August 2023

  • Wednesday, August 23rd Filiz Kamran's Writing retreat

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, August 23, 20239:00AM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 108N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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September 2023

  • Wednesday, September 6th War and Peace in the South Caucasus

    This event has been relocated

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 6, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    The talk discusses international facilitation efforts to overcome decades of conflict in the South Caucasus (Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia) in the context of Russia’s war against Ukraine, with a focus on the role of the European Union.  

     

    Toivo Klaar has been the European Union’s Special Representative for the South Caucasus and the Crisis in Georgia since 2017. Previously, he was the Head of Division for Central Asia in the European External Action Service and Head of the EU’s Monitoring Mission in Georgia. Prior to joining the European Commission, Klaar was an Estonian diplomat who served as an advisor to the president and to the minister of defence of Estonia. He holds an MPA from the Kennedy School at Harvard.


    Speakers

    Toivo Klaar
    Speaker
    EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus

    Andres Kasekamp
    Host
    Chair of Estonian Studies, Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Affiliated Faculty, Centre for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 7th Book Launch: The Zelensky Effect by Olga Onuch and Henry Hale

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 7, 202312:00PM - 2:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This was a hybrid event. In-person attendees went to Room 108N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto.
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    Description

    Olga Onuch and Lucan Way will discuss Onuch’s and Hale’s new book (co-authored with Henry Hale) titled The Zelensky Effect.

     

    About the book:

     

    With Russian shells raining on Kyiv and tanks closing in, American forces prepared to evacuate Ukraine’s leader. Just three years earlier, his apparent main qualification had been playing a president on TV. But Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly retorted, "I need ammunition, not a ride." Ukrainian forces won the battle for Kyiv, ensuring their country’s independence even as a longer war began for the southeast.

     

    About the authors:

     

    Olga Onuch is Professor of Comparative and Ukrainian Politics at The University of Manchester. In 2021, she was visiting CERES at the University of Toronto as a Senior Research Associate. From 2014 to 2020, she was an Associate Member of Nuffield College (Oxford). Since 2017 she has been an Affiliate of, and previously in 2014 a Fellow of, the Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute. In 2017, she was a Visiting Fellow at the Davis Center (Harvard). She is the winner of the 2017 Political Studies Association National Sir Bernard Crick Award for Outstanding Teaching.  

     

    Henry E. Hale is Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, and Co-Director of the Program on New Approaches to Research and Security in Eurasia (PONARS Eurasia)

    He has spent extensive time conducting field research in post-Soviet Eurasia and is currently working on identity politics and political system change, with a special focus now on public opinion dynamics in Russia and Ukraine.  His work has won two prizes from the American Political Science Association and he was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship for his research in Russia in 2007-2008.

    Prior to joining GW, he taught at Indiana University (2000-2005), the European University at St. Petersburg, Russia (1999), and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy (1997-98). He is also chair of the editorial board of Demokratizatsiya: The Journal of Post-Soviet Democratization.

     

    Contact

    Larysa Iarovenko
    416-946-8962


    Speakers

    Lucan Way
    Chair
    Professor of Political Science, Co-Director of the Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine

    Olga Onuch
    Speaker
    Professor of Comparative and Ukrainian Politics at The University of Manchester

    Henry Hale
    Speaker
    Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, Co-Director of the Program on New Approaches to Research and Security in Eurasia (PONARS Eurasia)


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Saturday, September 9th 1923: Race, Empire, and Settler Colonialism Across the Pacific

    DateTimeLocation
    Saturday, September 9, 202310:00AM - 6:30PMOnline Event, This was an Online Event
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    Description

    Please note, this event is for students and academic faculty.

    About the Event:

    1923: Race, Empire, and Settler Colonialism Across the Pacific is an online symposium that will bring together Transpacific and Pacific Studies scholars to reflect on, grapple with, and discuss the contemporary significance of racial exclusion during the 1920s in North America and around the world. This cross-disciplinary symposium will synthesize contemporary and historical perspectives along with global and regional perspectives to shed light upon how this era of racial exclusion resonates into present-day issues of race, empire, colonialism, and discrimination.

    The half-day symposium consists of three hour-and-a-half-long moderated panel sessions, including a question and answer period. The symposium is a joint initiative between the University of British Columbia’s Initiative for Student Teaching and Research in Chinese Canadian Studies (INSTRCC), as part of the Centre for Asian Canadian Research and Engagement (ACRE), and the University of Toronto’s Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies. This initiative is also being organized in conjunction with Canada-China Focus, to support the goals of Project 1923.

    For full details about the event and panels, please visit:
    https://1923symposium.eventbrite.com/

    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Sponsors

    Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies, University of Toronto


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, September 11th Screening of "Big Night!" and Director Q&A with Jun Robles Lana

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, September 11, 20236:00PM - 9:00PMExternal Event, Hosted in Innis Town Hall Theatre, 2 Sussex Avenue, Toronto, ON M5S 1J5
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    Description

    On behalf of our co-sponsors, please join us for a free showing of Jun Lana’s Award-Winning Film Big Night (2021) followed by a Director Q&A. Welcome reception, screening, and Q&A are open to the public! Space is limited, so save your seats!

     

    ABOUT THE FILM

     

    Big Night employs comedy and satire to reimagine Rodrigo Duterte’s infamous "War on Drugs." It tells the story of Dharna, a law-abiding and peace-loving queer beautician who owns a small salon in one of Manila’s slum areas. Dharna’s life takes a drastic turn when his name appears on a neighborhood watchlist of suspected drug users. Fearing that he might be assassinated like others on these lists, he sets out on a frustrating and unbelievably comical bureaucratic odyssey to clear his name. This film offers a timely and creative response to inequality’s ongoing effects on the Philippines and its diaspora, while foregrounding the joys and tribulations that marginalized Filipinos experience.

     

    ABOUT THE DIRECTOR

     

    Jun Robles Lana is the youngest Filipino to be inducted in the Palanca Literary Awards’ (Philippine’s Pulitzer Prize) Hall of Fame. In 2019 he won the Best Director Award at the Tallinn International Film Festival for Kalel, 15. Four years later, his film About Us But Not About Us won Best Film at the inaugural Critics’ Pick section of the same festival. His many directorial credits include the multi-awarded films Bwakaw, Barber’s Tales, Shadow Behind The Moon, Die Beautiful, and Big Night. His most recent film Your Mother’s Son is set to have its world premiere at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival.


    Speakers

    Jun Robles Lana
    Film producer, director, and screenwriter


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Co-Sponsors

    Dr. David Chu Community Network in Asia Pacific Studies

    Canadian Studies Program

    Cinema Studies Institute

    Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies

    Southeast Asia Seminar Series

    Women and Gender Studies Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, September 12th Southeast Asian Cinema in the World

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, September 12, 202310:00AM - 12:00PMSeminar Room 208N, Held in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    Southeast Asia Speakers Series

    Description

    Celebratory Roundtable on Southeast Asian Cinema  featuring Sheron Dayoc, Sonny Calvento, Annisa Adjam, Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto, Donsaron Kovitvanitcha, Jeremy Chua, Jun Robles Lana, Wregas Bhanuteja and moderated by Elizabeth Wijaya.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Annisa Adjam is a film producer and CEO of SINEMA 5, an Indonesian independent creative company that elevates genre elements in filmmaking to champion authentic voices on important issues. She is also the chairperson of Inteamates, an Indonesian creative storyteller community for social impact that highlights minority perspectives to enact change. Both entities are established in Jakarta from 2019 and previously produced "SAWO MATANG," Andrea Nirmala’s latest short film with Pidgin Production. Annisa is an alumna of Kyoto Filmmakers Lab Masters, BIFAN NAFF Fantastic Film School South Korea, Objectifs’s Short Film Incubator Singapore, IF/Then SEA Lab by Tribeca, and Full Circle’s Creative Producer Lab Philippines who earned a master’s degree in Filmmaking from Kingston University London. Her upcoming feature debut under SINEMA 5 "A Ballad of Long Hair” won Most Promising Project from SGIFF’s Silver Screen Awards 2022.

     

    Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto is an Indonesian writer and director who splits her time between Toronto and Jakarta. Her works utilize genre films as a medium to dissect sociopolitical, cultural, and environmental grievances through a female gaze. Her first short, Srikandi is a fantasy drama that premiered at the 46th Toronto International Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival: Asia, and the 40th Vancouver International Film Festival amongst other international festivals. Following her debut, she wrote and directed Bawang Merah Bawang Putih, a body horror food film produced as a 2022 Get Reel Filmmakers Scholarship recipient and premiered at Sundance Asia 2022. More recently, she completed Sawo Matang, a political futurism short as one of the 2021 NFFTY Pitch Competition winners and premiering at the 48th Toronto International Film Festival. Other than fiction, she co-directed a short documentary called Brown Enough, now available in TELUS Optik. She is an alumna of the 2020 Experimental Forest Writing is Rewriting Workshop, 2021 VIFF Catalyst Mentorship Program, 2023 BIFAN NAFF Fantastic Film School, and the 2023 Objectifs Short Film Incubator. In 2022, she co-founded Pidgin Productions in commitment to bridging gaps through our shared pidgin of art and cinema. Andrea is currently in development for her first feature film among other shorts.

     

    Sonny Calvento is a writer, director, and producer from the Philippines. His first short film, “Excuse Me, Miss, Miss, Miss” is the first Filipino short film programmed in the Sundance Film Festival. He is a recipient of Philippine Daily Inquirer’s IndieBravo Awards, The National Commission for Culture and the Arts’ Ani ng Dangal (Harvest of Honor Award) and a special citation from the Film Development Council of the Philippines. For 10 years, he worked as a scriptwriter for ABS-CBN Corporation, the biggest multimedia conglomerate in the country. The company was recently shuttered by the government. Now, he devotes his time to filmmaking and directing/producing for advertisements.

     

    Donsaron Kovitvanitcha is very active within Thailand’s indepdenent film scene. He works as a film writer, critic, and journalist for magazines and newspaper in Thailand. He also works as programmer for film festivals in Thailand. In 2017 and 2018, he was advisor to CinemAsia Film Festival, Amsterdam. In 2019 and 2020, he was advisor to Cinema du Reel International Documentary Film Festival. From 2020 to present, he is the preselector of short films for Busan International Film Festival 2020. In 2022, he becomes festival director of World Film Festival of Bangkok. Donsaron is also an independent film producer, focusing on producing films from new talented Thai film director such as Nontawat Numbenchapol’s Boundary (2013), Nawapol Thamrongrattanarit’s The Master (2015) and Die Tomorrow (2017), Anucha Boonyawatana’s The Blue Hour (2015) and Malila: The Farewell Flower (2017), Wattanapume Laisuwanchai’s Phantom of Illumination (2018). In 2022, the film Arnold is a Model Student (first feature film by Sorayos Prapapan) which he produced is in Filmmakers of the Present competition at Locarno Film Festival

     

    Jeremy Chua is a Singaporean film producer and screenwriter. Since 2014, he founded Singapore-based independent film label Potocol as a creative house for distinctive Asian auteurs to produce films, videos, installations and artwork. His work include Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell by Pham Thien An (Cannes Camera d’Or 2023), Tomorrow is a Long Time by Jow Zhi Wei (Berlinale 2023), Last Shadow at First Light by Nicole Midori Woodford (San Sebastian 2023), Autobiography by Makbul Mubarak (FIPRESCI Venice 2022), Glorious Ashes by Bui Thac Chuyen (Nantes Golden Balloon 2022), Rehana Maryam Noor by Abdullah Mohammad Saad (Cannes UCR 2021), A Family Tour by Ying Liang (Opening Film International Competition Locarno 2018), A Yellow Bird by K. Rajagopal (Cannes Critics’ Week 2016) and A Lullaby to the Sorrowful Mystery by Lav Diaz (Silver Bear Berlinale 2016). He is an alumnus of EAVE Ties That Bind 2013, Produire au sud 2015, Berlinale Talents 2017, SEAFIC 2017 and Torino Film Lab 2018. He is also a programmer at Pingyao International Film Festival under Jia Zhangke and Marco Mueller since 2017.

     

    Jun Robles Lana is the youngest Filipino to be inducted in the Palanca Literary Awards’ (Philippine’s Pulitzer Prize) Hall of Fame. In 2019 he won the Best Director Award at the Tallinn International Film Festival for Kalel, 15. Four years later, his film About Us But Not About Us won Best Film at the inaugural Critics’ Pick section of the same festival. His many directorial credits include the multi-awarded films Bwakaw, Barber’s Tales, Shadow Behind The Moon, Die Beautiful, and Big Night. His most recent film Your Mother’s Son is set to have its world premiere at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival.

     

    Sheron Dayoc is a director/producer who shifts from Fiction/non fiction storytelling to TV Commercial directing. His notable films are HALAW/Ways of the Sea (NETPAC Jury -2011 Berlinale, NETPAC Award – APSA 2011, Cinemalaya 2010 Best film), The Crescent Rising (Best Documentary – Busan IFF 2016, Best Documentary – Gawad Urian 2015) and Women of the Weeping River, which won numerous local and international awards. As for Advertising, his most notable work includes 2018 VICKS’ “Touch of Care” of Publicis One Singapore, that ranked as one of the top 5 adverts globally for 2018  by Campaignasia.com. The same ad won awards in Spikes Asia and Kidlat awards (Philippine Advertising Awards) and Araw Value Awards.

     

    Wregas Bhanuteja is an Indonesian film director and screenwriter. He studied film directing at the Jakarta Institute of Arts where he made his first short film, Senyawa. His second short, Lembusura, was selected in the Berlinale Shorts Competition in 2015. He then went on to work in a production house as a feature film assistant director. Alongside this, he carried on making short films. His latest, Prenjak, was selected at the 55th Semaine de la Critique where it won the Leica Cine Discovery Prize.


    Speakers

    Annisa Adjam
    Film Producer and CEO of SINEMA 5

    Andrea Nirmala Widjajanto
    Writer and Producer

    Cristano "Sonny" Calvento
    Writer, Director, and Producer

    Jeremy Chua
    Film Producer and Screenwriter

    Jun Robles Lana
    Film Producer, Director, and Screenwriter

    Sheron Dayoc
    Director and Producer

    Wregas Bhanuteja
    Film Director and Screenwriter

    Donsaron Kovitvanitcha
    Writer, Film Critic, Journalist, and Independent Film Producer


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Co-Sponsors

    Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies

    Southeast Asia Seminar Series

    Cinema Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, September 13th U of T's Mississauga's Graduate & Professional Schools Fair

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 13, 202310:00AM - 2:30PMExternal Event, The Fair took place at the University of Toronto at Mississauga campus, located at 3359 Mississauga Road N., Mississauga, ON L5L 1C6, specifically at the Recreation, Wellness, and Athletics Centre.
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    Description

    University of Toronto at Mississauga campus (UTM) Graduate & Professional Schools Fair: UTM students will have the opportunity to engage with a representative from the Munk School, where they will learn about the two-year professional master’s degrees: The Master of Global Affairs & the Master of Public Policy programs. Attendees will gain insights into the Admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, our unparalleled employment statistics, mandatory internships, Capstone courses, Professional Development workshops, and much more!


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, September 15th Francis Cody's "The News Event: Popular Sovereignty in the Age of Deep Mediatization" Book Launch

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, September 15, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    ABOUT THE BOOK

     

    Biography courtesy of the University of Chicago Press

     

    In the hypermediated world of Tamil Nadu, Francis Cody studies how “news events” are made.Not merely the act of representing events with words or images, a “news event” is the reciprocal relationship between the events being reported in the news and the event of the news coverage itself.

     

    In The News Event, Francis Cody focuses on how imaginaries of popular sovereignty have been remade through the production and experience of such events. Political sovereignty is thoroughly mediated by the production of news, and subjects invested in the idea of democracy are remarkably reflexive about the role of publicly circulating images and texts in the very constitution of their subjectivity. The law comes to stand as both a limit and positive condition in this process of event making, where acts of legal and extralegal repression of publication can also become the stuff of news about news makers. When the subjects of news inhabit multiple participant roles in the unfolding of public events, when the very technologies of recording and circulating events themselves become news, the act of representing a political event becomes difficult to disentangle from that of participating in it. This, Cody argues, is the crisis of contemporary news making: the news can no longer claim exteriority to the world on which it reports.

     

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR

     

    Francis Cody is an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Asian Institute at the University of Toronto, where he is the Director of the Dr. David Chu Program in Contemporary Asian Studies and the Centre for South Asian Studies. He has been teaching at U of T since 2008. His research focuses on language, politics, and media in southern India.

     

    After the event, we invite attendees to join us in room 202N, down the hallway from the book talk, for a book sale hosted by the University of Toronto Bookstore.


    Speakers

    Francis Cody
    Speaker
    Director, Dr. David Chu Program in Contemporary Asian Studies Director, Centre for South Asian Studies Associate Professor, Centre for South Asian Studies Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, UTM

    Kajri Jain
    Discussant
    Professor, Department of Art History, University of Toronto, Mississauga Graduate Chair, Department of Art History

    Alejandro Paz
    Discussant
    Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Scarborough



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, September 18th Is the Professionalism of Teaching Hurting Teachers in Japan?

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, September 18, 202312:00PM - 1:30PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Professionalizing teaching has been promoted in many countries for many years. The Japanese Government has also pursued a policy of professionalizing teaching since 2002. At the same time, however, it has advanced new policies that restrict the human rights of teachers, narrowing their professional autonomy and worsening their working conditions. How can these two policies be pursued without contradiction? How is the concept of “teaching as a profession” advocated in Japan?

     

    In this presentation, I answer this question by focusing on how the Japanese version of the concept was imported from the West and subsequently transformed in a non-Christian setting in the 19th century. It was formulated by a national action to create a strong centralized nation-state in Asia, but also in the transnational interaction of European, American, and Japanese educational leaders.

     

    Firstly, the current Japanese teacher policies as well as the data of teaching conditions are shared.

     

    Secondly, the early Japanese concept of “teaching as a profession” is explored by examining the ideas of Mori Arinori, the first Minister of Education. Mori claimed that teaching had to be a Japanese religious profession in order to safeguard children’s morality. For him, this meant educating the following generations to be obedient to their holy nation.

     

    Thirdly, Mori’s images of education are shown to be consistent with those in the United States where he studied as a diplomat. These images were shared not only with US leaders such as Horace Mann, but also with Prussian and French leaders of the era. In both countries, both the holy calling theory and profession theory included nationalism, which aimed at education for the nation. However, while the sacredness of the republican polity was admired based on the ideas of individualism and liberty in the United States, the sacredness of the imperial polity was admired by the apotheosis of the Emperor, the unbroken imperial line for ages eternal in Japan.

     

    These historical origins of the concept of teaching suggest why the professionalization of teaching in Japan has been advanced by forces who hoist the flag of national particularism, and by a government that supports this view. This implies that the professionalism of teaching does not always connote democracy or the human rights of children/teachers.

     

     

    Dr. Aki Sakuma is a Professor at the Teacher Training Center, Keio University in Tokyo, Japan. Her research interest are curriculum studies, teacher education, professional development and policymaking in education, comparative history of teachers and teacher preparation, and gender studies in education. She has published many articles and books, including The History of Teacher Education in 19th Century America: the Dilemma of Feminization and Professionalization of Teaching (University of Tokyo Pres, 2017), which won the Raicho Hiratsuka Prize. She has been serving as the Executive Board member of the Japanese Educational Research Association, National Association for the Study of Educational Methods, the Japanese Society for the Study on Teacher Education. She is currently working on the global history of the concept of teaching profession from a gender perspective, including The Origin of Teaching as a Profession in Japan: A Transnational Analysis of the Relationship between Professionalism and Nationalism in the 19th Century.

     

    Organized by the Initiative for Education Policy and Innovation at the Centre for the Study of Global Japan, University of Toronto.

     

    Lunch will be served to registrants of this seminar.

