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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for CeMEAS
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130513T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130513T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20170119T111833Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170119T111833Z
UID:4829-1368468000-1368475200@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Lecture Series Comparative Terror
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Series: Comparative Terror in China and Taiwan\nPeformances and Realities in Regime Consolidation: The Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries and the White Terror in Su’nan and Taiwan\, 1950-1954\nMonday\, May 13\, 2013\, 6 pm\, KWZ\, Room 0.606\nJulia C. Strauss\nSOAS\, University of London\n \n\nLecture Abstract:\nMuch of the state building literature that comes from a Weberian perspective focusses on the creation and solidification of state institutions\, particularly those bureaucratic institutions concerned with external defense\, internal order\, the extraction of sufficient resources to fund the state apparatus\, and therecruitment and socialization for the state bureaucracy itself. Other literatures in a more rational choice vein\, particularly associated with Robert Bates’ work on Africa\, focus on how incentives for individuals within state bureaucracies often lead to rent seeking behaviour that undercuts the wider state building project. \nMy work attempts to fill in the large grey areas and gaps between these two literatures on state building by focussing on an aspects of state building that is often simply assumed: how the higher reaches of the state mobilize the lower reaches of the bureaucracy and focus its attentions and commitments. I suggest that this process of state mobilization occurs through a complex of actions that can be loosely called the bureaucratic “campaign” that operates in tension with the more procedurally and precedent bound tendencies of government bureaucracies\, and further draw on the related notions of repertoire and performance as critical elements to processes of both campaign mobilization and workaday bureaucratization. In so doing\, I expand on Charles Tilly’s notions of “repertoire” (which he applied almost exclusively to social movements and protest from “below” as part of claim making) to consider two crucial factors in the consolidation of otherwise unproven and/or outright illegitimate new regimes of the People’s Republic of China and the Republic of China (Taiwan) in the early 1950s. At this time\, the young PRC and the recently relocated ROC (Taiwan) were deeply concerned about questions of internal (and external) security\, and launched massive campaigns against real and imagined subversion through the Campaign to Suppress Counterrevolutionaries (PRC) and the “White Terror”. 1) how leaders themselves drew on particular repertoires as the “frames” that established the boundaries of the desirable and achievable in terms of preference formation and 2) how leaders utilized particular kinds of performances to communicate new norms\, vocabularies\, and practices to the population at large.
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/lecture-series-comparative-terror/
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130506T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130506T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20161205T144949Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20161205T144949Z
UID:4659-1367863200-1367870400@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:The 1st Göttingen East Asia Research Salon
DESCRIPTION:The 1st Göttingen East Asia Research Salon \n\n \nMatteo Ricci in East West Music Exchange\n May 6\, 2013\, 6pm  – 8pm\n CeMEAS\, Seminar Room\, Heinrich – Düker – Weg 14\, 37073 Göttingen\n Presenter:\n Wong Tsz\, PhD Student\, Expert Cultures from the 12th to the 16th century \nCommentators:\nThomas Kaufmann\, Faculty of Theology/Church History\n Axel  Schneider\,  Department of East Asian Studies/Chinese History\n Katja Triplett\, Department of East Asian Studies/Religions in East Asia\nModerator:\nKatja Pessl\, CeMEAS Coordinator\nProgram:\nPresentation of research project  (max. 20 minutes)\n Comments  (20 minutes)\n Discussion \nCeMEAS will provide coffee and light refreshments\, however feel free to bring along additional food and drinks.
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/4659/
LOCATION:KWZ\, Heinrich Düker Weg 14\, 37073 Göttingen\, Germany
CATEGORIES:East Asia Research Salon
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130430T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130430T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20170119T111708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170119T111708Z
UID:4827-1367330400-1367337600@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:VORTRAG: How Can Latecomer Countries Catch-Up? (Vortragssprache: Deutsch)
DESCRIPTION:VORTRAG: How Can Latecomer Countries Catch-Up? (Vortragssprache: Deutsch)\nA Case Study of China‘s High-Speed Rail\n\n\nDienstag\, 30. April\, 2013\n14 Uhr c.t.\, KWZ 2.601\nProf. Dr. Junhua Zhang\nJiaotong University\, Shanghai \n \nDr. Junhua Zhang currently is a Professor of Political Science at the School of International and Public Affairs of the Shanghai Jiao Tong University (SJTU). His research fields are China’s political system\, international politics with focus on internet policy and international political economy and social memory.
