Events in UCIS

Friday, November 11 until Sunday, November 27

8:30 am Festival
HOMELANDS: The Romanian Film Festival Seattle, 9th Edition
Sponsored by:
Center for Russian East European and Eurasian Studies
See Details

The University of Pittsburgh's Center for Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies is proud to sponsor the 9th edition of the RFF titled Homelands. This year's festival reflects on current events, while celebrating the power of film to map out new meanings into a world where people have been displaced by wars, economic crises, political instability, and natural disasters. Internationally acclaimed movies featured in a carefully curated selection, covering all forms and genres, as well as film-related events with special guests, will redefine the sense of homeland and belonging, in relation to our families, neighbors, countries of origin, and, by extension, to our planet itself.

Films will be screened online with free tickets provided to Pitt faculty and students. More information to be announced.

Wednesday, November 16

1:00 pm Lecture
Afghanistan One Year Later: The Economics of a Collapsed State
Location:
Posvar 3911
Announced by:
Global Studies Center on behalf of
See Details

Join scholars and affiliates of the Center for Governance and Markets for the fall 2022 series "Voices from Afghanistan," featuring panels, seminars, and lectures discussing important topics surrounding the state of economics, civil society, and governance in Afghanistan more than a year after the collapse of Kabul in 2021.

2:00 pm Panel Discussion
Insights into European Elections: Sweden, Italy and Denmark
Location:
Zoom
Sponsored by:
European Studies Center and European Union Center of Excellence along with Indiana University Bloomington
See Details

The European Studies Center at the University of Pittsburgh, along with the Institute for European Studies at Indiana University – Bloomington, is happy to invite you to a virtual roundtable titled: Insights into European Elections: Sweden, Italy, and Denmark.

In this discussion, four experts and political scientists from Denmark, Italy, Sweden, and the United States will shed light on the results of the recent elections in Europe. This will include discussions on the transformations of European social democratic parties, the rise of right-wing populism, and how these impact European Union politics. This discussion will provide insights into the current European political developments in EU member-states and the possible directions of their futures.

Moderator:

Jae-Jae Spoon, University of Pittsburgh

Prof. Jae-Jae Spoon, Department of Political Science, University of Pittsburgh (Moderator) (spoonj@pitt.edu)
Jae-Jae Spoon is Professor of Political Science and Chair of the Political Science Department and a former director of the European Studies Center. She is co-editor Research & Politics (R&P). Her research focuses on comparative electoral behavior primarily in Europe. She is interested in understanding political party strategies and their outcomes for the party, its elected officials, and voters, and how party type and size, institutions, and context influence parties’ decision‐making at both the domestic and European levels. She has a particular interest in the behavior of new and small political parties. Professor Spoon received her PhD from the University of Michigan. Before coming to Pittsburgh, she taught at the University of Iowa and the University of North Texas and was a visiting researcher at the University of Mannheim.

Speakers:

Prof. Rune Stubager, School of Business and Social Sciences, Aarhus University (stubager@ps.au.dk)
Rune Stubager is professor of Political Science at Aarhus University, Denmark. His research interest is political behaviour with a particular emphasis on electoral behaviour. He is one of the principal investigators in the Danish National Election Study. He is the author (with Kasper Møller Hansen, Michael Lewis-Beck and Richard Nadeau) of The Danish Voter. Democratic Ideals and Challenges (2021 University of Michigan Press). His work investigates also the continuinuos social and political importance of social class to citizens of advanced democracies. For more information, please visit http://person.au.dk/en/stubager@ps.au.dk.

Prof. Andrea Ceron, Department of Social and Political Sciences, University of Milan (andrea.ceron@unimi.it)
Andrea Ceron is associate professor at the University of Milan, where he teaches Italian Political System, Polimetrics and Multivariate Analysis.
He has been visiting scholar at Harvard University, co-founder and board member of Voices from the Blogs Srl, an academic spinoff in the field of sentiment analysis.
He is currently principal investigator of the PRIN project "DEMOPE: Democracy under Pressure" and editor of the Encyclopedia of Technology and Politics.
He has published 8 books and 50 articles in international peer-reviewed journals.

