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DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
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UID:11633-1739692800-1742126400@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:Camp United Nations for Girls DC 2025
DESCRIPTION:Girls step on the world stage to study global affairs and diplomacy then hone their decision making skills at Camp United Nations for Girls.\n\n\nCamp United Nations for Girls DC 2025 introduces girls to the work of the United Nations and international policy. Camp United Nations begins with a lesson on the history of the United Nations and the organization’s purpose. This is followed by a study of the structure\, leadership\, and the rules of procedure of the United Nations. Each student will be given an assignment to serve as a delegate for a UN Member State. When the General Assembly convenes delegates will propose a resolution. The resolution will be subject to negotiation and amendment by the UN Delegates before a vote on a final version of the resolution. Girl Scouts and Girl Guides qualify to earn a Global Action Award or World Thinking badge for participating in Camp United Nations for Girls; awards and badges not provided. \nFor additional information contact us at +1 866-277-2123 extension 1\, via email at info@girlsinpolitics.com or visit our website at www.girlsinpolitics.com. Ticketing options for girls ages 9-11 and 12-17. Please no solicitation emails or calls. We do not book speakers\, book vendors or recruit volunteers for events. \nFrequently Asked Questions \nIs this event a drop-off? All camps are drop-off unless parent participation is indicated. Parents may wait at the venue for the duration of the camp in any of the lounge or seating area throughout the hotel. The meeting room space capacity can only accommodate students and staff. \nIs the registration fee refundable? The registration fee is non-refundable unless the organizer cancels the session. If a participant is unable to attend a session a credit will be placed on file that may be used at any time for a future program. The credit does not expire. \nIs this a partisan program or supported by a political party? No\, the Girls in Politics Initiative is an independent organization that is self-funded through the fees generated from hosting sessions. The curriculum is civic education. \nIs financial assistance available? Due to rising costs associated with hosting events\, there is no financial assistance available for this event and there is no promo code for this event. \nWho are the instructors? Our Lead Instructors are women that currently or have previously worked in government or electoral politics. Our support staffers are current or former licensed teachers. All instructors and support staff undergo background screening. All instructors and support staff are also in compliance with any local ordinances or state/provincial regulations applicable to those working with children.
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/camp-united-nations-for-girls-dc-2025/
LOCATION:999 9th St NW\, 999 9th Street Northwest\, Washington\, DC\, 20001\, United States
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DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20250306T083000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20250306T083000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250125T185750Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250222T085956Z
UID:6157-1741249800-1741249800@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:Productivity and Costs
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/productivity-and-costs-2/
LOCATION:Washington\, DC
CATEGORIES:BLS,IMPORTANT
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T090000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250306T134615Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250306T134615Z
UID:13494-1741251600-1741251600@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:In-Town Pool Call Time
DESCRIPTION:In-Town Pool
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/in-town-pool-call-time-14/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250307T163000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250304T024902Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250304T024902Z
UID:13162-1741258800-1741365000@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:The Security of Identity Politics: The 2025 A/P/A Graduate Student Working Group Symposium
