Safer and Fairer: The Value of Cooperative Approaches to Fieldwork
A new post is live at The CESS Blog by Philipp Lottholz of the University of Marburg.
The Analyzing Kyrgyz Narratives (AKYN) Research Project
A new post is up at The CESS Blog by James Plumtree of the American University of Central Asia.
Shifting Seas: The Lived Landscapes of Aral
A new post is up at The CESS Blog by Grace H. Zhou of Stanford University.
Author Interview with Scott Levi: The Rise and Fall of Khoqand, 1709-1876: Central Asia in the Global Age
A new post is up at The CESS Blog. Author and historian, Scott Levi, reflects upon the questions posed to him at a recent author-critic forum centered around his latest book.
Representing the Social Costs of Migration: Abandoned Wives or Nonchalant Women
A new post is up at The CESS Blog by Malika Bahovadinova of the Oriental Institute at the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.
2019 Summer School in Russian and Eurasian Studies (SSRES) at Nazarbayev University
SSRES at Nazarbayev University in Astana, Kazakhstan is an intensive academic program that offers students the chance to immerse themselves in the Russian or Kazakh languages and to experience Kazakh and post-Soviet culture in the heart of Eurasia.
New CESS Blog Post: “The Central Eurasianist Current of the 2018 Modern Rivers of Eurasia Symposium”
A new post is up at The CESS Blog by Patryk Reed of the University of Pittsburgh, “The Central Eurasianist Current of the 2018 Modern Rivers of Eurasia Symposium.”
New CESS Blog Post: “Securitisation and Mass Detentions in Xinjiang”
A new post is up at The CESS Blog by Rachel Harris of SOAS University of London: Securitisation and Mass Detentions in Xinjiang.
New CESS Blog post: “The Afterlives of Yurt Wall-hangings: Tus Kiiz”
A new post is up at The CESS Blog by Guldana Salimja of the University of British Columbia: The Afterlives of Yurt Wall-hangings: Tus Kiiz.
New CESS Blog post: “Last Lament of a Fallen Dynasty: Bukhara, Shahrisabz, […]”
New post up at The CESS Blog by James Pickett of the University of Pittsburgh: “Last Lament of a Fallen Dynasty: Bukhara, Shahrisabz, and a Curious Nineteenth-Century Persian Document”