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2000
1 November 2000
The Debate On Totalitarianism: New Light From Asia
Dr Jean-Louis Margolin, Aix-en-Provence University, France
18 October 2000
Governing China: Local Government Personnel in Wartime
Chongqing, 1937- 1949
Dr Huang Jianli, Department of History, National University
of Singapore
11 October 2000
The Indian Ocean and the South China Sea: the critical
maritime links
Assoc Prof Kenneth McPherson, Director, Indian Ocean Centre,
Curtin University of Technology, Australia
6 October 2000
China's Medieval fanfang - a Model for Macau under the
Ming?
Professor Roderich Ptak, Professor and Chair of Sinology,
Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany
4 October 2000
The Eastern Rim of Southeast Asia in Late Medieval and
Early Modern Chinese Sources
Professor Roderich Ptak, Professor and Chair of Sinology,
Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany
20 September 2000
The Historical Destiny and the Cultural Identity of a
Community
Ms Tran Thi Thanh, Department of History, Ho Chi Minh
University of Education, Vietnam
30 August 2000
The Hokkien Merchants and their Maritime Trade Networks
in the 16th and the 18th Centuries
Dr James Chin Kong, Centre for Asian Studies, University
of Hong Kong
11 August 2000
German Strategy 1914-18
Professor Hew Strachan, Professor of Modern History, Director,
Scottish Centre for War Studies, University of Glasgow,
Scotland
2 August 2000
Imperialism & State-Building in Southeast Asia
Professor Nicholas Tarling, Fellow, New Zealand Asia Institute,
University of Auckland, New Zealand
31 July 2000
US Cultural Policy and the Cold War in Asia: The Case
of Korea, 1945-1960
Dr Charles K. Armstrong, Department of History & International
Affairs, Columbia University, USA
27 July 2000
How Do You Know If You're Winning? American Military Perceptions
of The Vietnam War
Professor Ronald Spector, Professor of History & International
Relations, Elliot School of International Affairs, George
Washington University, USA
25 July 2000
The 50th Anniversary of World War II in the United States:
History and Memory
Professor Ronald Spector, Professor of History & International
Relations, Elliot School of International Affairs, George
Washington University, USA
24 July 2000
Siam & International Control of Opium under the League
of Nations
Mr Stefan Hell, PhD Cancidate, Tuebingen University, Germany
19 July 2000
The United States and the Making of Post- Colonial Southeast
Asia
Dr Marc Frey, University of Cologne, Germany
31 March 2000
Mother Spain, Uncle Sam, and the Heroes of '96: The Making
of a Filipino National Narrative
Professor Reynaldo R. Ileto, Faculty of Asian Studies,
Australian National University
29 March 2000
Marrying History with Art: The Novelist as Historian,
"A Choice of Evils"
Ms Meira Chand, Novelist
22 March 2000
The Dice Were Rather Heavily Loaded: Field Marshal Wavell
and the Fall of Singapore in 1942
Dr Brian Farrell, Department of History, National University
of Singapore
15 March 2000
Three Chinese Disturbances in a Malay State of Kedah (Kulim),
1888-1908
Dr Wu Xian An, Centre for Advanced Studies, National University
of Singapore
9 March 2000
Gun Control and Imperialism in Nineteenth- Century South
Africa and New Zealand
Dr William K Storey, Department of History, Milsaps College,
Mississippi, USA
28 January 2000
Art Nation/Earthquake Nation: Seismicity and Cultural
Identity in Meiji Japan
Dr Gregory Clancey, Department of History, National University
of Singapore
27 January 2000
The Strong Arm and the Blind Eye: Sugar and the Manufacture
of Knowledge in Colonial Java
Professor Roger Knight, Department of History, University
of Adelaide, Australia
26 January 2000
Silicon for Industry: Component Design, Mass Production,
and the Move to Commercial Markets at Fairchild Semiconductor,
1960-1967
Dr Christophe Lecuyer, Postdoctoral Fellow, Dibner Institute,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
12 January 2000
Contemporary Perceptions of China in the United States
Professor Walter LaFeber, Marie Underhill Noll Professor
of History, Department of History, Cornell University,
USA
5
January 2000
Palaces, Markets, and Collections: The Circulation and
Representation of Qing Imperial Objects, 1860-1911
Professor James L. Hevia, Professor of History, Chair,
Curriculum in International Studies, University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
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