor Ten Years On

Geoffrey Robinson (History, UCLA)

 
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Legacies of Violence: East Timor Ten Years On

Geoffrey Robinson (History, UCLA)

 
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Opening Remarks at Legacies of Violence in Indonesia and East Timor: A Workshop

Geoffrey Robinson (History, UCLA)

 
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Opening Remarks at Legacies of Violence in Indonesia and East Timor: A Workshop

Geoffrey Robinson (History, UCLA)

 
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The Shifting Landscape of International Justice

David Kaye (Law, UCLA)

 
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The Shifting Landscape of International Justice

David Kaye (Law, UCLA)

 
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Towards a History of Indonesia's Metapolitics: The Law on Censorship

John Roosa (History, University of British Columbia)

 
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Towards a History of Indonesia's Metapolitics: The Law on Censorship

John Roosa (History, University of British Columbia)

 
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Transitional Justice in East Timor: Overview and Assessment

David Cohen (War Crimes Studies Center, UC Berkeley)

 
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Transitional Justice in East Timor: Overview and Assessment

David Cohen (War Crimes Studies Center, UC Berkeley)

 
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Why Implementation of CAVR is Critical to the Success of Timor Leste

Fernanda Borges MP (Member of Parliament, Timor-Leste)

 
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Why Implementation of CAVR is Critical to the Success of Timor Leste

Fernanda Borges MP (Member of Parliament, Timor-Leste)

 
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Experts: What's Behind Decision to Intervene in Libya?

Two skeptics of the no-fly zone mission in Libya, Burkle Center Senior Fellow Gen. (ret.) Wesley K. Clark and Acting Professor of Law Asli Bali, identified a range of mixed motives behind the move to intervene and speculated on what will happen next.

 
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Fading Friendships: Alliances, Affinities and the Activation of International Identities

In international politics "friends'' co-ally. But friendship is relational and contextual. Countries are more likely to act on common interests on a given dimension if few other actors share that identity. In contrast, new cleavages are likely to emerge as an identity becomes ubiquitous.

 
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10 Questions for Russia Expert Daniel Treisman

Drawing on memoirs, personal interviews and other sources, Professor of Political Science Daniel Treisman, who first traveled to Russia in 1988, has written a sweeping study that covers roughly the period he's spent watching the country. Instead of pondering Russia's dark side or its "soul," Treisman in "The Return: Russia's Journey From Gorbachev to Medvedev" looks at Russia as a typical, though important, country facing everyday 21st-century social, political and economic challenges.

 
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Melting Pots and Promised Lands: Early Zionism and the Idea of America

A lecture by Hilton Obenzinger, Stanford University

 
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Who May Be Killed? Anwar al-Awlaki as a Case Study in the International Legal Regulation of Lethal Force

A lecture by Robert Chesney, Charles I. Francis Professor in Law, University of Texas School of Law. This event was co-sponsored by the International Human Rights Law Program at the UCLA Law School.

 
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Who May Be Killed? Anwar al-Awlaki as a Case Study in the International Legal Regulation of Lethal Force

A lecture by Robert Chesney, Charles I. Francis Professor in Law, University of Texas School of Law. This event was co-sponsored by the International Human Rights Law Program at the UCLA Law School.

 
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Senior Burkle Center Fellow Gen. Wesley Clark (ret.) debates when to intervene in Libya on NPR's All Things Considered

Burkle Center Senior Fellow, Gen. Wesley K. Clark (ret.), discusses the debate over when to intervene in Libya with Anne-Marie Slaughter, former Director of Policy Planning, U.S. State Department. Aired on NPR's All Things Considered with Robert Siegel on March 18, 2011.

 
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Senior Burkle Center Fellow Gen. Wesley Clark (ret.) discusses what comes next for Libya on CNN

Gen. Wesley Clark discusses the United Nations Security Council's decision to approve a no-fly zone over Libya, and says that the coalition needs to know how military action will impact the ultimate political goal in Libya. Aired on CNN Newsroom on March 18, 2011.

 
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Exhibit Touts Jazz Ambassadors' Global Impact

From March 20 through Aug. 14 at the Fowler Museum, "Jam Session: America's Jazz Ambassadors Embrace the World” will illustrate how some of our most famous musicians taught the world about the United States while learning about their host nations as well.

 
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Professor Spiegel appears on UCLA News Week

Professor Steven Spiegel appears on UCLA News Week to discuss the current crisis in Libya.

 
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UCLA News|Week: Faculty Experts Examine Libya No-Fly Zone

In this webcast by the UCLA Broadcast Studio, faculty members from UCLA centers for Near Eastern Studies and Middle East Development weigh in on the ramifications of a U.S.-backed no-fly zone on the civil war in Libya.

 
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US Interrogator Who Decried Torture Joins Burkle Center

Matthew Alexander, an 18-year Air Force and Air Force Reserves veteran and author of books about effective, non-coercive interrogation methods, is bringing his on-the-ground perspective about counterterrorism policies to UCLA as a Burkle Center fellow.

 

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