DESCRIPTION:This symposium will interrogate how different forms of A/P/A  identity politics both serve and challenge notions of security.\n\n\nPresented by the A/P/A Graduate Student Working Group. Hosted by the Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU. \nThis symposium will interrogate how different forms of Asian/Pacific/American identity politics both serve and challenge notions of security amid the intensification of the border crisis\, chauvinist populism\, and forever wars. On one hand\, representation-based identity politics offer security and comfort by widening membership into positions of power and privilege based on liberal capitalist promises of diversity. Concepts such as the model minority\, affirmative action\, and intersectionality have thus often been instrumentalized in the pursuit of defending and securitizing the existing political order against political challenges from both left and right. Alternatively\, “Asian/Pacific/American” is an illustrative example of how identity can both gather marginalized peoples and generate forms of solidarity\, knowledge\, and activism across different geographies and cultures beyond the pursuit of belonging and security. \nNYU campus access guidelines: This is an in-person event\, open to the public. Registration is required. Registration to attend on Thursday\, March 6 closes on Wednesday\, March 5 at 5:00 p.m. Registration to attend on Friday\, March 7 closes on Thursday\, March 6 at 5:00 p.m. \nAccessibility note: This venue has an elevator and is accessible for wheelchair users. There are single-stall\, all gender restrooms\, and a lactation room available. If you have any access needs\, please email apa.rsvp@nyu.edu \n \nSymposium Schedule  \nThursday\, March 6\, 2025 \n \n11:00 a.m. Coffee and Registration \n11:45 a.m. Opening remarks \n\nCrystal Parikh\, Director\, Asian/Pacific/American Institute at NYU\nLinda Luu\, NYU\n\n12:00 p.m. Place-Based Cultural Work Chair: Ayami Hatanaka \n\nMariko Whitenack\, NYU\, “Growing Relations (in)to Place”\nYee Thao\, UCLA\, “‘Belong\, Believe\, Become:’ Reimagining Refugeehood and Spaces through Hmong Femme Weavership”\nJo Alvarado\, UCLA\, “BAHAYNIHAN: Reworlding the Philippine Spatial Imaginary”\n\n1:15 p.m. Lunch \n2:15 p.m. Securitizing Internationalism Chair: Adi Kumar \n\nPasuth Thothaveesansuk\, UNC\, “One Policeman and Two Colonies: America and Postwar Asian Liberal Internationalism”\nNidhi Satyagal\, UCLA\, “Privilege and Violence: The Indian Diaspora’s Complicity in Hindutva within Community Organizations”\nMich Ling\, Rutgers\, “Keeping House: On Contradiction\, Care\, and the Institutionalization of Asian American Studies”\n\n4:00 p.m. Keynote: “The student as terrorist: Identity in the command forms of colonial racial capitalist worldmaking” by Dr. Jodi Melamed\, Professor of English and Race\, Ethnic\, and Indigenous Studies at Marquette University \n\nResponse by Dang Weiyu\, NYU\n\n5:30-6:30 p.m.: Keynote Reception \n \nFriday\, March 7\, 2025 \n10:00 a.m.: Coffee \n10:30 a.m. The Limits of DEI and Institutional Critique Chair: Linda Luu \n\nEdna Wan\, Cornell\, “Cultural Preservation and Carceral Development: The Museum of Chinese America’s Politics of Property”\nChristine Phan\, UPenn\, “Developing the Politics of Solidarity: The Nonprofit Neutralization of Asian American Political Identity”\nMariam Rahyab LCSW\, NYU\, “Decolonized Mental Health for Asian Americans”\nAnou Vang\, UCLA\, “Mloog — How Hmong Students Reimagine Care”\n\n12:00 p.m. Asian/Pacific/American Identity Politics after the Critical Ethnic Studies Turn Chair: Rui Liu \n\nJoey Song\, UMich\, “Rejecting a Cohesive Asian American Identity in the Plight toward Empathy”\nDaniel Jin\, UMich\, “Beyond the Trans-Pacific: LatinAsian Histories of Capitalism\, Empire\, Labor\, and Migration”\nCaroline Hsu\, UMich\, “‘Very Distinctly Asian in its Identity:’ Simu Liu\, Bubble Tea\, and Asian American ‘Common Sense’”\n\n1:15 p.m.: Lunch \n2:15 p.m. Racial Liberalisms and Entangled Colonialisms Chair: Violet Dong \n\nSaomai Phuong Nguyen\, Cornell\, “Spectacular Journeys: From Vietnamese Boat Refugees Swimming to Astronauts Flying”\nJames Gui\, Columbia\, “Anti-War Aurality in the ‘US Navy of Rock and Roll’”\nNancy Billings\, Yale\, “’I left my native village and drifted to the American continent’: The Hemispheric Potential of the Poetry on Angel Island”\n\n3:30 p.m. Closing Remarks \n\nAyami Hatanaka\, NYU\n\n3:45-4:30 p.m. Reception \n \n \nPhotograph by Emily Gerace.