    Contact

    Sophie Bourret-Klein
    (416) 946-8972


    Speakers

    Aki Sakuma
    Speaker
    Teacher Training Center, Keio University

    Rie Kijima
    Moderator
    Initiative for Education Policy and Innovation at the Centre for the Study of Global Japan, University of Toronto



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, September 18th Situating the Frontier: When People, Spaces, Objects and Ideas Come Together

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, September 18, 20233:00PM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in Room 108N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    Over the past decade, as Chief Curator of Times Museum, Nikita Yingqian Cai has been focusing on curating a network of people, spaces, objects, and ideas in the region of the Pearl River Delta-a frontier of contemporary art in China.

     

    Cai will present the research-based projects she initiated at Times Museum, and share her experiences in how artistic expressions and practices are translated, fabricated and contextualized in the curatorial process. She will also map a variety of human and non-human actors, such as labor, virus, river, port, island, plant etc., in the forming and relocating of a frontier-where the region transformed from an agricultural frontier to a frontier of “Reform and Open” in the 1990s, and subsequently redistributes its labor-intensive manufacturing resources and extracting capital to the southern of the world. By inserting artworks, artistic concepts, and investigations into already existing conditions and setting up a friction between them, shadowed context repressed by the developmental mentality is activated and may subsequently change what we think it is all about. In this sense, the curatorial incubates imaginations to blur boundaries and categorizations, thus challenge their constraining powers

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Nikita Yingqian Cai is Deputy Director and Chief Curator of Times Museum. She has curated exhibitions such as Times Heterotopia Trilogy (2011, 2014, 2017), Jiang Zhi: If This is a Man (2012), Roman Ondák: Storyboard (2015), Big Tail Elephants: One Hour, No Room, Five Shows (2016), Pan Yuliang: A Journey to Silence (Villa Vassilieff in Paris and Guangdong Times Museum, 2017), Omer Fast: The Invisible Hand (2018), Zhou Tao: The Ridge in the Bronze Mirror (2019), Neither Black/Red/Yellow Nor Woman (Times Art Center Belin, 2019), Candice Lin: Pigs and Poison (2021), and One song is very much like another and the boat is always from afar (2021). She initiated the para-curatorial series in 2012 and launched “All the Way South” research network in 2016. She was awarded the Asian Cultural Council Fellowship in 2019.

     

    Discussant: Yi Gu is an Associate Professor of modern and contemporary art and visual culture, with a focus on Asia especially China.Her research interests include cold war visual culture and post-socialist art, comparative media studies, Chinese photography history and contemporary photography in Asia, politics of aesthetics, data visualization, and visual methodologies across disciplines. Her book Chinese Ways of Seeing and Open-Air Painting (Harvard University Press Asia Center, 2020) points out an ocular turn of China’s twentieth century as a foundation for a revisionist history of modern Chinese art. She is currently completing a manuscript on socialist data visualization and China’s contemporary Digital Countryside initiative. She is a co-editor of open-access academic journal Trans Asia Photography and a convening member of the research project “Recalibrating Postwar Chinese Art: Digital Humanities and Alternative Archives.”

     

    Chair: Tong Lam is an Associate Professor in the Department of Historical Studies and the Graduate Department of History and Director of the Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies at the Asian Institute. His current book-length study employs lenses of media studies, environmentalism, and science and technology studies (STS) to examine the politics and poetics of mobilization in China’s special zones in the socialist and postsocialist eras. As a visual artist, Lam has utilized his lens-based work to uncover hidden evidence of state- and capital-precipitated violence—both fast and slow—across various contexts. At present, his research-based visual projects particularly delve into the intersection between technology and military violence, as well as the landscapes of industrial and postindustrial ruination. 


    Speakers

    Tong Lam
    Chair
    Director, Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies, Asian Institute Associate Professor, Department of Historical Studies, UTM

    Nikita Cai
    Speaker
    Deputy Director and Chief Curator of Times Museum

    Yi Gu
    Discussant
    Associate Professor, Department of Arts, Culture and Media, UTSC


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, September 18th Timothy Garton Ash: 'From Post-War Europe to Post-Wall Europe - and Back'

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, September 18, 20235:00PM - 7:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto and online via Zoom.
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    In his new book Homelands: A Personal History of Europe, Timothy Garton Ash gives a unique account of the history of Europe since 1945. This is history illustrated by memoir and reportage. Garton Ash draws on his extensive personal notes from 50 years of events witnessed, places visited and history makers encountered (from Margaret Thatcher to Vladimir Putin) to chart the rise and then faltering of the quest for a ‘Europe whole and free’.

     

    In this lecture, Professor Garton Ash will extend the analysis in Homelands to offer an interpretation of how Europe progressed from the post-War period (famously analyzed by Tony Judt) to what he calls the post-Wall period. And why it then regressed, in a ‘downward turn’ after 2008, culminating in Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine on 24 February 2022 – beginning the largest war in Europe since 1945. What did Europe get right? Where did it go wrong? Why?

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Timothy Garton Ash is Professor of European Studies, University of Oxford, Isaiah Berlin Professorial Fellow at St Antony’s College, Oxford and a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He is the author of eleven books of contemporary history and political writing which have explored many facets of the history of Europe over the last half-century. They include The Polish Revolution: Solidarity, The File: A Personal History, In Europe’s Name: Germany and the Divided Continent, Facts are Subversive: Political Writing from a Decade without a Name and Free Speech: Ten Principles For a Connected World. He also writes a column on international affairs in the Guardian, which is widely syndicated, and is a regular contributor to the New York Review of Books, amongst other journals. From 2001 to 2006, he was Director of the European Studies Centre at St Antony’s College, Oxford, where he now directs the Dahrendorf Programme. The Magic Lantern: The Revolution of ’89 Witnessed in Warsaw, Budapest, Berlin, & Prague was reissued in 2019 with a new chapter exploring  the 30 years since 1989 in post-communist Europe. His latest book, Homelands: A Personal History of Europe, was recently published and translations into more than 18 other European languages (including Portuguese) have either been published or are in preparation. Prizes he has received for his writing include the Somerset Maugham Award, the Prix Européen de l’Essai and the George Orwell Prize. In 2017, he was awarded the International Charlemagne Prize of the city of Aachen, for services to European unity.


    Speakers

    Timothy Garton Ash
    Professor of European Studies, University of Oxford, Isaiah Berlin Professorial Fellow at St Antony’s College, Oxford and a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, September 18th Timothy Garton Ash, "Homelands: a Personal History of Europe"

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, September 18, 20235:00PM - 7:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, September 19th Simon Fraser University Information Table

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, September 19, 202310:30AM - 3:30PMExternal Event, This event took place at the Academic Quadrangle (AQ) on Simon Fraser University's Burnaby campus. 
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    Description

    The Munk School’s Admissions Officer will host an Admissions Information Table, providing an opportunity for Simon Fraser University students to gather comprehensive information about the Master of Global Affairs & Master of Public Policy degree programs. At the table, students can learn about the admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, internships, Capstone courses, employment statistics, and much more!


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, September 19th Career Development and some social

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, September 19, 202312:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, September 20th Mixing Medicines: The Global Drug Trade and Early Modern Russia

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 20, 20231:00PM - 3:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person in seminar room 108N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto ON
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    Series

    Russian History and Politics Series

    Description

    What would you be prepared to do to heal yourself? This talk will discuss what answer the early modern Russian elite gave to that question, an answer shaped by both the opportunities of global trade and the values of local culture.
    This event is a part of the Russian History and Politics Series

     

    Clare Griffin is a graduate of University College London and Assistant Professor of Russian History at Indiana University Bloomington. Her first book, Mixing Medicines: The Global Drug Trade and Early Modern Russia, appeared in 2022 with McGill-Queens University Press. She is now working on her next project which is about disability in early modern Russia, with a particular focus on wounded soldiers.

     

    Contact

    Tanyaa Mehta
    (416) 946-8698


    Speakers

    Clare Griffin
    Assistant Professor of Russian History at Indiana University Bloomington



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, September 20th Care Activism: Migrant Domestic Workers, Movement-Building and Communities of Care

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 20, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person in Seminar Room 108N, North House, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON.
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Series

    Harney Lecture Series

    Description

    Care Activism: Migrant Domestic Workers, Movement-Building and Communities of Care (University of Illinois Press 2023) argues that migrant domestic workers’ social movements emerge and persist out of migrant domestic workers’ belief in the need to place at the very centre migrant domestic workers’ interests. Through ethnographic research with migrant domestic worker advocacy organizations across Canada and in Singapore, Hong Kong, the Philippines and in transnational fora such as the ILO, this book shows the multiple ways that migrant domestic workers ‘care’ for each other in ways that sending and receiving states, and even other advocacy organizations cannot or will not. Specifically, through the framework of  care activism, we see how migrant domestic workers create communities of care that can help them survive and even thrive despite arduous working and living conditions, prolonged family separation, and tensions during family reunification processes.  Through care activism, we witness how domestic workers do not only seek material improvements in their lives and policy change, but also put forward future-oriented visions of what migrant justice and gender justice could look like.

     

    Speaker biographies:

     

    Ethel Tungohan is a Canada Research Chair in Canadian Migration Policies, Impacts and Activism and an Associate Professor of Politics at York University. Her book, Care Activism: Migrant Domestic Workers, Communities of Care, and Movement-Building,  won the National Women’s Studies Association First Book Prize and was featured in Ms. Magazine’s August ‘must-reads’ list of books by Indigenous, Black, and Racialized scholars. Her work looks at migrant activism, immigration, labour and social policy, and immigration history. She frequently uses socially-engaged research methods in her work.

     

    Kad Mariano is a PhD student in the Department of Politics at York University. His Master’s thesis investigates how public representations of Indigeneity in Nathan Phillips Square culturalize Canada’s settler-colonial past and reframe Indigenous struggles through multiculturalism. His doctoral research proposes looking at the politics of recognition/reconciliation through the transnational lives of migrants.

      

    Martha Balaguera is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto Mississauga. Her scholarship focuses on Latin American collective political struggles in violent contexts and transnational feminisms. Her first book project (in progress) theorizes the frontier regime that spans Central America, Mexico and the United States, and the activist practices of an immigrant justice movement field bringing together undocumented migrants, asylum seekers, and activist allies across borders.

     

    Megan Gaucher is an Associate Professor of critical migration law and politics in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University. Her interdisciplinary research focuses on the state’s operationalization of heteropatriarchal, racialized, settler-colonial narratives of family to police migrants and reinforce Canada’s physical and ideological borders; and the ways in which citizens, partial citizens, and non-citizens negotiate these parameters. She is the author of A Family Matter: Citizenship, Conjugal Relationships, and Canadian Immigration Policy (UBC Press), and her work has been published in the Canadian Journal of Political Science, International Journal of Canadian Studies, and Canadian Ethnic Studies, among others. Her current projects include an examination of narratives of care used to evaluate family reunification appeals made by migrant workers, and an investigation into the politicization and subsequent legislative treatment of maternity tourism.

     

    Cynthia Mariano was a live-in caregiver under the Live-in Caregiver Program from 2003 to 2006. During that time, she was engaged in care activism by sharing her experience and knowledge of Canadian immigration policy to help her fellow migrant care workers. She is currently a Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant for more than ten years and has taught Immigration Law at Anderson College and Herzing College for four years.

     

     


    Speakers

    Megan Gaucher
    Discussant
    Associate Professor, Department of Law and Legal Studies, Carleton University

    Cynthia Mariano
    Discussant
    Regulated Canadian Immigration Consultant, College Instructor and Former Live-in Caregiver

    Ethel Tungohan
    Speaker
    Canada Research Chair in Canadian Migration Policies, Impacts and Activism; Associate Professor, Department of Politics, York University

    Kad Mariano
    Discussant
    PhD candidate, Department of Politics, York University

    Martha Balaguera
    Discussant
    Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto Mississauga



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 21st University of British Columbia Graduate & Professional Schools Fair

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 21, 202311:00AM - 3:00PMExternal Event, The event took place at UBC Life Building (6138 Student Union Boulevard) University of British Columbia – Vancouver, Point Grey Campus 6133 University Blvd., Vancouver, BC
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    Description

    The Munk School’s Admissions Representative will be attending the University of British Columbia (UBC) Graduate & Professional Schools Fair! UBC students are invited to visit our booth to explore the opportunities offered by our Master of Global Affairs & Master of Public Policy degree programs. Get all your admissions questions answered and discover the vast array of benefits, including insights into our remarkable alumni, diverse career options, impressive employment statistics, enriching internships, engaging capstone courses, and much more! 


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 21st Artful Design + Artificial Intelligence: What Do We (Really) Want from AI?

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 21, 20234:00PM - 5:30PMExternal Event, This event was held at the University of Toronto Schools, 371 Bloor St. W., Toronto, ON, M5S 2R7
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    Description

    Join us for an exciting event that explores the fascinating STEAM intersection of music, coding, art, and artificial intelligence.   

     

    We all design, shaping the world around us in the form of tools, policies, education, and communities. In recent months we’ve seen the growing emergence of “astoundingly competent” AI tools, leading many of us to wonder how AI might soon impact our work, our lives, our world. How do we (want to) live and work with artificial intelligence? How might we artfully design tools and systems that balance machine automation and human interaction? And perhaps the most basic question of all, what do we (really) want from AI?  

     

    In this presentation, we will engage with these questions through an artful design lens, considering factors such as aesthetics, ethics, and accountability. As a case study, we will draw from the teaching of "Music and AI", a critical-making course at Stanford, and explore the power of human creativity in using AI not as an "oracle", but as a tool for creative expression.  

     

    Ge Wang is an Associate Professor at Stanford University’s Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA). He researches the artful design of tools, toys, games, musical instruments, programming languages, expressive VR experiences, and interactive AI systems with humans in the loop. Ge is the architect of the ChucK audio programming language, the director of the Stanford Laptop Orchestra and the Stanford VR Design Lab. He is the Co-founder of Smule and the designer of the Ocarina and Magic Piano apps for mobile phones. A 2016 Guggenheim Fellow, Ge is the author of Artful Design: Technology in Search of the Sublime, a photo comic book about how we shape technology — and how technology shapes us.

    At Stanford University, Ge teaches "critical-making" courses at the intersections of art, the humanities, and engineering, including "Music, Computing, Design", "Laptop Orchestra", and "Music and AI".  

     

    The first 50 guests will receive a free copy of Ge Wang’s book Artful Design: Technology in Search of the Sublime.  

     

    Doors open at 3:30 p.m.  

    This is a free event, but tickets are required for each attendee.

     

    This event is hosted by Initiative for Education Policy and Innovation, Centre for the Study of Global Japan at the University of Toronto, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, sponsored by University of Toronto Schools.

    Contact

    Sophie Bourret-Klein
    (416) 946-8972


    Speakers

    Ge Wang
    Associate Professor, Center for Computer Research in Music and Acoustics (CCRMA), Stanford University



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, September 22nd Art of Participation: Objects in the Art of Korea in the 1960s and the 1970s

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, September 22, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event was held in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    Centre for the Study of Korea Speaker Series

    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    This talk explores the aesthetics and politics of objects in art, life, and society in the 1960s and the 1970s in South Korea. During this period, art and cultural practitioners adopted and developed the method of using objects – everyday, industrial, traditional, or natural objects and human bodies – in their practice in order to establish contemporary Korean art and culture that was comparable to the art of the world and close to the public, or everyday life, in Korea. Their practices ranged from utilizing objects’ association with life and society to abstracting the quality of objects and even rendering the human body into an object, as seen in the 1968 action piece Transparent Balloons and a Nude. In this “art of participation,” as I propose to call it, the idea and method of objects emerged from and gave form to the concept and aspiration of participation: from the avant-gardist notion of art’s participation in life to the participation of art and artists in the reconstruction of the country, which meant not only the reorganization of the art, cultural, and social systems and the economic development, but also the elimination of colonial remnants and the oppression of the society and the government. While contributing to the larger discussion of multiple modernisms in the realm of art and culture, this talk expands the discussion of objects and their relationship to art and society and complicates the understanding of the relationship between art and society, or politics.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKER

     

    Camille (Ji Eun) Sung is an Arts & Science Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of East Asian Studies at the University of Toronto. Her primary research interest lies in artistic practices that actively employed non-conventional media, with a focus on their conversation with and operation within the socio-political conditions in Korea, and more broadly, in East Asia. Her research interests also include queer and feminist art practice, activism, and theory and the relationship between critical theory and praxis. She is working on her book project that examines how art and cultural practitioners responded to, participated in, or abstained from the modernization process in post-colonial Korea in the 1960s and the 1970s. Her work has been published in the Journal of History of Contemporary Art and will be included in the Routledge Companion to Art History and Feminisms.

     

    Chair: Janet Poole is an Associate Professor at the Munk School fo Global Affairs and Public Policy. She is also the Distinguished Professor of the Humanities & Chair, Department of East Asian Studies. Poole’s research and teaching interests lie in aesthetics in the broad context of colonialism and modernity, in history and theories of translation, and in the creative practice of literary translation.


    Speakers

    Camille (Ji Eun) Sung
    Speaker
    Arts & Science Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of East Asian Studies; Research Associate, Centre for the Study of Korea

    Janet Poole
    Chair
    Associate Professor; Distinguished Professor of the Humanities & Chair, Department of East Asian Studies



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, September 22nd Energy History and the World that Carbon Made

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, September 22, 20233:00PM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event has held in Room 108N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    Dr. David Chu Seminar Series

    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    Energy has witnessed a surge of interest among historians and scholars in adjacent fields in recent years. This might be expected given the growing sense of urgency around our unfolding climate crisis, to which the extravagant burning of fossil fuels has been a leading contributor. Energy has been a compelling subject of study because of how important decisions related to its production and use will be to determining our collective present and future. At the same time, part of the appeal of energy has been its analytical promise. To environmental historian Richard White, it is a “protean and useful concept.” By following energy flows, one is able to weave together social and natural processes that are otherwise more commonly considered as separate threads. But the capaciousness of the energetic perspective presents its own challenge. In this talk, Seow draws on his recently published book, Carbon Technocracy, to offer some reflections on the utility of placing energy at the center of our historical and social analyses.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Victor Seow is a historian of technology, science, and industry, focusing on China and Japan and on histories of energy and work. He is the author of Carbon Technocracy: Energy Regimes in Modern East Asia (University of Chicago Press, 2022), which has received several awards, including the Association for Asian Studies’ John Whitney Hall Book Prize and the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations’ Michael H. Hunt Prize for International History. He is currently working on a history of industrial psychology in China from the 1930s to the present.

     

    Discussant: Caleb Wellum is Assistant Professor of US History (CLTA). He writes and teaches about modern US history, politics, and culture. His book about the 1970s energy crisis in the United States—Energizing Neoliberalism—will be out in fall 2023 from Johns Hopkins University Press. Wellum is Editor of Energy Humanities and a member of the Petrocultures Research Group. He contributed to the collectively authored books After Oil and Solarities and is co-organizer of After Oil 3 at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity and the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. Wellum has published on the history of film, documentary photography, oil futures trading, energy conservation politics, and the future of the humanities, among other topics. He is currently developing three research projects, books about the history of the ‘New Economy’ and the relationship between energy, theory, and the practice of history, and a critical carbon tracking app.

     

    Chair: Tong Lam is an Associate Professor in the Department of Historical Studies and the Graduate Department of History and Director of the Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies at the Asian Institute. His current book-length study employs lenses of media studies, environmentalism, and science and technology studies (STS) to examine the politics and poetics of mobilization in China’s special zones in the socialist and postsocialist eras. As a visual artist, Lam has utilized his lens-based work to uncover hidden evidence of state- and capital-precipitated violence—both fast and slow—across various contexts. At present, his research-based visual projects particularly delve into the intersection between technology and military violence, as well as the landscapes of industrial and postindustrial ruination.