Prof. Timothy Hellwig, Department of Political Science, Indiana University – Bloomington (thellwig@indiana.edu)
Professor of Political Science and Academic Director of the Europe Gateway at Indiana University. My interests include comparative and international political economy, mass political behavior, and research methods. I am a team member on the Executive Approval Project. I am author of Democracy Under Siege? Parties, Voters, and Elections after the Great Recession (with Yesola Kweon and Jack Vowles, 2020 Oxford) and Globalization and Mass Politics: Retaining the Room to Maneuver (2014 Cambridge). I teach courses on comparative elections, political economy, European politics, the EU, world politics, and quantitative methods.
Professor of Political Science and Academic Director of the Europe Gateway at Indiana University. My interests include comparative and international political economy, mass political behavior, and research methods. I am a team member on the Executive Approval Project. I am author of Democracy Under Siege? Parties, Voters, and Elections after the Great Recession (with Yesola Kweon and Jack Vowles, 2020 Oxford) and Globalization and Mass Politics: Retaining the Room to Maneuver (2014 Cambridge). I teach courses on comparative elections, political economy, European politics, the EU, world politics, and quantitative methods.
Timothy Hellwig is a professor of Political Science and Academic Director of the Europe Gateway at Indiana University. His interests include comparative and international political economy, mass political behavior, and reaserch methods. He is a team member on the Executive Approval Project and an author of Democracy Under Siege? Parties, Voters, and Elections after the Great Recession (with Yesola Kweon and Jack Vowles, 2020 Oxford) and Globalization and Mass Politics: Retaining the Room to Maneuver (2014 Cambridge). He teaches courses on comparative elections, political economy, European politics, the EU, world politics, and quantitative methods.

Prof. Maria Solevid, Department of Political Science, Gothenburg University (maria.solevid@pol.gu.se)
Maria Solevid, Ph.D. and Associate Professor in Political Science, Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg. Solevid conducts research within the Swedish National Election Studies Program (SNES), and the Gothenburg Research Group on Elections, Public Opinion and Political Behavior (GEPOP).

5:00 pm Student Club Activity
Polish Conversation Table
Location:
1219 Cathedral of Learning
Sponsored by:
Center for Russian East European and Eurasian Studies
5:45 pm Lecture
China Town Hall with Matthew D. Johnson
Location:
via Zoom
Sponsored by:
Asian Studies Center along with National Committee on U.S.-China Relations
See Details

Join us for a discussion about current issues and the recent successes and challenges of China's Belt and Road initiative with AltaSilva VP and Director of Research, Matthew D. Johnson, along with a national webcast to follow at 7 pm ET with former U.S. Ambassador to Russia, China, and Singapore, Jon M. Huntsman, Jr. To register for this event, please click here.

6:00 pm Film
Mars One
Location:
5904 Bryant St, Pittsburgh, PA 15206
Sponsored by:
Center for Latin American Studies along with Center for African American Poetry & Poetics, Center for Creativity, Office of the Provost, University Library System (ULS), Diversity & Inclusion David C. Frederick Honors College, Nordenberg Chair and School of Law Institute for International Studies in Education, Department of French & Italian, Center for Urban Education and Pitt Arts
See Details

Casa Brasil & Addverse present a free screening of Mars One, a film by Gabriel Martins.

Synopsis: "The Martins family are optimistic dreamers, quietly leading their lives in the margins of a major Brazilian city following the disappointing inauguration of a far-right extremist president. A lower-middle-class Black family, they feel the strain of their new reality as the political dust settles" (letterboxd.com).

7:00 pm Cultural Event
Arabic Language Conversation Hour
Sponsored by:
Global Hub