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/the-security-of-identity-politics-the-2025-a-p-a-graduate-student-working-group-symposium/
LOCATION:20 Cooper Square\, 3rd floor\, 20 Cooper Square\, third floor\, New York\, NY\, 10003\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T123000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T140000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250304T030851Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250304T191408Z
UID:13272-1741264200-1741269600@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:Russia’s Pursuit of Repopulation: Abortion\, Large Families\, and Propaganda
DESCRIPTION:Through 1944 pronatalist Family Law and Putin’s pronatalist policy\, this talk identifies forces that affect the politics of reproduction.\n\n\nSix months after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine began\, in August 2022\, the Russian President Vladimir Putin revived the Soviet title of “Mother Heroine” for mothers with ten or more children. Originally the Soviet government had introduced this title as a part of its postwar pronatalist Family Law adopted in 1944. Putin has been committed to increasing fertility in Russia for over a decade and has gradually restricted women’s access to abortion. With this background in mind\, it may not seem surprising that he added one more measure from the post-WWII pronatalist toolkit when the “special military operation” threatened to accelerate the decrease in Russia’s population.However\, the revival of the Mother Heroine award signifies a slight\, but important shift. In general\, postsocialist pronatalism carefully adapted the pronatalist ideas from the Soviet period\, embracing some elements\, while rejecting others. One of the rejected measures was the postwar Soviet policy of “one-parent pronatalism\,” which made the father’s role in childrearing optional. Instead\, postsocialist pronatalism has promoted “two-parent pronatalism\,” which encouraged fathers to play an essential role in childrearing. This position manifested in the 2008 introduction of the “Parental Glory” title rather than reviving “Motherhood Glory” or “Mother Heroine.” The 2022 revival of Mother Heroine was a shift away from this earlier decision. How should we interpret this shift?Through a comparative analysis of the 1944 pronatalist Family Law and Putin’s pronatalist measures\, this talk attempts to identify both constant and shifting choices as well as forces that affect the politics of reproduction today. In addition to policymakers\, the talk will address the roles of women\, doctors\, and the Russian Orthodox Church. \n \nSpeakers: \nProfessor Mie Nakachi\, Global Studies at Hokusei Gakuen University \nRochelle Goldberg Ruthchild\, Historian and Davis Center Associate
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/russias-pursuit-of-repopulation-abortion-large-families-and-propaganda/
LOCATION:CGIS South Building\, S354\, 1730 Cambridge Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T140000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250306T134617Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250306T181430Z
UID:13495-1741269600-1741269600@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:The President signs Executive Orders
DESCRIPTION:Closed Press
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/the-president-signs-executive-orders-6/
LOCATION:Oval Office
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T180000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250224T150239Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250303T150418Z
UID:12622-1741278600-1741284000@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:Documentary Screening: Erase the Nation
DESCRIPTION:Polish director and war reporter Tomasz Grzywaczewski will present his new documentary about the war in Ukraine followed by a discussion\n\n\nSchedule: \n4:30 – Brief Introduction by Tomasz \n4:45 – Film Screening \n5:35 – Q&A \n6:00 – Event Concludes \nAbout the Documentary: \n**This screening is part of the Intermarium Lecture Series and the Kosciuszko Chair of Polish Studies** \nThe documentary film ‘Erase the Nation\,’ directed by Tomasz Grzywaczewski\, shows the destruction of Ukraine’s cultural heritage\, having been carried out by the Russian Federation’s troops since February 22\, 2022. The film shows the deliberate destruction of Ukrainian monuments from Lviv\, Chernivtsi\, Ivankiv\, Kyiv\, and Kharkiv to Izium and Bohorodychy in eastern Ukraine. The crimes