    Speakers

    Victor Seow
    Speaker
    Associate Professor of the History of Science, Harvard University

    Caleb Wellum
    Speaker
    Assistant Professor, Department of Historical Studies, UTM

    Tong Lam
    Chair
    Director, Dr. David Chu Program in Asia-Pacific Studies, Asian Institute Associate Professor, Department of Historical Studies, UTM


    Main Sponsor

    Dr. David Chu Program in Asia Pacific Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Dr. David Chu program for Asia Pacific Studies

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, September 22nd CSK "Welcome Back" Reception

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, September 22, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.

    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, September 22nd Documenting Myanmar's Revolution: A Photo Gallery

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, September 22, 20237:00PM - 9:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in Room 2034, Hart House, 7 Hart House Cir, Toronto, ON M5S 3H3
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    Description

    Join us for the opening night of Bryan Dickie’s photo exhibit, documenting a people’s unity and aspiration in a triumph against dictatorship.

     

    ABOUT THE EXHIBIT

     

    This gallery features photos from Bryan Dickie’s published photo book covering Myanmar’s ongoing civil war. The book focuses on civilians who joined together to form an opposition army dubbed the ‘People’s Defence Force’ who are actively fighting an entrenched military regime that took control of the country in the 2021 February coup. The gallery is free attendance and will be available starting Sept 22nd until the end of September. The opening night will feature a talk by Bryan Dickie. Register for opening night.

     

    ABOUT THE PROJECT

     

    On February 1st, 2021, Myanmar experienced its third coup in just under six decades. After the country’s largest opposition party to the military government, the National League for Democracy, won 930 of 1117 seats in the parliament, the highest number of seats ever achieved by the political party, the country’s leading General, Min Aung Hlaing, sent in his troops. In pre-dawn raids, the military fanned out across the country, rounding up the newly elected parliamentarians a day before they were to take their seats. After weeks of countrywide demonstrations and general strikes, civilians began to travel to border regions in search of military training from the ethnic armed organizations fighting the government for over seven decades. What was born out of this mass exodus is now known as the People’s Defence Force, a grassroots conglomerate of people’s militias tied together to oust the military government and reinstall democracy in their country.

     

    The photographer Bryan Dickie and Aung Myat Phone will discuss the recent events in Myanmar and Bryan’s recently published photo book covering Myanmar’s ongoing civil war. The book focuses on civilians who joined together to form an opposition army dubbed the ‘People’s Defence Force’ who are actively fighting an entrenched military regime that forcibly took control of the country in February 2021.

     

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Bryan Dickie is a Canadian-based editorial photographer interested in exploring humanity’s enigmas. Using his camera as a portal into people’s lives, Bryan has used photography as a tool to understand the world around him. In 2010, on a whim, Bryan decided to travel to Myanmar and serendipitously stumbled upon a historical moment that saw Aung San Suu Kyi released from house arrest after fifteen years of sporadic detention. The people’s excitement at their country’s transition resonated with Bryan on an extremely ephemeral level and sparked a relationship with the people of the South Asian Nation. Over the next decade, Bryan would be lucky enough to travel to the far reaches of Myanmar to photograph and interview refugees, child soldiers, warlords and various leaders of the many ethnic armed organizations that are still active throughout Myanmar today.

     

    Aung Myat Phone is a Burmese refugee living in Yangon when the military took control of his country. He was one of the early protesters out on the streets and witnessed first-hand the military’s brutal crackdown on demonstrations that saw scores of civilians gunned down in cold blood. As the only member of his family who escaped during the coup, Aung Myat has many friends and family who had to stay and fight for their country’s democracy. His cousin was at the same training camp as photographer Bryan Dickie when documenting the People’s Defence Force.

     

     


    Speakers

    Bryan Dickie
    Canadian-Based Editorial Photographer

    Aung Myat Phone
    Burmese Refugee


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, September 25th – Friday, September 29th The Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989) - Moving through Sound

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, September 25, 20231:00PM - 5:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Tuesday, September 26, 20231:00PM - 5:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Wednesday, September 27, 20231:00PM - 5:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Thursday, September 28, 20231:00PM - 5:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Thursday, September 28, 20235:30PM - 8:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Friday, September 29, 20231:00PM - 5:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in 321N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    INSTALLATION | The Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989)

     

    Supported by Soulpepper Theatre and the Jackman Humanities Institute, the multimedia installation, The Neighbours: Forms of Trauma (1945-1989), by Lilia Topouzova, Krasimira Butseva, and Julian Chehirian constitutes the public-facing art component of the international academic workshop Authoritarianism: Lives, Legacies, Trauma, led by Professors Joshua Arthurs and Lilia Topouzova.

     

    The installation is built upon 40 interviews conducted by Topouzova and Butseva with survivors from the Bulgarian gulag (1945-1962). The project is the outcome of 20 years of scholarly research and 9 years of artistic collaboration.

     

    Through object, video and sound interventions, the artists recreate the survivors’ homes and evoke the material and psychological space where the interviews unfolded. Staged within them are fragments from oral histories, field recordings and video from former camp sites. The media conflux evokes the unstable boundaries between spaces of home and the psychologically proximate sites of violence.

     

    The public are welcome to view the installation between 1:00 pm and 5:00 pm each day September 25 to September 29. The organizers will hold a special event on September 28, 2023, from 5:30 pm to 8 pm including a guided tour of the installation, a live musical performance featuring works by composers who experienced authoritarian regimes, curated by Catherine Lukits, doctoral candidate in History at the University of Toronto and former orchestral cellist, and a panel discussion between the visual artists and Rohan Kulkarni, Director of Education and Community Engagement at Soulpepper Theater.

     

    For Faculty Members: If you are interested in booking a tour of the installation for your class in the week of September 25 to 29, please email: lilia.topouzova@utoronto.ca.

     

    PUBLIC EVENT: MOVING THROUGH SOUND

     

    On September 28, 2023, from 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm, the organizers will host a public event exploring authoritarianism through voice and sound. The event includes a guided tour of the installation, music by Canadian Opera Company performers and a panel discussion between the visual artists and Rohan Kulkarni, Director of Education and Community Engagement at Soulpepper Theater.  

     

    Guests will hear the voices of survivors of political violence and listen to the music of composers who survived authoritarian regimes curated by Catherine Lukits, doctoral candidate in History at the University of Toronto and former orchestral cellist.

     

    PROGRAM

     

    5:30 pm: Guided Tour of the Installation

    6:00 to 8:00 pm: Welcoming remarks by Professors Joshua Arthurs and Lilia Topouzova

     

    Music Performances

    György Ligeti – Sonata for Solo Cello (1948/1953)  

    Leana Rutt, cello (Canadian Opera Company)

    Marcel d’Entremont (Canadian Opera Company)

     

    Panel Discussion

    Rohan Kulkarni (Soulpepper Theater) in conversation with the artists and scholars, Lilia Topouzova (University of Toronto), Julian Chehirian (Princeton University), and Krasimira Butseva (London College of Communication, University of the Arts London).


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, September 26th Test Event - 2023_09_26

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, September 26, 20236:00AM - 8:00AMOstry Lounge, Second Floor, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.

    Contact

    Marcus
    (416) 876-9793


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, September 26th Fellows workshop

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, September 26, 20238:00AM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

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    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, September 27th McMaster Graduate & Professional School’s Fair

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 27, 202310:00AM - 3:00PMExternal Event, The event took place at McMaster University Student Centre Marketplace (first floor - marketplace)
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    Description

    The McMaster Graduate Fair presents the perfect opportunity for McMaster students to discover the Munk School’s two outstanding professional master’s degree programs: the Master of Global Affairs & Master of Public Policy. Come and gain valuable insights into our admissions process, alumni success stories, diverse career paths, enriching internships, impressive employment statistics, engaging capstone courses, and professional development opportunities and so much more!  


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, September 27th Russian invasion of Ukraine: How to report from a warzone

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 27, 20231:00PM - 3:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person at Room 208N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON.
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    Description

    One of the most prominent Czech journalists, Ondřej Kundra, will speak about the war in Ukraine based on his first hand experience, further discussing how to report about the atrocities of the Russian aggression.

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Ondřej Kundra currently works in the Respekt weekly as a deputy editor-in-chief. He has received numerous journalism awards for political analysis and investigative reporting, including the prestigious Ferdinand Peroutka Prize. He is the author of Meda Mládková’s biography My Amazing Life (2014), a book about Russian spies; Putin’s Agents (2016), for which he was nominated for the Magnesia Litera award. Together with Tomáš Lindner, he wrote the documentary book My Son the Terrorist (2017).  The book of the story of Vendulka Voglová about the most famous photo of the Holocaust of Czechoslovak Jews is called Flight to Freedom. His last book is Novichok or Bullet (2021) about the dirty operations of Russian intelligence. He has been eight times in Ukraine since last February when the Russian full-scale invasion started.

    Contact

    Olga Kesarchuk
    416-946-8938


    Speakers

    Ondrej Kudrna
    Deputy Editor-in-Chief, Respekt Weekly



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, September 27th Virtual Book Launch: Statesmen, Strategists, and Diplomats: Canada's Prime Ministers and the Making of Foreign Policy

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, September 27, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMOnline Event, This event took place online via Zoom.
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    Description

    About the Book

    The Imperial Prime Minister? Assessing the role of Canada’s PMs in Shaping Foreign Policy

    Who makes foreign policy in Canada? The bureaucracy? Civil society? The Business Community? Parliament?

     

    In this session, four scholars will share a discussion on the central role of the Canadian prime minister in crafting and executing this country’s foreign policy. The discussion will stretch back to Sir John A. Macdonald’s creation of the "Atlantic Triangle" but will focus on the roles played by Robert Borden, R.B. Bennett, Pierre Trudeau and Paul Martin. Guest speakers will include Stephen Azzi (Carleton University), Damien-Claude Belanger (University of Ottawa), Susan Colbourn (Duke University), and Patrice Dutil (Toronto Metropolitan University), who recently edited Statesmen, Strategists and Diplomats: Canada’s Prime Ministers and the Making of Foreign Policy (UBC Press).

     

    This event is sponsored by the Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History at Trinity College.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 28th APSIA Fair 11

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 28, 202311:00AM - 2:00PMOnline Event, Online Event
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    Description

    Association of Professional Schools of International Schools (APSIA) Online Graduate School Fair 11

    Thinking about Grad School? Searching for an international career in the private, public, or non-governmental sector?

    Whether you’ve just started your search or have a shortlist in mind, representatives of APSIA’s top international affairs and public policy graduate schools can help you navigate the admissions process.

    Register today and answer your questions about:

    application requirements,
    curricula and joint degrees,
    financial aid, and
    career opportunities.
    Go beyond what you read on a website – leave with new information and personal connections to admissions staff.

    Registration Now Open!

    Website

    Online


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Rejeanne Puran Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 28th For Future Reference: Reference Letter and CV Writing Workshop

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 28, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person at Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Join the Undergraduate Society of American Studies and the Centre for the Study of the United States on September 28th from 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM in room 208N for a reference letter workshop designed exclusively for undergraduate students.

     

    This workshop will help you hone the art of crafting an exceptional reference letter and a compelling CV, whether you’re exploring your graduate academic journey or preparing for future career opportunities. This workshop is open to all interested students.

     

    For practical tips that will set you apart in the highly competitive academic and professional arena, don’t miss this opportunity to enhance your future prospects. As an added bonus, lunch will be provided!

     

    Mark your calendars for "For Future Reference" on September 28th, and let’s pave the way to your success together.


    Speakers

    Rick Hapern
    Interim Director, Centre for the Study of the United States Bissell-Heyd Chair, American Studies Director, American Studies Program



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 28th China’s Role in Solving the Climate Crisis

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 28, 20234:00PM - 5:00PMOnline Event, This event was held on Zoom, Online Event
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    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    The world is sizzling.  With record-setting global temperatures and wildfires sweeping across Canada, the climate crisis has reached a tipping point. Environmental governance has been trumpeted as an area for cooperation between the China and the West. Yet, cooperation on emission setting and other environmental standards are not always easy to achieve, given unabated political tensions. Join a panel of top China environmental experts for a timely discussion on opportunities and constraints in China’s role to curb the climate crisis.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Denise van der Kamp is an Associate Professor in the Political Economy of China at Oxford University. Her research examines environmental policy, regulatory uncertainty, and bureaucratic governance in China. Originally from Hong Kong, she received her PhD from UC Berkeley and has lived and worked in China, Tajikistan, Canada, the United States, and the UK.

     

    Iza Yue Ding is an Associate Professor of Political Science. Her research explores the paradoxes and pushbacks attending economic, political, and cultural modernization, such as creative resistance against institutional rigidities, lingering moral traditions against legal development, enduring historical memories against rapid socioeconomic transformations, and humans’ simultaneous degradation of nature and attachment to nature. Ding is the author of The Performative State: Public Scrutiny and Environmental Governance in China (Cornell University Press, 2022). She is currently working on a monograph on global historical waves of environmentalism.

     

    Juliet Lu is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Forest Resources Management and the School for Public Policy and Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia. She is a political ecologist focused on the implications of China’s growing investments in land and other resources in Southeast Asia and beyond. Dr. Lu’s research examines conflicts and governance issues around resource extraction and intensive land use. She focuses on transnational land investments, namely Chinese rubber plantations in Laos, the promotion of monoculture plantations at the expense of more biodiverse systems, and the rise of private sector sustainable governance initiatives worldwide. She is looking to work with students interested in conducting grounded research around land conflicts, cash crop-driven land use change, and Chinese investments.

     

    Diana Fu Diana Fu (Moderator) is an Associate Professor of Political Science at The University of Toronto and director of the East Asia Seminar Series at the Asian Institute, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy. She is a non-resident fellow at Brookings Institution, a China fellow at the Wilson Center, and a public intellectuals fellow at the National Committee on US-China Relations. Her research examines civil society, popular contention, state control, and authoritarian citizenship in China. She is author of the award-winning book “Mobilizing Without the Masses: Control and Contention in China” (2018, Cambridge).

     

     


    Speakers

    Denise Van Der Kamp
    Speaker
    Associate Professor in the Political Economy of China, Oxford University

    Iza Yue Ding
    Speaker
    Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Northwestern University

    Juliet Lu
    Speaker
    Assistant Professor, Department of Forest Resources Management and the School of Public Policy and Global Affairs, University of British Columbia

    Diana Fu (Moderator)
    Moderator
    Associate Professor of Political Science and the Munk School; Director of the East Asia Seminar Series, Asian Institute, Munk School, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 28th Masterclass with Prof. Ritu Birla on Speculation, Financialization and the Re/presentation of Sovereignty

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 28, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event was held in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    ABOUT THE MASTERCLASS

     

    In this session, Prof. Birla will introduce us to interdisciplinary themes in the study of speculation and financialization, and map questions she is posing about challenges to democratic representation in regimes of monetization.  With attention to Global South-sited contexts, we will discuss new approaches to capitalism and sign-value, the speculative subject, and the mediative techniques of financial governmentality.   Prof Cody will respond, followed by a general discussion. Registered participation will be sent links to required reading, newly published article by Prof. Birla, and one short background reading.

     

    As this is a masterclass, attendees must read Ritu Birla, “Short-Circuits and Seizures: Currency and the Coding of the Global” in Public Culture (https://uoft.me/Short-Circuits-and-Seizures).

     

    We also strongly recommend reading Laura Bear, Ritu Birla and Stine Simonsen Puri, "Speculation and the Futures of Capitalism in India” in Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and Middle East for further background (https://uoft.me/Futures-and-Capitalism-in-India).

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Ritu Birla is an Associate Professor in the Department of History and also directs a research project in Global Governance, Economy and Society in collaboration with the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. She has held positions as the first Richard Charles Lee Director of the Asian Institute at the Munk School, and before that, Director of the Centre for South Asian Studies.  Recognized for bringing the empirical study of economy and empire to current questions in social and political theory, her research has sought to build new conversations in the global study of capitalism and its forms of governing.

     

    Discussant: Francis Cody  is an Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Asian Institute at the University of Toronto, where he is the Director of the Dr. David Chu Program in Contemporary Asian Studies and the Centre for South Asian Studies. He has been teaching at U of T since 2008. His research focuses on language, politics, and media in southern India.


    Speakers

    Ritu Birla
    Speaker
    Affiliated Faculty, Asian Institute; Associate Professor, Department of History

    Francis Cody
    Discussant
    Associate Professor, Anthropology and Asi​an Institute; Director, Centre for South Asian Studies; Director, Dr. David Chu Program in Contemporary Asian Studies, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Sponsors

    Asian Insititute

    Centre for South Asian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, September 28th Talk on the Six-Day War with Guy Laron

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, September 28, 20236:00PM - 8:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto
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    Description

    One fateful week in June 1967 redrew the map of the Middle East. Many scholars have documented how the Six-Day War unfolded, but little has been done to explain why the conflict happened at all. In this talk, Guy Laron refutes the widely accepted belief that the war was merely the result of regional friction, revealing the crucial roles played by American and Soviet policies in the face of an encroaching global economic crisis, and restoring Syria’s often overlooked centrality to events leading up to the hostilities.

     

    About the Speaker

    Guy Laron is a senior lecturer at the international relations department, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Previously, he was a visiting assistant professor at Northwestern University, a visiting fellow at the University of Oxford, and a term fellow at the Wilson Center (2022-2023). He is the author of two books: "Origins of the Suez Crisis" and "The Six-Day War." His op-eds and stories have appeared in the Guardian, the Nation, History Today, Haaretz, Le Monde Diplomatique, and the American Prospect.

     


    Speakers

    Guy Laron
    Senior lecturer, international relations department, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem

    Randall Hansen
    Professor, Department of Political Science and Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Global Migration Lab


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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October 2023

  • Tuesday, September 19th – Tuesday, October 31st GLA1003H Office Hours

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, September 19, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
    Tuesday, September 26, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
    Tuesday, October 3, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
    Tuesday, October 10, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
    Tuesday, October 17, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
    Tuesday, October 24, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
    Tuesday, October 31, 202312:00PM - 1:00PMRound Room, Second Floor, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.

    Contact

    Megan Ball-Chiodi
    416-946-8917


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, October 2nd Challenges and Amplifiers for the Ukrainian Democracy: Politics and Civil Society during 600 Days of the War

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, October 2, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event was held in-person at Room 108N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto and online via Zoom
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    Description

    This presentation explores the intricate relationship between democracy and the ongoing war in Ukraine. Focusing on the period during the war, it examines the challenges and opportunities that emerged for the Ukrainian government, local authorities and civil society. Based on the changes of the public opinion Dr. Bidenko highlights key factors of the Ukrainian unity and risks for the further recovery.

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Dr. Yuliya Bidenko (j.bidenko@karazin.ua) is an Associate Professor and Guarantee of the Master’s Program at Karazin Kharkiv National University, Political Science Department. For 2023 she serves as a Senior Visitor Research Fellow at the Centre for Eastern European and International Studies (ZOiS) in Berlin. In 2021-2022 she was the expert and the author of the Ukrainian annual country report for the Nations in Transit by the Freedom House. In 2022 she joined the National Platform for Resilience and Reconciliation as a regional coordinator in eastern Ukraine. Since 2016 Dr. Bidenko is the expert for the “Team Europe” Initiative by the European Union’s Delegation to Ukraine. She has published academic articles and papers devoted to Ukrainian resilience, decentralization, civil society, and political regime changes in Ukraine and Eastern Europe.

     

    Contact

    Olga Kesarchuk
    416-946-8938


    Speakers

    Yuliya Bidenko
    Speaker
    Associate Professor at Karazin Kharkiv National University, Political Science Department; Expert for the EU Delegation to Ukraine' Initiative "Team Europe Kharkiv"

    Ksenya Kiebuzinski
    Chair
    Petro Jacyk Program Co-Director; Director of the Petro Jacyk Central and East European Resource Centre, University of Toronto Libraries


    Main Sponsor

    Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine

    Co-Sponsors

    Center for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, October 2nd Book Launch: Cracking the Nazi Code

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, October 2, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMBoardroom and Library, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto
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    Description

    Dr. Winthrop Bell, University of Toronto philosophy professor and British secret agent A12, may be best known for sounding the first intelligence warning against the Nazi plot for World War II in 1919, and the earliest public warning against Hitler’s plan for the Holocaust in 1939. Yet, defeating Nazi evil was, for Bell, simply a precursor to establishing a just post-war peace, one that would allow friendship and mutual profit for both victor and vanquished.

