August 1, 2024
Posted by: Monique Thormann
When tackling massive global issues like climate change, hunger, war and poverty, “the world is struggling,” says Nadine Fabbi, director of the University of Washington’s Canadian Studies Center. “We’re lacking
July 19, 2024
Posted by: Madison Anne Morgan
Tran Huynh Bao Ho, a graduate from the Department of Asian Languages and Literature, recently spoke with the Jackson School about her time as a Foreign Language and Area Studies
July 17, 2024
Posted by: Jessica Beyer
An early leader within the European Union (EU) and global platform regulation, Germany has exhibited a strong stance against dis/misinformation, with many other countries following suit. Although the field of
July 17, 2024
Posted by: Jessica Beyer
The People’s Republic of China (PRC) possesses high-altitude electromagnetic pulse (HEMP) weapons designed to paralyze electronic infrastructure–such as telecommunications and industrial control systems. A HEMP is a nuclear warhead that
July 17, 2024
Posted by: Madison Anne Morgan
In a bustling conference hall at the United Nations headquarters in New York in June, delegates from around the world gathered for the United Nation’s seventeenth annual Conference of States
July 15, 2024
Posted by: Madison Anne Morgan
Christopher Tounsel, chair of the African Studies program, has recently published the book “Bounds of Blackness: African Americans, Sudan, and the Politics of Solidarity.” Through his writing, Tounsel highlights a
July 3, 2024
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Yasir Zaidan, a doctoral candidate in international studies, shares his view on the situation in Sudan as one of six foreign policy experts for In Brief, a weekly newsletter produced
July 3, 2024
Posted by: Monique Thormann
Christopher Tounsel, Chair of the African Studies Program housed in the Jackson School, is one of three featured guests in an episode of the podcast “Rights and Wrongs,” hosted by
June 25, 2024
Posted by: Madison Anne Morgan
In 2005, East Asia Center managing director Paul Carrington spent a snowy week in Seoul, South Korea. Nineteen years later — and sans the snow — he’s returned. For the
June 25, 2024
Posted by: Madison Anne Morgan
Nick Gottschall, managing director for the South Asia Center, was selected as a Fulbright Scholar for the 2024-2025 Fulbright-Nehru International Education Administrators Program to India. The Nehru International Education program