ICAS 10
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
20-23 JULY 2017
THE 10TH INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION OF ASIA SCHOLARS CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 20–23 JULY 2017 CHIANG MAI THAILAND
ICAS 10 Paul van der Velde, co-founder of ICAS and Secretary of International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS), hereby gives his weekly contribution on ICAS 10 in the year 2017.
A short summary ICAS 10, Chiang Mai, 20-23 July 2017 After a decade it was high time to return to Southeast Asia. Chiang Mai University in Thailand indicated it was willing to organize the 10th edition of ICAS in connection with 50 years of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) back to back with the Thai Studies conference. According to the local organizer of both conferences professor Chayan Vaddhanaphuti: ‘The emergence of the ASEAN community in Asia is a hope for economic, political and socio-cultural connectivity as well as a challenge for policymakers and the grassroots. ASEAN in Asia is, thus, one of the central themes of this conference.’ No wonder Dr. Surit Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of ASEAN officiated at the opening ceremony and made a flamboyant plea for democratic values and academic freedom. His speech closely connected with the ICAS Keynote Roundtable ‘Upholding Democratic values in Southeast Asia: Intellectual Freedom and Public Engagement’. Two Southeast Asian historians and a social rights activist from Thailand addressed the situation of democratic deficit prevailing in most Southeast Asian countries by focusing on the social and political roles they play as actors and witnesses of ASEAN’s recent history. More than three hundred participants joined in the lively discussions during the Keynote Roundtable, a format which will be used in future editions of ICAS, because it embraces a multitude of voices and views and is therefore more apt for a meeting such as ICAS. This multitude of voices should also be present in the ICAS Book Prize (IBP). ICAS and the IBP can be regarded as one of the ways to facilitate the confluence of localized ‘connected knowledges’ and also the decentering of the landscape of knowledge about Asia. From the start, the IBP has had a broad interdisciplinary basis - Social Sciences and Humanities instead of the traditional geographic or disciplinary compartimentalisations. The diversification of the IBP’s language basis, in collaboration with partners and sponsors from other language areas than English, was realized at ICAS 10. For the first time a separate publication containing the long lists, the shortlists and the winners of the Chinese, English, German, French and Korean editions was published. The scene of all the winners on stage at the end of the opening ceremony was both a great moment for those winners, but certainly also for the twenty-five members of the six reading committees and the eight institutions in Asia and Europe involved in what has become the prize with the most submissions (nearly seven hundred) in the field of Asian studies. One of
the members of the reading committee reported on how he had experienced judging no less than 150 books. He did that in a supplement of The Newsletter wherein twenty other contributors addressed the concept of the New Asia Scholar. One of the characteristics of such a scholar is that (s)he has transcended regions and disciplines to gain a workable understanding of the vast terrain of Asian studies. The Film Screenings organized by the Center of Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS) of Kyoto University were a reflection of Southeast Asia’s rich ethnic and cultural landscape. The screenings are an outcome CSEAS’ Visual Documentary Project which aims at examining everyday life in Southeast Asia through documentary film making and stimulating the dialogue with ASEAN countries. As of 2016 the project has linked up with numerous film schools in Southeast Asia to further strengthen documentary filmmaking networks. No less than thirty documentaries varying in length from 15 to 70 minutes were presented with such titles ranging from Ageing in Bangkok to Burmese in Thailand and Lives Under The Red Lights to Silence of the Summer. What more made ICAS 11 in Chiang Mai special apart from Lanna reception at the venue the International Exhibition and Convention Centre - and the best overall design of any ICAS yet? That certainly were the twenty thematic exhibitions in a traditional wooden structure inside the Convention centre which enabled participants visitors of the conference to discuss a wide variety of projects with its initiators and those involved in it at a local level. As an example may serve the exhibition ‘Salween Local Research Display: bringing the Village to the Conference’. In it local researchers from villages along the Salween River, which flows through Thailand, Myanmar, and China, who have been conducting research into the social and environmental issues related to the river, displayed the outcomes of their research to start conversations with academics, professionals, activists and others from all over the world. To finish it off a real market place with a wide variety of local quality produce was at the entrance of the convention centre. Many participants took craft items home along with nice memories of an exceptional ICAS.
ICAS 10
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
20-23 JULY 2017
CONTENTS
2-3 Welcome 4-5 Venue Floor Plan 6-7 Schedule at a Glance 8-11 Special Events 12-21 Film Screenings 22-27 Exhibitions
THE 10TH INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION OF ASIA SCHOLARS CONFERENCE PROGRAMME 20–23 JULY 2017 CHIANG MAI THAILAND
CO-SPONSORS Chiang Mai City Arts & Cultural Center Konrad Adenauer Stiftung Thailand Convention & Exhibition Bureau
28-107 Panel Schedule 108-127 Advertisements 128-136 List of Participants 137-144 List of Participant Affiliated Institutions Notes
ICAS 10
WELCOME
20-23 JULY 2017
WELCOME TO ALL ICAS 10 PARTICIPANTS
On behalf the Local Organising Committee, I would like to extend our warm welcome to all participants of ICAS10, taking place from 20-23July 2017 in Chiang Mai. As the 10th edition of ICAS is taking place in Asia, it will be greatly beneficial and intellectually challenging to invite Asia scholars to use this platform to discuss and exchange ideas on how we can better understand the changes that are happening in this region today. The conference is envisaged as an opportunity for participants to question the old paradigms and to search for new ones that can help us to analytically investigate the emerging economic, political and social order, as well as to conceive a realisation of the need for a new methodology to help us in better dealing with the problems of environment degradation, migration, authoritarianism, ethnic conflict, inequality, commoditisation of culture, and so forth. The emergence of the ASEAN community in Asia is a hope for economic, political and socio-cultural connectivity as well as a challenge for policymakers and the grassroots. ASEAN in Asia is, thus, one of the central themes of this conference. We hope that participants will find a chance to critically examine the role of the ASEAN community in the context
We are proud of the fact that Chiang Mai was chosen to be the venue for ICAS 10. It is situated in the middle of Asia, particularly in between China and India. It is a living ancient city of diverse ethnic groups, with a Northern Thai majority. It can be seen as an example of a place where two civilisations meet and are overlaid by modernity. Chiang Mai can present itself as a good example of an Asian city undergoing rapid changes while struggling to retain its traditions and cultures, with the active participation of local communities. It is our honour to be part of this conference. We hope all Asia scholars and other participants enjoy the vibrant academic deliberations and intellectual exchanges during this conference, and invite you all to join us in the celebration of Chiang Mai’s 721th anniversary.
On behalf of the Local Organising Committee, Chayan Vaddhanaphuti, PhD. 2017, Chiang Mai
2
Scenes of Chiang Mai. Images reproduced under a Creative Commons license, courtesy of flickr.
of a neoliberal economy.
