Events in UCIS

Thursday, January 19 until Saturday, January 21

8:30 am Symposium
Environment as Imaginative Force: Nature and Culture in Southeast Europe and the Middle East
Sponsored by:
Center for Russian East European and Eurasian Studies
See Details

Environmental history and nature-writing have captured both scholarly and public interest as evidenced by the number as well as the quality of recent publications. The proliferation is doubtlessly the result of the urgency of the climate crisis and environmental destruction and social, political, and cultural anxieties stemming from them. Within the academy especially, research on environmental history is flourishing; scholars have been examining new themes and possibilities for studying environmental change and its complex entanglements with the human world. In the last several years, scholars have expanded the scope of environmental research, which now ranges from narratives centering on various environments and topographies such as rivers or permafrost to animal farming in the context of twentieth-century politics and the role of technology such as photography in making nature an important part of colonialist discourse.

This symposium aims to gather scholars whose work touches on different aspects of the cultural and social history of the environment in Southeast and East Europe and the Middle East. Broadly conceived, the region forms a part of the former Ottoman domains and the historical treatment of the region has been overwhelmingly through the lens of political history and top-down approaches. In recent years, though, a number of historians embraced environmental approaches, producing in turn excellent studies on a range of topics, from climate history and its impact on societies to empire and resource management, particularly of water. Inspired by this scholarship, the symposium seeks to emphasize the environment as a powerful discursive force at the intersection of cultural, religious, and intellectual history. Therefore, its core concern is to explore and formulate new questions, themes, and approaches regarding the role of the environment in shaping different imaginaries as well as modes of belonging and identity, of history and cultural and political categories and hierarchies.

Thursday, January 19

12:00 pm Student Club Activity
Tavola Italiana Speciale - Tombola!
Location:
Global Hub
Sponsored by:
Global Hub along with Pitt Italian Club
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Join the Italian Club for weekly Tavola Italiana on Thursdays from 12-1 pm during Spring 2023! The first tavola of the semester, on January 19, will be a special one where the group will play the Italian game tombola - bring your spare change!

5:00 pm Student Club Activity
French Conversation Hour
Location:
Global Hub
Sponsored by:
Global Hub along with French Club
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Join the French Club for Spring 2023's weekly conversation hours, on both Wednesdays and Thursdays from 5-6:30 pm!

Note: French Conversation Hour will not meet in the Global Hub on Thursday, April 13.

6:30 pm Panel Discussion
The African Diaspora Convenes on the World Stage & Calls for Reparatory Justice Reports from the Inaugural session of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent
Location:
Zoom
Sponsored by:
Center for African Studies and Global Studies Center along with U.S. Human Rights Cities Alliance, Southern Center for Human Rights, Southern Poverty Law Center, Ubuntu Institute for Community Development and Pittsburgh Human Rights City Alliance
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Join us as we have a discussion with prominent social justice advocates who attended the United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (UNPFPAD), as they share their observations and offer ideas on a global Declaration on the Rights of People of African Descent and how this new body can be a tool for building local and national movements to end white supremacy and advance racial justice.

In December 2022, the United Nations launched the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (UNPFPAD) as part of the International Decade on People of African Descent (2015-2024). The PFPAD will develop a global Declaration on the Rights of People of African Descent and define steps to improve the lived experiences of African descended people around the world through improved implementation of international commitments to end racism and all forms of discrimination. Delegate Justin Hansford calls this Forum a potential "instrument of liberation" that requires grassroots communities to “dream big” and engage with this global process to find creative and concrete ways to address ongoing harms of colonialism, genocide, and slavery. Over 900 civil society representatives attended the first PFPAD meeting in Geneva, which generated promising ideas for transformative change.

8:00 pm Student Club Activity
Persian Table Hour
Location:
Global Hub
Sponsored by:
Global Hub along with Persian Club
See Details

Join the Persian Club for weekly converstions on Thursdays at 8-9 pm during Spring 2023!