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/vortrag-can-latecomer-countries-catch-vortragssprache-deutsch/
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130424T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130424T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20170119T111943Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170119T111943Z
UID:4831-1366826400-1366833600@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Lecture Series Environmental Communication
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Series: Environmental pollution in China.\nNew media and public participation: The case of air pollution\nWednesday\, April 24\, 2013\n18:00 – 19:30\, Seminar Room 0.609\, KWZ\nHeinrich-Düker-Weg 14\nProf. Li Ji\nSchool of Journalism and Communication\, Wuhan University \nThe air pollution problem in China has been taken as the most serious environmental challenge facing the Chinese new government in 2013. The severity of the problem grew as public awareness of air pollution has been aroused by media reports. Interconnections between traditional media and new media in China formed new strength to push the Chinese government to act legitimately for solving the problem. From Blue Sky Project to PM 2.5 reports\, the lecture reviews how Chinese media respond to air pollution problems in China in recent years\, and how new media becomes a new strength to promote public participation in air pollution problems in China. \nDr. JI Li has been researching in the field of international/intercultural communication for 10 years\, with more than 20 journal articles\, book chapters and books published. She has also undertaken more than 10 academic projects\, including one major project on environmental communication funded by of National Social Science Foundation of China. \nDr. JI Li has been visiting scholar of the Open University\, University of Sunderland\, Chinese Culture University\, Taiwan\, University of Goettingen in last 10 years. In 2008\, she was selected as a member delegate of United States Institute on Journalism and Media funded by U.S. Department of State’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs. She has also won China-Canadian Scholarship Exchange Program (CCSEP) last year. \nShe is now focusing on environmental communication research and conducted many comparative researches in the field. As a founding member of the International Environmental Communication Association\, she has already translated several important works on environmental communication into Chinese.
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/lecture-series-environmental-communication/
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130123T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20130123T200000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20170119T112123Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170119T112123Z
UID:4833-1358964000-1358971200@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Lecture Series: Culture Governance and Local Development in China: The Case of Nanjing
DESCRIPTION:Lecture Series:\nCulture Governance and Local Development in China: The Case of Nanjing\nWednesday\, January 23\, 2013\n18:00 – 20:00\, Seminar Room 0.603\, KWZ\nHeinrich-Düker-Weg 14\nProf. Leng Tse-Kang\nNational Chengchi University\, Academia Sinica \n \nThe purpose of this talk is to delve into the model of urban governance on the cultural industry in China. The case of Nanjing is selected to demonstrate the formation of urban state entrepreneurialism and its constraints. In contrast to the manufacturing sector\, which is marked by strong state intervention\, the cultural and creative industries present the state with such challenges as “creating” the market and the environment. Traditional top-down policy instruments of command\, control\, and regulation could not be fully applied to this new field of service-oriented businesses. This talk aims to explain how the local state transforms itself into an active market player to create niches of urban development. \nProf. Lengs research interests focus on theories of international relations and cross-Straits relations\, political economy of globalization\, and political economy of urban development in China. Recent academic works include: “Local States\, Institutional Changes\, and Innovations Systems: Beijing and Shanghai Compared\,” Journal of Contemporary China\, (Forthcoming\, March\, 2013. Co-authored with Jenn-hwan Wang)  /  “Coping with China in Hard Times: Taiwan in global and domestic Perspectives\,” Pacific Focus \, (vol. 26\, no. 3\, Dec\, 2011)  /  “Politics of Centrally-Administered Municipalities in China\,” in Jae Ho Chung ed.\, The Ladder of Governance: Traditions and Changes in China’s Local Administrative Hierarchy (London: Rutledge\, 2009)\, Chapter 3 / Governance of Biodiversity Conservation in China and Taiwan (Cheltenham\,UK: Edward Elgar\, 2006. Co-authored with Gerald McBeath).
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/lecture-series-culture-governance-local-development-china-case-nanjing/
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20121123T150000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20121123T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20170119T112343Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170119T112343Z
UID:4837-1353682800-1353686400@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:China and the United States: Four Mutual Images in Public Discourse
DESCRIPTION:China and the United States: Four Mutual Images in Public Discourse\nFriday\, November 23\, 2012\n15:00 -16:00\, Seminar Room 0.609\, KWZ\nHeinrich-Düker-Weg 14\nDong Wang\nPhD\, Professor of Contemporary Chinese History\nUniversity of Turku
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/china-united-states-four-mutual-images-public-discourse/
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20121123T003000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20121123T133000
DTSTAMP:20260403T194719
CREATED:20170119T112247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170119T112247Z
UID:4835-1353630600-1353677400@www.cemeas.de
SUMMARY:Urbanization and the Establishment of Communities (Shequ) in China: Implications for Everyday Life
DESCRIPTION:Urbanization and the Establishment of Communities (Shequ) in China: Implications for Everyday Life\nFriday\, November 23\, 2012\n12:30 – 13:30\, Seminar Room 0.610\, KWZ\nHeinrich-Düker-Weg 14\nProf. Dr. Flemming Christiansen\nChair of Political Sociology of China\nUniversity of Duisburg-Essen
URL:https://www.cemeas.de/event/urbanization-establishment-communities-shequ-china-implications-everyday-life/
CATEGORIES:CeMEAS Lecture Series,Lecture
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