East Asian Studies Center
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October 20, 2020 | USC Professors Eunjoo Pacifici and Terry Church on "Drugs in COVID Times"
EASC has launched a new series on Regulatory Science: East Asian Perspectives which represents an exciting collaboration with colleagues at the Health Sciences Campus to cover a wide range of topics on health and wellness that are of vital interest to us today.
In Regulatory Science, we study the regulatory requirements for biomedical products in the United States and elsewhere around the world. East Asia plays a prominent role in all facets of this area -- as developers, manufacturers, and consumers of regulated products.
In our first webinar session for the series, we focused on “Drugs in COVID Times” and examined the role of East Asia in global drug development.
October 1, 2020 | Global East Asia (GEA) is a four-week upper-division Maymester research course with a study abroad component for USC undergraduate students, made possible by the East Asian Studies Center and USC Dornsife. This intensive program gives students the opportunity to travel and conduct research in China or Japan. Students from all majors, schools and language backgrounds are eligible to apply and experience East Asia in a unique way.
September 15, 2020 | The East Asian Area Studies (EAAS) major offers an interdisciplinary approach to learning about East Asia, combining language study with history, social sciences and the humanities. This webinar will introduce the EAAS major, discuss how students can tailor the major to their academic interests, and list exciting funding, professionalization, research and study abroad opportunities available to students interested in studying China, Japan, Korea or the region as a whole.
May 15, 2020 | The USC East Asian Studies Center hosted an EASC Virtual Commencement Reception following the USC Dornsife Commencement Ceremony and we are incredibly proud of our EAAS graduates! It was wonderful seeing our graduates and guests who shared their memories with EASC at USC.
January 16, 2020 | Hidden among Beijing’s northern mountain range, a replica of the Wyoming town of Jackson Hole promises to deliver the American dream to its several thousand Chinese residents. In Americaville, Annie Liu escapes China’s increasingly uninhabitable capital city to pursue happiness, freedom, romance, and spiritual fulfillment in Jackson Hole; only to find the American idyll harder to attain than what was promised to her.
This screening is co-sponsored by the USC U.S.-China Institute, USC East Asian Studies Center, and the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West.
October 23, 2019