    What was the historical importance of his intelligence work? What is its relevance today?  With his papers finally declassified, we can reflect on its relevance for today’s scholars and policymakers who are interested in international relations and Canada’s role in the defense of Europe.

     

    About the Speaker

    Jason Bell, PhD, (no relation to Winthrop) is associate professor of philosophy at the University of New Brunswick. He has previously served as a Fulbright Professor in Germany and taught at universities in Belgium and the United States. He is author of Cracking the Nazi Code: The Untold Story of Canada’s Greatest Spy (HarperCollins), about Winthrop Bell’s intelligence work.

     

    Contact

    Jack Cunningham
    416 420 0985


    Speakers

    Jason Bell
    Speaker
    Associate Professor, Philosophy, University of New Brunswick

    Jack Cunningham
    Moderator
    Program Coordinator, Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History, Trinity College



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, October 3rd Feel (in) the gaps. (In)visible disabilities

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, October 3, 20231:00PM - 3:00PMExternal Event, Event was External
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    Description

    The Program for Critical Studies in Equity and Solidarity

    &

    The Centre for the Study of the United States present

     

    Feel (in) the gaps. (In)visible disabilities

    A Virtual Exhibit Tour and Panel Discussion

     

    with artists Letícia Barreto, Cinzia Greco, Maica Gugolati, Jaime Lee Loy, and Gabrielle Le Roux.

     

    1-3pm

    October 3, 2023

    William Doo Auditorium

    45 Willcocks St.

     

    This is a hybrid event.

    Meeting ID: 852 8068 7718 / Passcode: 931014

     

      Feel (in) the Gaps is a continuation of an ongoing discussion and exchange amongst five transnational artists, activists, researchers, and curators who share the experience of having different invisible disabilities. The artists have been meeting regularly online, creating a safe space where they learn about each other’s (in)visibilities and create critically and artistically from it. Within ‘invisible disabilities’ the exhibition includes permanent and transient disabilities, such as autoimmune diseases, psychological and neurological conditions, unrecognized or medically unexplained disabilities, chronic diseases, and forms of trauma, with trauma explored both as the consequence of disability and as a disability in itself. When defining disability, and in particular invisible disability, in medical contexts, mistranslation can occur. For this reason, the exhibition promotes dialogism as a methodology of sharing, creating and exhibiting. The exhibit also confronts societal ableism and “toxic positivity” that pressures people to over-perform “feeling fine”; but also it disagrees with the classic iconography of suffering that superficially boxes-in the complexities of knowledge and experiences.  The project rejects the pressure for in/visibly disabled people to camouflage them/ourselves, to imitate and fit in, and to adapt to survive. Feel (in) the Gaps rather insists on surviving ‘through’ and with disabilities, in a form of “through living”, or “through-viving” in partnership with societal challenges. This allows for a different way of living in the world and possibly being recognized by it.

     

    Artist Bios:

     

    Letícia Barreto (she/her; Brazil) is a multidisciplinary artist and art educator based in Alverca – Lisbon, Portugal. She is an art teacher at Nextart, in Lisbon, PT. Her artworks have been exhibited nationally and internationally since 2000, online and onsite, between Europe, Latin America, and the USA

     

    Cinzia Greco (she/her; Italy) is an academic social scientist. She holds a PhD in medical anthropology and is currently a researcher at the University of Manchester in the UK. Cinzia has a longstanding interest in how illness and health are tangled with gender, class and race and how these entanglements define our experiences and the place we occupy in society. Her research has been published in several feminist and medical academic international journals. She is also a co-editor of the French journal Anthropologie & Santé.

     

    Maica Gugolati (she/her; Italy) is a multi-based researcher, anthropologist, and philosopher. She holds a Ph.D. in anthropology of art and performance and is an affiliated researcher at IMAF, Institute of African Worlds. She is a member of the International Art Curatorial Association: AICA South Caribbean. She curated online and onsite shows and developed experimental collaborative art-research projects in the Caribbean and in the Americas. Her artfieldwork-based projects are exhibited nationally and internationally between Europe, India, the Caribbean region, and Latin America. She published academic and artistic articles. She is a co-editor of Black Diaspora Journal and Caribbean InTransit, a consultant and co-educator at Decolonial Dialogues platform.

     

    Jaime Lee Loy (she/her; Trinidad and Tobago) is an artist and writer and a lecturer at the University of West Indies and an art educator at the primary school level. She founded and runs a not-for-profit ‘Summer Heroes’ (2012) an arts-based charitable program that incorporates art therapy approaches and creative development in children, as well as ‘Art with Aunty Jaime,’ teaching art to children. As a writer her fiction has been published by the St Petersburg Review, Akashic Books, NY, and Tongues of the Ocean’s Six Word Stories. Lee Loy is the author of local children’s stories as well as published fiction for adults. Her artworks have been exhibited nationally and internationally between Trinidad and Tobago, the USA, and the UK.

     

    Gabrielle Le Roux (they them/she her) is a queer, white South African artivist, filmmaker and social justice activist. Spanning more than two decades and three continents, Le Roux has developed a collaborative methodology working with portraits and first-person narratives to celebrate and amplify the voices of people, frequently activists whose lives bring much-needed change to society. Le Roux’s projects with activists are shown nationally and internationally in Europe, the African continent, and the Americas.

     

     

     

    Main Sponsor

    Centre for the Study of the United States

    Co-Sponsors

    Critical Studies in Equity and Solidarity, University of Toronto


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, October 3rd New Sources on the Fate of Hungarian Prisoners of War and Civilian Internees in Soviet Captivity

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, October 3, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person in seminar room 208N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto.
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    Description

    I have been exploring questions such as why and how the Soviet authorities rounded up some 700,000 prisoners of war and civilian internees in Hungary to transport them to hundreds of labor camps in the Soviet Union. As a significant development, three years ago, the Hungarian National Archives purchased the digitized version of 682,000 personal documents from the Military Archives of Russia. These files also contained the personal data of Hungarian prisoners. This new source, available online since 2022, has given new impetus to my research. Considering the above, the first topic that I would like to propose for my planned presentation is the history of Hungarian prisoners in Soviet labor camps after the Second World War in the light of new Soviet sources.

     

    Tamas Stark received his PhD from the Eötvös Loránd University in 1993. From 1983 he was a researcher at the Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and in 2000 he was appointed a senior research fellow. In 2014 he was Fulbright visiting professor at the Nazareth College in Rochester NY. His specialization is forced population movement in East-Central Europe in the period 1938-1956, with special regard to the history of the Holocaust, the fate of prisoners of war and civilian internees and postwar migrations. Since 2020, he is the chairman of the subcommittee on the History of World War II of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His main publications include: Hungarian Jews During the Holocaust and After the Second World War, 1939–1949; A Statistical Review ( Boulder CO, 2000), Magyar foglyok a Szovjetunióban (Budapest 2006) and „...akkor aszt mondták kicsi robot” – A magyar polgári lakosság elhurcolása a Szovjetunióba korabeli dokumentumok tükrében. (Budapest 2017).

     

    Susan M. Papp was awarded a Ph.D. in Modern European History at the University of Toronto in 2019, specializing in east-central Europe and Holocaust Studies. Dr. Papp is widely published (both scholarly works and historical fiction) in several languages. She is an award-winning documentary filmmaker.

    Her dissertation, The Politics of Exclusion in the Hungarian film industry: Jews, Fascists, Communists and the path to Hollywood will be published shortly.

     

     

    Sponsored by CERES, Hungarian Studies Program, and Hungarian Research Institute of Canada  


    Speakers

    Tamas Stark
    Professor of History at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences

    Susan M. Papp
    (Chair) Ph.D. in Modern European History at the University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Hungarian Studies Program

    Hungarian Research Institute of Canada

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 4th U of T Scarborough Graduate & Professional Schools Fair

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 4, 202311:00AM - 3:00PMExternal Event, The Fair took place at University of Toronto Scarborough (UTSC) 1265 Military Trail, Scarborough, ON; Highland Hall Event Centre
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    Description

    University of Toronto at Scarborough campus (UTSC) Graduate & Professional Schools Fair:  UTSC students will have the opportunity to engage with a representative from the Munk School, where they will learn about the two-year professional master’s degrees: The Master of Global Affairs & the Master of Public Policy programs. Attendees will gain insights into the Admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, our unparalleled employment statistics, mandatory internships, Capstone courses, Professional Development workshops, and much more!


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 4th Book Launch: Canada Alone: Navigating the post-American World, by Kim Richard Nossal

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 4, 202312:00PM - 2:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto and online via Zoom.
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Canada must prepare for an isolationist and unpredictable neighbour to the South should a MAGA leader gain the White House in 2025.

     

    The American-led global order has been increasingly challenged by Chinese assertiveness and Russian revanchism. As we enter this new era of great-power competition, Canadians tend to assume that the United States will continue to provide global leadership for the West.

     

    Canada Alone sketches the more dystopian future that is likely to result if the illiberal, anti-democratic, and authoritarian Make America Great Again movement regains power. Under the twin stresses of a reinvigorated America First policy and the purposeful abandonment of American global leadership, the West will likely fracture, leaving Canadians all alone with an increasingly dysfunctional United States. Canada Alone outlines what Canadians will need to navigate this deeply unfamiliar post-American world.

     


    Speakers

    Kim Richard Nossal
    Professor Emeritus, Department of Political Studies and Centre for International and Defence Policy Studies, Queen's University.



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 4th Book Launch: Canada Alone, by Kim Richard Nossal

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 4, 202312:00PM - 2:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 4th Munk ITCS Test Event - please ignore

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 4, 20233:00PM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 108N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    + Register for this Event Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 5th Study International/Global Affairs in Berlin & Toronto (MIA/MGA): Join our info session!

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 5, 202311:00AM - 12:00PMOnline Event, This was an Online Event
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    Description

    Start in Berlin, finish in Toronto and earn a Master of Global Affairs from the Munk School and a Master of International Affairs from the Hertie School.  Joins us on 5 October at 5pm (CET) / 11am (EST) to learn more about our MIA/MGA dual-degree program, a collaboration between the renowned Munk School at the University of Toronto and the prestigious Hertie School in Berlin. Admissions representatives from both schools will answer your questions about the programme’s curriculum, give you insights into student services in both cities and explain how the dual-degree programme works.  Don’t miss this chance to shape your future on the global stage, register today!


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy Master of Global Affairs

    Shraddha Vasudevan
    Associate: Student Admissions Hertie School of Governance in Berlin



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 5th The Impact of the War in Ukraine on Central Europe

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 5, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person at Room 108N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON
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    Description

    The policies of Central European states are the opposite of what one might conclude on the basis of their past relations with Ukraine and the Ukrainians. The Polish-Ukrainian and Romanian-Ukrainian history is burdened by ethnic cleansing, territorial claims/disputes, repression. The Czech Republic and Slovakia were traditionally pro-Russians. Despite the burdened history and the pro-Russian traditions these countries have been able to overcome the shadow of the past and now stand by Ukraine. In Hungary, anti-Russian sentiments were deeply rooted, with two revolutions and freedom struggles being defeated by the Russian/Soviet army, while Hungarians have had no conflict with Ukrainians in the past. Despite this historical past, the Hungarian government is the only one in Central Europe and the European Union that pursues a pro-Russian policy. In my presentation, I would explain what has caused these changes and the possible reasons for the Hungarian government’s hostile policy towards Ukraine.  

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Tamas Stark received his PhD from the Eötvös Loránd University in 1993. From 1983 he was a researcher at the Institute of History of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and in 2000 he was appointed a senior research fellow. In 2014 he was Fulbright visiting professor at the Nazareth College in Rochester NY. His specialization is forced population movement in East-Central Europe in the period 1938-1956, with special regard to the history of the Holocaust, the fate of prisoners of war and civilian internees and postwar migrations. Since 2020, he is the chairman of the subcommittee on the History of World War II of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. His main publications include: Hungarian Jews During the Holocaust and After the Second World War, 1939–1949; A Statistical Review ( Boulder CO, 2000), Magyar foglyok a Szovjetunióban (Budapest 2006) and „...akkor aszt mondták kicsi robot” – A magyar polgári lakosság elhurcolása a Szovjetunióba korabeli dokumentumok tükrében. (Budapest 2017).

     

    Susan M. Papp was awarded a Ph.D. in Modern European History at the University of Toronto in 2019, specializing in east-central Europe and Holocaust Studies. Dr. Papp is widely published (both scholarly works and historical fiction) in several languages. She is an award-winning documentary filmmaker.

    Her dissertation, The Politics of Exclusion in the Hungarian film industry: Jews, Fascists, Communists and the path to Hollywood will be published shortly.

     

     

    Sponsored by CERES, Hungarian Studies Program, and Hungarian Research Institute of Canada  

     


    Speakers

    Susan M. Papp
    Ph.D. in Modern European History at the University of Toronto

    Tamas Stark
    Professor of History, the Hungarian Academy of Sciences


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Hungarian Studies Program

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 5th “Zeitenwende” in Germany and Japan? Continuity and change in Germany and Japan's foreign policy after the Cold War

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 5, 20234:00PM - 5:30PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person at Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    For a long time, Germany and Japan have been characterized as Civilian Powers. Civilian Power refers to international actors who prefer non-military methods to military methods as a means of resolving international disputes. However, Germany and Japan are now shifting their foreign and security policies against the backdrop of recent upheavals in world politics, in particular the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. How, then, have the foreign policies of Germany and Japan shifted, respectively? How similar and how different are the developments in Germany and Japan? This lecture provides an overview of the trajectories of German and Japanese foreign and security policy from a historical perspective and examines the implications of recent shifts.

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Takumi Itabashi is a Professor of International History at the Faculty of Law at the University of Tokyo. He received Ph.D. from Hokkaido University in 2008. Before joining the University of Tokyo, he taught at Seikei University. He also spent two years as visiting scholar at the University of Cologne. His research topics include German history, contemporary German politics and the history of European integration. He is the author of Overcoming the Division 1989-1990: The Challenge of West German Diplomacy Over Reunification (Tokyo: Chuokoron-Shinsha, 2022) (in Japanese). The full list of publications can be found at the following link. https://researchmap.jp/read0143167/?lang=en

     

    Moderator:

     

    Phillip Lipscy, Director, Centre for the Study of Global Japan, Munk School

     

    Organized by the Centre for the Study of Global Japan, University of Toronto. Co-sponsored by the Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, University of Toronto.    


    Speakers

    Takumi Itabashi
    Speaker
    Professor of International History, Faculty of Law, University of Tokyo

    Phillip Lipscy
    Moderator
    Director, Centre for the Study of Global Japan, Munk School


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for the Study of Global Japan

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 5th Tamas Stark

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 5, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMFirst Floor Lounge, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 5th St. Mike's Grad Week: Let's talk about Grad School

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 5, 20236:00PM - 8:00PMExternal Event, The event took place at St. Michael's College, University of Toronto, Charbonnel Lounge at 81 St. Mary Street
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    Description

    This event is part of the "Grad Week" series for upper-year students at the University of Toronto, St. Michael’s College, who are exploring pathways to post-graduation. The goal of "Let’s Talk Grad School" is to provide students considering graduate programs with valuable information and to give them the opportunity to ask questions.  

    The Admissions Officer from the Munk School will be a part of this panel, offering insights into the Master of Global Affairs and Master of Public Policy degree programs.  

     

     

     


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 6th The Sensational Proletarian: Affect and Leftist Cultures in Colonial Korea

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 6, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event was held In-Person, Room 108N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    CSK Annual Speaker Series

    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    Visceral sensations, exaggerated affects, and suffering subjects characterized leftist Korean cultural production in the 1920s and 1930s. In popular fiction, print cartoons, reportage, cultural commentary, and other emergent forms of mass culture, scenes detailing the spectacular bodily harms endured by migrant workers, tenant farmers, factory workers, men, women, and children proliferated. Yet such representations were criticized as excessively grotesque and insufficiently political by leftist intellectuals at the time and have subsequently been overlooked by scholars in favor of socialist realism and its dynamic proletarian heroes.

     

    This talk, by contrast, focuses on these textual and visual representations to tell the story of how the new affects and everyday experiences introduced by imperial capitalism and colonial modernity were mediated through the surface of the lower-class body. This talk traces the emergence of the sensational proletarian as a central semantic figure of colonial Korean print culture and reads its varied manifestations as emblematic of Korean cultural producers’ efforts not only to grapple with modernity, imperialism, and capitalism, but to do so using the political ideology and imaginary of Marxism. During this period, Koreans in rural areas suffered from abject poverty, spiritual confusion, natural disasters, punishing agricultural taxes, and a widening gap between the rich and the poor. Leftist Korean cultural producers in the early twentieth century also encountered and engaged with Marxism as a new political/theoretical framework. Their interpretations of Marxism led to a flourishing of different forms of cultural production and inspired a visual and textual language that used the sensations of the body to interpret and articulate class politics.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKER:

     

    Kimberly Chung is an Assistant Professor of Korean Literary and Cultural Studies at McGill University. She received her PhD in Comparative Literature from University of California, San Diego. Before arriving at McGill, she was a Visiting Assistant Professor at Hongik University and a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Korea Institute of Harvard University. She has published research on modern and contemporary Korean literature, visual culture, and art in scholarly journals like Journal of Korean Studies and Acta Koreana and was a special guest editor for the issue Sensibility and Landscape in Korean Literature and Film for Acta Koreana (Vol. 17 no.1, 2014). She is a co-editor of an anthology on Korean contemporary art titled Korean Art From 1953: Collision, Innovation and Interaction (Phaidon Press, 2020). Her book The Sensational Proletarian: Affect and Leftist Cultures in Colonial Korea is currently under review at Stanford University Press.

     

    Chair: Michelle Cho is an Assistant Professor in the Department fo East Asian Studies, University of Toronto. Cho’s research and teaching focus on questions of collectivity and popular aesthetics in Korean film, media, and popular culture. She has published on Asian cinemas and Korean wave television, video, and pop music.Before coming to U of T, Professor Cho was a Korea Foundation Assistant Professor at McGill University. Prior to that, she was a Postdoctoral Fellow of International Humanities at Brown University, affiliated with the Departments of Modern Culture and Media and East Asian Studies.


    Speakers

    Kimberly Chung
    Speaker
    Assistant Professor or Korean Literary and Cultural Studies, McGill University

    Michelle Cho
    Chair
    Assistant Professor, Department of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Co-Sponsors

    Asian Institute

    Centre for the Study of Korea


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 6th Shirdi Sai Baba’s Present: Routes, Repositories and Refabulations

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 6, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 208N, Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    Sir Christopher Ondaatje Lecture on South Asian Art, History and Culture

    Description

    This event is part of the Sir Christopher Ondaatje Lecture Series on South Asian Art, History and Culture

     

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    In this talk, Srinivas poses the following question: What is the relationship between Shirdi Sai Baba’s images, their powers, ocular or otherwise, and their  disposition in urban — rather than national — space? Beginning with the exploration of four routes or trajectories for the memory and transmission of Shirdi Sai Baba’s charisma through various gurus and teachers to Indian and global publics after his passing in 1918, then the exploration of the spatial refabulations of Shirdi Sai Baba’s presence by focusing on Bangalore, a major metropolis and global city of 13 million people in southern India. On several roads and transport arteries, in public temples, roadside shrines, and markets, we see how architectural forms, rituals and worship, quotidian lives and corporeal practices of devotees come to be repositories of Shirdi Sai Baba’s urban presence in the present, as they connect the biographical with the material and spatiality with religiosity. To conclude, Srinivas will reflect on these processes of spatialization and associated constituencies and their significance for the (devotional) present.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKER

     

    Smriti Srinivas is a Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Davis, USA. She explores regimes of spatial, somatic, and symbolic production, particularly in cities and Indian Ocean worlds. Her most recent books include the coedited Devotional Spaces of a Global Saint: Shirdi Sai Baba’s Presence (2022); Reimagining Indian Ocean Worlds (2020, coedited); and A Place for Utopia: Urban Designs from South Asia (2015).


