On 1 April 2016, Burma’s newly elected civilian government takes office, marking a new chapter in Burmese political history. From 1962 to 2012, decades of military rule stifled free expression through the brutal repression of protest, the imprisonment and torture of activists, and the closure of universities. But the urge to speak remained irrepressible. Where some political prisoners improvised writing materials, others found a voice in exile.
What role did journalists and student activists play in Burma’s transition from military to civilian government? What challenges do Burmese journalists face today, given an increasing and at times unquestioning public reliance on unverified social media, for news?
Kyaw Zwa Moe is chief English language editor of The Irrawaddy, an independent media organization founded in Thailand in 1992 and launched in Yangon in 2012. A former Visiting Fellow at the UC Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism (2005), he spent eight years in prison for advocating for democracy.
Discussant Min Zin, PhD Candidate, Political Science, UC Berkeley
Co-sponsors: Center for Buddhist Studies, Center for Human Rights, Peace & Conflict Studies, Freshman Seminar
Yvonne Maldonado, Stanford University
Epidemiologic Principles in the Global Elimination of Polioviruses
The 6th Annual Bay Area Symposium on Viruses - May 27, 2016
http://bayviro.org/symposium/
Words In Action: ARABIC
It is a nominal sentence, a poem by Mahmoud
Darwish
Performed by Marica Petrey
Words In Action - A MULTILINGUAL STUDENT PERFORMANCE CELEBRATING LINGUISTIC DIVERSITY AT UC BERKELEY
Chevron Auditorium -- International House Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Words In Action is generously sponsored by the BERKELEY LANGUAGE CENTER
Aaron Shurin is the author of eleven books of poetry and prose, most recently "Citizen", a collection of prose poems and "King of Shadows", a collection of personal essays. His writing has appeared in over thirty national and international anthologies, and has been translated into seven languages. Shurin's honors include fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts Council, the San Francisco Arts Commission, and the Gerbode Foundation. He lives in San Francisco.
http://lunchpoems.berkeley.edu/
PURPA, EPAct 1992, and EPAct 2005, EISA 2007 (Continued) - August 27, 2008
The basic concepts underlying the economic regulation of energy. In addition, discussion, of three federal acts that form reference points for our national conversation about renewable energy.