Srimad Bhagavatam with the text of Sridhar with Visisitaadvaita 
–––––
https://profiles.google.com/divinebooksindia/posts/XQ8QJaZdTPK
> H-ASIA
> March 12, 2011
>
> Earthquake/Tsunami -- Harvard's Center for Geographic Analysis has
> launched website for data sharing
>
> (x-post H-Japan)
> ************************************************************************
> From: Ted Bestor <bestor@wjh.harvard.edu>
>
> In response to the 8.9 magnitude earthquake, which struck offshore Sendai,
> Japan on Mar 11th 2011, the Center for Geographic Analysis at Harvard
> University has launched the Japan Sendai Earthquake Data Portal
> (http://cegrp.cga.harvard.edu/japan/) to support the exchange of
> geospatial datasets for relief and reconstruction efforts. The portal
> works best with a Firefox browser.
>
> If you have geospatial data about the earthquake impacted regions (such as
> satellite images, aerial photos, GIS data sets, or other data files that
> bear locational references) before or after the March 11th earthquake,
> please consider sharing them through this portal.
>
> To contribute datasets to the portal, please email us to obtain the Secure
> FTP login information: chgis@fas.harvard.edu.
>
> You are also welcome to search our portal for related news and available
> data to download and use. All copyrights are retained by the original
> producers of the data, and downloads from this portal are for academic,
> non-commercial, relief and reconstruction efforts only.
>
> ******************************************************************
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> H-ASIA
> Mar 13 2011
>
> Freer Sackler Seminar on Chigusa Tea Jar postponed
> ******************************************
> From: "Micklewright, Nancy" <MicklewrightN@si.edu>
>
> Dear Colleague,
>
> The Chigusa Tea Jar webinar has been postponed due to events in Japan.
>
> Our thoughts are with the people of Japan during this difficult time.
>
> Nancy Micklewright
> Head, Scholarly Programs and Publications
> Freer Sackler
>
> ************************************************************************
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> H-ASIA
> March 13, 2011
>
> Tibet Society at AAS/ICAS
> ******************************************************************
> From: Nicole Willock <nwillock@umail.iu.edu>
>
> Tibet Society will be holding a Meeting-in-Conjunction with the AAS/ICAS
> joint conference in Hawaii.
>
> *Focus: Tibetan and Himalayan Studies Pedagogy*
>
> Fri. April 1, 7:15pm Room 308A
> followed by a Business Meeting (approx. start 8:45pm)
>
> http://www.aasianst.org/Conference/Program/Special-Events-MIC.pdf
>
> Below is further information on:
> 1) Tibetan and Himalayan Studies Pedagogy Session
> 2) Panels with Tibet-related content at the AAS/ICAS
>
> ********************************************************************************
> 1) Tibetan and Himalayan Studies Pedagogy Session Information:
>
> The AAS Tibet Society and the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation would like
> to invite scholars attending the AAS meeting in Honolulu to discuss the
> current state of pedagogy in Tibetan and Himalayan Studies.
>
> Background:
> Five years ago the Rubin Foundation initiated a series of grants to
> promote undergraduate education in Himalayan Studies in North American
> Universities. The Rubin Foundation believed that small, targeted grants to
> select colleges and universities might have the effect of capitalizing on
> a growing interest in Tibet and the Himalaya to further increase course
> offerings, special events, and the creation and distribution of course
> materials.
>
> In 2007 three initial grants were made to Columbia, Yale, and the
> University of California, Santa Barbara. The following year three were
> added: Dartmouth, Emory, and Eugene Lang, New School University. Among
> these six schools there has been a wide range of programs, from courses
> and course development to social science workshops and undergraduate trips
> to local temples.
>
> At this meeting-in-conjunction, several of the Foundation grantees will
> reflect briefly on what they have done with grants, and what they see and
> the impact, and then have an open conversation. Grantees will be asked to
> consider whether the grants have had their desired effect of further
> expanding a growing field; whether there is there evidence of the
> hoped-for institutional buy-in to the work our grants promoted, and what
> they see for the future of Himalayan Studies at their school.