committed against secular and religious cultural heritage\, from archaeological monuments to modern libraries and schools. Testimonies by Ukrainian cultural representatives paint a picture of a deliberate struggle of barbaric invaders against Ukrainian identity\, for which Ukrainian heroes are giving their lives. The film also presents ways of securing and attempting to protect damaged sites and the scale of assistance that is and will be needed to protect and restore cultural heritage in Ukraine. \n\n\nAbout the Speaker: \nTomasz Grzywaczewski is a journalist\, writer\, filmmaker\, and expert in Central and Eastern Europe studies. Author of the books “The Erased Border” dedicated to the people who formed the multinational mosaic of the Second Polish Republic\, “The Borders of Dreams”\, devoted to the post-soviet unrecognized states\, “Life and Death on the Dead Road” and “Across the Wild East”. Speaker i.a. at Georgetown University in Washington DC and The Explorers Club in NYC. Author of the articles for numerous magazines and websites including Foreign Policy\, New Eastern Europe\, Gość Niedzielny\, Do Rzeczy\, Wprost. Former editor-in-chief of the Koncept magazine. Alumni of Russian Security Studies Certificate at Daniel Morgan Graduate School of National Security\, Washington DC. Co-screenwriter of a documentary feature “Shadows of the Empire” inspired by his book “Borders of Dreamlands”. The movie shot in Kaliningrad Oblast\, Ukraine\, Georgia\, Armenia\, and Nagorno-Karabakh was presented during e.g. Krakow Film Festival\, Transatlantic Festival\, a special screening at Georgetown University in Washington and released in Polish cinemas. \nMake a gift to IWP
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/documentary-screening-erase-the-nation/
LOCATION:The Institute of World Politics\, 1521 16th Street Northwest\, Washington\, DC\, 20036\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T163000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T180000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250304T030856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250304T191408Z
UID:13274-1741278600-1741284000@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:War Crimes in Russia's Invasion of Ukraine
DESCRIPTION:Grzebyk and Uczkiewicz’s book offers a multidisciplinary examination of the international crimes committed in the Russia-Ukraine War.\n\n\nA book published by Patrycja Grzebyk and Dominika Uczkiewicz in late 2024\, “The Russian-Ukrainian Conflict and War Crimes: Challenges for Documentation and International Prosecution\,” brings together contributors who examine the atrocities and war crimes perpetrated by Russian troops during the war against Ukraine that began in 2022. This seminar presents the major findings of the book. \nEvent Speakers:  \nDominika Uczkiewicz: Assistant Professor of International Law and History\, Pilecki Institute (Poland) \nPatrycja Grzebyk: Associate Professor of International Law\, University of Warsaw (Poland) \nAgnieszka Bieńczyk-Missala: Professor in Political Sciences\, Researcher and Lecturer at the Faculty of Political Science\, International Studies of the University of Warsaw. \nMark Kramer: Director\, Cold War Studies Project\, Davis Center
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/war-crimes-in-russias-invasion-of-ukraine/
LOCATION:CGIS South Building\, S354\, 1730 Cambridge Street\, Cambridge\, MA\, 02138\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T180000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250125T200223Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250306T094431Z
UID:6315-1741280400-1741284000@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:Modernizing the Nuclear Triad
DESCRIPTION:Join us as Maj. Gen. Stacy Jo Huser discusses modernizing the U.S. nuclear triad to address global threats and ensure strategic superiority.