Events in UCIS

Thursday, April 17

9:30 am Exhibit
Chinese Politics Student Poster Session
Location:
Global Hub
Sponsored by:
Global Hub along with Department of Political Science
See Details

Stop by the Global Hub to see students in Chinee Politics (PS 1332) present research about their work this semester.

11:00 am Student Club Activity
Swahili Level 4 Conversational Hours
Sponsored by:
Center for African Studies and Global Hub along with Less Commonly Taught Languages Center
See Details

Swahili Level 4 students: Join Swahili instructor Faraja Ngogo on Thursdays at 11 am-12 pm in the Global Hub to practice Swahili.

12:00 pm Student Club Activity
Tavola Italiana
Sponsored by:
European Studies Center and Global Hub along with Department of French & Italian
See Details

Mangia con noi! Bring your lunch and chat with us! Pitt students only, all levels welcome!

5:30 pm Lecture
The “DeepSeek Moment:” China and the Crisis of American Confidence with Kaiser Kuo
Location:
Carnegie Mellon Campus Baker Hall A53, Steinberg Auditorium
Sponsored by:
Asian Studies Center along with Carnegie Mellon Humanities Center
See Details

China's recent achievements in artificial intelligence, exemplified by DeepSeek's breakthrough LLM, represent more than just technological advancement - they signal a fundamental shift in global innovation dynamics. While Chinese companies have demonstrated remarkable capabilities in areas from EVs to social media to AI, U.S. responses continue to follow a predictable pattern: disbelief, anger, accusations of theft, and blame. This recurring cycle reveals both China's evolved capacity for coordinated technological development and deep-seated American anxieties about what this means for U.S. technological primacy. Drawing on his extensive experience analyzing both societies, Sinica Podcast host Kaiser Kuo explores how China's innovation ecosystem has matured, why its successes continue to surprise Western observers, and what this tells us about the structural, cultural, and epistemic barriers to understanding China's technological transformation. The talk examines how China's rise has challenged core assumptions about the relationship between political systems and innovation, market economies and state guidance, and ultimately, about American exceptionalism itself — and whether it can accommodate China's own brand of exceptionalism.

Kaiser Kuo is the host and co-founder of the Sinica Podcast, a weekly discussion of current affairs in China that has run since April 2010 — for its first six years from Beijing, and since 2016 from the U.S. as part of SupChina. The show features in-depth conversations with scholars, journalists, diplomats, analysts, and others who work to better understand China in all its complexity.

Benno Weiner is Associate Professor of History at Carnegie Mellon University where he specializes in the ethnopolitics of twentieth-century state and nation making along China’s ethnocultural borderlands. He is the author of The Chinese Revolution on the Tibetan Frontier and co-editor of Conflicting Memories: Tibetan History under Mao Retold.