Get ready to groove and move like it's the swinging 60s! Join us for a soulful celebration that'll transport you straight to the heart of Motown. ASU's Black Theatre Organization is throwing the ultimate blast from the past in celebration of the ASU School of Music, Dance and Theatre production of Dominique Morisseau's "Detroit ’67," and you're invited.

Co-sponsored by the School of International Letters and Cultures and the English department, the Connected Academics program at ASU is happy to announce our annual research pitch competition for graduate students from both departments.

Participants will have three minutes to present a persuasive pitch that delineates their current academic research. The main objective of the competition is to offer graduate students from humanities and social sciences an opportunity to present their socially impactful works to a broader audience outside their areas of expertise.

The School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies (SHPRS) Anti-Racism Committee and the Minorities and Philosophy Club (MAP) invite you to join us for a conversation about the ethics and realities of immigration and undocumented persons in the United States from the past, present and future.

This event will be a discussion between panelists followed by a Q&A from the audience. 

The Spatial Analysis Research Center (SPARC), along with the Urban Climate Research Center (UCRC) and the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning, is hosting the annual SPARC workshop, to be held on Tuesday, March 26, 2024 from 8:50 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. in the Ventana B ballroom at the Memorial Union. SPARC has hosted a very successful annual workshop for the past five years, both in person and remote, on different topics related to spatial data analytics and geographic information science.

Former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott assesses the geopolitical challenge that China poses in the Indo-Pacific and how Western countries should respond. While no one can know whether the chance of an assault on Taiwan is 10 percent or 50 percent, he warns that the danger is high enough for countries to be alarmed. The natural tendency among democracies to assume business-as-usual amounts to sleepwalking into crisis. Abbott lays out the larger security problem and sketches options to address.

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