\n\n\nIn this talk\, Major General Stacy Jo Huser\, Commander of the 20th Air Force\, Air Force Global Strike Command\, will discuss the necessity of modernizing the U.S. nuclear triad to address emerging threats from China\, Russia\, and North Korea. Drawing from her extensive experience in nuclear operations and strategic planning\, she will explore challenges like hypersonic weapons\, cyber vulnerabilities\, and artificial intelligence\, emphasizing how modernization ensures effective deterrence and strategic superiority in an evolving global landscape. \nMaj. Gen. Stacy Jo Huser is Commander\, 20th Air Force\, Air Force Global Strike Command\, Francis E. Warren Air Force Base\, Wyoming. She is responsible for more than 12\,000 Airmen providing nuclear global strike and nuclear weapons sustainment for the U.S. Air Force. \nMaj. Gen. Huser commissioned through Officer Training School in 1996 after earning a bachelor’s degree in psychology from North Central College\, Naperville\, Illinois. She has extensive experience in space and missile operations. Maj. Gen. Huser has served as a space operations crew member\, instructor and training manager\, as well as an ICBM combat crew commander\, evaluator and chief of emergency war order plans. She also completed staff tours in the Secretary of the Air Force’s Legislative Liaison Office and at United States Strategic Command. Maj. Gen. Huser commanded the 625th Strategic Operations Squadron\, Offutt AFB\, Nebraska; the 91st Missile Operations Group\, Minot AFB\, North Dakota; and the 90th Missile Wing at Francis E. Warren AFB\, Wyoming. \nPrior to her current assignment\, Maj. Gen. Huser served as the Principal Assistant Deputy Administrator for Military Application\, National Nuclear Security Administration\, Department of Energy\, Washington\, D.C. In that role\, she assisted the Deputy Administrator for Defense Programs to maintain the safety\, security and reliability of the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile.
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/modernizing-the-nuclear-triad/
LOCATION:Riverside Room\, 121 Bay State Road\, Boston\, MA\, 02215\, United States
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T173000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250306T190000
DTSTAMP:20260411T130801
CREATED:20250304T025048Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250304T025048Z
UID:13171-1741282200-1741287600@politicaljar.com
SUMMARY:Altars Archives
DESCRIPTION:Artist\, organizer\, researcher\, and director Emilia Yang will offer strategies for decolonizing participatory art\, design and witnessing.\n\n\nPart of the 2024-25 ReMemory: Experiments in Listening\, Authorship and Knowledge-Keeping Series: \nAltars Archives: Strategies for Decolonizing Participatory Art\, Design and Witnessing  \nDrawing on my experience as a victim/survivor\, activist for memory\, artist\, designer\, and researcher\, I will share the process of creating AMA y No Olvida\, Memory Museum Against Impunity. This memory initiative was made in collaboration with the Association Mothers of April (AMA)\, a collective of families of victims of state violence organized in a context of authoritarian and brutal repression in Nicaragua. This endeavor was informed by the families’ use of altars as technologies of remembrance and connection to the spiritual realm to share our individual pain with a broader community. Through this example\, I will share strategies for decolonizing participatory art\, design\, and witnessing through embodied practices. \nEmilia Yang (She/her/hers/ella) is an artist\, designer\, organizer\, researcher\, and director of “AMA y No Olvida\, Museum of Memory against Impunity” from Nicaragua. Her art practice utilizes expanded forms of expanded media for the creation of community-based feminist\, anti-racist\, and transformative justice projects and futures.  \nHer artworks have been exhibited in international spaces such as the Resistance Biennial in Guatemala\, the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica\, the Museum of Jade and Pre-Columbian Culture in Costa Rica\, Casa América and the Museum and Vanguard Art Center Neomudéjar in Spain\, Le Commun Contemporary Art Building in Geneva\, and the Games and the New Media Summit at Tribeca Film Festival.  \nShe has been the recipient of multiple fellowships\, including the Arts for Gender Equality Fellowship by the Rockefeller Foundation and CARE USA in 2023 and the Hunting Family Faculty Fellow at U-M Institute of the Humanities in 2024. She is currently an Assistant Professor of Art and Design at the University of Michigan’s Penny W. Stamps School of Art and Design with a focus on Anti-Racism by Design. www.emiliayang.org \n \nAbout Incite at Columbia University \nIncite is an interdisciplinary social science research institute at Columbia University. \nOur mission is to create knowledge for public action—to catalyze conversations that lead to more just\, equitable\, and democratic societies. \nFor more information\, visit our site.
URL:https://politicaljar.com/event/altars-archives/
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