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Publications from the Program on Central Asia
Working Papers
Rambling Reflections on the Mobility and Governability of Religious Phenomena and Systems in Inner Asia
Franoise Aubin, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Local Power and Transnational Resources: An Anthropological Perspective on Rural Rehabilitation in Afghanistan
A working paper by Alessandro Monsutti
War Crimes and Psychological Trauma: Afghan Diasporic Fiction on Afghanistan
A Working Paper by Mir Hekmatullah Sadat
Publication: Language and Sovereignty: A Comparative Analysis of Language Policy in Tatarstan and Kazakhstan, 1991-2010
Kyle L. Marquardt, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Conference Reports
The Mongols from the Margins: New Perspectives on Central Asians in World History
A one-day conference sponsored by the UCLA Program on Central Asia and the Richard Hovannisian Endowed Chair in Modern Armenian History.
Crossing the Roof of the World: People and Geopolitics in Trans-Himalayan Trade
A Report on Program on Central Asia Conference held February 19, 2010 at UCLA
Central Asia Inititative: Mobility and Governability in Central Asia
Report on Conference held October 18, 2008 at UCLA.
David MacFadyen on "Little Angel, Make Me Happy"
In his introduction to Usman Saparov's film at the March 13, 2008 screening, David MacFadyen situates "Little Angel" in the context of the Soviet-era political climate and film culture of Turkmenistan in the 1970s to 1990s.
Persia beyond the Oxus Conference Volume Published
Bulletin of the Asia Institute, Volume 21
Publication: Afghanistan in Ink: Literature between Diaspora and Nation
Edited by Nile Green and Nushin Arbabzadah (Columbia/Hurst, 2011)
Podcasts
The Mongols and the New World History
Opening Remarks by Sebouh Aslanian, Assistant Professor & Richard Hovannisian Endowed Chair in Modern Armenian History. Presented at the one-day conference "The Mongols from the Margins: New Perspectives on Central Asians in World History."
Posted: 3/11/2013
No One Knew Who They Were: Russian Interaction with the Mongols
A lecture by Charles Halperin, Russian and East European Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington. Presented at the one-day conference "The Mongols from the Margins: New Perspectives on Central Asians in World History."
Posted: 3/11/2013
Mongol Caucasia: Regional Historiographies and Social Change in an Integrating Eurasian World
A lecture by Steve Rapp, Sam Houston State University. Presented at the one-day conference "The Mongols from the Margins: New Perspectives on Central Asians in World History."
Posted: 3/11/2013