    Speakers

    Smriti Srinivas
    Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Davis


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Sponsors

    Asian Insititute

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for South Asian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, October 10th Bending not Broken: Redefining Asian Masculinity & Stories of Resilience

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, October 10, 20237:00PM - 9:00PMExternal Event, This event was held at Innis Town Hall, Innis College, 2 Sussex Street, St George Campus, University of Toronto, ON M5S 1J5
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    Description

    ABOUT THE EVENT

     

    This one-hour panel discussion, co-hosted by The Asian Institute and The Asian Gold Ribbon campaign, focuses on Redefining Asian Masculinity. It will engage debates about how North American societal expectations and definitions of Asian masculinity have relegated Asian men to the position of overlooked victims in a culture of toxic masculinity. The discussion will touch upon topics such as: mental health, social location, personal identity, societal influence, familial pressures, and immigration status. We invite you to join us in fostering an environment conducive to respectful dialogue and the development of safer spaces for difficult conversations. Together, let’s engage in a communal effort to deconstruct and reconstruct conceptions of Asian masculinity with the shared goals of understanding intersectionality/ies, enhancing visibility, instilling pride, and encouraging overall well-being.

     

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Devo Brown (he/him), has worked in the broadcast industry with over 15 years of experience. He’s spent most of those years in Toronto where he has hosted morning and afternoon drive shows on FLOW 93.5 FM as well as the highly rated ‘Devo Brown Show’, evenings on KiSS 92.5 FM. Devo took his experience – and face made for radio – to make the leap into the world of television. Devo is currently seen daily across Canada on Breakfast Television – a national morning television show. His experience and reputation as a great interviewer has led him to chat with many of the industry’s most sought after celebrities: Drake, Jennifer Lawrence, Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, Billie Eilish, Jamie Foxx, Rihanna, Michael B. Jordan, Nicole Kidman, Jon Bon Jovi, Harrison Ford, Mariah Carey, Hilary Swank, just to name a few. Many athletes, filmmakers, creators, and entrepreneurs have also shared their stories with Devo. When he’s not connecting with viewers on social media Devo’s fun, upbeat, and laid-back personality keeps his schedule busy. He is a highly sought-after host of major events such as concerts, festivals, corporate functions, charitable events, parties, competitions and more across Canada and the United States.

     

    (Welcome Remarks) Carol Chin (she/her), is an Associate Professor for the Department of History at University of Toronto. Her research and teaching interests are in late nineteenth- through twentieth-century American foreign relations, specializing in U.S.-East Asian relations. Her particular interest is in the intersection of national identity with concepts of empire, culture, and gender and the ways in which these themes can enhance the study of international relations. She is the author of “Beneficent Imperialists: American Women Missionaries in China at the Turn of the Century” (Diplomatic History 2003); “Translating the New Woman: Chinese Feminists View the West, 1905-1915” (Gender and History 2006); and Modernity and National Identity in the United States and East Asia, 1895–1919 (Kent State University Press 2010). In 2022-23 she co-chaired the university’s Anti-Asian Racism Working Group.

     

    Robert Diaz (he/him), is an Associate Professor in the Women and Gender Studies Institute (WGSI) at University of Toronto. His research focuses on the experiences of sexual minorities in Asia, with particular attention to diasporic communities in the transpacific, Southeast Asia, and the Philippines. He examines transnational representations of sexual minority Filipinos in contemporary new media, film, and popular culture in order to better understand how notions of human rights, national belonging, and social justice are embodied across different cultural, historical, and political contexts. Collectively, his work broadly identifies the shared barriers that many sexual, gender, and racial minorities face globally.

     

    William Lou (he/him), is a podcast and radio host and writer for TV. He hosts a TV and radio daily and a podcast. He has previously worked at theScore, Raptors Republic, and Yahoo Sports Canada.

     

    Alex Wong (he/him), is a writer, author, and content producer based in Toronto. He has written about basketball and culture for publications including The New Yorker, GQ SLAM, The New York Times, and The Atlantic. He is the author of Cover Story: The NBA and Modern Basketball as Told Through Its Most Iconic Magazine Covers and PreHistoric:  he Audaciou and Improbable Origin Story of the Toronto Raptors.  He co-authored the Canadian bestseller We The Champs:  The Toronto Raptors’ Historic Run to the 2019 NBA Title. Alex also has experience producing content with athletes and brands, working as a consultant and producer on Serge Ibaka’s “How Hungry Are You” and helping with the launch of Red Bull Canada’s partnership with Pascal Siakam. He currently produces and co-hosts “The Raptors Show with Will Lou” on Sportsnet 590 The Fan.

     

    (Moderator) Joseph Wong (he/him), is a Professor at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, as well as in the Department of Political Science and serves as the Vice President, International, for the University of Toronto. He was the Ralph and Roz Halbert Professor of Innovation at the Munk School through June 2023. He previously held the Canada Research Chair in Democratization, Health and Development for two full terms, ending 2016. Wong’s research interests are in comparative public policy and political economy. His latest book, From Development to Democracy: The Transformations of Modern Asia, was published by Princeton University Press in 2002. Professor Wong is also the host of the award-winning video series, Joe’s Basketball Diaries.

     

     

    ABOUT ASIAN GOLD RIBBON

     

    The Asian Gold Ribbon (AGR) Campaign is a platform developed for social change. We focus upon and celebrate the beauty of our Asian cultures and heritages and are united against all forms of racism. We stand in solidarity and support Asian mental health and wellbeing, amplify Asian voices, and educate to raise awareness. We unite to celebrate rather than hate.

     


    Speakers

    Carol Chin
    Welcome Remarks
    Associate Professor, Department of History, University of Toronto

    Joseph Wong
    Moderator
    Vice-President, International Professor, Department of Political Science Professor, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy

    Robert Diaz
    Speaker
    Associate Professor, Women and Gender Studies Institute, University of Toronto

    Devo Brown
    Speaker
    Entertainment Host, Breakfast Television

    Alex Wong
    Speaker
    Author Producer of "The Raptors Show with Will Lou"

    William Lou
    Speaker
    Host of "The Raptors Show with Will Lou"


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 11th Master of Global Affairs & Master of Business Administration (MGA/MBA) Information Session

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 11, 202311:00AM - 12:00PMExternal Event, This was an External Event
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    Description

    The combined Master of Global Affairs/Master of Business Administration (MGA/MBA) program provides students with an opportunity to integrate a truly international approach and perspective into their study of business and bring a business perspective to the study of global affairs. In three years, students earn two professional degrees from the University of Toronto — one from the Munk School and one from the Rotman School of Management.

     

    Come Join us for a Joint Admissions Information Session with Admissions Officers from the UofT’s Rotman School of Management and Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy.

    You will have the opportunity to learn more about this amazing combined degree program, the curriculum, degree requirements, how to apply, unparalleled employment statistics and much more.

     

    This event will take place in-person at Rotman School of Management, 105 Saint George Street, Room 392 (CIBC Room), Toronto, ON   M5S 3E6

     


    Speakers

    Chris Jones
    Assistant Director MBA Program

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer UofT, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 12th – Saturday, October 14th After Oil 3 Workshop

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 12, 20239:00AM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 'Munk Centre For International Studies - 1 Devonshire Place
    Friday, October 13, 20239:00AM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 'Munk Centre For International Studies - 1 Devonshire Place
    Saturday, October 14, 20239:00AM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 208N, 'Munk Centre For International Studies - 1 Devonshire Place
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 12th Natural Allies: Environment, Energy, and the History of US-Canada Relations, by Daniel Macfarlane

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 12, 202312:30PM - 2:00PMBoardroom and Library, This event took place in-person in the boardroom at 315, Munk School, 315 Bloor St., Toronto and online via Zoom
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    Description

    No two nations have exchanged natural resources, produced transborder environmental agreements, or cooperatively altered ecosystems on the same scale as Canada and the United States. Environmental and energy diplomacy have profoundly shaped both countries’ economies, politics, and landscapes for over 150 years.

     

    Natural Allies looks at the history of US-Canada relations through an environmental lens. From fisheries in the late nineteenth century to oil pipelines in the twenty-first century, Daniel Macfarlane recounts the scores of transborder environmental and energy arrangements made between the two nations. Many became global precedents that influenced international environmental law, governance, and politics, including the Boundary Waters Treaty, the Trail Smelter case, hydroelectric megaprojects, and the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreements. In addition to water, fish, wood, minerals, and myriad other resources, Natural Allies details the history of the continental energy relationship – from electricity to uranium to fossil fuels -showing how Canada became vital to American strategic interests and, along with the United States, a major international energy power and petro-state.

     

    Environmental and energy relations facilitated the integration and prosperity of Canada and the United States but also made these countries responsible for the current climate crisis and other unsustainable forms of ecological degradation. Looking to the future, Natural Allies argues that the concept of national security must be widened to include natural security – a commitment to public, national, and international safety from environmental harms, especially those caused by human actions.

     

     


    Speakers

    Daniel Macfarlane
    Associate Professor, School of the Environment, Geography, and Sustainability, Western Michigan University


    Main Sponsor

    The Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History

    Co-Sponsors

    The Bill Graham Centre for Contemporary International History


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 12th Unveiling the Interplay Between Digital Technologies and Skills

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 12, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person in Seminar Room 108N, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON.
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    Series

    IPL - Speaker Series

    Description

    Advanced digital technologies (DTs), such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), Big Data, Cloud Computing, 3D Printing/Additive Manufacturing, Internet of Things (IoT) and Robotics, are changing the process to develop, produce and deliver products, processes and services. They are considered important drivers of higher demand for skilled labour and improved job quality and productivity increase (Lane and Saint-Martin, 2021). Classified under the “Industry 4.0” phenomenon driving the ‘Fourth Industrial Revolution’ (4IR), these six DTs are defined as the “next generation digital technologies” because of their capacity to be disruptive, pervasive, and transformational (Cho, et al., 2022; Martinelli et al., 2021; Schwab, 2016). Due to their unprecedented potential for technological change and important transformation of industries, labour markets and societies (OECD, 2016), it is expected that they will boost competitiveness and innovation across regions and business through the integration of new value-adding technologies into the existing ones (Bayley and De Propris, 2019; EC, 2017).

     

    However, readiness for technological development and adoption of DTs remains a critical factor and, specifically, internal capabilities and changes in the skills knowledge base have been recently identified as key elements for firms to be better prepared to access and adopt new DTs (Coro et al., 2021). Based on this framework, this work has two objectives. First, we investigate the development of DTs and skills as a co-evolutionary phenomenon focusing on the spatial distribution of Industry 4.0 in the UK. It contributes to the current literature on evolutionary economic geography by shedding light on the evolution of technological trajectories in regions as local repositories of competences and knowledge. Second, we move into firm level analysis to analyse how pervasive is the adoption and use of advanced DTs and what are the dynamics of technology adoption and organizational skills required to adopt the most advanced technologies by firms. Using the distinctive case of Greater Manchester and a unique bespoke survey the study reveals patterns of firms’ adoption of DTs and skills; the underlying motivations and potential barriers towards digital transformation within individual firms; and it explores the influence of digitalisation on firms’ productivity.  

     

    About the speaker

    Mabel Sánchez Barrioluengo is Senior Lecturer in Science Policy and Innovation at the Alliance Manchester Business School and Deputy Director of the Manchester Institute of Innovation Research. Previously she worked as Research Fellow at the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission in the area of Human Capital and Employment. She has a degree in Statistics and holds a PhD from the Technical University of Valencia and INGENIO (CSIC-UPV) in Spain with a particular focus on the economics of higher education. Her main research interests are in the involvement of universities in economic development, university-society collaborations, and the relationship between digital technologies, skills, employment and human capital. Her research has been published in several international journals like Research Policy, Scientometrics, Science and Public Policy, Regional Studies, etc.


    Speakers

    Mabel Sánchez Barrioluengo
    Senior Lecturer, Science Policy and Innovation, Alliance Manchester Business School; Deputy Director, Manchester Institute of Innovation Research



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 12th From Democracy to Gender Apartheid: Canada's Foreign Policy and the Deteriorating Human Rights Situation in Afghanistan

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 12, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This hybrid event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto and online via Zoom.
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    Description

    In the midst of an ever-evolving and dire situation in Afghanistan, where the transition from a fragile democracy to a disheartening state of Gender Apartheid compounded by Humanitarian crisis, and growing security threats, this event examines the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan under Taliban rule. It focuses on Canada’s foreign policy towards the country, addressing the competing priorities between upholding human rights, women’s rights, and civil liberties on one side and tackling the dire humanitarian conditions potentially faced by its people on the other.

     

    During the event, the Farsi translation of Professor Karima Bennoune’s treatise on “Gender Apartheid in Afghanistan” will also be launched/distributed by AISS.

     

     

    About the Speakers:

     

    Aisha Ahmad is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto, a Senior Fellow at Massey College, and a Member of the Royal Society of Canada’s College of New Scholars, Artists, and Scientists. She is the author of the multiple award-winning book Jihad & Co.: Black Markets and Islamist Power (Oxford University Press, 2017), and the forthcoming edited volume Securing Canada’s Future: Vital Insights from Women Experts (University of Toronto Press, 2024). Her article, “The Security Bazaar,” published in the flagship journal International Security, won the 2017 Best Security Article Award from the International Studies Association. Her article “The Long Jihad: The Boom-Bust Cycle Behind Jihadist Durability” was awarded Best Article in the Journal of Global Security Studies for 2021. With respect to her teaching, Dr. Ahmad is the 2018 winner of the Northrop Frye Award of Excellence for outstanding contributions to co-curricular learning and pedagogical innovation, and the 2018 recipient of the University of Toronto, Scarborough Campus (UTSC) Assistant Professor Award for outstanding contributions to undergraduate teaching at the Scarborough campus. She has conducted fieldwork in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia, Mali, Iraq, and Lebanon, and has spent over a decade advising senior leaders in military, government, and international organizations on global security policy.

     

    Zarqa Yaftali is a peace builder and an advocate for women’s and children rights, in Afghanistan. She is founder of Women and Children Research and Advocacy Network. Since 2007, she has served as Executive Director of the Women and Children Legal Research Foundation (WCLRF), where she has conducted legal and field research in Afghanistan on the topic of violence and discrimination against women and girls, access to education, women participation in peace process  as well as sexual harassment against women, access to justice, and property rights.  She is founder of Women and Children Research and Advocacy Network. In October 2020, on the occasion of the 20th-anniversary of UNSCR 1325, she was selected to represent civil society and brief at the UN Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security.  She also briefed the UNSC about protecting the participation of women peace makers on 19 January 2021. She was also recognized for her tireless advocacy as the recipient of UNDP’s prestigious 2019 N-Peace Award, which highlights the contributions of peacebuilders toward implementation of the WPS agenda. Yaftali was member of the High Council for National Reconciliation. She is also member of various national and regional civil society organizations and advocacy groups, including the Secretariat of the Civil Society Joint Working Group, board member of Women Living under Muslim Laws WLUML, Champion of girl’s education in Afghanistan, Co-Chair of the Women, Peace Security  Working Group, Member of International Civil society Network ICAN and board member of the Women Regional Network.

     

    Bilal Sarwary is an Afghan journalist who has worked extensively with Western media. He has covered Afghanistan for the BBC since 2001, the year in which the US-led invasion toppled the Taliban. He is an independent scholar majoring in the central linkages between warfare, drugs and terrorism. He graduated from Middlebury College, Vermont in 2010. His thesis was entitled The Farcification of Taliban, and it involved a comparison of Columbia’s FARC with the Afghanistan’s Taliban insurgency.

     

    Zuhal Ahad is a journalist from Afghanistan who is currently an associate editor at Chatelaine; a Canadian magazine. Zuhal is a 2022-2023 William Southam Journalism Fellow at Massey College of the University of Toronto. Previously, she has worked as a multimedia Women’s Affairs journalist with the BBC in Afghanistan from 2018 to 2022. After the fall of Afghanistan, Zuhal has published articles related to human rights and Women’s rights violations on the Guardian, NPR, TRT, the National and Al Jazeera. Zuhal holds two bachelor’s degrees; a major in Business administration; focusing in management from the American university of Afghanistan and bachelors in communication and journalism from Kabul university.

     

    Moderator:

     

    Shoaib Rahim is an Associate Professor of Practice at the American University of Afghanistan and is currently also lecturing a course on Afghanistan at The Munk School CERES Program of the University of Toronto. He is the former Deputy Mayor and Mayor of Kabul and also closely involved in Afghanistan peace delegation in the Doha peace process. He is a Fulbright Scholar and a New School Fellow.

     

    The event is co-sponsored by the Afghanistan Institute for Strategic Studies (AISS), the Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, the Eurasia Initiative, and the Asian Institute of the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the University of Toronto.

     


    Speakers

    Aisha Ahmad
    Speaker
    Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto

    Zarqa Yaftali
    Speaker
    Director of the Women and Children Research and Advocacy Network

    Bilal Sarwary
    Speaker
    Journalist

    Zuhal Ahad
    Speaker
    Journaist

    Shoaib Rahim
    Moderator
    Associate Professor of Practice, American University of Afghanistan



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 12th From Democracy to Gender Apartheid: Canada's Foreign Policy and the Deteriorating Human Rights Situation in Afghanistan

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 12, 20234:00PM - 7:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, 'Munk Centre For International Studies - 1 Devonshire Place
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 13th Perspectives on Feminist Political Economy and Gendered Labour in India (Part I)

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 13, 202310:00AM - 11:30AMOnline Event, This event was held on Zoom, Online Event
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    Description

    A two part series, join our online panel of experts as we engage with different perspectives on feminist political economy and gendered labour in India. The next discussion will be held in November.

     

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    Feminist political economy focuses on the inextricable link between the spheres of production and reproduction which leads to the systemic gendering and racialization of work. Of particular significance is the notion of “social reproduction” which includes not only the domestic and care work which allows people to be fed, clothed and rested so they can perform their jobs, but also the emotional and aesthetic reproductive labour through which people maintain their material conditions and identities as workers. The gendered dimension of contemporary neoliberal accumulation also shapes new forms of exploitation and subordination of women’s labour and bodies within intimate relationships and widens fractures along caste, and religious lines. These ideas will be explored through a two-part series based on ethnographic research.

     

    The maintenance of the infrastructure of transnational firms in India requires the labour of low-wage service workers such as security guards, drivers and housekeepers. This talk will highlight the experiences of these workers who maintain India’s lavish multinational firms. These workers are required not only to learn new ways of working but also to transform their identities and embodied aesthetics. Workers receive training so they can develop what they call a “body personality” deemed appropriate for employment in transnational organizational spaces, while at the same time comprising an informal labour force with low wages, little job stability and weak employment relationships. Drawing on feminist political economy, the talk will explore workers’ productive and reproductive labour as well as the caste-based, gendered stories of immobility and exclusion which underlies India’s technology boom.

    The talk draws on the authors’ recent book Low Wage in High Tech: An Ethnography of Service Workers in Global India (Oxford University Press).

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Sanjukta Mukherjee is an Associate Professor at the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies at DePaul University. Dr. Mukherjee’s research and teaching interests lie at the intersection of feminist political economy, critical development studies and urban geographies with a focus on neoliberal globalization, transnational service work and social transformations centered on the politics of gender, class, caste, race and age in South Asia and its diaspora. She is co-author of Low Wage in High Tech: An Ethnography of Service Workers in Global India (Oxford University Press, 2020). Her research has been published in journals like Gender, Place and Culture, The Professional Geographer, International Migration Review and several anthologies and edited volumes.

