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Dr. Mehta's Research Featured in UCSB Current article image

Dr. Mehta's Research Featured in UCSB Current

From the UCSB Current - March, 7th, 2018 - By Jim Logan:

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Global Studies MA Reunion Recap! article image

Global Studies MA Reunion Recap!

On the weekend of February 23rd, the UCSB Global Studies MA program held its first ever graduate student reunion! A huge thanks to Gary Lytle for organizing the event, as well as to our undergraduate assistants and to all who attended. It was a fabulous weekend during which old friends and colleagues got to catch up with one another and share what they have been up to lately. Various panels were hosted throughout the weekend, which provided for engaging discussion and a survey of global issues currently being addressed by our grads.

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GS Colloquium 2/28: Scholars at Risk

Nancy Gallagher, Hassan Almohammed, and Kathleen Moore present on the Scholars at Risk program as part of the Global Studies Colloquium. 

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Is Work Globalizing?

Dr. Aashish Mehta from the Department of Global Studies gives a talk as part of the Global Studies Colloquium on February 21st. 

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Hiring: Temporary Lecturers, Department of Global Studies article image

Hiring: Temporary Lecturers, Department of Global Studies

Continue Reading Hiring: Temporary Lecturers, Department of Global Studies


Colloquium Series: Song, Surfing, and Postcolonial Sustainability  Event Image

Colloquium Series: Song, Surfing, and Postcolonial Sustainability

The Global Studies Colloquium Series in conjunction with the Orfalea Endowment for the Master's Program in Global Studies is proud to present a talk by Timothy Cooley, "Song, Surfing, and Postcolonial Sustainability." 

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GS Colloquium Series: The Significance of a "Ritual Economy" in the Context of Chinese State Capitalism and Globalization Event Image

GS Colloquium Series: The Significance of a "Ritual Economy" in the Context of Chinese State Capitalism and Globalization

Event Start: January 31, 2018 01:00 PM

Event End: January 31, 2018 02:30 PM

Event Location: SSMS 2001

Event Details:

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GS Colloquium Series: "Carbon Fundamentalism vs. Climate Justice: Taking Social Movements Beyond Disasters and Tipping Points" Event Image

GS Colloquium Series: "Carbon Fundamentalism vs. Climate Justice: Taking Social Movements Beyond Disasters and Tipping Points"

Event Start: January 24, 2018 01:30 PM

Event End: January 24, 2018 02:30 PM

Event Location: SSMS 2001

Event Details:

Continue Reading GS Colloquium Series: "Carbon Fundamentalism vs. Climate Justice: Taking Social Movements Beyond Disasters and Tipping Points"


Congratulations to Dr. Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky on his new book, “Empire of Refugees: North Caucasian Muslims and the Late Ottoman State”

Please see this article in UCSB's The Current to learn more: https://news.ucsb.edu/in-focus/new-book-reveals-ottoman-origins-refugee-resettlement-middle-east

Congratulations to Dr. Vladimir Hamed-Troyansky on the Stanford Humanities Center Fellowship!

To learn more about Dr. Hamed-Troyansky's work through the Stanford Humanities Center Fellowship, please see this article:

https://news.ucsb.edu/in-focus/ucsb-historians-ya-zuo-and-vladimir-hamed-troyansky-awarded-stanford-humanities

 

 

Global Studies PhD Student Eugene Riordan, Jr Receives GSA Excellence in Teaching Award AND Dixon-Levy GSA Service Award

Please join us in celebrating Eugene and the other winners at 7pm on May 31 (register here). To learn more about these awards, please see this website.

 

Global Studies PhD Student Mariah Miller and Anthropology PhD Student MacKenzie Wade Co-teach INT CS 130: Alternative Foods; Alternative Economies in Winter 2022

Mariah Miller and MacKenzie Wade

Miller and Wade created this course through a collaboration with the College of Creative Studies and Graduate Division, thorough the Crossroads 2.0 Program. Please see this link for more information on the course and the Crossroads 2.0 Program.

 

Global Studies PhD Student Maya Zaynetdinova Awarded IHC Public Humanities Graduate Fellow

Maya Zaynetdinova is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Global Studies, an educator, and content creator. She is researching and writing a blog about sociocultural history of the decentralized technology of blockchain and its impacts on global societies. Maya is particularly interested in blockchain’s potential for environmental activism and sustainable change. She aims to make this complex technology more accessible to the public through her writing and public presenting. Read her IHC article here.

GLOBAL STUDIES COLLOQUIUM SERIES

The Department of Global Studies' Colloquium Series is a lecture and lunch series, which has been made possible by the generosity of the Orfalea Endowment for the Master's Program in Global Studies.  The Colloquium Series strives to open and explore a wide range of interdisciplinary debates and their interaction and engagement with the global, hosting new guest speakers each quarter from UCSB and beyond. Professor Jan Nederveen Pieterse is currently the Director of the Colloquium Series. For more information, please contact our Orfalea Colloquium Fellow Brett Aho at: brettaho@ucsb.edu

When?  Various Wednesdays, 12:30-2pm

Where?  Zoom link https://ucsb.zoom.us/j/84246564996  (talks will be recorded and posted on our YouTube channel)

Who?  The Global Studies Colloquium Series is open to everyone interested in attending the talks.

            

Special Presentation: Miguel Fuentes' Research Software

https://youtu.be/jIAX4P-SMpA

Through his higher education programs, Miguel Fuentes has learned how different software can make research give him visually useful results, more in depth analysis and simply easier paths towards writing. Miguel is offering this introductory course to some (or all) the research tools he's encountered through the years: from software to find the literature he needs to write, software that make writing easier —as they break down the parts of an essay or a dissertation—, to software that help him catalog and analyze data in a systematized way. The presentation's goal will be three-fold: 1) skim through different software, 2) go more in depth on how to start using the software, and 3) dialogue with participants on how to use this software according to your needs.

The ability to use qualitative and quantitative methods landed Miguel the job he currently has at the Williams Research Institute, and using this software made it easier to develop advanced skills to do so. If you're entering the job market soon, these are tools that can definitely help make your case during the selection process! If you're an experienced researcher, these tools can make your writing and analysis easier, or can help your RAs manage your data more efficiently. In any case, software can be as useful as you want it to be.