Roundtable V: The Future of U.S.-China Cultural Relations
The Second U.S-China Cultural Forum
Roundtable V: The Future of U.S.-China Cultural Relations
Moderator: James A. LEACH, Chairman, National Endowment for the Humanities JIN Canrong, Vice Dean of the School of International Relations, Renmin University of China Allison BLAKELY, Professor of European and Comparative History, Boston University YAN Xuetong, Director of the Institute of International Studies, Tsinghua University Josiah OBER, Professor of Classics and Professor of Political Science, Stanford University
PACS 164B: Introduction to Nonviolence - Spring 2007. An introduction to the science of nonviolence, mainly as seen through the life and work of Mahatma Gandhi. Historical overview of nonviolence East and the West up to the American Civil Rights movement and Martin Luther King, Jr., with emphasis on the ideal of principled nonviolence and the reality of mixed or strategic nonviolence in practice, especially as applied to problems of social justice and defense.
The Scope of NPDES Regulation - continued
Instructor Holly Doremus. This introductory course is designed to explore fundamental legal and policy issues in environmental law. Through examination of environmental common law and key federal environmental statutes, including the National Environmental Policy Act, Clean Air Act, and Clean Water Act, it exposes students to the major challenges to environmental law and the principal approaches to meeting those challenges, including litigation, command and control regulation, technology forcing, market incentives, and information disclosure requirements. With the addition of cross-cutting topics such as risk assessment and environmental federalism, it also gives students a grounding in how choices about regulatory standards and levels of regulatory authority are made.
http://www.law.berkeley.edu/students/curricularprograms/envirolaw/index.html