ICAS 10
WELCOME
20-23 JULY 2017
WELCOME FROM IIAS AND ICAS
We warmly welcome all participants and visitors to the
in 2018. In the same vein, the workshop “Perspectives on
Tenth International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS 10)
Asian Studies in Latin America”, held in November 2016, has
here in Chiang Mai, the ancient capital of the Lanna Kingdom,
given birth to a new Latin America network on Asian studies.
with its rich social and cultural heritage. Together with our
An inaugural conference is planned for 2019. In the true ICAS
local host and organiser, Chiang Mai University, ICAS 10 will
spirit, these pan-African and pan-Latin American conferences
bring fresh knowledge and perspectives to the city’s relations
on Asian studies set out to bring together a diversified range of
with the rest of Asia, through exchanges between a wide range
individuals and institutions from these continents as well as the
of international academic, social and cultural actors, on a
rest of the world, whose shared engagement with Asia will further
vast range of subjects including urban development, social
deepen Asia-Africa and Asia-Latin America intellectual relations.
and economic transformation, migration and connectivity, history and cultural heritage.
Another way IIAS and ICAS facilitate the confluence of localised ‘connected knowledges’, and the decentring of the landscape
In the lead-up to ICAS 10, it has been an honour and a great
of knowledge about and in Asia, is the ICAS Book Prize (IBP).
pleasure for us to collaborate with Chiang Mai University,
From the start, the IBP has had a broad interdisciplinary basis
in particular Acting Vice President for International Relations
(‘Social Sciences’ and ‘Humanities’) instead of the traditional
Prof. Dr Rome Chiranukrom, and the local organisers from
geographic or disciplinary compartmentalisations. The recent
CMU’s Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable
diversification of the IBP’s language basis, in collaboration
Development (RCSD), Prof. Dr Chayan Vaddhanaphuti
with partners and sponsors from other linguistic regions,
and Kanchana Kulpisithicharoen, in addition to many
is a clear example of this decentralising approach. In addition
other persons and institutions in Chiang Mai, including
to the existing English Edition, the IBP will this year honour
our supporting partners: Thailand Convention & Exhibition
publications in the Chinese, Korean, French and German
Bureau (TCEB) and the Chiang Mai International Exhibition
languages. To achieve this growth, prospective partners were
and Convention Centre (CMECC).
approached to either organise and/or sponsor the respective language editions. We would like to thank the following
Established in 1997, ICAS is a global platform enabling
institutes, which eagerly took up the challenge: The Education
individuals and institutions from different parts of the
University of Hong Kong (Chinese Edition), Groupement
world to come together to exchange views on a variety
d’intérêt scientifique Études asiatiques (GIS Asie) (French
of issues pertaining to Asia. Its Secretariat is hosted by the
Edition), the German Institute of Global and Area Studies
International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS), Leiden, the
(GIGA) and the Schweizerische Akademie für Geistes- und
Netherlands. IIAS operates as a network-based, research-
Sozialwissenschaften (SAGW) (German Edition), and Seoul
driven organisation supporting the study of, with and
National University Asia Center (SNUAC) (Korean Edition).
in Asia. Informed by a humanistic agenda, the institute
Together with the Asian Library/Leiden University (English
focuses primarily on three thematic clusters: Asian cities,
Edition), the IBP is now shouldered by eight institutions in Asia
Asian cultural heritage and global Asian interactions.
and Europe. We hope to include two more book prizes in the future, in Japanese and Spanish/Portuguese.
ICAS has contributed to decentring the field of Asian studies by including a wider variety of voices from Asia, but also from
We wish all participants, exhibitors and visitors a fruitful time
other regions of the world. It has succeeded in convening an
at ICAS 10 and an enjoyable stay in the vibrant and heritage-rich
open space in which Asia scholars and cultural and social actors
Chiang Mai.
from the whole world can directly interact. An illustration of ICAS´s inclusive and global reach is the co-organisation with the Association of Asian Studies in Africa (A-ASIA) of its inaugural conference, “Asian Studies in Africa. Challenges and Prospects of a New Axis of Intellectual Interactions”, with the University of Ghana in Accra in September 2015. This historic conference
Philippe Peycam
Paul van der Velde
is set to have a follow-up at the University of Dar es Salaam
Director IIAS
Secretary ICAS 3
ICAS 10
VENUE FLOOR PLAN
VENUE FLOOR PLAN
CHIANG MAI INTERNATIONAL EXHIBITION AND CONVENTION CENTRE
4
20-23 JULY 2017
ICAS 10
VENUE FLOOR PLAN
20-23 JULY 2017
ASIAN STUDIES BOOK FAIR
Hallway A
A1
Areca Book
A2
Tara Books
A6
University of Washington Press
A7
Silkworm Books
A8
NIAS Press
A9
GIGA German Institute of Global
& Area Studies
A10 River Books
Hallway B
B3
Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences
B4
Palgrave Macmillan
B5
Entrepot Publishing
B6 HIPE Publications B7
Routledge
B8
Routledge
B10 Wanfang Data Corporation B11 ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute B12 Amsterdam University Press B13 Cambridge University Press B14 Gale B15 Brill B16 NUS Press B18 Combined Academic Publishers B19 The Collective Bookstall B20 International Institute for Asian Studies B21 International Convention of Asia Scholars
(ICAS) & Asian Library, Leiden University
Hallway C
C1
Center for Asian & African Studies,
EI Colegio de México
C2
Hong Kong University Press
C3
IRASEC/KITLV
C4 Seoul National University Asia Center C5
Chiang Mai University
C6 Chiang Mai University C7
UM China Data Center
C8 Northern Smile Travel
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ICAS 10
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE
20-23 JULY 2017
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE
WEDNESDAY 19 JULY Afternoon
Registration and badge pick up
City Museum
THURSDAY 20 JULY 8.00 – 16.00
Registration and badge pick up
Registration Desk
9.15 – 16.30
Asian Studies Book Fair open
Hallway A, B, C
9.15 − 11.00
Panel sessions
Rooms: 1-25
11.00 – 11.30
Morning Tea
Hallway A, B, C
11.30 − 13.15
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
13.15 – 14.15
Lunch
Food Court
14.15 − 16.00
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
16.00 – 16.30
Afternoon Tea
Hallway A, B, C
16.30 − 17.15
Opening Ceremony
Plenary
Dr Surin Pitsuwan and Prof. Rome Chiranukrom
17.15 − 18.15
Keynote Presentation
THE CHINESE SILK ROAD. RE-TERRITORIALIZING POLITICS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Aihwa Ong
18.15 − 18.45
ICAS Book Prize Award Ceremony
and ICAS 11 Announcement
18.45 – 20.00
Welcome Reception
Mr Pawin Chamniprasat
Plenary
Plenary
Food Court
FRIDAY 21 JULY 8.00 – 17.00
Registration and badge pick up
Registration Desk
9.15 – 18.00
Asian Studies Book Fair open
Hallway A, B, C
9.15 − 11.00
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
11.00 – 11.30
Morning Tea + Poster presentations
Hallway A, B, C
11.30 − 13.15
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
13.15 – 14.15
Lunch
Food Court
14.15 − 16.00
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
16.00 – 16.30
Afternoon Tea
Hallway A, B, C
Book launch at Routledge
Booth B7-8
16.30 − 18.15
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
6
ICAS 10
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE
20-23 JULY 2017
SATURDAY 22 JULY 8.00 – 16.00
Registration and badge pick up
Registration Desk
9.15 – 18.00
Asian Studies Book Fair open
Hallway A, B, C
9.15 − 11.00
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
11.00 – 11.30
Morning Tea
Hallway A, B, C
11.30 − 13.15
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
13.15 – 14.15
Lunch
Food Court
13.15 – 14.15
Weaving demonstration
Exhibitions
14.15 − 16.00
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
16.00 – 16.30
Afternoon Tea + Poster presentations
Hallway A, B, C
16.30 − 18.15
Keynote Roundtable
Room 14
UPHOLDING DEMOCRATIC VALUES IN SOUTHEAST ASIA. INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
Maria Serena Diokno, Son Soubert and Jon Ungpakorn
SUNDAY 23 JULY 8.00 – 12.00
Registration and badge pick up
Registration Desk
9.15 – 12.00
Asian Studies Book Fair open
Hallway A, B, C
9.15 − 11.00
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
11.00 – 11.30
Morning Tea
Hallway A, B, C
11.30 − 13.15
Panel sessions + Film screening
Rooms: 1-25 + Film
13.15 – 14.15
Closing Lunch
Food Court
This programme is correct at the time of printing.
