Faculty

The Road Ahead: Iberian Soundscapes

Event time: 
Friday, October 6, 2023 - 1:00pm to Saturday, October 7, 2023 - 8:00pm
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall LUCE, Common Room See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

This 2-day convening aims to explore the ongoing impact of Iberian histories in South Asia in shaping identities, social distinction, histories of merchant and commercial capitalism. We bring to the longue duree inquiry of Luso-Hispanic globality (15th century and beyond), a unique focus on histories of music and performance in South Asia and the Americas, particularly Brazil. This conference is co-sponsored with Columbia University and will bring together scholars, musicians, journalists, and other cultural producers to participate in a series of panel discussions and concerts at Yale during two days: October 6 and 7 in Fall 2023.

For more information and to register, please go to the conference website: https://roadahead.macmillan.yale.edu

Admission: 
Free
https://roadahead.macmillan.yale.edu

Student Guide Tour: “In a New Light: Paintings from the Yale Center for British Art”

Event time: 
Sunday, December 3, 2023 - 11:30am to 12:30pm
Location: 
Yale University Art Gallery YUAG See map
1111 Chapel Street
New Haven, CT 06510
Event description: 

Join a YCBA student guide for a tour of In a New Light: Paintings from the Yale Center for British Art.

While the Yale Center for British Art (YCBA) is closed for building conservation, more than fifty major collection works, spanning four centuries of British landscape and portraiture traditions, are on view at the Yale University Art Gallery. Join our student guides to learn more about the exhibition, as well as architecture, collection, and history of the YCBA.

Admission: 
Free
No registration is required; check in at the Information Desk in the Gallery lobby. Space is limited. For the Gallery's current vaccination and mask requirements, visit artgallery.yale.edu/hours-and-directions.

203-432-2800

Student Guide Tour: “In a New Light: Paintings from the Yale Center for British Art”

Event time: 
Sunday, November 26, 2023 - 11:30am to 12:30pm
Location: 
Yale University Art Gallery YUAG See map
1111 Chapel Street
New Haven, CT 06510
Event description: 

Join a YCBA student guide for a tour of In a New Light: Paintings from the Yale Center for British Art.

While the Yale Center for British Art (YCBA) is closed for building conservation, more than fifty major collection works, spanning four centuries of British landscape and portraiture traditions, are on view at the Yale University Art Gallery. Join our student guides to learn more about the exhibition, as well as architecture, collection, and history of the YCBA.

Admission: 
Free
No registration is required; check in at the Information Desk in the Gallery lobby. Space is limited. For the Gallery's current vaccination and mask requirements, visit artgallery.yale.edu/hours-and-directions.

203-432-2800

Ayse Zarakol- Before the West: The Rise and Fall of Eastern World Orders

Event time: 
Thursday, September 14, 2023 - 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Location: 
35 Hillhouse Avenue HLH35, Provost's House See map
35 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

Ayse Zarakol is Professor of International Relations at the University of Cambridge and a Politics Fellow at Emmanuel College. Her research is at the intersection of IR and historical sociology, focusing on East-West relations in the international system, history and future of world order(s), conceptualizations of modernity and sovereignty, rising and declining powers, and Turkish politics in a comparative perspective.

Cosponsored by the Fox International Fellowship

Admission: 
Free

Whiteness, Not White Supremacy: Lessons Learned from the Whitening Process of Ottoman Greek Migrants

Event time: 
Tuesday, April 25, 2023 - 4:00pm to 5:30pm
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall LUCE, 203 See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Speaker/Performer: 
Yiorgo Topalidis
Event description: 

Yiorgo Topalidis is a historical sociologist whose research explores the social construction, contestation, memory and forgetting of Whiteness and its decoupling from White supremacy. He engages with these concepts through historical case studies that feature the experiences of Ottoman Greek migrants in a US context.

Admission: 
Free

203-432-0061

PRFDHR Film: Frø: Nordic Seed Heroes - Movie Screening and Q&A with Film Director Charly Frisk

Event time: 
Thursday, April 13, 2023 - 3:00pm to 4:00pm
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall LUCE, 203 See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Speaker/Performer: 
Charly Frisk (film director) Moderator: Ulla Kasten (Yale University)
Event description: 

Movie screening on Thursday, April 13th, 2023 (25mn) followed immediately by Q&A session (35mn).

We have lost 75% of the world’s global seed diversity. Restoring seed biodiversity is important to ensure our food systems are resilient to climate change and protect our cultural diversity – recipes using ancient, diverse, heirloom varieties that enrich our lives here on planet Earth with one another. The film Frø - Nordic Seed Heroes explores the intersection of people and seeds, from all the way up to the Arctic Circle at the Svalbard Global Gene Vault to the middle of a wheat field in rural Denmark.

The film features the following seed heroes based in the Nordic regions (in order of appearance): the Brinkholm Andelsgaarde farm, the Nordic Genetic Resource Center and Crop Trust’s Svalbard Global Seed Vault, the University of Oslo’s Natural History Museum, Frøsamlerne (the Danish Seed Savers), Kørnby Mølle, Grønt Marked, Losæter urban farm, Drys Nu, and the Nordic Genetic Resource Center.

The documentary is a research initiative by Charly Frisk, a student at Yale School of Environment, and a collaborative initiative with the University of Oslo’s Natural History Museum, funded by the Garden of Club of America, the Scandinavian Seminar, the Program on Refugees, Forced Displacement, and Humanitarian Responses at Yale, and the Danish Heritage Society.

