![sub_image3.jpg Krieger Hall](/sites/default/files/inline-images/sub_image3_0.jpg)
UCI History Graduate Students and Faculty are sharing their "history hacks". Click to check them out!
Click here for more informationThe event brings together scholars of the Caribbean and Pacific to explore struggles and movements related to lingering imperialism, climate crisis and migration that resonate across island geographies. This two-day event takes place on May 7 at 11AM PT and May 14 at 10AM PT, and is co-sponsored by the UCI Humanities Center, Oceans theme year and the History Department.
Click here for more informationThe application for the 2021 UCI Undergraduate History Conference is now open to all undergraduate students! All students are welcome to apply to be part of our showcase of undergraduate research on Thursday, May 20. Application deadline is Sunday, April 4.
Click here for more informationJoin the History Graduate Student Association on Thursday, April 8th and Friday, April 9th for their 2021 conference. Click for details on registration, the event program, and the keynote address.
Click here for more informationWe are pleased to announce the establishment of the Center for Armenian Studies at University of California, Irvine. (Click here for a message from Houri Berberian, Director of UCI Center for Armenian Studies.)
Click here for more informationDr. Fedman's new book "Seeds of Control: Japan's Empire of Forestry in Colonial Korea", published in July 2020 by University of Washington Press, tells the story of how Japanese colonial rule in Korea affected the peninsula's extensive mountains and forests, revealing a largely untold story of green imperialism in Asia.
Click here for more informationBorucki, along with UC Santa Cruz historian Gregory O'Malley, led the development of the Intra-American Slave Trade Database, which tracks records of slave voyages within the Americas � stretching from Boston to Buenos Aires, Argentina, and involving both the Atlantic and Pacific coast. (Click for write-up by the School of Humanities.)
Click here for more informationThe AAJR represents the oldest organization of Judaic scholars in North America. Fellows are nominated and elected by their peers and constitute the most distinguished scholars teaching Judaic studies within U.S. universities. (Click for write-up by the School of Humanities.)
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