The Organising Committee reserves the right to alter the programme as necessary.
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ICAS 10
SPECIAL EVENTS
20-23 JULY 2017
SPECIAL EVENTS / THURSDAY 20 JULY
16.30 – 17.15 / PLENARY
OPENING CEREMONY Dr Surin Pitsuwan, Former Secretary-General of ASEAN Prof. Rome Chiranukrom, Vice President for International Relations and Alumni Affairs, CMU
Aihwa Ong’s work has always dealt with the particular entanglements of politics, technology and culture in rapidly changing situations on the Asia Pacific rim. Currently, her work focuses on regimes of governing, technology and culture that crystallize new meanings and practices of the human. Her field research shifts between sites in Southeast Asia and China in order to track emerging global centers
KEYNOTE PRESENTATION
and biotechnical experiments in East Asian modernity.
17.15 – 18.15 / PLENARY
THE CHINESE SILK ROAD: RE-TERRITORIALIZING POLITICS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Aihwa Ong, University of California Berkeley, USA On May 14, a Beijing forum introducing China’s “One Belt, One Road” policy prominently displayed the 15th century voyages of Admiral Zheng He to the Nanyang and Africa. While OBOR intends to encompass 65 countries, the imagery of a maritime Silk Road signals that Southeast Asia is the most immediate and critical region for materializing China’s foreign objectives. OBOR has been presented as an avowedly non-political “win-win” policy initiative to improve economic and security conditions in the emerging world. Focusing on the Silk Road initiative, I explore the material power of infrastructure to reconstitute the political in Southeast Asia. By engineering roads and ports overseas, China aims to re-route flows and remake topologies. First, I argue that the neoliberalization of infrastructure in
As a foreign-born anthropologist, Aihwa Ong has approached research from vantage points outside or athwart the United States. This angle of inquiry unsettles and troubles stabilized viewpoints and units of analysis in the social sciences. From her early work on Muslim factory women in Malaysia, to the experiences of migrant Chinese and Cambodian refugees in California; from the selective deployment of neoliberal norms to the rise of biotech projects in Asia; Ong explores how the interaction between global forms and situated politics and cultures shape emerging globalized contexts. Ong’s inter-disciplinary approach and her ideas – ‘flexible citizenship’, ‘graduated sovereignty’, ‘global assemblages’, among others – are featured in debates on globalization and modernity. She has lectured internationally and been invited to the World Economic Forum. Her awards include grants from the MacArthur Foundation and the National Science Foundation, and a number of book prizes. Keynote presentation is followed by the ICAS Book Prize Award Ceremony and ICAS 11 Announcement
China allows it to “rule beyond the state”. Second, I view the Silk Road building of railways, ports and zones as a process that re-territorializes politics in SE Asia. PRC financing, technology, and expertise are engendering a cascade of zones, by repurposing manufacturing sites and by recasting Thailand, Myanmar, and Indonesia as nodal points in an emerging PRC-oriented trade and logistical system. Third, the inroads of The Silk Road compromise national power. Political exceptions made to accommodate PRC interests contribute to the effects of “graduated” or unevenness in sovereign rule. By shaping infrastructure, Chinese investors and developers come to control land use, property, and labor, thus re-territorializing politics, and embedding foreign spaces in host countries. Finally, what are the nationalist implications of China’s infrastructural power for SE Asia? 8
18.45–20.00 / RESTAURANT
WELCOME LANNA RECEPTION Welcome speech by Mr Pawin Chamniprasat, Chiang Mai Governor. The Organising Committee invites all ICAS 10 delegates to join them for the Welcome Lanna Reception, catered by the outstanding Rati Lanna Riverside Resort. Do not miss out on this opportunity to build new relationships, see old friends and enjoy the company of your colleagues and peers in a relaxed and informal setting.
ICAS 10
SPECIAL EVENTS
20-23 JULY 2017
ICAS Book Prize 2017
Now also including French, German, Chinese and Korean language editions
Award Ceremony Thursday 20 July, 18.15 in Plenary Hall
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ICAS 10
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
In 2019, ICAS 11 will return to Europe, to where it began; in Leiden, the Netherlands. The historic city of Leiden is home to one of the oldest universities and several of the most renowned Asia research centers. Leiden University will be the main host of ICAS 11, thereby partnering with the city, research institutions and museums, who share equally rich Asian and global connections.
20-23 JULY 2017
The venue of ICAS 11 will be the imposing building of the Law Faculty, once a laboratory where the Nobel Prize laureate H. Kamerlingh Onnes discovered superconductivity, without which our digital would never have come into being. Participate at ICAS 11 in Leiden and enjoy a multitude of networking opportunities, possibilities to share your research and to meet with publishers face-to-face.
For more information, visit www.icas.asia/icas11 10
ICAS 10
SPECIAL EVENTS
20-23 JULY 2017
SPECIAL EVENTS / SATURDAY 22 JULY
PLENARY KEYNOTE ROUNDTABLE
Some questions immediately come to mind: to what extent
16.30–18.15 / ROOM 14
does the weakness of an entrenched culture of political and social democracy in many Southeast Asian countries today
UPHOLDING DEMOCRATIC VALUES IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM AND PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
stem from difficulties – if not impossibilities – to articulate intellectual freedoms with acts of social and political public engagement? What could ideally be the role of civic, educational, cultural institutions and their members to uphold a real culture
This ICAS public plenary roundtable seeks to address
of accountability in Southeast Asian contexts?
the situation of democratic deficit prevailing in most Southeast Asian countries today by focusing on the social
All three speakers have played and continue to play an
and political roles of three public intellectuals whose
active part in the public life of their countries where they are
backgrounds and achievements make them unique as both
regarded as inspiring figures. They share the same quest
actors and witnesses of their countries’ recent history.
for justice and democratic rights for their countrymen and women. They will, in their own way, reflect on their capacity to
Maria Serena I. Diokno is a trained historian from the
stay free from the danger of turning into ‘official intellectuals’
Philippines who teaches at the University of the Philippines
serving the social and political status quo.
at Diliman. She is the founder of the Southeast Asian Studies Regional Programme (SEASREP) – a renowned network of
The three 20-minute public talks will be followed
humanistic scholars from Southeast Asia. From 2012 to 2016,
by an open Q&A session.
she served as the chairman of the National Heritage Board of the Philippines, a position she left in order to protest the policies of President Duterte. Son Soubert is a trained art historian from Cambodia who teaches at the Royal University of Fine Arts, Phnom Penh. He has been involved in the political, diplomatic and humanitarian realms of action surrounding the return to peace in Cambodia since the wake of the UN mission there in 1992. He has served as both an opposition MP and a member of the Constitutional Council from where he has remained a vocal opponent to Prime Minister Hun Sen and his friends in power.
