Christoph Plath (Freie Universität), Reframing Human Rights. Collective Rights, the New Economic Order and the Legacy of Third-Worldism
Devika Shankar (Princeton University), Slippery Sovereignties: The Princely States of Malabar and the Development of British Cochin, 1800-1920
Disha Karnad Jani (Princeton University), “A People Gets the Kind of Leader It Deserves”: M.N. Roy and the Problem of Freedom
Eléonore Chanlat-Bernard (EHESS), An Imperial History of Welfare between Britain and Colonial India (c.1870s-1940s)
Fabian Steininger (Freie Universität), Mass Violence against Istanbul Armenians in August 1896
Federico Del Giudice (EHESS), Migration, Labour and Welfare: The Case of the Italian Workforce in France During the Interwar Period
Mengfei Pan (University of Tokyo), The Meiji “Art” that Crossed Boundaries: A Study of Asahi Gyokuzan’s Life and Works
Pablo Pryluka (Princeton University), Consumption and Advertising: A Genealogy of Anti-Consumerism in Argentina from a Global Perspective
Rob Konkel (Princeton University), Creating a Global Economy: (Un-)Cooperative Internationalism, Technocratic Global Capitalism, and the Making of the Modern World, 1919-1939
Shohei Okubo (University of Tokyo), The Trade, Distribution and Consumption of South Asian Products in the Eighteenth Century Malay-Indonesian Archipelego
Susanne A. Schmidt (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin), The Midlife Crisis, Gender, and Social Sciences in the United States, 1970-90
Yaruipam Muivah (EHESS), Servitude and Abolition in Colonial North-East India, 1881-1930
Yorim Spoelder (Freie Universität), Staging the Nation Beyond the Raj: Visions of Greater India, the Discourse of Civilization and Nationalist Imagination (1905-1964)
Yufei Zhou (Osaka University), Imagining the Self with the Other’s Voices: Karl August Wittfogel and East Asia
Yuki Terada (University of Tokyo), The Establishment and Evolution of Museums in Iran
GHC Summer School, Princeton University 9-14 May 2016
Abigail Kret (Princeton University), Rethinking Development for a New Decade: The Ford Foundation in Chile, 1969-1980
Aenne Oetjen (Freie Universität), Locating world health: The League of Nations’ Far Eastern Bureau and the development of regional health politics
Benjamin Sacks (Princeton University), Urban Espionage: Spying, Copying, and Borrowing Colonial Cities, 1704-1731
Dongxiang Xu (EHESS), Asia is one – Pan-Asianism in two Chinese and Japanese intellectual groups of ‘national essence’
Emily Rile (Princeton University), Intra-European Cooperation on Foreign Aid: The OEEC, Marshall Plan, and ‘Post-war Europe’
Fidel Tavarez (Princeton University), The Spanish Theory of Commercial Empire, c. 1740-1762
Hiroshi Fujimoto (University of Tokyo), The History of American Medical Missions in Modern Japan, 1859–1945
Jan Severin (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin), Male Same-Sex Desire and Masculinity in Colonial German Southwest Africa
Marvin Menniken (Freie Universität), Between Conservatism, Cold War and Counterculture – The American Legion in California, 1950 – 1980
Maxence Klein (EHESS), Berlin Seeks Jerusalem: Culture, Secession and Identity in the Jewish Zionist Youth Group Jung Juda (1912-1917)
Merisa Harada (University of Tokyo), Modern Sino-French Diplomacy over the Interests in South China in Relation to the Formation of French Indochina
Natalie Pashkeeva (EHESS), Writing of « global » and of « national » histories of the Young Men’s Christian Associations from the third quarter of the nineteenth century and in the twentieth century
Oury Goldman (EHESS), Grasping the World: Printers, booksellers and translators as agents of global knowledge in sixteenth century France
Susanne Schmidt (Cambridge University), Possible histories of the midlife crisis: New York, Hamburg, Mumbai
Tsuyoshi Kamimur (University of Tokyo), Mutual connection between East India and North America, especially Quebec in the 1770s
GHC Summer School, Tokyo University 7-12 September 2015
Emily Kern (Princeton University), Evolution’s Footprints: Transnational Science, Human Identity, and the Emergence of Global Research Networks in Twentieth Century Biology
Fabian Krautwald (Freie Universität), Colonialism, Revolution, and the Scaling of History—The German Colonial Society 1918–1919
Fabian Steininger (Freie Universität), The Nation Forms: A Study of Conceptual Change in the Late Ottoman Empire
Gabriela Goldin Marcovich (EHESS), A Collective Biography of New Spain’s Lettered City in the 18th Century: Some Reflections on the Use of Scale Variations in a Transnational Context
Hiroshi Emoto (University of Tokyo), The Reception History of John Ruskin: Towards a Global History of Modern Architectural Thought
Jiyoon Kim (University of Tokyo), Overseas/Foreign Travel Experience and Korea’s Globalism in the 1980s
Karina Kriegesmann (Freie Universität), Dangerous Fears: Brazilian Media and the Emotionalization of the Public, 1917–1930
Kotaro Fukuhara (Univeristy of Tokyo), Factors of the Development of Rice Farming in High Latitudes: An Example from Northeastern China
Leonard von Galen (Freie Universität), “(…) they were like kings” Indian Merchants in the Sultanate Zanzibar and Oman (1840–1856)
Mandkhai Lkhagvasuren (University of Tokyo), Reexamination of Mongol Administration: The Case of Bitigchis
Sakiko Nakao (EHESS), Defining “Africa”: the Pan-African Struggles of the Young Elites during the Decolonization in West Africa (1945–1962)
Sarah Abel (EHESS), Assessing the Social Limits of Genetic Identities: A Study of DNA ‘Ancestry’ Testing Practices in the US and Brazil
Shiyuo Katakura (University of Tokyo), Institutional Changes of Major Port Cities in the Nineteenth-Century Western Indian Ocean: Overlapping Empires and Merchant Networks
Yongchao Cheng (Nagoya University), Role and Contribution of Joseon Embassies to Tokugawa Japan and Imperial China
Yuki Terada (University of Tokyo), Global History through the Medium of Museums: The Establishment and Evolution of Museums in Iran