     

    Shruti Tambe is the Head, Department of Sociology, Center for Advanced Studies, and the Director, Euroculture, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune. Dr. Tambe’s rearch interests include social movements, labour, Social Policy, Qualitative Social Research and Social Theory. Her most recent publication is ‘Women Workers in Urban India’.

     

    Kiran Mirchandani is a Professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto. Dr. Mirchandani’s research and teaching focuses on gendered and racialized processes in the workplace; critical perspectives on organizational development and learning; criminalization and welfare policy; and globalization and economic restructuring. Using qualitative, interpretive approaches, her work is based on qualitative interviews with transnational service workers in India and workers in precarious jobs in Canada.

     

    (Moderator) Reena Kukreja is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Global Development Studies, Queens University. She is cross-appointed as Adjunct Assistant Professor in the Cultural Studies Program at Queen’s University. She is also Visiting Fellow at the International Migration Research Centre at the Balsillie School of International Affairs, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo. Dr. Kukreja’s current research examines the intersections of xenophobia, Islamophobia, securitization of borders, and the politics of citizenship and migration in shaping hierarchies of masculinities and masculine identity formation among undocumented South Asian male migrants from Bangladesh, Pakistan, and India in Greece.


    Speakers

    Kiran Mirchandani
    Chair
    OISE, University of Toronto

    Sanjukhta Mukherjee
    Speaker
    Associate Professor, Department of Women’s and Gender Studies, DePaul University

    Shruti Tambe
    Speaker
    Head, Department of Sociology, Center for Advanced Studies, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune Director, Euroculture, Savitribai Phule Pune University, Pune

    Reena Kukreja
    Moderator
    Assistant Professor, Department of Global Development Studies, Queens University Adjunct Assistant Professor, Cultural Studies Program, Queen’s University



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 13th Soviet Industrial Architecture and Its Afterlife in Eastern Ukraine

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 13, 202312:00PM - 2:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event was held at 108N, North House,1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Christina E. Crawford provides historical context for the present-day destruction of industrial architecture in Eastern Ukraine by Russia through focus on Kharkiv, the first capital of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic (1919-34). In research drawn from her recent book, Spatial Revolution: Architecture and Planning in the Early Soviet Union (Cornell University Press, 2022), Crawford will discuss how, in the 1920s and ‘30s during Stalin’s first Five-Year Plan for industrialization, Soviet authorities invested heavily in capital projects in Kharkiv and the Donbas, a territory rich in the natural commodities of iron ore, coal, and grain. A late-breaking decision to construct a tractor factory on Kharkiv’s outskirts pushed Ukrainian architects to embrace intense design standardization not only for the factory, but for its residential sector as well. New Kharkiv, the so-called socialist city designed by Ukrainian architects for tractor factory workers, utilized standardized housing, social service buildings, and even repeatable urban blocks to ensure swift construction. Industrial architecture innovations developed with the help of American technical consultants at New Kharkiv were then harnessed by the increasingly centralized Soviet planning regime to quickly construct other industrial enterprises in the region. The Azovstal Steel Factory in Mariupol, where Ukrainian soldiers made a final stand against Russian occupiers in Spring 2022, too, has its roots in the early Soviet period, as Crawford will discuss.

     

     

     

    Contact

    Olga Kesarchuk
    416-946-8938


    Speakers

    Christina E. Crawford
    Speaker
    Masse-Martin NEH Professor of Art History, Emory University

    Ksenya Kiebuzinski
    Chair
    Co-Director of the Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine; Head of the Petro Jacyk Central and East European Resource Centre, University of Toronto Libraries

    Natalia Barykina
    Discussant
    Reference Specialist, Petro Jacyk Central and East European Resource Centre, University of Toronto Libraries


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 13th Centre for the Study of Korea Speaker Series

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 13, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 108N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.

    Contact

    Naseem


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 13th Ambassadors reflect in the wake of the Hamas attack on Israel

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 13, 20234:00PM - 5:00PMBloor - Classroom, This event has been relocated to Room 160 at the Canadiana Gallery, 14 Queen's Park Crescent West, Toronto ON.
    Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    The events in Israel and Gaza are unfolding quickly following the reprehensible Hamas attacks across Israel last weekend and we at the Munk School know that this continues to be deeply difficult and troubling for many in our community. 

     

    On Friday, October 13 at 4pm the Munk School will host a closed-door conversation for MPP and MGA students in room This event has been relocated to Room 160 at the Canadiana Gallery, 14 Queen’s Park Crescent West, Toronto ON. The purpose of the event is to discuss and understand how events are likely to unfold, how different actors are viewing the events, and what role diplomacy plays in situations like this. 

     

    Two of our Fellows have agreed to make some opening remarks and then field questions. Jon Allen is previously Canada’s Ambassador to Israel and Palestine, and has been deeply committed to the pursuit of peace in the region. Arif Lalani is previously Canada’s Ambassador to Afghanistan, Jordan, Iraq, and the UAE, and worked for several years heading diplomacy for His Highness, the Aga Khan. He has deep regional and diplomatic expertise to share on this issue. 

     

    If you have questions you want answered, please send them to Ana Cardoso (ana.cardoso@utoronto.ca) ahead of time. Ana will compile them and Jon and Arif can review ahead of time to prepare responses. Of course, we will have time and space for questions in the discussion as well. We want to conduct this conversation with the collegiality and concern for others that it requires. 

     

    This event is entirely optional and we at the School understand that this topic is deeply personal and difficult for many of you. As always, your professors and other services at the University are here for you to discuss these issues. You’re under no obligation to join us on Friday.


    Speakers

    Jon Allen
    Former Canadian Ambassador to Israel and Palestine

    Arif Lalani
    Former Canadian Ambassador to Afghanistan, Jordan, Iraq, and the UAE



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 13th War in the Middle East

    This event has been relocated

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 13, 20234:00PM - 5:00PMBoardroom and Library, This event has been relocated to Room 160 at the Canadiana Gallery, 14 Queen's Park Crescent West, Toronto ON.
    + Register for this Event Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    The events in Israel and Gaza are unfolding quickly following the reprehensible Hamas attacks across Israel last weekend and we at the Munk School know that this continues to be deeply difficult and troubling for many in our community.

     

    On Friday, October 13 at 4pm the Munk School will host a closed-door conversation for MPP and MGA students in room This event has been relocated to Room 160 at the Canadiana Gallery, 14 Queen’s Park Crescent West, Toronto ON. The purpose of the event is to discuss and understand how events are likely to unfold, how different actors are viewing the events, and what role diplomacy plays in situations like this.

     

    Two of our Fellows have agreed to make some opening remarks and then field questions. Jon Allen is previously Canada’s Ambassador to Israel and Palestine, and has been deeply committed to the pursuit of peace in the region. Arif Lalani is previously Canada’s Ambassador to Afghanistan, Jordan, Iraq, and the UAE, and worked for several years heading diplomacy for His Highness, the Aga Khan. He has deep regional and diplomatic expertise to share on this issue.

     

    If you have questions you want answered, please send them to Ana Cardoso (ana.cardoso@utoronto.ca) ahead of time. Ana will compile them and Jon and Arif can review ahead of time to prepare responses. Of course, we will have time and space for questions in the discussion as well. We want to conduct this conversation with the collegiality and concern for others that it requires.

     

    This event is entirely optional and we at the School understand that this topic is deeply personal and difficult for many of you. As always, your professors and other services at the University are here for you to discuss these issues. You’re under no obligation to join us on Friday.


    Speakers

    Jon Allen
    Former Canadian Ambassador to Israel and Palestine

    Arif Lalani
    Former Canadian Ambassador to Afghanistan, Jordan, Iraq, and the UAE



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 13th Book Talk by Dr. Jeehey Kim "Photography and Korea"

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 13, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMExternal Event, This event was held in the EAS Lounge, Robarts Library, 130 St. George Street, 14th floor
    + Register for this Event Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    ABOUT THE BOOK TALK

     

    Photography and Korea is the first history of Korean photography for a Western readership. Going beyond nationalist historiography, my book avoids depicting Korea as a monolithic entity. Instead, it acknowledges that Korea, as well as Asia in a broader context, has always been interconnected within the intricate web of global socio-political forces.

    In pursuit of this perspective, the book unveils various facets of Korea, encompassing the divided North and South, Korea as perceived through the lens of foreign observers, and the dispersion of Korean communities across the world.

    The book introduces diverse foreign nationals—European, American, and Japanese—who were involved in visualizing Korea through photography, not merely to suggest that they influenced photographic practices in Korea, but, more importantly, to foreground the interconnectedness among photographic activities around the world. In turn, the history of Japanese photography during the 1920s and ’30s cannot be understood solely through exploring photographic practices on the island; its ambit can be fathomed best by also considering the dynamics of photography in its colonies. Likewise, European and American photographers’ enterprises on the Korean peninsula constitute a crucial part of the history of photography of the region, extending beyond the margins to which they have previously been relegated.

    Jeehey Kim is an assistant professor in the art history program at the School of Art, University of Arizona. She earned a PhD in Art History at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. She has been writing on vernacular photographic practices and on documentary films and visual culture in relation to the Cold War and gender politics in East Asia. At the University of Arizona, she launched a series of symposia on Asian photography with the Center for Creative Photography in the Spring of 2022. She is currently working on her second book project on funerary use of portrait photography in East Asia.


    Speakers

    Dr. Jeehey Kim


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Saturday, October 14th MGA & MPP Online Admissions Information Session

    DateTimeLocation
    Saturday, October 14, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMOnline Event, This was an Online Event
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    Description

    The Graduate Admissions Officer will host an Online Admissions Information session, providing you with all the essential details about our two outstanding master’s degree programs: the Master of Global Affairs & the Master of Public Policy. During this session, you will learn about our admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, internships, capstone courses, unparalleled employment statistics, and so much more! Don’t miss out on this valuable opportunity—register today! 


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, October 16th Campaign Steering Committee Meeting

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, October 16, 202312:00PM - 7:00PMBoardroom and Library, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.

    Contact

    Alexandra Kavanagh


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, October 16th The Revival of Bangkok as a Chinese City: Cinema and Media

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, October 16, 20235:30PM - 7:30PMExternal Event, This event was held in the The Deluxe™ Screening Room at Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue, University of Toronto
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    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    Across Southeast Asia and East Asia real estate and hospitality ventures, cinema and new media, lifestyle brands, and wellness businesses currently draw on Chinese pasts and the aesthetics of colonial modernity as the privileged aesthetics of the good life. As film directors, hotels, bars, and clubs revive 1930s Shanghai and 1960s Hong Kong modernities—and exploit the materiality of Bangkok’s Chinese neighborhoods—this redeployment of (semi)colonial histories and urban pasts is emerging as the primary signifier of a desirable Asian cosmopolitanism but also as the grounds for political critique. Bangkok as a Chinese city stands at the center of these developments. Both nationally and internationally the city represents a paradigmatic site of fantasy that provides for a particular elasticity of place and time and, by extension, of personhood and belonging. This talk inquires into the ways that contemporary Thai films such as Happy Old Life (2019) and Bad Genius (2017) take part in this conversation.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Arnika Fuhrmann, Profesor of Asian Studies and Comparative Literature at Cornell University, is an interdisciplinary scholar of Southeast Asia working at the intersections of the region’s aesthetic, religious, and political modernities. She is the author of Ghostly Desires: Queer Sexuality and Vernacular Buddhism in Contemporary Thai Cinema (2016) and Teardrops of Time: Buddhist Aesthetics in the Poetry of Angkarn Kallayanapong (2020).

     

    (Moderator) Elizabeth Wijaya, Director of the Southeast Asia Seminar Series at the Asian Institute, and Assistant Professor in the Department of Visual Studies and the Cinema Studies Institute at the University of Toronto. Wijaya works at the intersection of cinema, philosophy, and area studies. She is especially interested in the material and symbolic entanglements between East Asia and Southeast Asia cinema. Her work emphasizes a multimethodological approach, which is attentive to media forms, ethnographic detail, material realities, archival practices, international networks, and interdisciplinary modes of theorization. 


    Speakers

    Arnika Fuhrmann
    Speaker
    Professor, Department of Asian Studies, Cornell University

    Elizabeth Wijaya
    Moderator
    Director, Southeast Asia Seminar Series, Asian Institute Assistant Professor, Department of Visual Studies, University of Toronto Assistant Professor, Cinema Studies Institute, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute

    Co-Sponsors

    Asian Insititute

    Cinema Studies

    Southeast Asia Seminar Series


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, October 17th A&S Academic Leaders’ Workshop

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, October 17, 20239:00AM - 1:00PMSeminar Room 108N, 'Munk Centre For International Studies - 1 Devonshire Place
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, October 17th – Tuesday, October 31st Munk School Communications and Events Meeting

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, October 17, 202310:00AM - 11:00AMOstry Lounge, Second Floor, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Tuesday, October 24, 202310:00AM - 11:00AMOstry Lounge, Second Floor, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Tuesday, October 31, 202310:00AM - 11:00AMOstry Lounge, Second Floor, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 18th Organizing for Survival: Disability Advocacy during Russia's War Against Ukraine, from refugees to veterans

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 18, 202312:00PM - 1:30PMOnline Event, This was an Online Event
    + Register for this Event Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Virtual Event presented by the Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine and the Centre for Global Disability Studies at the University of Toronto

     

    Disability advocacy is an often-overlooked arena of human rights civic organizing. This roundtable brings together three researchers with new and on-the-ground knowledge of the impacts of the war on disability advocacy and policy and on disabled people and their families. Drawing on expertise, research, and activism, panelists will discuss experiences of wounded Ukrainian soldiers; the impact of the war on disabled civilians and how disability advocacy networks and organizations led by disabled people have responded, in both Ukraine and in neighboring Poland to support disabled refugees. Taken together, a new picture of disability experience in war time begins to emerge, as well as a deeply changed political landscape for disability advocacy. What are the lived experiences of living with or acquiring disability in Ukraine (or of fleeing Ukraine) in war time? How are disability advocacy leaders understanding the task at hand? What is needed now? What global networks or historical examples are useful in a situation like this one?

    Contact

    Olga Kesarchuk
    416-946-8938


    Speakers

    Dr. Magdalena Szarota
    Speaker
    Department of Sociology, Lancaster University Researcher and expert in human rights advocacy. Researching response to disability refugee crisis caused by the Russian invasion to Ukraine.

    Hanna Zaremba
    Speaker
    Department of Social Anthropology, Ethnology Institute of Ukraine; Researcher studying Ukrainian disability activism in the context of the 2022 invasion

    Ivan Shmatko
    Speaker
    Department of Sociology, University of Alberta; Researcher conducting a project on experiences of wounded Ukrainian soldiers as part of the veteran human rights organization Pryntsyp.

    Dr. Cassandra Hartblay
    Chair
    CERES and Centre for Global Disability Studies, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Petro Jacyk Program for the Study of Ukraine

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for Global Disability Studies

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 18th Ten Thousand Years of Patriarchy - Fellows Lunch with Alice Evans

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 18, 202312:30PM - 2:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event will be held at 208N, North House,1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    + Register for this Event Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    This lunch seminar, exclusively for Munk School students, is an opportunity to meet in a small group with Munk School Fellow-in-Residence Alice Evans.

    Alice Evans a Senior Lecturer at King’s College London, with previous appointments at Cambridge and London School of Economics. She has published on gender, urbanization, the drivers of social change and inequality.

    In this informal seminar, Dr. Evans will speak about her forthcoming book, “The Great Gender Divergence”, the first ever global history of gender, tracing the origins of patriarchy, cultural evolution, how the world became more gender equal and why some countries are more gender equal than others.

    Students are encouraged to come with questions about any country in the world. In addition to the opportunity to learn about Dr. Evans’ work, students will also hear how and why Dr. Evans chose to study what she does.


    Speakers

    Alice Evans
    Fellow-in-Residence, Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, Senior Lecturer, King's College London


    Main Sponsor

    Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy

    Sponsors

    Munk School of Global Afairs & Public Policy


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 19th – Friday, October 20th Humanitarianism, Intervention, and Sovereignty. European and Global Perspectives on the History of Humanitarian Interventionism since 1945

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 19, 20238:00AM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person in seminar room 108N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto ON
    Thursday, October 19, 20238:00AM - 5:00PMSecond Floor Lounge, This event took place in-person in seminar room 108N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto ON
    Friday, October 20, 20238:00AM - 5:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person in seminar room 108N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto ON
    Friday, October 20, 20238:00AM - 5:00PMSecond Floor Lounge, This event took place in-person in seminar room 108N, North House, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto ON
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    The event is open only to the University of Toronto faculty, staff and students.

     

    The conference intends focuses on the global debates surrounding state sovereignty and (humanitarian) interventionism during emergencies situations since 1945 and addresses the interdependence of humanitarian assistance and humanitarian intervention as well as its local implementations.

     

    This event was funded by the DAAD with funds from the German Federal Foreign Office (AA).

     

    Sponsored by Joint Initiative in German and European Studies. Co-sponsored by the Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies.

     

    Contact

    Olga Kesarchuk
    416-946-8938

    Main Sponsor

    Joint Initiative in German and European Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for Euopean, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service)


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 19th On NATO’s Frontline: The View from Estonia

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 19, 20231:00PM - 2:00PMBoardroom and Library, This event took place in-person in the Boardroom at the Observatory, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, 315 Bloor St. W., Toronto ON.
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Estonia is a small frontline NATO and EU member which is playing an oversized role in the Western response to Russia’s war against Ukraine. Estonia has provided more aid per capita to Ukraine than any other country, devoting 1.3% of its entire GDP to help resist aggression. Estonia has been working to bolster European security and maintain Transatlantic unity. Minister Tshakna will give a short overview of what has been done so far and what needs to be done in the future, including holding Russia accountable for its war crimes.

     

    Speaker bio:

     

    Margus Tsahkna is Minister of Foreign Affairs of Estonia and has previously also served as Minister of Defence and Minister of Social Welfare. He has been the Secretary-General of the Pro Patria Union, but is now a member of the leadership of the new liberal party Estonia 200. He was born in Tartu in 1977, studied law at the University of Tartu, and enjoys singing.

     


    Speakers

    Margus Tsahkna
    Speaker
    Minister of Foreign Affairs of Estonia

    Andres Kasekamp
    Moderator
    Chair of Estonian Studies, Professor of History, Munk School



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 19th Waterloo University's Further Education Fair

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 19, 20231:00PM - 4:00PMExternal Event, This was an External Event
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    Description

    The Munk School’s Graduate Admission’s Officer will be attending Waterloo University’s Further Education Fair.

    Waterloo University students will have the opportunity to get all the information they need about our two outstanding professional master degree programs: The Master of Global Affairs & Master of Public Policy!

    Attendees will gain insights into the Admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, our unparalleled employment statistics, mandatory internships, Capstone courses, Professional Development workshops, and much more!


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 19th CSUS Graduate Student Workshop

    This event has been cancelled

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 19, 20234:00PM - 5:30PMSeminar Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 20th Faculty Meeting

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 20, 202310:00AM - 12:00PMBoardroom and Library, 315 Bloor Street West, Toronto, ON, M5S 0A7
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    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 20th Feminist Translation as Research and Writing Practice for Scholars Working Between Languages

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 20, 202310:00AM - 12:30PMExternal Event, This workshop was held at the EAS Lounge, Robarts Library (14th Floor), 130 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3H1
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    Description

    ABOUT THE WORKSHOP

     

    This workshop will be a space where scholars working between languages can consider feminist translation as an informative practice that helps us to be more deliberate about some of the many decisions that have to be made when presenting one language in another for the purposes of scholarly, activist and creative work. Guided by the concerns, questions and examples that participants bring with them, the workshop will be facilitated by literary translation scholar Sun Kyoung Yoon and graduate student and translator Sophie Bowman. We will explore various definitions of feminist translation and what it can mean in practice, using examples from recent translations and translation debates. Students, faculty and scholars from all disciplines are welcome. Participants are encouraged to prepare one or two questions or discussion points in advance. Lunch will be provided, but spaces are limited, so please register in advance.