Jon Ungpakorn is a trained engineer and prominent human rights activist from Thailand who is considered by most as a founding father of Thai NGOs. Mr. Ungpakorn founded many civic organisations, starting with the AIDS-Access Foundation in the early 1990s. He first became involved in Thai politics when he was elected as senator in 2000, and when he joined the Health Committee and Social Development and Human Security Committee. He is also the founder of Prachatai, a web-based news website specialized in human rights and politics.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FILM SCREENINGS
THE VISUAL DOCUMENTARY PROJECT
the Japan Foundation Asia Center has participated in this project as co-organizer to help widely promote the richness
Organiser: Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS),
of Southeast Asian cultures to people in Japan and stimulate
Kyoto University
dialogue with ASEAN nations. As of 2016, the project has linked up with numerous film schools in the region to help
Overview
strengthen documentary filmmaking networks.
Southeast Asia is rich in ethnic, religious and cultural diversity. The region has maintained such diversity while at
https://vdp.cseas.kyoto-u.ac.jp
the same time achieving economic progress and becoming a hub for the flow of people, goods, money and information.
Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS),
Yet at present, the region is also confronted with serious
Kyoto University
issues such as a decrease in biodiversity and tropical forests,
For over 50 years the Center for Southeast Asian
disasters, pandemics, aging populations, ethnic and religious
Studies (CSEAS) has conducted research in Southeast
conflicts, economic differentiation and poverty. In the face of
Asia to formulate and pursue original research agendas.
this, how are coexistence and sustainability possible despite
Amassing an extensive body of information through
the diversity that exists? How can we make public resources
integrated area studies, CSEAS seeks to develop research
out of the region’s social foundations which are the basis
frameworks based on extensive fieldwork and on observations
of people’s everyday lives?
that derive from the region’s diversity. Currently, CSEAS is promoting trans-disciplinary collaborative research to
In order to address these issues the Center for Southeast Asian
form academic communities that can deal with transnational
Studies (Kyoto University) initiated the “Visual Documentary
issues; move toward life-oriented research approaches
project” in 2012 to explicitly examine everyday life in Southeast
attuned to regional diversity; create socially innovative
Asia through documentary film making. This project aims to
approaches to the needs of the environment; and share
use visual forms of expression to complement the growing
and use global information resources with the regional
literature that exists on Southeast Asian societies. From 2014,
and global academic world.
From Lives under the Red Light, Hem Vanna
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FILM SCREENINGS / TIMETABLE
All Films are presented in the Film Screening Room located on the 1st Floor. See the Venue Floor Plan on page 4.
SATURDAY 22 JULY
THURSDAY 20 JULY 11.35 – 11.55
The Clinic
9.20 – 9.45
Dedicated to Grandpa Dieu
12.00 – 12.20
Glass Man
9.50 – 10.20
Michael’s
12.25 – 12.45
Caring for the Cradle
10.23 – 11.00
Nyalon
12.50 – 13.10
Ageing Bangkok
11.35 – 13.15 Sweet Medicine, Followed
14.20 – 14.30
For a Rainy Day
14.35 – 14.55
Pamana
14.20 – 15.00
Calalai
15.00 – 15.15
On the Streets
15.05 – 15.35
60 Days
15.20 – 15.35
The Burmese in Thailand
15.40 – 15.55
Women of the Forest
15.40 – 16.05
Consider
by a Q&A with Anita Hardon
SUNDAY 23 JULY FRIDAY 21 JULY 9.20 – 9.50
Mr Zero
9.20 – 9.35
Lives under the Red Lights
10.00 – 10.30
Vein
9.40 – 9.55
The Last Generation
11.35 – 12.00
Don’t know much about ABC
10.00 – 10.15
More than a Tree
12.05 – 12.35
Viral! Sial!
12.40 – 12.50
Fragile
10.20 – 10.35 My Grandpa’s Route has been Forever Blocked 11.35 – 12.00
Silence of the Summer
12.05 – 12.25
Echoes from the Hill
12.30 – 12.50
A Political Life
12.55 – 13.15
My Leg
14.20 – 15.30 Path of Anna: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow 2 16.30 – 18.15 Crossing the Line, Followed by a Q&A with Director Anita Barar
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FILM SCREENINGS / SYNOPSES
THE CLINIC
CARING FOR THE CRADLE: MANGYANS
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 11.35 – 11.55
AND MATERNAL HEALTH
Director: Aung Min, Myanmar
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 12.25 – 12.45
2012 / 20 minutes
Director: Jewel Ranier Ocampo, Philippines
The Clinic shares the relationship between a 45 year
2012 / 20 minutes
old doctor and his clients. The protagonist, the clinic
This documentary focuses on an indigenous group called
doctor, was brought up and trained under the education
the “Mangyan” (Alagan), in Mindoro Oriental, an island
system of Myanmar socialist regime. Nonetheless, he
6 hours away from Manila. It documents how their traditional
made his own living as a clinic doctor. His clients come
birth methods are threatening them and why it’s not so easy
up with their different problems while he has own personal
for them to get modern medical assistance. The documentary
conflicts. This documentary developed as way to respond
also shows how a simple idea can help the Mangyan reduce
to his dilemmas.
their maternal mortality rate.
GLASS MAN
AGEING BANGKOK
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 12.00 – 12.20
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 12.50 – 13.10
Director: Zay Yar Aung, Myanmar
Director: Yanin Pongsuwan, Thailand
2012 / 20 minutes
2012 / 19 minutes
Kaung Htet is 20 years old and only 3 feet 9 inches.
Population aging is becoming significant issue in Thailand,
He is suffering from osteoporosis, with bones like glass
yet there is still a lack of state’s policy to develop the
which have broken over 40 times since birth. When
well-being of the elderly. This documentary focuses on
he was a child, he was afraid of going out in public and
the life of an old woman aged 84 named Ood, who has to
depressed about his situation. However, since he was
fend for herself. Ood, previously an actress for films and
sent to the School for Disabled Children, his point
TV commercials until the age of 62, seems independent,
of view on life and his mindset have changed.
yet this documentary unintentionally shows her loneliness.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FOR A RAINY DAY
ON THE STREETS
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 14.20 – 14.30
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 15.00 – 15.15
Director: Nguyen Anh Phong VY, Vietnam
Director: Mycuoung Le, Vietnam
2013 / 12 minutes
2013 / 16 minutes
In a small alley in Hanoi’s old town, where lots of families have been living together, a woman lives with her second son
This film is about the lives of young men and women who
together with the family of her first son. Her life is a series of
earn their lives by selling sugar, singing and dancing on Ho
relentless working years along with uncompensated losses.
