Mr Bart 脡des joins ISID as Professor of Practice for a two year term beginning May 1 2021.聽 At the Institute, Mr 脡des will broaden capacities in relation to Asia and will complement other ISID research agendas in such areas as development finance, strategic partnerships, and sustainable development. Of particular interest is his planned study of digital initiatives for development in the post-pandemic era.
ISID congratulates Nhu Truong who has just been awarded a Shorenstein postdoctoral fellowship at Stanford University.聽 As a Shorenstein Postdoctoral Fellow on Contemporary Asia, Dr Truong will pursue research on why some authoritarian regimes are more responsive than others.
Nhu won a graduate field research award from the Institute in 2017 in order to pursue her research in Vietnam and China.
Much of the influence on climate from air pollution in East Asia is driven by consumption in the developed countries of Western Europe and North America, according to research co-led by 缅北强奸 atmospheric scientist Yi Huang.
In a paper published online this week in Nature Geoscience, Huang and colleagues from China, the U.S. and U.K. report that international trade shifts the climate impacts of aerosols -- solid or liquid particles suspended in air -- from net consuming countries to net producing countries.
With classical music's popularity thriving in Asia (as millions of youngsters in China in particular are studying piano and violin from early age), and with the financial difficulties facing classical music in the West, opera houses in particular (as the New York City Opera bankruptcy, the present negotiations at the Metropolitan Opera, the last minute rescue of this year's season at the Rome opera house, and the constant strikes at classical music venues in France suggest), the question is: can classical music be financed without significant government subsidies?聽
For about a billion revelers around the world, that means it's time to start thinking about sweets -- specifically the South Asian confections called mithai. [鈥 "Sweets are a sign of positive things, that life is good," said Arvind Sharma, a professor of religion at 缅北强奸. "When you offer something to god and then give it to someone to eat, it becomes sacred."
Read more at聽
Last week, a Globe article outlined the challenges that Canada faces in establishing itself as a trading power in the Asian region.
As I read along, I suddenly thought of a scene from the movie Shrek, where the donkey character jumps in and out of view, shouting: 鈥淥h, oh, pick me . . . oh, pick me . . . oh me . . . me, me, meeeee (donkey falls out of view)鈥.
-Article by William Polushin