"Our program is rooted in history, but it looks to the future," EALAC Professor John Phan tells local audience.
Running from May 21 to June 7, 2026, the not-for-credit program is open to Columbia, Barnard, and Kyushu University undergraduates and MA students.
Deadline for research paper proposals: December 5, 2025. Deadline for op-eds and photo essays: February 28, 2026.
The film examines the controversial diplomat’s role in shaping US foreign policy through declassified documents, archival footage, and interviews with historians, journalists, and Kissinger’s own proteges and colleagues.
For the 2025 N.T. Wang Distinguished Lecture, Scott Kennedy sifts through conflicting assessments and draws on firsthand observations to reach a unified picture of China's economy.
WEAI faculty member brings long experience in researching poverty, inequality, social policy, and population well-being to her new role.
The scholar of contemporary Japan opens his series of reminiscences by impressing on younger readers, "It is not at all strange not to know what you want to do in life."
China Books Review praises two novels that demonstrate the Wuhan Diary author's commitment to truth-telling.
Modeling five collections by designer Minh Hanh, Columbia volunteers transform the Morningside Heights campus into a glamorous showcase for international fashion.
Seven Tuesday evening sessions, from mid-October through early December, will cover premodern poetry from China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam.
Speaking in Tokyo, the veteran Japan-watcher argues that Sanae Takaichi's election as president of the Liberal Democratic Party will hasten the demise of the LDP.
Refreshed website gives Korean Studies at Columbia a vital new hub for representing faculty, promoting public programs, and showcasing publications.