Chi Minh city’s busy streets. The film offers a window into the
At an old age, she still sells green tea daily to support herself
life of Dien whose job is just not a way to earn a living. It also
and her mentally incapable son.
comes from his love for singing, where the streets are his only stage. Bi and Ti a couple who fell in love with each other, live together like husband and wife and stick to this job just to earn money. The film also follows children who were born and grew up as street children. On the streets leaves the viewer with a question: when will it come to an end?
PAMANA THURSDAY 20 JULY / 14.35 – 14.55 Director: Giselle Joyce Nadine de la Peña, Philippines 2013 / 18 minutes This documentary tells the story of an Agta-DumagatRemontado community in Quezon Province who face the
THE BURMESE IN THAILAND
threat of losing their ancestral land. Various developmental
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 15.20 – 15.35
projects by lowlanders have caused socio-political,
Director: Kantayalongote Suree, Thailand
economic, and environmental consequences, affecting both
2013 / 13 minutes
Agta and lowland communities. The Agta-Dumagat continue
Portraying the lives of Burmese workers in Thailand
to struggle for their rights throughout decades of oppression
this documentary shows how they work and their living
and marginalization. The documentary sensitively show
conditions. It focuses on a Burmese worker “Jet” who
how through self-determination, the community was able to
works in a “Tom Luead Moo” shop and spends 20 hours
put up their own school that teaches academics and cultural
a day managing all the daily tasks.
identity to their youth with the hope of fostering the next generation of cultural defenders who to protect the legacy left by their ancestors.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FILM SCREENINGS / SYNOPSES
CONSIDER
THE LAST GENERATION
THURSDAY 20 JULY / 15.40 – 16.05
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 9.40 – 9.55
Director: Panu Saeng-Xuto, Thailand
Directors: Darang Melati Z / Riza Andrian, Indonesia
2013 / 25 minutes
2014 / 13 minutes
Tay is a teenage “kathoey” (ladyboy) a member of the
This documentary explores the decline of fish resources
relatively well-tolerated transgender group. Kathoey take
on a coastal village in Greater Aceh Region, Indonesia.
on traditional female roles, and are sometimes described
With detailed interviews with fisherman in the village,
as a third sex. This documentary follows Tay and observes
it introduces the human effects of illegal fishing on both
the acceptance of his orientation at his Christian school
communities and people. The documentary is framed in
Saint Joseph Mueang-Ake. The documentary peers into the
the context of the 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake which
daily life of Tay, and those around them to paint a complex
devastated the coast, destroyed vast tracts of coral,
observation of how an individual’s gender is articulated
and led to a decrease in fish stocks. Through interviews
in Thai society.
with fishermen who lost limbs through fish bombing, this documentary portrays the harsh reality and anxieties some fishing communities presently face in the region.
LIVES UNDER THE RED LIGHTS FRIDAY 21 JULY / 9.20 – 9.35 Director: Hem Vanna, Cambodia
MORE THAN A TREE
2013 / 13 minutes
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 10.00 – 10.15
Under the red light focuses on the lives of four persons who
Director: Philipp Danao/ Khin, Myanmar
work as sex workers in Phnom Penh. Most of them were kicked
2014 / 16 minutes
out from their families and came to live in Phnom Penh and
Every year, coastal communities in Rakhine State on the
ended up working in the sex industry. This film sensitively
northwestern coast of Myanmar are exposed to the threat
deals with the daily discrimination they face. Sex work places
of floods and cyclones. Between 2008 and 2011, Malteser
them at risk to gang rape, sex violence, drugs and arrests by
International and Mangrove Service Network (MSN) helped
police. This documentary offers a window onto the lives of
two villages in Sittwe Township to plant and grow over 10,000
these sex workers in modern day Cambodian society.
mangroves thus safeguarding the lives of more than 5,000 people. Punctuated by striking images of the coastal landscape, this short documentary describes the critical importance of mangrove restoration in reducing disaster risks aggravated by the changing environment. It also sensitively shows how in particular, the women of these villages have become an integral part of an eco-vision to protect and help their communities.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
MY GRANDPA’S ROUTE HAS BEEN FOREVER
ECHOES FROM THE HILL
BLOCKED
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 12.05 – 12.25
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 10.20 – 10.35
Directors: Jirudikal Prasonchoom
Director: Supaparinya Sutthirat, Thailand
& Pasit Tandaechanurat, Thailand
2014 / 15 minutes
2014 / 19 minutes
In this documentary, Supaparinya Sutthirat takes us on a
This documentary focuses on Karen villagers in the
journey down the Ping River, a waterway that has historically
Northwest of Thailand, the “Pgaz K’Nyau” (Simple humans),
been used for trade. It reflects upon the evolving river-scape
who live in a village without running electricity far from
comparing the river of now to that of the one that existed
highways. It voices and reveals their way of life, the nature
during her Grandfather’s time. In 1958, the Bhumibol Dam was
around them, how they think, and how they believe and
built, effectively changing the landscape. Sutthirat takes the
protect it. Jirudikal Prasonchoom sensitively captures their
viewer on a journey down the present Ping River in an attempt
sacred beliefs and worldview and how they maintain harmony
to understand the past and observe issues in the present.
and preserve nature. The documentary juxtaposes their
Using an innovative split screen technique, the video invites
lives with the Thai government’s recent attempt to make
viewers to reflect on small weirs, floodgates, and dikes lying
their forest a national park and build a dam on their land.
sequentially from the source of the river to the Bhumibol Dam
This documentary explores the tensions that exist between
while taking the viewer on a boat cruise to contextualize the
people’s relations to the nature around them and the way
impact of changes on the river.
government attempts to justify development in the region.