The Q&A will be led by Ulla Kasten, Council on Middle East Studies Research Scholar at the MacMillan Center at Yale and former Associate Curator and Museum Editor of the Yale Babylonian Collection.

Admission: 
Free but register in advance

Interconnectivity and the Global Digital Agenda

Event time: 
Wednesday, April 5, 2023 - 12:00pm to 1:15pm
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall LUCE, 202 See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

The Schmidt Program on Artificial Intelligence, Emerging Technologies, and National Power at the Jackson School will host a conversation with Tomas Lamanauskas, Deputy Secretary-General of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), on the evolving issues of interconnectivity, global advancement of the digital agenda (Connect 2030 Agenda), and the interplay of the emerging telecommunication technologies and infrastructural change. Ted Wittenstein, Executive Director of International Security Studies, will moderate.
As Deputy Secretary-General, Mr. Lamanauskas fosters close collaboration across varied radiocommunication, standardization, and development activities, reinforcing the collective role of ITU’s five elected officials as a single, highly effective team.
Over more than 20 years as a strategist, Mr. Lamanauskas has focused his career on telecommunications and digital technologies and has guided multicultural, multidisciplinary teams through challenging times and transformative changes. He previously held senior executive positions with national regulatory authorities in Europe, the Middle East, and the Caribbean, and was a senior government advisor on telecommunications issues in the Pacific region.
The event is co-sponsored by the Baltic Studies Program at the Yale MacMillan Center.
Open to the Yale community. Please register in advance.

Will Putin's Invasion Spur More Countries to Acquire Nuclear Weapons?

Event time: 
Wednesday, April 19, 2023 - 5:00pm to 6:00pm
Location: 
Horchow Hall HRCH, 103 (GM Room) See map
55 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

The Jackson School of Global Affairs will host a talk with Robert Einhorn, senior fellow at the Strobe Talbott Center for Security, Strategy, and Technology of the Brookings Institution.
In his remarks, Einhorn will address the question, “Will Putin’s Invasion Spur More Countries to Acquire Nuclear Weapons?”
The event is part of the school’s Sunrise Foundation Lecture Series, which addresses policy issues especially pertinent to emerging economies.
Einhorn served 35 years at the U.S. Department of State, including as Assistant Secretary for Nonproliferation in the Bill Clinton administration and the Secretary of State’s Special Advisor for Nonproliferation and Arms Control in the Barack Obama administration. He received a B.A. in Government from Cornell University and an MPA in International Relations from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.
The talk is open to the Yale campus community. Please register in advance.

Admission: 
Free but register in advance

Russia, Ukraine, and the Laws of War

Event time: 
Wednesday, March 8, 2023 - 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Location: 
Horchow Hall HRCH, 103 (GM Room) See map
55 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Event description: 

With Alona Verbytska, human rights advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Ms. Verbytska’s portfolio covers the “Human Rights of the Defender.” She assesses and monitors the adherence to the laws of war in the conflict. She will speak about issues such as the commission of and accountability for war crimes, the use of mercenary soldiers, and the treatment of prisoners of war.

Admission: 
Free

203-432-0061

Breaches of International Law in the Aggression Against Ukraine: Women in Russian Captivity

Event time: 
Tuesday, February 21, 2023 - 12:00pm to 1:30pm
Location: 
Henry R. Luce Hall LUCE, 203 See map
34 Hillhouse Avenue
New Haven, CT 06511
Speaker/Performer: 
with Lyudmila Huseynova, Anna Olsen, and Tetiana Katrychenko
Event description: 

Lyudmila Huseynova is a resident of the temporarily occupied Novoazovsk region of Donetsk region where she worked as a safety engineer at a local poultry farm. At the time of her arrest, she had spent the past five years caring for orphans and semi-orphans from the temporarily occupied village of Primorske. She was detained on October 9, 2019 for volunteering, espousing a pro-Ukrainian position (a blue-yellow flag hung over her house in Novoazovsk for a long time), and for her social media activity. Lyudmila was initially detained in the Izolyatsia prison, where she was severely tortured. She was later transferred to a pre-trial detention center in Donetsk and charged with “espionage.” During the three years of Ludmila Huseinova’s imprisonment, the local “courts” never delivered the so-called sentence.
Anna Olsen is a senior combat medic of the chemical and biological protection company of the 36th separate brigade of marines. She, along with her siblings and stepsisters, was at the Ilyich factory in Mariupol. She was captured and spent six months in captivityat Olenivka, undergoing physical and psychological torture, and held with over 3 dozen others in a cell designed for just six individuals.
Tetiana Katrychenko is a journalist, coordinator of Ukrainian NGO Media Initiative for Human Rights (MIHR), and author of the 2019 report Prisoners of War and Civilian Hostages of Donbass. Since the beginning of the armed conflict, her journalistic focus has been on covering the topic of illegally detained persons in eastern Ukraine. Katrychenko later shifted from journalism work to conducting advocacy campaigns in support of detainees’ families and subsequently joined the MIHR’s team. Since February 2020, Katrychenko has been a member of the Commission launched by the Ministry of Reintegration of Temporarily Occupied Territories in Ukraine, which deals with issues related to the recognition of persons deprived of liberty as a result of armed aggression against Ukraine. Katrychenko manages the Female Face of Donbass Hostages project: she compiles lists of hostages held by representatives of illegal armed groups in Donbas, maintains contact with relatives of hostages, and interviews ex-hostages after their release. She also provides advice to relatives of newly detained persons, as well as to the Ukrainian law enforcement agencies dealing with the issue.

203-432-0061
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