>
> Current on-line resources include:
> Engaging Digital Tibet: http://digitaltibet.ccnmtl.columbia.edu/
> Treasury of Lives: http://www.tibetanlineages.org/
>
> *********************************************
> 2) Panels w/ Tibet-related content at the AAS include:
>
> Thurs. March 31
>
> Session 2, Rm 315
> 8:00-10:00am
> Technologies of Travel in Defining Colonial Modernity: Buddhist Agents of
> International and Inter-traditional Change in the 19th and 20th Centuries
>
> Session 111, Rm 315,
> 12:30-2:30pm
> Tradition and Evolution in Bhutanese Intangible Culture
>
> Session 134, Rm 313a
> 2:45-4:45pm
> Roundtable "Buddhist Warfare": Commentators from South, Southeast and East
> Asia
>
> Friday April 1:
> Session 219, Rm 307B
> 8:00-10:00am
> Travelogues I
>
> Session 294, Rm 323c
> 12:30-2:30pm
> Crossing Boundaries: Esoteric Buddhism and Practice in Medieval Asia
>
>
> Session 302, Rm 306A
> 12:30-2:30pm
> Transcription and Transformation: Buddhist Scribal and Manuscript Cultures
> in Japan, Tibet and Thailand
>
> Session 332, Rm 325B
> 12:30-2:30
> Place, Heritage, and Construction of the Local
>
> Sat April 2:
>
> Session 396, Rm 307B
> 7:30-9:30am
> Transformative Literature
>
> Session 435, Rm 304A
> 9:45-11:45am
> Buddhism Transformed: Globalization and Modernity
>
> Session 503, Rm 321B
> 1:45-3:45pm
> Imperial Strategies in Transition: The QInghai/Amdo Frontier between
> Empire and Nation
>
> _Sunday, April 3_
>
> Session 662, Rm 322B
> 10:15-12:15pm
> Western Musical Instruments in China and Cultural Tibet
>
> Session 713, Rm 325A
> 12:30-2:30pm
> Local Knowledge and Central Power in the Making of Chinese Inner Asia
>
> --
> Nicole Willock
> Dual Ph.D. Candidate
> Departments of Central Eurasian Studies and Religious Studies
> Indiana University
>
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> H-ASIA
> March 13, 2011
>
> Call for papers: Dutch Decolonisation: A Thematic Issue of _Journal of
> Genocide Research_
> PROPOSAL DEADLINE 31 MAY 2011
> ************************************************************************
> From: Juergen Zimmerer <juergen.zimmerer@uni-hamburg.de>
>
> *Call for Paper: Dutch Decolonisation: A Thematic Issue of Journal of
> Genocide Research*
>
> *Dutch Decolonisation*
>
> A recent strand of research in genocide studies emphasizes the intimate
> connections and the porous boundary between imperial and colonial violence
> and genocidal practices. So far, the British and German settler colonies
> have been the subject of such attention, but more imperial contexts need
> to
> be studied to allow for a nuanced and truly global analysis of these
> connections. One such context that has received too little attention in
> the
> English language scholarship is that of the Dutch imperial presence in the
> Indonesian archipelago. This imperial scene, which is generally not
> perceived as an instance of settler colonialism, should help us look
> beyond
> settler colonies and discuss the links between mass violence and
> colonialism/imperialism more generally. The Journal of Genocide Research
> accordingly invites contributions on this topic from scholars of all
> disciplines for a special issue edited by Bart Luttikhuis and Dirk Moses
> (European University Institute, Florence). We are particularly interested
> in
> dynamics of retributive atrocities related to campaigns of insurgency and
> counterinsurgency, such as during the expeditions in Aceh (1873-1913) as
> well as the Indonesian Revolution (1945-1950). Contributions about the
> post-conflict memorialization and memory of these events in both metropole
> and postcolonial polity are also welcome.
>
> Please send proposals and a short cv to bart.luttikhuis@eui.eu and
> dirk.moses@eui.eu. The deadline for proposals is May 31st 2011, and for
> submissions March 31st 2012. All submissions are subjected to the
> journal?s
> regular anonymous peer review process.
>
>
> Prof. Dr. Juergen Zimmerer
> Historisches Seminar
> Universitaet Hamburg
> Von-Melle-Park 6
> 20146 Hamburg
> Tel. +494042838-2591, +4940428384841 (Secr.),
> Fax.: +494042838-2371
> juergen.zimmerer@uni-hamburg.de
> President, International Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS)
> Senior Editor, Journal of Genocide Research
>
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