The Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation, a federally recognized tribe in central Arizona, descends from the Yavapai people who have lived in the region for centuries. Following forced relocations and conflicts with the U.S. government in the late 19th century, the tribe secured the Fort McDowell Reservation in 1903. In the 1970s, the federal government proposed the Orme Dam, which would have flooded much of the reservation, threatening the community’s land and way of life. The tribe mounted a successful resistance, culminating in a 1981 referendum that defeated the project.

“Truth Across Borders,” an exhibit and conversation with Marty Baron and Jorge Ramos, two of the most respected names in journalism.

Moderated by Javier Marin, this exclusive event will dive into the challenges and future of journalism.

The conversation will transcend borders—geographical, linguistic, and cultural—highlighting the urgency of quality journalism in these times.

Audience questions will drive a dynamic exchange of ideas between these journalists, students and the general public.

Join us for an exciting in-person and virtual discussion that brings together experts in journalism, film, academia and speculative fiction to explore space law from an African perspective and its transformation into a hypothetical groundbreaking Nigerian sci-fi film, "Making Space."

 

Moderated by Timiebi Aganaba - assistant professor space and society, School for the Future of Society, ASU

 

Is successful management of a local, regional, national, or global economy simply a matter of having “more data”? No: what we call “the economy” is a product of knowledge dispersed among many minds that cannot confront planners and managers as data. F.A. Hayek wrote that “it is the curious task of economics to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design,” and in the language of the late political scientist and anthropologist James C. Scott, the economy is illegible.

Hosted by Sa Whitley, an Assistant Professor in the School of Social Transformation and the Co-Director of the Queer X Humanities Initiative, the SST Transgender Studies Reading Group reading group is an informal place for ASU faculty, students and staff to discuss scholarship in the exciting and burgeoning field of Transgender Studies. With a new theme or prompt about the "state of the field" each session, participants explore scholarship, contemporary art and politics.
You're invited to join the School of Human Evolution and Social Change for a for a special colloquium, presented in conjunction with the latest exhibit to be on display in the school's Innovation Gallery. 
The talk will be followed by an opening reception to celebrate the new exhibit, “Message in a Bottle.” This companion exhibit features artwork by Mary K. Lucking, inspired by the research of Anne R.

The SILC Cup is back for 2025! Gather your friends to participate in a friendly soccer tournament between students of the various language organizations and clubs throughout ASU.

Visit the SILC Cup webpage for more information, and register your team today!

The Pat Tillman Veterans Center and ASU Career Services are excited to partner to host the 2nd annual Women Veterans and Military-Connected Students RISE Conference — an event centering on a community that embodies Resilience, Independence, Strength and Empowerment, serving as a beacon of support and solidarity for women who have served or are connected to the military. #womenrise

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