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DTSTAMP:20250303T063204
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250318T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250318T163000
SUMMARY:Careers / Jobs:USA - Campus - Careers in Tax: Diversified Staff Group
DESCRIPTION:Our Tax Diversified program (Diversified Staff Group) provides young tax professionals the opportunity to learn about EY Tax while balancing both the breadth and depth of their experiences. On this path\, you will have the opportunity to gain experience in tax planning\, tax accounting\, and tax compliance in your first few years before making an educated choice about which area of tax best aligns with your skills and interests along with business needs. Join us to understand how diversified experiences provide a tremendous knowledge base and future success.
UID:132072-21869923@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/132072
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:
LOCATION:
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250224T132006
DTSTART;TZID=America/Detroit:20250318T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Detroit:20250318T173000
SUMMARY:Lecture / Discussion:2025 Sylvia Thrupp Lecture (Presented by Comparative Studies in Society and History)
DESCRIPTION:Lauren Benton’s 2005 CSSH article mapped piracy’s imperial role and challenged the romanticized view of pirates as legal outcasts in the early modern world. Two decades later\, controversies about whether pirates were agents of empires or enemies of all persist. Benton moves beyond these debates here to gauge maritime raiding’s wider political valence. A single “piratical” cruise reveals the nineteenth-century Atlantic’s vast political spectrum\, encompassing city-states\, federations\, and empires. In cases sparked by the voyage\, the U.S. Supreme Court sought to narrow the definition of states and war. The voyage meanwhile connected to open-ended constitutional projects in Latin America featuring nation-states as one of many political possibilities. A micro-history of one voyage brings into focus the process by which the international order emerged through political fragmentation. The lessons remain relevant to understandings of global order and non-state violence in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.\n\nLauren Benton is Barton M. Biggs Professor of History and Professor of Law at Yale University. Benton’s most recent book\, “They Called It Peace: Worlds of Imperial Violence\,” was published in 2024 and shortlisted for the Cundill History Prize. Previous books include “Rage for Order: The British Empire and the Origins of International Law\, 1800-1850” (coauthored with Lisa Ford)\; “A Search for Sovereignty: Law and Geography in European Empires\, 1400-1900”\; and “Law and Colonial Cultures: Legal Regimes in World History\, 1400-1900\,” which received the Jerry Bentley Book Prize and the James Willard Hurst Book Prize. In 2019\, Benton was awarded the Toynbee Prize for significant contributions to global history.\n\nRespondents:\nJatin Dua\, University of Michigan\nNathan Perl-Rosenthal\, University of Southern California\nJudith Scheele\, School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences (EHESS)
UID:133101-21872389@events.umich.edu
URL:https://events.umich.edu/event/133101
CLASS:PUBLIC
STATUS:CONFIRMED
CATEGORIES:Anthropology,History,Law
LOCATION:West Hall - 340
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