SILENCE OF THE SUMMER
A POLITICAL LIFE
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 11.35 – 12.00
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 12.30 – 12.50
Director: Mai Dinh Khoi, Vietnam
Director: Soe Arkar Htun, Myanmar
2014 / 25 minutes
2015 / 20 minutes
This documentary introduces different stories on the
U Thein Soe dedicated the best years of his life to
relationship between human society and the environment in
working as Aung San Suu Kyi’s bodyguard. To please his
Vietnam. During the summer in the parks of the city, people
long-suffering wife and family he has now bowed out of
cannot hear the sound of cicadas and other insects even
politics − but still can’t help giving up his time to provide
though it is their mating season. In the countryside, near the
local people with valuable legal advice.
rice fields, children cannot hear the vital sounds of nature, as the fields are now sprayed with pesticides and herbicides. In the laboratory, an entomologist collects specimens of cicadas, crickets and other insects, fearing that they might disappear in the near future. This documentary is a poignant reflection on the changes taking place in the Vietnamese landscape.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FILM SCREENINGS / SYNOPSES
MY LEG
CROSSING THE LINE (ICAS 10 SUBMISSION)
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 12.55 – 13.15
FRIDAY 21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15
Director: Khon Soe Moe Aung, Myanmar
Director: Anita Barar, Australia
2015 / 19 minutes
2007 / 75 minutes
For over 60 years in Kayah State, Myanmar, different
In 1947 when British gave freedom to India, a line drawn
ethnic armed groups have been fighting the Burmese Army
on the map of India gave birth to a new nation - Pakistan.
in a war for freedom and independence. A group of war
The division resulted mass killing and forced migration
veterans have opened an artificial leg workshop constructing
of tens of thousands. The generation old bonds disappeared
a hundred legs per year for fellow veterans with the same
and brutal attacks against humanity were witnessed. The
stroke of fate – leaving ethnic differences behind.
feature documentary film ‘Crossing the Line’ documents the cultural memories of this partition and the human factor of borders and boundaries, politics of divide and the notion of identity by a few seniors living in Sydney of both the countries who crossed the border. It is a film about seniors’ longing for their roots, their nightmares, their friendship, their quest and about a tragedy, which humanity had gone through.
PATH OF ANNA: YESTERDAY, TODAY, TOMORROW 2 FRIDAY 21 JULY / 14.20 – 15.30 Director: Naoi Riyo, Japan/Thailand 2013 / 70 minutes Infected with HIV by her ex-husband, Anna meets Pom and marries him. The couple sell eggs at the morning market everyday to earn their living. During the daytime,
DEDICATED TO GRANDPA DIEU
Anna takes care of HIV-positive orphans in their village
SATURDAY 22 JULY / 9.20 – 9.45
together with Pom. With mutual moral support from and
Director: Hien Anh Nguyen, Vietnam
to other HIV-positive friends and family, Anna tries to live
2015 / 25 minutes
out every precious second never giving up on her hope for
This documentary depicts the everyday life of an elderly
tomorrow. This is a sensitive documentary about the life
person, Mr. Dieu, in busy Hanoi city. He leads a simple life
of a mother and a daughter portraying the trials of
in a modest house with a blue wooden door on a small corner
a mother and her relations with people around her.
of a busy street. The documentary focuses on Mr. Dieu – a man with strong ambition – who used to work as a freelance interpreter at the UN High Commissioner for Refugees in the mid-1960s. He works very hard, translating books he likes, but he has never tried to publish any of them himself.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
MICHAEL’S
SWEET MEDICINE (ICAS 10 SUBMISSION)
SATURDAY 22 JULY / 9.50 – 10.20
SATURDAY 22 JULY / 11.35 – 13.15
Director: Kunnawut Boonreak, Thailand
Directors: Juul Op den Kamp, the Netherlands
2015 / 30 minutes
and Ralph Pulanco, the Philippines
Among the different economic and religious networks
2017 / 75 minutes
that exist in Mae Sot district, a city along Thailand-Burma
“Sweet Medicine” follows Leo, who is a dealer of First Vita
border, ‘Michael Rofik’ and ‘Michael Mohamad’ Yameen two
Plus, a multilevel marketing company in the Philippines that
Rohingyas, have been struggling for their livelihood while
sells herbal food supplements. The documentary shows how
trying to maintain their Rohingya identity. The two Michaels
in Palawan, where one third of families live in poverty and
come from the same ethnic group but their economic status
cannot feed their children well, Leo tries to convince people
and background differ. This story takes place in Mae Sot and
to buy First Vita Plus to treat and prevent all kinds of health
Umpiem Refugee camps. Although both migrated a long time
conditions. Charismatic officials of the company suggest that
ago, they do not belong to either Thailand or Myanmar.
Leo can become a millionaire if he works hard in recruiting new dealers and selling the product, while the government warns that the food supplements have no proven therapeutic value, and that they lack facilities to guarantee quality of these products. The film is a product of the ChemicalYouth project, funded by the European Research Council, and led by Anita Hardon. The film was made with a research team and crew from Palawan.
NYALON SATURDAY 22 JULY / 10.23 – 11.00 Director: Ima Puspita Sari, Indonesia 2015 / 37 minutes For many years husband and wife, Dini and Kardi, who cut hair in their own respective hair saloon in Wates village, Central Java have many loyal customers who often talk freely about family gossips, local politicians and even national
CALALAI IN-BETWEENNESS
politics. We can see and hear blunt, honest opinions of the
SATURDAY 22 JULY / 14.20 – 15.00
customers about the chaotic presidential campaign and
Director: Kiki Febriyanti, Indonesia
its divisive election. At the end of the day it seems like
2015 / 40 minutes
not a bad idea to learn about politics in a hair saloon.
A story about the existence of women of South Sulawesi, Indonesia, living in Bugis culture in the midst of a modern world ruled by a binary gender system. For centuries Bugis people have accepted gender diversity as implicitly written in the La Galigo manuscript, where they believe that humans consist of five genders, and one of them is calalai. Who is calalai?
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
FILM SCREENINGS / SYNOPSES
60 DAYS
MR ZERO
SATURDAY 22 JULY / 15.05 – 15.35
SUNDAY 23 JULY / 9.20 – 9.50
Directors: Htut Ye Kyaw, Sett Paing Aung,
Director: Nutcha Tantivitayapitak, Thailand
Pyay Maw Thein, Myanmar
Producer: Chawanrat Rungsangcharoenthip, Thailand
2016 / 31 minutes
2016 / 30 minutes
On November 17, 2014, amidst the protests regarding the
A documentary that deals with the story of Bundit Aneeya,
national educational law in Myanmar, a 60-day moratorium
a senior translator and writer whose provocative writings
was announced by the students. This documentary explores
led him to be accused of mental instability. Having been
the student protest through this interim, an important
charged four times under article 112 (lèse-majesté in
step in the country’s national education reform, including
Thailand), this documentary offers a sensitive portrayal
interviews with students who were actually involved.
of his works and personal history.
WOMEN OF THE FOREST
VEIN
SATURDAY 22 JULY / 15.40 – 15.55
SUNDAY 23 JULY / 10.00 – 10.30
Director: Inshallah Montero, Malaysia/Philippines
Directors: Htet Aung San, Phyo Zayar Kyaw,
2016 / 15 minutes
KO JET, Myanmar
In Sarawak, Malaysia, Borneo’s rainforest is fading into
2016 / 30 minutes
corporate land. This documentary spotlights the women
A relatively unspoken part of life in Myanmar, this
of the Kayan and Penan tribes, who struggle from both
documentary sheds light on the mining sites and
manmade destruction and effects of climate change.
dangers that surround laborers as they search for
It sensitively explores how reproductive health and rights
jade. This documentary offers an stark portrayal
should be included in climate change policies, and, in the
of mining in Myanmar and the everyday risks
form of a dialogue, seeks to protect the rights of these
that miners face trying to make a living.
women who live in the Bornean forests.
