UCLA Asian American Studies Center


Winter 2010 Class Schedule

ClassWeb Sites

The Center Headlines

Yale University Presents Highest Honor to UCLA Professor Don Nakanishi


Walter and Shirley Wang Establish First Endowed Chair and Program on US-China Relations and Chinese American Studies


UCLA AAS Center Co-Founder Morgan Chu Receives UCLA Medal

 

more >>

 

AASC Press Publications

Amerasia Journal Index Search


UCLA releases Amerasia Journal women's issue: Where Women Tell Stories


Amerasia Journal: Call for Abstracts "Transoceanic Flows: Pacific Islander Interventions across the American Empire" Publication Date Spring 2011

 

more >>

 

Center Resources

UCLA Asian American Studies Center Gift Giving


DOWNLOAD CROSSCURRENTS: Newmagazine of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center


Learn more about the Center? Download the UCLA Asian American Studies Center Brochure (PDF)

 

more >>

 

Library/Reading Room

Friends of the Reading Room, UCLA Asian American Studies Center Library

 

Students & Community

UCLA Asian American Studies Center Scholarships and Fellowships


UCLA STUDENTS: Become a Free Member of the Center's Graduate and Undergraduate Student Associates Program


AASC General List-Serv Mailing List Registration

 

EthnoCommunications

Announcing the EthnoCommunications Winter Quarter Course


UCLA AASC EthnoCommunications student film selected for the ID Film Festival

UCLA's U.S.-China Media Brief Launches Website Featuring Experts, In-depth Policy Analysis, and Other Expanded Features

August 7, 2008

MEDIA CONTACT: Letisia Marquez
lmarquez@support.ucla.edu
(310) 206-3986

Profs. Russell Leong, Don T. Nakanishi
uschinainfo@aasc.ucla.edu
(310) 825-2974 Fax (310) 206-9844

UCLA's U.S.-China Media Website Features "101+ Things Every American Should Know about U.S.-China Relations"

LOS ANGELES, August 7, 2008 - On the eve of the Beijing Olympics, UCLA's Asian American Studies Center today announced a listing of experts and other features than can be found at U.S./China Media Brief www.uschinamediabrief.com. The service is offered as an educational service to journalists, educators, and the public-at-large.

Here's what the one-stop Media Brief online resource offers:

  • 101 pages of written content, statistics, and expert viewpoints, intended to provide mainstream U.S. media with quick access to background information on U.S.-China relations and issues. Contains 101+ things every American needs to know about U.S.-China Relations.
  • Experts Exchange that gathers leading national and international experts in law, political theory, media, economics and trade, U.S.-China relations, human rights issues, global politics, environmental issues, literature and culture, and more in relation to balancing and broadening the debate on U.S.-China relations.
  • Beijing Olympics 12-page special print edition available for downloading in PDF form.
  • Here's what the New York Times Olympics blog, said about the U.S./China Media brief: "a handy guide for anyone to peruse, available as a pdf or in greater depth at www.uschinamediabrief.com. Perhaps most useful is the brief's concise explanation of the Sino-American argument over human rights"
  • Economy, Trade, Environment, Human and Legal Rights, presented and explained in a succinct balanced format.
  • U.S.-China Relations Timeline that covers 200 years of U.S.-China relations from 1784 to 2008, and includes a list of 50 events in which China, the U.S., and Chinese Americans are interlinked culturally, politically, and economically.
  • China's eco-cities, the United Nations Human Rights Covenants, and a behind-the-scenes look at the real trade balance between the U.S. and China.
  • "Hot button" issues: media and internet, product safety, labor and trade.
  • Eight Things to Know about the Chinese Internet.

The Media Brief was developed, researched, written, and edited as an educational service for the U.S. media by a team at the UCLA Asian American Studies Center including: Professor Don T. Nakanishi, director of the UCLA Asian American Studies Center); Ms. Sharon Owyang, principal writer and researcher (Harvard-trained writer and Emmy-nominated associate producer of the acclaimed Bill Moyer's "Chinese in America" series for PBS); and Adjunct Professor Russell C. Leong, editor of the UCLA Amerasia Journal (award-winning writer). Additionally, a team of experts and leaders in U.S.-China relations, education, research, and politics also contributed to the Media Brief.

For contacts, and interviews with experts and writers:
E-MAIL: uschinainfo@aasc.ucla.edu
Phone: (310) 825-2974
Fax: (310)206-9844
Web: www.uschinamediabrief.com

Contact: Prof. Russell C. Leong or Prof. Don T. Nakanishi


© Copyright, All Rights Reserved, 2005-2009
UCLA Asian American Studies Center
3230 Campbell Hall + 405 Hilgard Avenue + Los Angeles, California 90095-1546
phone 310 . 825 . 2974 + fax 310 . 206 . 9844 + email webmaster@aasc.ucla.edu