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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20180402T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20180402T190000
DTSTAMP:20260429T134643
CREATED:20200423T172356Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210412T082324Z
UID:107198-1522690200-1522695600@www.indiachinainstitute.org
SUMMARY:Xi Jinping and China's Success Trap
DESCRIPTION:Drawing on Professor Mohanty’s more than three decades of research\, this talk will focus on how China’s “reform and open door” policy evolved and helped achieve tremendous economic success. Professor Mohanty will also examine how this policy has generated serious social and environmental problems. \n\n\n\nIn his recent book\, ‘China’s Transformation: The Success Story and the Success Trap’\, Mohanty argues that the consequences of this story of success and growth are so strong that it has been difficult for China to change its main development path and to achieve a desirable level of equity and sustainability. Professor Mohanty describes this as the “success trap” that China is currently grappling with. \n\n\n\nThis event is organized by the India China Institute and co-sponsored by the Global Studies Program at The New School \n\n\n\nLIMITED SEATING
URL:https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/event/xi-jinping-and-chinas-success-trap/
CATEGORIES:Public Event,Public Talks
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/03/Xi-Jinping-and-Chinas-Success-Trap-Wordpress.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20180405T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20180405T190000
DTSTAMP:20260429T134643
CREATED:20200423T172329Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210412T081957Z
UID:107140-1522949400-1522954800@www.indiachinainstitute.org
SUMMARY:The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor: Prospects\, Perceptions\, and Potential Implications for India and the US
DESCRIPTION:The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is a $62 billion infrastructure project associated with Beijing’s broader Belt and Road Initiative. It entails new roads\, power plants\, and ports across Pakistan as part of China’s global effort to facilitate access to markets far and wide. CPEC has the potential to bring major benefits to Pakistan’s economy\, but because of security and financial issues\, it is also fraught with risk. This lecture will examine CPEC’s prospects; discuss how it is perceived in Pakistan\, China\, India\, and the US; and consider its strategic implications for both New Delhi and Washington. \n\n\n\nMichael Kugelman is the Asia Program Deputy Director and Senior Associate for South Asia at the Woodrow Wilson Center\, where he is responsible for research\, programming\, and publications on the region. His main speciality is Pakistan\, India\, and Afghanistan and U.S. relations with each of them. Kugelman writes monthly columns for Foreign Policy’s South Asia Channel and monthly commentaries for War on the Rocks. He also contributes regular pieces to the Wall Street Journal’s Think Tank blog. He has published op-eds and commentaries in the New York Times\, Los Angeles Times\, Politico\, CNN.com\, Bloomberg View\, The Diplomat\, Al Jazeera\, and The National Interest\, among others. \n\n\n\nLIMITED SEATING
URL:https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/event/the-china-pakistan-economic-corridor-prospects-perceptions-and-potential-implications-for-india-and-the-us/
LOCATION:Klein Conference Room\, 66 West 12th Street 5th Floor\, New York\, NY\, 10011\, USA
CATEGORIES:Public Event,Public Talks
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20180409T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20180409T200000
DTSTAMP:20260429T134643
CREATED:20200423T172231Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210412T081756Z
UID:107012-1523298600-1523304000@www.indiachinainstitute.org
SUMMARY:Global Asia and Postcolonial Predicaments: How to Historicize the Rohingya Crisis
DESCRIPTION:The horrors suffered by Rohingyas in Myanmar today – which now appear ever more frequently and graphically in the news — represent one brutal extremity of a kind of victimization that haunts countless people whose only crime is living in old spaces of human mobility that modern empires carved into national territories. Methodological nationalism justifies their precarity with histories that provide charters for national belonging\, tying citizens firmly to specific places inside national borders. In a world covered by nations\, human rights depend on that belonging. Old spaces of mobility can thus become perilous homelands where nations produce minorities as aliens eligible for marginalization\, exclusion\, and expulsion. Histories of mobile social space may implicitly disenfranchise their residents\, but we need those histories to escape methodological nationalism and explore interactions of mobility and territoriality that generate globalization\, at many levels of scale. All these post-colonial predicaments challenge any history of the Rohingya crisis\, which I approach here through local histories of Global Asia around the Bay of Bengal.The “Carol Breckenridge Memorial Lecture Series in South Asian History” is an annual lecture by a distinguished scholar in the field of South Asian history and society\, broadly defined. It was established with the generous support of Professor Arjun Appadurai\, the former Provost of The New School. The lecture series has featured diverse vantage points on South Asian history and different generations of scholars\, including Sir Christopher Bayly\, Gayatri Spivak\, Dipesh Chakrabarty\, Faisal Devji\, and Ritu Birla. \n\n\n\nDavid Ludden is Professor and Chair in the Department of History at New York University. He received his Ph.D. in History from the University of Pennsylvania\, in 1978\, and served on the Penn faculty from 1981 until 2007\, when he came to NYU. He has directed South Asia programs at Penn\, the Social Science Research Council\, the Fulbright Senior Scholars program (CIES)\, and NYU. He served as President of the Association for Asian Studies in 2002-3. His research focuses on very long-term histories of globalization in Asia\, particularly as they concern trajectories of capitalist economic development\, spatial inequity\, natural environments\, and changing material conditions in everyday life. \n\n\n\nLIMITED SEATING