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ICAS 10
FILM SCREENINGS
20-23 JULY 2017
I DON’T KNOW MUCH ABOUT ABC
FRAGILE
SUNDAY 23 JULY / 11.35 – 12.00
SUNDAY 23 JULY / 12.40 – 12.50
Directors: Sok Chanrado/Norm Phanith, Cambodia
Director: Bebbra Mailin, Malaysia
(Bophana Audiovisual Resource Center)
2015 / 11 minutes
2016 / 23 minutes
This documentary follows the life of an Indonesian family
Ron Dara, is a 33-year old homeless man who lives on the
living in Sabah, Malaysia. It is told from the perspective
streets close to the White Building in Phnom Penh along
of a child, Nirwana (12 years old), who holds a big dream
with his son. Dara earns a meagre income from sewing
to become a singer despite family struggles.
old shoes and collecting garbage to be able to support his daily life and his son’s schooling. This documentary shows the intimate relation between a father and his son and how education is crucial to cut down poverty and improve financial circumstances.
VIRAL! SIAL! SUNDAY 23 JULY / 12.05 – 12.35 Director: David Buri, Malaysia 2016 / 29 minutes Edry Faizal hosts BFM Kupas, a satirical Malaysian current affairs youtube series. When Edry volunteers in a state recently hit by devastating floods, Aisyah Tajuddin steps into his shoes to host the show. Things take a dramatic turn when the episode goes disastrously viral and Aisyah receives rape and death threats. This documentary follows Edry as he goes on a journey to uncover what went wrong.
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ICAS 10
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS / 1-5
EXHIBITIONS HALL
1
Connectivity, Conundrums and Challenges people. The thematic exhibitions at ICAS 10 reflect the
THE ART OF THE CHAMPA KINGDOM: MEETING POINT OF MARITIME AND OVERLAND TRADING ROUTES IN ASIA
multi-dimensional impact of globalisation in the region: the
Royal Museum of Antiquity, Hue, Vietnam
struggles of local people, how they cope with the changes, and
Contact person: Huynh Thi Anh Van
Southeast Asia is a land rich in culture and diversity of
their attempts to revitalize their cultures and identities. The maritime trade was once the main economy of the Exhibitions: Connectivity in Diversity
Champa Kingdom (nagara Campa). Based on a coastline
1. The Art of the Champa Kingdom: Meeting Point
of more than 1000 kilometres long from Quang Binh Province
of Maritime and Overland Trading Routes in Asia 2. Salween local research display: Bringing the village to the conference
to Binh Thuan province, the Cham people (urang Campa) have built a system of seaports to receive international merchant ships, which helped to facilitate the import-export activities
3. Siamese Journey in Malaysia
of the region. These activities were important part of the
4. Lanna in Myawaddy
“marine silk road” in connecting East Asia (China, Japan) with
5. Kingdom’s edge
South Asia (India) and West Asia (Arabian countries) as well
6. In Search for the Job
as neighboring states in Southeast Asia. Moreover, Champa
7. New Originals
Kingdom was also the last stopover of the overland trade
8. Children on the Move
routes connecting the other minor states in the Mainland
9. Population and Aging Society in Thailand
Southeast Asia with the international marine trade route in
10. Water & Land in the Mekong Region
the East Sea/Nan Hai which Arabian traders called “Champa
11. Food System in Asia
sea” from the VIIIth century. In that context, the art of Champa
12. Thai Vernacular Houses
Kingdom became the meeting point of the maritime and
13. Lanna Rice
overland trading route in Asia. Some examples from the
14. Arts, Crafts & Urban Heritage
Section of Cham antiques (Hue Museum of Royal Antiquities,
15. 250 Year of Thonburi
Vietnam) are taken as evidences in this exhibition.
16. Community/Social Engagement in Research University (Chiang Mai University) 17. Community/Social Engagement in Research
2
University (Ratchamonkol Technology University 18. Cornell’s Ethnography in Northern Thailand
SALWEEN LOCAL RESEARCH DISPLAY: BRINGING THE VILLAGE TO THE CONFERENCE
19. Hmong Songs of Memory
Contact person: Vanessa Lamb
of Lanna)
20. In Memory of King Bhumibol Adulyadej Local researchers from villages along the Salween River, which flows through Thailand, Myanmar, and China, have been conducting research into the social and environmental issues related to the river for the past two years or more. They will display their research findings and goods from the village to help participants – who range from academics, development professionals, activists, and others – see water governance challenges from the perspective of the village.
22
ICAS 10
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
3
4
SIAMESE JOURNEY IN MALAYSIA
LANNA IN MYAWADDY (PHOTO EXHIBITION)
Thai Studies Program, Department of Southeast Asian
Wat Suan Dok, Chiang Mai
Studies, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University
Contact persons: Phra Nakorn, Wat Suan Dok
of Malaya Contact person: Mala Rajo Sathian 5 A Siamese Journey in Malaysia is a visual presentation of the outcome of a research aimed at documenting the history,
KINGDOM’S EDGE
cultures and identities of Thai (or Siamese) communities
Contact person: Richard Humphries
living in the northern Malaysian states of Kedah, Penang and Perlis, that partly border south Thailand. The photos capture
Kingdom’s Edge represents British photojournalist Richard
the faces and voices of the Siamese in north Malaysia and
Humphries’ eight year journey documenting Thailand’s
show the significance of the community, as representing
deep south region. Through his book of the same name, and
another minority group within the larger multi-ethnic society
this collection of 15 colour photographs, Richard, a fluent
of Malaysia. About 70 photos covering seven major themes
Malay speaker, examines the complex intricacies and subtle
of the Siamese community and their heritage in Malaysia
incongruities of daily life in South East Asia’s deadliest conflict.
is showcased. The themes are:
Moving away from the mainstream media’s monotonous
1. Chronicling the Past: A Siamese History in Malaysia
coverage, Richard has found a region that teems and bustles
2. Community
with life and culture. It is a region of trade and commerce, of
3. Dancing and Performing Arts
young people and free wifi, of tea shops and markets. A place
4. Renewal and Blessings: Songkhran and Khao Phansa
where tudong clad girls ride four on a motorbike, where twice
5. Thai temple and Architecture
a day people freeze on the spot to the sound of the national
6. Thai language through temple schools and Thai Oracle
anthem, and where the call to prayer fills the air five times a
through Samut Khoi 7. Legacy of Thai Elite in Malaysia
day. It is a complex society that is both Muslim and Buddhist, Malay and Thai. It is both old and youthful, calm and restive. It is a place that has more in common with Kuala Lumpur
The north Malaysia- south Thai border zone is indeed a region
than distant Bangkok. Through this visual narrative Richard
of vibrancy, diversity and inter-connectedness. Located within
presents a timely and alternative view from one of the world’s
this realm of the Thai and Malay worlds are the Siamese
most underreported conflict zones, a largely forgotten pocket
communities on the Malaysian side of the border, who are
of territory at the farthest edge of the Kingdom of Thailand.
mostly Thai speaking and followers of Buddhism living among neighborhoods that are predominantly Malay and Muslim. This photo exhibition informs us of their lived identities and heritage. The hybrid space encompassing both these worlds serve as a “living bridge” of the past and future relations between Thailand and Malaysia.