     

    ABOUT THE FACILITATORS

     

    Sun Kyoung Yoon is an Associate Professor of literary translation at the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. Her research interests include English translations of Korean literature, decolonising translation, and translation and gender. She has published many articles on literary translation in international journals such as The Translator, Target, Perspectives, Journal of Gender Studies and Acta Koreana. Recently, her article ‘Fidelity or Infidelity? The Mistranslation Controversy over The Vegetarian’ that deals with translation and gender has been published in Target.

     

    Sophie Bowman is a PhD candidate in East Asian Studies at the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on women’s textual depictions of everyday life in 1950s South Korea. Sophie has also translated multiple works of literature from the Korean, including Kim Boyoung’s I’m Waiting for You and Other Stories (with Sung Ryu, Harper Voyager, 2021) and Pak Kyongni’s “The Sickness No Medicine Can Fix” (published in The Age of Doubt, Honford Star, 2022).

    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 20th Vaccine Politics in Western Europe

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 20, 202312:00PM - 1:30PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person in Seminar Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    This talk will examine the politics of vaccinations in Europe: how do governments ensure that their populations are vaccinated, and why do they use different approaches? Kurzer’s focus will be on Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany. The academic literature identifies trust (general, science, medical) and administrative capacity as the most common political and policy factors influencing vaccination rate. Trust in the government plays an important role in the decisions of individuals to accept a vaccine or not. A second factor is public administration or state capacity in delivering vaccines, mapping out vaccine campaigns, deciding on access, and neutralizing the impact of anti-vaccine forces on vaccination campaigns. The literature concludes that countries with high levels of trust and high administrative capacity have high vaccination rates. By comparing the three countries, the talk presents findings that question the conventional wisdom as neither administrative capacity nor trust seem to explain variations in the first round of COVID-19 vaccinations.   

     

    Paulette Kurzer’s expertise is European politics. She has published widely on the European Union and her specific focus is the politics of EU consumer protection, public health, and housing. Her other research project is the comparative political economy of the small states in Western Europe. She teaches courses in comparative politics, advanced industrialized states, and European politics. She is the Director of the Online Graduate Program in International Security.   This lecture is in part funded by the DAAD with funds from the German Federal Foreign Office (AA).


    Speakers

    Paulette Kurzer
    Speaker
    Professor, School of Government and Public Policy, University of Arizona

    Alexander Reisenbichler
    Chair
    Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto; JIGES Research Coordinator, CERES



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 20th Gender and Translation Practice in Myeong-sun Kim’s Lonely People and When You Look Back

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 20, 20231:30PM - 3:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event was held in Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    CSK Speaker Series

    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    This talk examines the works of the “New Woman” Myeong-sun Kim (1896-1951), focusing on her two Korean translations of Gerhart Hauptman’s Lonely People (1891), namely Lonely People (1924) and When You Look Back (1925). While Kim’s translations are often regarded as early Korean novels due to their departure from a literal translation of the German play, I argue that they should be seen as feminist adaptations of the original work, with a distinct emphasis on narrative and characterization. Unlike Hauptman’s German play, which centers on a male protagonist struggling against traditional ideologies such as family and religion, Kim’s Korean novels foreground women’s suffering, free love, and independence. In doing so, they critique the practices of early marriage, concubinage, and patriarchy in Joseon during the Japanese colonial period. The transformation of the male narrative into a female narrative in Kim’s works highlights the importance of the translator’s characterization, with feminism playing a crucial role. Male characters are portrayed as feminists who understand and respect female characters, in contrast to the patriarchal German protagonist of the source text. Meanwhile, female characters are depicted as more independent and active owners of their own lives in the target texts. Kim resists the oppressive and suffocating patriarchal society, rewriting the German play into two feminist novels of Joseon.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    Sun Kyoung Yoon is Associate Professor of literary translation at the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. Her research interests include English translations of Korean literature, decolonising translation, and translation and gender. She has published many articles on literary translation in international journals such as The Translator, Target, Perspectives, Journal of Gender Studies and Acta Koreana. Recently, her article ‘Fidelity or Infidelity? The Mistranslation Controversy over The Vegetarian’ that deals with translation and gender has been published in Target.

     

    Chair: Camille (Ji Eun) Sung is an Arts & Science Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of East Asian Studies at the University of Toronto. Her primary research interest lies in artistic practices that actively employed non-conventional media, with a focus on their conversation with and operation within the socio-political conditions in Korea, and more broadly, in East Asia. Her research interests also include queer and feminist art practice, activism, and theory and the relationship between critical theory and praxis. She is working on her book project that examines how art and cultural practitioners responded to, participated in, or abstained from the modernization process in post-colonial Korea in the 1960s and the 1970s. Her work has been published in the Journal of History of Contemporary Art and will be included in the Routledge Companion to Art History and Feminisms.  


    Speakers

    Sun Kyoung Yoon
    Associate Professor, Literary Translation, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies

    Camille (Ji Eun) Sung
    Arts & Science Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of East Asian Studies Research Associate, Centre for the Study of Korea


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for the Study of Korea

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for the Study of Korea

    Asian Institute

    East Asian Studies Department, University of Toronto


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 20th We, the Data Book Launch

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 20, 20232:30PM - 3:30PMOstry Lounge, Second Floor,
    Friday, October 20, 20233:00PM - 6:30PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility,
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    Description

    As we go about our lives, we are co-creating data through what we do. And while our data-intensive world is here to stay, does it come at the cost of our humanity in terms of autonomy, community, dignity, and equality? Wendy H. Wong’s new book, We, The Data: Human Rights in the Digital Age (MIT Press, 2023) calls for an extension of human rights as current policies do not reflect our experiences in the era of datafication. Join Wong for an in-person event exploring the insights in her book.

     

    About this event

     

    On October 20, 2023, the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society (SRI) and the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy co-present Wong, professor of political science at UBC Okanagan and SRI faculty affiliate, in conversation with Anna Su, associate professor of law at the University of Toronto and SRI research lead, about the insights in Wong’s book. The conversation will be followed by an audience Q&A and reception. This in-person event will be recorded and posted online at a later date.

     

    About the book

     

    A rallying call for extending human rights beyond our physical selves, We, The Data makes the case that we are all stakeholders in holding data collectors accountable–more than mere subjects or sources of data by-products that can be harvested and used by technology companies and governments. We, The Data was written with the support of SRI during Wong’s time as one of the Institute’s inaugural research leads. It has been featured in Most Anticipated: 2023 Fall Nonfiction Preview (49th Shelf) and October 2023’s Must-Read Books (Next Big Ideas Club).

     


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 20th Opposition Rule: Controlling Corruption Under Autocracy

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 20, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in seminar room 208N, North House, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy, Toronto ON.
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    Series

    Russian History and Politics Series

    Description

    How does the opposition govern under autocracy? In this paper, I analyze a unique instance where pro-democratic forces took control of political institutions in a prominent electoral autocracy: the success of the non-systemic opposition in the 2017 Moscow municipal council elections. Even in a repressive environment, I show that opposition forces can improve governance and reduce corruption from within government, suggesting that developing an alternative to autocratic rule may be best served by joining rather than boycotting institutions.

     

    About the speaker

     

    David Szakonyi is Assistant Professor of Political Science at George Washington University and co-founder of the Anti-Corruption Data Collective. His academic research focuses on corruption, clientelism, and political economy in Russia, Western Europe, and the United States. His most recent book — Politics for Profit: Business, Elections, and Policymaking in Russia (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics, 2020) — examines why businesspeople run for political office and how their firms benefit. He has also led numerous investigations into political corruption and opacity in the private equity and real estate industries, which have been published in the Washington Post, Foreign Policy, the Daily Beast, and the Miami Herald, among other outlets. He received his PhD in political science from Columbia University and his BA from the University of Virginia.

     


    Speakers

    David Szakonyi
    Assistant Professor, Political Science, George Washington University and co-founder, Anti-Corruption Data Collective

    Brendan McElroy
    (Chair), Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science at University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Saturday, October 21st MGA & MPP Online Admissions Information Session

    DateTimeLocation
    Saturday, October 21, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMOnline Event, This was an Online Event
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    Description

    The Graduate Admissions Officer will host an Online Admissions Information session, providing you with all the essential details about our two outstanding master’s degree programs: the Master of Global Affairs & the Master of Public Policy. During this session, you will learn about our admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, internships, capstone courses, unparalleled employment statistics, and so much more! Don’t miss out on this valuable opportunity—register today! 


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer University of Toronto Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Tuesday, October 24th Mongolia Conference

    DateTimeLocation
    Tuesday, October 24, 202310:00AM - 5:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility,
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    Description

    The Asian Institute at the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy and the Embassy of Mongolia in Canada present a conference on the occasion of the celebration of fifty years of bilateral relations between Mongolia and Canada. The conference reflects on the rich history of Mongolian Studies in Canada as well as issues connected to contemporary Mongolian society, economy, and security.

     

     

    Event Program

     

    2:00 – 2:15 p.m. Introduction and opening remarks

    Welcoming remarks: Professor Peter Loewen, Director, Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, University of Toronto

    Introduction and opening remarks: Professor Joe Wong, Vice President International, University of Toronto

    Her Excellency Sarantogos Erdenetsogt, Ambassador of Mongolia to Canada

    Award Ceremony

     

    2:15 – 3:30 p.m. Panel 1 (the last 20-30 minutes for Q&A)

    Historical Reflections: Mongolian Studies in Canada

    Professor Michael Gervers, University of Toronto Scarborough
    Professor David Curtis Wright, University of Calgary
    Elisabeth Rose, PhD Candidate, University of Toronto
    Gerelt Trost, Research Support Specialist, University of Saskatchewan (Online Participation)
    Moderator: Professor Jennifer Purtle, University of Toronto

     

    3:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m. Break

     

    3:45 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Panel 2 (the last 20-30 minutes for Q&A)

    Economy, Security and Society

    Mr. Munkh-Ochir Dorjjugder, Executive Office of the National Security Council of Mongolia, Deputy Chief and Director for Strategic Policy and Analysis (Online Participation)
    Oyu Vasha is the Minister Counselor, Deputy Chief of the Mission, Embassy of Mongolia in Ottawa
    Professor Jonathan Miller, MacDonald Laurier Institute (Online Participation)
    Dr. Kongdan (Katy) Oh, Korea Economic Institute of America
    Moderator: Professor Ed Schatz, Director, Center for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, U of T

     

    5:00 p.m. – 5:05 p.m. Closing remarks, Ambassador of Mongolia to Canada, Her Excellency Sarantogos Erdenetsogt

     

    Reception to follow

    Contact

    Nina Boric


    Speakers

    Professor Peter Loewen
    Welcome Remarks
    Director, Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, University of Toronto

    Professor Joe Wong
    Opening Remarks
    Vice President International, University of Toronto

    Her Excellency Sarantogos Erdenetsogt
    Opening Remarks
    Ambassador of Mongolia to Canada

    Professor Michael Gervers
    Speaker
    University of Toronto Scarborough

    Professor David Curtis Wright
    Speaker
    University of Calgary

    Elisabeth Rose
    Speaker
    PhD Candidate, University of Toronto

    Professor Jennifer Purtle
    Moderator
    University of Toronto

    Mr. Munkh-Ochir Dorjjugder
    Speaker
    Executive Office of the National Security Council of Mongolia, Deputy Chief and Director for Strategic Policy and Analysis

    Professor Jonathan Miller
    Speaker
    MacDonald Laurier Institute

    Dr. Kongdan (Katy) Oh
    Speaker
    Director, Center for European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, University of Toronto

    Professor Ed Schatz
    Moderator
    Research Support Specialist, Research Acceleration and Strategic Initiatives, Office of the Vice-President Research at the University of Saskatchewan

    Gerelt Trost
    Speaker
    Minister Counselor, Deputy Chief of the Mission, Embassy of Mongolia in Ottawa

    Oyu Vasha
    Speaker


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Wednesday, October 25th CERES MA Open House

    DateTimeLocation
    Wednesday, October 25, 20234:00PM - 5:00PMOnline Event, This was an online event
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    Description

    This is an online event. Interested in the Master of Arts Degree in European and Russian Affairs? Do you want to study the histories, politics, economies, and societies of Europe, Russia, and Eurasia with world-renowned scholars? Are you interested in a funded international summer internship or a semester of study abroad? Recognized as one of the best of its kind in North America, the two-year Master of Arts program offered at the Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies offers students the opportunity to pursue a comprehensive, rigorous, and hands-on degree at Canada’s leading research university. Join us virtually for the CERES MA Open House on Monday, October 25, 4 – 5 pm. Learn about admissions and meet CERES students and alumni. Apply by February 1, 2024 to be considered for funding: https://archive.munkschool.utoronto.ca/ceres-ma/how-apply

    Contact

    Katia Malyuzhinets
    416-946-8962

    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 26th Kitchen Improvisations: 19th Century Cookbooks, Grandmother’s Harlem Kitchen, and the Legacy of Verta Mae Smart Grosvenor

    This event has been cancelled

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 26, 202312:00PM - 2:00PMExternal Event, This event was cancelled.
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    Description

    Culinary Workshop & Seminar with Prof. Rafia Zafar

     

    Please join us in welcoming Prof. Rafia Zafar to the Culinaria Kitchen Lab on Thursday, Oct. 26 (12-2pm) for a session that weaves together histories, recipes, and delectable improvisation. Working with and between the stories and dishes crafted by Verta Mae Smart Grosvenor and Zafar’s Grandmother in her Harlem restaurant kitchen, Prof. Zafar explores the languages of food, resilience, and memory composed in the literary genre of Black and African American food writing and cookbooks. Guests will be invited to sample the dishes demonstrated by Prof. Zafar as a part of this kitchen session.

    This event is followed by a seminar With Prof. Zafar on October 27th at 12:00pm, titled "Kitchenette Unbuilding: Two Black women writers on ‘the heart of the home’"at Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7.

     

    About the Speaker:

     

    Rafia Zafar is Professor of English and African & African American Studies and the Program in American Culture Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.  She holds degrees from the City College of New York (BA, English), Columbia University (MA, English & Comparative Literature) and Harvard University (PhD, History of American Civilization).  In April 2024 she will return to the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Italy, where she will lecture in its master’s program in Gastronomy: World Food Cultures and Mobility.  At her home institution she teaches popular courses on Food & Literature and Black Foodways.

     

    Zafar’s major publications include Recipes for Respect:  African American Meals and Meaning; the two-volume Harlem Renaissance Novels: The Library of America Collection (editor); We Wear the Mask: African Americans Write American Literature, 1760-1870; Harriet Jacobs and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl  (co-editor); and God Made Man, Man Made the Slave (co-editor).  In addition to her book publications, she co-edited a special issue of African American Review on the bibliophile and historian Arturo Schomburg.  Her awards and fellowships include the Walt Whitman Distinguished Fulbright Chair at Utrecht University, a Ford Foundation Post-doctoral fellowship, election to the American Antiquarian Society and a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library).  She began her career in foodways during university, slinging cheese at a little gourmet store in New York City that morphed into Dean & DeLuca, now gone, but at its height a veritable temple for professional chefs, gourmets, and food tourists alike.  

     

    Organized by the Centre for the Study of the United States, the Munk School of Global Affairs and Pubic Policy and the Culinaria Research Centre, University of Toronto Scarborough.


    Speakers

    Rafia Zafar
    Professor of English and African & African American Studies, Washington University in St. Louis



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 26th The Hon. Ed Fast on Trade in the Era of Trump

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 26, 20234:00PM - 5:30PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto and Online via Zoom
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Series

    David Peterson Program in Public Sector Leadership

    Description

    Join us on Thursday, October 26 as The Honourable Ed Fast, MP, discusses the evolving trade environment and how Canada risks being left behind with Peter Loewen, Director of the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy.  

     

    Over the last century, Canada’s proactive trade agenda and export leadership has helped Canadian workers, businesses, exporters, and investors gain preferred access and a real competitive edge in key markets around the world. By making trade and international diplomacy a priority, historic trade agreements have been secured with the United States, Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region.

     

    More recently, Canada’s international reputation as a trusted trade and geo-political partner has been needlessly eroded. Embarrassing diplomatic snafus with large economies like India and China have stalled our ability to expand export opportunities in the rest of the world. Trade negotiations with additional countries, most notably with the ASEAN bloc of countries have similarly stalled.  Add to that mix of circumstances the war in Ukraine, the growing belligerence and bellicosity of China, and an increasingly protectionist United States, and we are left with a profoundly challenging environment in which to promote our trade interests around the world.

     

    Of significant consequence is the role that former American president Donald Trump has played in the United States’ pivot away from global leadership on trade liberalization and towards increasing protectionism and isolationism. This lurch towards protectionism was heralded by Trump’s insistence on pulling out of the original Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations and his reticence to appoint members to the World Trade Organization’s dispute resolution panels. This giant step backwards was exacerbated by the increasing willingness of the BRICS countries to block consensus at the different rounds of WTO trade negotiations.

     

    But it’s not too late to turn things around. One of Canada’s most successful and respected former Ministers of International Trade, the Hon. Ed Fast, lays out a road map on to how to resurrect a moribund Canadian trade agenda and restore Canada’s trade leadership within the global marketplace. He will also touch upon the importance of trade liberalization as an opportunity for trade partners to maximize their respective comparative advantages to achieve “win-win” outcomes for their economies.

     

    About The Speaker

     

    Ed Fast was first elected to the House of Commons in 2006, and was re-elected in 2008, 2011, 2015, 2019 and 2021. On May 18, 2011, former Prime Minister Stephen Harper appointed Ed to his cabinet to serve as Minister of International Trade. He assumed responsibility for development of the Government of Canada’s Global Markets Action Plan, which created a more competitive Canadian economy by deepening Canada’s trade and investment ties in dynamic and fast-growing economies around the world. His accomplishments include free trade agreements with the European Union, South Korea, Ukraine and negotiations on the original Trans Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). He also oversaw negotiations on modernizing free trade agreements with Israel and Chile.

     

    Prior to his appointment to cabinet, Ed served as a member of the Standing Committees on Canadian Heritage, and Transport, Infrastructure and Communities, and as Chairman of the Standing Committee on Justice & Human Rights.

     

    Since 2015, Ed has served variously as the Conservative shadow minister for environment, industry and finance. Ed’s Private Member’s Bill C-277 to amend the Criminal Code to increase from 5 to 10 years in prison the maximum sentence for luring children over the Internet for sexual purposes received Royal Assent in 2007 and became the law of Canada.

     


    Speakers

    The Hon. Ed Fast
    Member of Parliament, Abbotsford



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Thursday, October 26th CSUS Graduate Student Workshop

    This event has been cancelled

    DateTimeLocation
    Thursday, October 26, 20234:00PM - 5:30PMSeminar Room 208N, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
    Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    Information is not yet available.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th MGA & MPP Admissions Information Seession for UofT, Political Science Students

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 202311:00AM - 12:30PMOnline Event, This was an online event
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    Description

    The Graduate Admissions Officer will host an Online Admissions Information session for UofT, Political Science undergraduate students, providing all the essential details about our two outstanding master’s degree programs: the Master of Global Affairs & the Master of Public Policy.

     

    During this session, you will learn about our admissions process, alumni experiences, career prospects, internships, capstone courses, unparalleled employment statistics, and so much more!

     

    Don’t miss out on this valuable opportunity—register today! 