URL:https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/event/global-asia-and-postcolonial-predicaments-how-to-historicize-the-rohingya-crisis/
LOCATION:Klein Conference Room\, 66 West 12th Street 5th Floor\, New York\, NY\, 10011\, USA
CATEGORIES:Public Event,Public Talks
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20180418T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20180418T193000
DTSTAMP:20260429T134643
CREATED:20200423T172348Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260107T103506Z
UID:107179-1524076200-1524079800@www.indiachinainstitute.org
SUMMARY:Urban Futures in the Indian Himalayas
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \nThe expanded reproduction of rural livelihoods has led to an increasing number of households in the Indian Himalayas—especially in the state of Himachal Pradesh—route available surplus to nearby urban areas in search of speculative footholds. This talk is about the production of space and everyday lives concomitant to this process.Rohit Negi is with the School of Human Ecology at Ambedkar University\, Delhi. He has a PhD in Geography (Ohio State) and masters degree in Urban Planning (UIUC). Rohit’s research lies at the intersections of urban geography and political ecology\, and his ongoing projects concern Delhi’s toxic air\, and Himachal’s construction boom. \n  \nLIMITED SEATING \n  \n\n  \n  \n 
URL:https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/event/urban-futures-in-the-indian-himalayas/
CATEGORIES:Public Event,Public Event (General),Public Talks>Info Session
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20180423T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20180423T180000
DTSTAMP:20260429T134643
CREATED:20200423T172340Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210412T081225Z
UID:107166-1524499200-1524506400@www.indiachinainstitute.org
SUMMARY:The Promise of Making: Desiring Alternatives and Hacking Entrepreneurial Living in China
DESCRIPTION:Since 2014\, a series of Western media outlets from the Wired UK over the Economist to Forbes has begun to celebrate the city of Shenzhen in the South of China as a rising hub of innovation\, a so-called “Hollywood for Makers” and “Silicon Valley of Hardware.” These media stories took up an idea that open source hardware advocates had been promoting for several years: that the city of Shenzhen had become crucial for the realization of one of the key promises of the maker movement\, i.e. to prototype concrete alternatives to the pitfalls of the information society and contemporary capitalism. Just a couple years earlier\, Shenzhen was largely known as a place of copycats and fakes that lacked creativity where ideas created elsewhere were simply executed and mass produced. What happened within the timespan of only a few years that changed Shenzhen’s image from demonstrating China’s continuous lag in technology innovation towards a place where alternatives to neoliberal capitalism could be prototyped?In this talk\, Silvia Lindtner presents excerpts from her forthcoming book “The Promise of Making”\, unpacking the historical contingencies of this transformation of Shenzhen\, and with it China\, in the global tech imaginary. Drawing from more than seven years of ethnographic research\, she shows how the displacement of techno-optimistic onto Shenzhen unfolded through and alongside the emergence of “making” as a mode of intervention in the status-quo by hacking not only machines but also markets and work itself. Shenzhen\, as the speaker shows\, was rendered by open source hardware advocates\, venture capitalists\, avant-garde designers\, and Chinese politicians and state actors alike as a laboratory to prototype what she calls “entrepreneurial living\,” i.e. a naturalization of experimentation as a mode of “living on” amidst a pervasive economization of life. While making reformulated a key neoliberal logic of self-economization as a story of empowerment by promising to include ever more people in its call for self-transformation into human capital\, Shenzhen came to be seen as the place to accomplish this upgrade of the self and to regain a sense of control amidst anxieties over the economic and environmental crisis. \n\n\n\nSilvia Lindtner is an assistant professor at the University of Michigan in the School of Information\, with a courtesy appointment in the Penny W. Stamps School of Art and Design. Lindtner’s research and teaching interests include innovation and technology entrepreneurship\, making and hacking cultures\, shifts in digital work\, labor\, industry\, policy\, and governance. This work unfolds through a deep engagement with issues of gender\, inequality\, and enactments of masculinity in engineering and computer science fields\, politics and transnational imaginaries of design\, contemporary political economy\, and processes of economization. Lindtner draws from more than eight years of multi-sited ethnographic research\, with a particular focus on China’s shifting role in transnational and global tech production alongside research alongside research in the United States\, Taiwan\, and Africa. \n\n\n\nLIMITED SEATING
URL:https://www.indiachinainstitute.org/event/the-promise-of-making-desiring-alternatives-and-hacking-entrepreneurial-living-in-china/
CATEGORIES:Public Event,Public Talks
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