    Speakers

    Rejeanne Puran
    Graduate Admissions & Recruitment Officer UofT, Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th Kitchenette Unbuilding: Two Black women writers on ‘the heart of the home’

    This event has been cancelled

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 202312:00PM - 1:30PMSeminar Room 208N, This event was cancelled and rescheduled to a later date.
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    Description

    Culinary Workshop & Seminar with Prof. Rafia Zafar

     

    By the middle of the twentieth century, the gains in public respect and civil rights that many Black citizens of the United States expected from their military service during the first World War had failed to materialize.  The recurrent irony, of another World War, when African Americans were again asked to fight to preserve democracy abroad and extirpate genocide-minded bigots, was not lost on black civilians and military personnel; nevertheless, African Americans responded to the call to service.  Yet when set next to the all too brief efflorescence of African American arts and letters in the period between the world wars, the continued underemployment of African Americans, educated or not, and the unceasing de facto and de jure segregation of society, the cynicism of black authors at mid-century should not surprise anyone.  In very different ways, two novels appearing within a decade of the Second World War’s end engage with America’s abrogated promises.  Ann Petry’s The Street (1946) and Gwendolyn Brooks’s Maud Martha (1953) each offer narratives about the ability of African American women to attain positive personal and social goals.  Each author limns the life of a young married black woman as she attempts to deploy her literacy, native abilities, and domestic economy into a safe world for herself and her growing family.  Unsurprisingly, the kitchen—long seen as contributing to the Black woman’s disempowerment—figures significantly in these fictions.

     

    This event is part of a two part workshop with Prof. Zafar on October 26th at 12:00pm, titled "Kitchen Improvisations: 19th Century Cookbooks, Grandmother’s Harlem Kitchen, and the Legacy of Verta Mae Smart Grosvenor’"at the Science Wing 313, 1265 Military Trail—University of Toronto, Scarborough Campus.

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Rafia Zafar is Professor of English and African & African American Studies and the Program in American Culture Studies at Washington University in St. Louis.  She holds degrees from the City College of New York (BA, English), Columbia University (MA, English & Comparative Literature) and Harvard University (PhD, History of American Civilization).  In April 2024 she will return to the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Italy, where she will lecture in its master’s program in Gastronomy: World Food Cultures and Mobility.  At her home institution she teaches popular courses on Food & Literature and Black Foodways.

     

    Zafar’s major publications include Recipes for Respect:  African American Meals and Meaning; the two-volume Harlem Renaissance Novels: The Library of America Collection (editor); We Wear the Mask: African Americans Write American Literature, 1760-1870; Harriet Jacobs and Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl  (co-editor); and God Made Man, Man Made the Slave (co-editor).  In addition to her book publications, she co-edited a special issue of African American Review on the bibliophile and historian Arturo Schomburg.  Her awards and fellowships include the Walt Whitman Distinguished Fulbright Chair at Utrecht University, a Ford Foundation Post-doctoral fellowship, election to the American Antiquarian Society and a National Endowment for the Humanities fellowship at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture (New York Public Library).  She began her career in foodways during university, slinging cheese at a little gourmet store in New York City that morphed into Dean & DeLuca, now gone, but at its height a veritable temple for professional chefs, gourmets, and food tourists alike.  

     

    Organized by the Centre for the Study of the United States, the Munk School of Global Affairs and Pubic Policy and the Culinaria Research Centre, University of Toronto Scarborough.


    Speakers

    Rafia Zafar
    Professor of English and African & African American Studies, Washington University in St. Louis



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th Instability in Stability: Queer “Adults” and Paradoxes of Precarity in South Korea

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place at 108N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    CSK Speaker Series

    Description

    ABOUT THE TALK

     

    This talk explores how demographic shifts, economic transformations and changing conceptions of heterosexual adulthood relate to queer life in South Korea. Specifically, Wolff examine how queer Koreans in their 20s and 30s navigate the conflict between achieving a feeling of economic stability and a sense of queer selfhood. As economic instability and labor insecurity became normalized following the Asian Financial Crisis, corporate and civil servant jobs also became coveted for the sense of stability (anjeong-gam) they seemed to promise. With marriage and fertility rates at all-time lows due to factors like financial precarity and high-parenting costs, many idealize “stability” as a pathway back to these disrupted processes of “adulthood.” However, queer Koreans have historically experienced precarity on the basis of heteronormative conditions for achieving and maintaining economic stability.

     

    Wolff”s research found that as queer college graduates labored towards “stable” careers, they were paradoxically beset by affective forms of instability, as queer embodiment and political participation threatened workplace discrimination and even dismissal. While academic theories of “precarity” often describe how the loss of economic stability leads to disrupted social reproduction and evacuated futures, this talk seeks to complicate the concept and its temporal associations. By elucidating how dynamics of heteronormativity have shaped notions of precarity,Wolff argue that instability and stability must be understood as emergent processes articulated through dynamics of kinship, class, gender, sexuality, and social difference.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKER

     

    Alex Wolff (they/she) is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Toronto. Their research examines intersections of economics, gender, and sexuality through a focus on queer sociality and activism in South Korea. Building upon preliminary fieldwork (2017-19) and a year of ethnographic research in Korea (2020-21), they are currently writing a book manuscript that explores how class, economics of kinship, and structural marginalization relate to the ways LGBTQ+ Koreans build publics, politics, and their futures. Their work has been supported by the Social Science Research Council, the Korea Foundation, and the Center for Critical Korean Studies. They received their PhD in anthropology from the University of California, Irvine, in 2023.

     

    Chair: Jesook Song is a Professor at the Department of Anthropology, university of Toronto. She received her Ph.D. in Anthropology with a certificate in Women’s Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, USA. Mediating Gender, her co-edited volume with Michelle Cho, is scheduled to come out in the University of Michigan Press in early 2024.


    Speakers

    Alex Wolff
    Speaker
    Korea Foundation Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Anthropology Department, University of Toronto

    Jesook Song
    Chair
    Professor, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th Radical Leftist Parties in Europe (1945-2023): From communism to a modern Radical Left

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 20232:00PM - 4:00PMSeminar Room 208N, This event took place in-person at Room 208N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Description

    The Hellenic Studies Initiative at University of Toronto, the HHF Chair in Modern Greek Studies at York University, the Graduate Diploma in European Studies, York University and the Hellenic Canadian Academic Association of Ontario welcome Nikos Marantzidis.

     

    About the Speaker

     

    Nikos Marantzidis is Professor of Political Science in the department of Balkan, Slavic and Oriental Studies at the University of Macedonia in Thessaloniki. He is also elected visiting professor at the Department of International Studies at Charles University in Prague (Czech Republic) and the University of Kerala (India). He is the author of many books, journal articles, opinion pieces and his latest book is Under Stalin’s shadow: a global history of Greek Communism, by Cornell University Press (2023). Other books: Εμφύλια Πάθη, 23 ερωτήσεις και απαντήσεις για τον εμφύλιο (with Stathis Kalyvas), Athens, Μεταίχμιο 2015. Δημοκρατικός Στρατός Ελλάδας 1946-1949, Αθήνα, Αλεξάνδρεια, 2010.

     


    Speakers

    Nikos Marantzidis
    Speaker
    University of Macedonia in Thessaloniki

    Phil Triadafilopoulos
    Chair
    Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Co-Sponsors

    Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    York University

    Hellenic Canadian Academic Association of Ontario


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th Citizens Electric! Galvanized Bodies and Popular Sovereignty in the Revolutionary Francophone Atlantic

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 20234:30PM - 6:30PMSeminar Room 108N, This event took place in-person at Room 108N, North House, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto, ON, M5S 3K7
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    Series

    French History Seminar/Seminaire d'histoire de France

    Description

    In an era before the lightbulb, when electricity meant both Benjamin Franklin’s bottled lightning and the ethereal fluid that animated Luigi Galvani’s frog legs, what did electricity mean politically? Electricity became a metaphor for the power of revolutionary festivals, speeches, and events to "shock" an audience, producing overpowering collective sentiment in an instant. Electrified citizens, equal and united in sentiment, replaced the stratified body politic as a model of social cohesion. A new era required new metaphors, and this talk investigates how science and politics intersected to produce the new metaphor of revolutionary electricity. 


    Speakers

    Samantha Wesner
    Arts & Science Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Toronto


    Main Sponsor

    Centre for the Study of France and the Francophone World (CEFMF)

    Co-Sponsors

    CEFMF - Centre for the Study of France and the Francophone World

    York University

    Department of History

    Department of French

    Faculty of Arts & Science

    Government of France, Cultural and Scientific Services, Ottawa


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th Book Launch: Randall Hansen: War, Work & Want: How the OPEC Oil Crisis caused Mass Migration & Revolution

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 20235:00PM - 6:30PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto and online via Zoom.
    Registration Full Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    War, Work & Want asks why global migration, which should have fallen after 1970, tripled over the next fifty years. Hansen argues that the OPEC oil crisis unleashed economic and geopolitical changes that led to over 100 million unexpected migrants. The quadrupling of oil prices permanently halved economic growth in the West, leading to a five-decade stagnation in wages. The middle classes responding by rebuilding their inflation-shattered standards of living on the back of cheap migration labor, leading to millions of low-skilled migrations – documented and undocumented. In the oil-rich Middle East and Russia, a sudden rush of oil money destabilized Iran, led to the fall of the Shah, and resulted in multiple military conflicts: the Iran-Iraq War, two Gulf Wars, and, in a more complicated way, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The result was tens of millions of refugees. The overall result was over 100 million unexpected – and unwanted – migrants.

     

    Followed by a reception

     

    Contact

    Olga Kesarchuk
    416-946-8938


    Speakers

    Ryan Balot
    Speaker
    Chair of the Department of Political Science

    Edward Schatz
    Chair
    Director, Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies

    Randall Hansen
    Speaker
    Canada Research Chair in Global Migration, Department of Political Science & Director, Global Migration Lab, Munk School

    Lama Mourad
    Speaker
    Assistant Professor, Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, Carlton University

    Phil Triadafilopoulos
    Speaker
    Acting Director, Harney Program in Ethnic and Pluralism Studies, Munk School



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Friday, October 27th Book launch: Randall Hansen, War, Work & Want: How the OPEC Oil Crisis caused Mass Migration & Revolution

    DateTimeLocation
    Friday, October 27, 20235:00PM - 8:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, 'Munk Centre For International Studies - 1 Devonshire Place
    + Register for this Event Print this Event Bookmark this Event

    Description

    War, Work & Want asks why global migration, which should have fallen after 1970, tripled over the next fifty years. Hansen argues that the OPEC oil crisis unleashed economic and geopolitical changes that led to over 100 million unexpected migrants. The quadrupling of oil prices permanently halved economic growth in the West, leading to a five-decade stagnation in wages. The middle classes responding by rebuilding their inflation-shattered standards of living on the back of cheap migration labor, leading to millions of low-skilled migrations – documented and undocumented. In the oil-rich Middle East and Russia, a sudden rush of oil money destabilized Iran, led to the fall of the Shah, and resulted in multiple military conflicts: the Iran-Iraq War, two Gulf Wars, and, in a more complicated way, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. The result was tens of millions of refugees. The overall result was over 100 unexpected – and unwanted – migrants.


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Saturday, October 28th Myanmar Human Rights Town Hall Meeting

    DateTimeLocation
    Saturday, October 28, 20232:00PM - 3:00PMExternal Event, Event was held in Rm 1130, Bahen Centre, 40 St George St, University of Toronto
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    Description

    Join the Myanmar Culture Club at the University of Toronto for this important Town Hall Meeting.

     

    ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

     

    U Kyaw Za is a Spokesperson for the National Unity Government of Myanmar

     

    U Aung Myo Min is the Minister of Human Rights of the National Unity Government of Myanmar

     

    U Aung Kyaw Moe is the Deputy Minister of Human Rights of the National Unity Government of Myanmar

     

    A THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS AND SUPPORTERS

     

    This event is made possible thanks to the Asian Institute, Tea Circle, and the Burmese-Canadian Community including the Burma Canadian Association Ontario, the Canada-Burma Ethnic Nationalities Organization, Burmese Canadian Network, and the Myanmar Student Association Ontario.


    Speakers

    U Kyaw Za
    Spokesperson National Unity Government of Myanmar

    U Aung Myo Min
    Minister of Human Rights, National Unity Government of Myanmar

    U Aung Kyaw Moe
    Deputy Minister of Human Rights, National Unity Government of Myanmar


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, October 30th NORAD: Past, Present, Future

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, October 30, 20234:00PM - 6:00PMThe Vivian and David Campbell Conference Facility, This event took place in-person in the Campbell Conference Facility, Munk School, 1 Devonshire Place, Toronto
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    Description

    The Graham brings together leading experts on NORAD to discuss the past, present, and future of this unique institution.

     

    About the Speakers

     

    Dr. Andrea Charron is Director of the Centre for Defence and Security Studies, and Professor of International Relations at the University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada. She holds a Ph.D. from the Royal Military College of Canada (Department of War Studies).  She is co-author of NORAD: In Perpetuity and Beyond (MQUP, 2022), coeditor of The Legacy of 9/11: Views from North America (MQUP, 2023) and several others on sanctions.  

     

    Dr. James Fergusson is currently a Senior Research Fellow with the Centre for Defence and Security Studies at the University of Manitoba. His recent publications, co-authored with Dr. Charron, are NORAD: In Perpetuity and Beyond (McGill-Queen’s University Press 2022), “NORAD and USNORTHCOM”s Deterrence Conundrum”, Journal of Strategic Studies (Winter, 2021), From NORAD to NOR[A]D: The Future of North American Defence Cooperation. Calgary: Canadian Global Affairs Institute. May, 2018; and Canada and Defence Against Help: The Wrong Theory for the Wrong Country at the Wrong Time. Canadian Defence. Eds. Thomas Juneau and Phillipe Lagasse. His single-authored publications include Relic of the Past: Why the demise of the Cold War INF Treaty will not alter the strategic military balance.(Ottawa: MacDonald-Laurier Institute) and Canada and Ballistic Missile Defence 1954-2009: Déjà vu all over again, Canadian War Museum Military History Series. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2010. In addition to his academic publications, Dr Fergusson has been commissioned to write several reports for the Department of National Defence and the Department of Foreign Affairs. He lectures to a wide range of military audiences, including to the Canadian Forces Barker College. Dr. Fergusson has testified on many occasions to the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, the Standing Committee on National Defence, and the Senate Standing Committee on National Security. He served for ten years on the Defence Science Advisory Board. He also served as Honorary Colonel of the Canadian Forces School of Aerospace Studies, and subsequently a five year position as Honorary Colonel of 2 Canadian Air Division.

     

    Dr. Joseph T. Jockel is Piskor Professor of Canadian Studies at St. Lawrence University in Canton, NY. He is the author or co-author of many articles and several books on Canadian defense policy and Canada-US military relations, including, No Boundaries Upstairs: Canada, the United States and the Origins of North American Air Defense, 1945-1958, Canada in NORAD, 1957-2007, A History, and Canada in NATO: 1949-2019. He also once was the Acting Secretary of the US section of the Canada-US Permanent Joint Board on Defence.

     


    Speakers

    Dr. Andrea Charron
    Director of the Centre for Defence and Security Studies, Professor of International Relations, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada

    Dr. James Fergusson
    Senior Research Fellow with the Centre for Defence and Security Studies, University of Manitoba

    Dr. Joseph T. Jockel
    Piskor Professor of Canadian Studies, St. Lawrence University in Canton, NY



    If you are attending a Munk School event and require accommodation(s), please email the event contact listed above to make appropriate arrangements.

    Disclaimer: Please note that events posted on this website are considered to be public events – unless otherwise stated – and you are choosing to enter a space where your image and/or voice may be captured as part of event proceedings that may be made public as part of a broadcast, webcast, or publication (online and in print). We make every effort to ensure your personal information is kept and used in compliance with the Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act (FIPPA). If you have any questions please get in touch with our office at munkschool@utoronto.ca or 416-946-8900.



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  • Monday, October 30th Remembering Itaewon: Reflections on the Past and the Present

    DateTimeLocation
    Monday, October 30, 20236:00PM - 7:00PMOnline Event, This event was online via zoom
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    Description

    ABOUT THE EVENT

     

    Following Mourning Itaewon: Korean Diaspora Speaks in 2022, the CSK is organizing Remembering Itaewon: Reflections on the Past and the Present to reflect on the tragic Halloween crowd crush that had taken many young lives. This year, we focus on the significance of Itaewon in Korea’s contemporary history, from the site of a U.S. military base to the site of multiculturalism and globalization. The panelists discuss how such history influences the political and public reactions to the crowd crush

     

    ABOUT THE PANEL

     

    Kim Ji Youn is a Senior Researcher in the Migration Humanities Research Project at the Institute of Humanities, Hansung University in South Korea. Currently, she teaches classes on contemporary issues in Korean society, urban issues, mobility, and migration from an anthropological and sociological perspective. Since her Ph.D. thesis on Itaewon, she has continued to research issues of multiculturalism, gentrification, and the spatialization of otherness centered on Itaewon. As an urban sociologist, her works interrogate the normative notions of urbanity, community, migration, and social minorities.

     

    Mihye Cho is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology and Director of the Master Program in Inter-Asia NGO Studies at SungKongHoe University and Research Fellow at the Institute of Inter-Cultural Studies, Seoul National University. Her research interests include citizen subjectivity, urban studies, and cultural studies. Her current research explores valuation and social resilience in the process of social transformation. Her monograph, Entrepreneurial Seoulite: Culture and Subjectivity in Hongdae, Seoul (Michigan University Press, 2019), examines citizen subjectivity in the midst of restructuring processes following the financial crisis. Her co-edited book, Creative Ageing Cities: Urban Design with Older People in High-Density Asian Cities (Routledge, 2018), investigates the intersection of aging, citizen subjectivity, and place-making in Asian cities. Her recent articles include "Seoul 2022" (Streetnotes, 2023), "’Smart Nation’ and ‘Social Acceleration’: Imagining ‘Urban Kampung’ in Singapore, (Korean Association of Southeast Asian Studies, 2022), and "Quality of Life and Diverse Temporalities amid Fast Urbanism" (Asian Journal of Social Science, 2020).

     

    Sohyeon Peik is a freelance researcher based in Seoul, South Korea. She graduated Sungkonghoe University with a bachelor’s degree in Sociology and minors in Chinese Studies and Inter-Asia Cultural Studies. Her main studies during undergraduate were focused on history and peace issues in East Asia. They led her interest to state violence, war and memory, post-memory, and grievability. After Itaewon Halloween tragedy, occurred in her senior year, she started interviewing young people about their experiences of the incident and “surviving feelings” that was growing among the youth. She is currently working on the research paper about Itaewon tragedy and ‘survived youth’ based on the interview documentation. She also dealt with the issue in her recent article, "Seoul 2022" (Streetnotes, 2023) by drawing.

     

    (Chair) Sherry S. Yu is Associate Professor in the Department of Arts, Culture and Media, and the Faculty of Information at the University of Toronto. She holds a Ph.D. in Communication from Simon Fraser University. Her research explores multiculturalism, media, and social integration. She is the author of Diasporic Media beyond the Diaspora: Korean Media in Vancouver and Los Angeles (2018, UBC Press) and the co-editor of Ethnic Media in the Digital Age (2019, Routledge) and The Handbook of Ethnic Media in Canada (forthcoming, McGill-Queen’s University Press). Her research also has been published in scholarly journals such as Journalism: Theory, Practice & Criticism, Journalism Studies, Television & New Media, Canadian Journal of Communication, Journal of Global Diaspora & Media, Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, and Canadian Ethnic Studies. 


    Speakers

    Ji Youn Kim
    Speaker
    Senior Researcher, Migration Humanities Research Project Institute of Humanities Hansung University in South Korea

    Mihye Cho
    Speaker
    Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Director, Master Program in Inter-Asia NGO Studies, SungKongHoe University; Research Fellow, Institute of Inter-Cultural Studies, Seoul National University

    Sohyeon Peik
    Speaker
    Freelance Researcher Seoul, South Korea

    Sherry Yu
    Chair
    Associate Professor Co-Program Director, Journalism Joint Program Department of Arts, Culture and Media (UTSC) Faculty of Information (UTSG)


    Main Sponsor

    Asian Institute


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