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ICAS 10
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS / 6-13
6
8
IN SEARCH FOR A JOB – ANY JOB
CHILDREN ON THE MOVE
Contact person: John Hulme
Coalition of NGOs working with children in Chiang Mai and Bangkok
The past thirty years has seen an ever-increasing global restructure of production and investment as capital moves
Contact persons: Sudarat Suwannarat, Perada Suponpun
freely from industrial centers in Europe and North America to
Traditional Thai brothels were as much a part of the Thai
countries with the cheapest labour. This, in turn, has produced
landscape as beautiful temples and rice fields. Although
vast numbers of migrant workers. But the free movement
modern day sex workers are more varied (from street walkers
of finance capital stands in stark contrast to the plight of the
to exotic dancers to massage girls to bar attendants) and
millions of legal and so-called “illegal” migrants throughout
more hidden (with services increasingly arranged for online)
the world who are confronted by a myriad of border controls,
they exist nonetheless. Many would like to deny this “dark
racist legislation and other measures blocking their efforts
side” of Thai society. However, acceptance of its reality is
to escape poverty, famine, political repression or war. Illegal
an important step in combatting its harmful effects. Recent
migrants scuttling across borders is a scene repeated daily in
developments in the commercial sex industry include the
Europe and the Americas, Thailand, of course, is no exception
trafficking and abuse of young girls and boys. Associated with
with an estimated one and a half million migrants from
this trend is the growth of online child exploitation (the use
Burma, now known as Myanmar, entering the country since
of technology to record victimization/create explicit material
the mid-1980s In Search of a Job-any Job and the hope of a
for sale, distribution, or for use in threatening the victim).
better life for their families. Internal conflict and human rights
We hope that participants who experience our exhibition will
abuse by the military led government have accelerated this
increase their awareness and understanding of these issues,
process. But life in Thailand for Burmese migrants brings new
and be prompted to take further action in their communities.
difficulties. More than half of these mainly young workers are undocumented, forced to eke out a living on rock bottom wages and in constant fear of deportation. They are employed
9
in dirty, dangerous and difficult jobs in Thailand’s fishing and shrimp farms, as well as providing cheap labour for the tourist
POPULATION AND AGING SOCIETY IN THAILAND
industry. Over the past eight years, I have been making regular
Mahidol University
visits to Thailand’s western border with Burma, to record the
Contact person: Suchada Thaveesit
construction industries, rubber plantations, dockyards and
plight of some of these desperately poor workers and their families. “In Search of a Job-any Job” is a selection of this work
Age structure of the population in many countries is changing
and one that hopefully reminds us of the difficulties facing
into a more ageing society. This demographic phenomenon
migrants in every country.
is a consequence of declining fertility and increased longevity. Thailand reached the demographic criteria for being labeled an “aged society” in 2005, when the proportion of the total
7
population age 60 years old and over reached 10%. In 2016, Thailand had a population 64.4 million, with 9.8 million age
NEW ORIGINALS (GRAPHIC DESIGN POSTER)
60 years old and over (15.2%). The proportion of the older
Thailand Creative and Design Center (TCDC)
population has increased rapidly. It is estimated that in the
Contact person: Imhathai Kunjina
year 2019 older persons will for the first time outnumber children. Moreover, Thailand will become a super-aged society in 2031 when 28% of population will be elderly. These posters show the population aging in the world, ASEAN, and Thailand in 2015, including the situation of the Thai elderly, quality
24
of life and wellbeing of the Thai elderly.
ICAS 10
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS
10
20-23 JULY 2017
on a number of fronts. We are witnessing the conversion of rural spaces into land for development/investment
WATER & LAND IN THE MEKONG REGION
projects; the introduction of policies on forests, land and rivers
Contact person: Tom Weerachart
that threaten traditional livelihoods; and the industrialization of food production. Domination and control of markets by
What would happen if the Mekong river stopped flowing
large-scale agricultural and food corporations also pose
tomorrow? This is a scenario that could possibly happen
a danger to small-scale food producers and farmers. The
to millions of people relying on the Mekong river after
working conditions of labourers in the food industry, both
decades of exploitation and trial and error in governing the
in the formal and informal sector, are greatly deteriorating.
Mekong by different actors from upstream to downstream
However, people across Asia are coming together to fight
countries. The Mekong exhibition puts together stories from
these threats and defend small-scale, sustainable food
the beginning of the Mekong river to the mouth of the river,
production. This exhibition aims to show the importance
across China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Cambodia and
of nature as a source of food and life, local food cultures and
Vietnam. It aims to capture the Mekong phenomenon in the
traditions, and peoples’ struggles to protect and promote
past years by looking closely at socio-cultural ecology, local
sustainable and traditional food systems. The exhibition will
livelihoods, development and the impacts and the struggles
be divided into five sub-themes:
and movement of affected people in seeking justice for the
1. Local/Traditional Food.
Mekong river. The exhibition presents three thematic stories:
2. Forest Food.
1. The River presents stories of lives, culture, ecosystem
3. Land for Food.
of the Mekong people from upstream to downstream.
4. Food Workers.
2. The Devastation reflects problems and impacts of regional
5. Reclaiming the Food System.
development trend such as hydropower development, rapids blasting and water diversion that affects the
The exhibition will comprise about 20 photos and short videos
environment and the human rights of local people.
on related issues. The exhibition space will be decorated with
3. The Movement recognizes the struggles to protect the
local foods and agricultural products.
Mekong river and the local and regional social movement to seek justice for the Mekong and those impacted. 12 11
TAI HOUSES (DEMONSTRATION) Faculty of Architecture
FOOD SYSTEM IN ASIA: FOCUS ON THE GLOBAL SOUTH CO-ORGANIZING THE EXHIBITION WITH SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND LOCAL GROUPS
Contact person: Rawiwan Olarnratmanee
13
Contact person: Niabdulghafar Tohming
LANNA RICE By examining food systems, we uncover a number of
Lanna Rice Research Center, Chiang Mai University
crucial challenges facing our society and natural environment. Food systems encompass the governance of land and natural resources, the rights of communities and workers, and the broader economic model and state policies. They also point to the rise of corporate power and the rapid destruction of our environment and traditional ways of living. In recent years, local food systems in Asia have come under threat
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ICAS 10
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS / 14-20
14
16
ARTS, CRAFTS & URBAN HERITAGE Faculty of Fine Arts, Chiang Mai University
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT IN RESEARCH UNIVERSITY
Contact person: Woralan Boonyasurat
Research Administration Unit (RAC), Chiang Mai University Contact persons: Avorn Opatpatanakit, Khun Pai
The arts & crafts of Northern Thailand (i.e., weaving, wood & silver crafting, paper cutting) – including the work of
This exhibition will elaborate area‐based and issue‐based
students participating in the ‘Weaving Knowledge’ Summer
research initiated by Chiang Mai University in five major sites
School workshop – will be demonstrated. As Chiang Mai
in Chiang Mai province, highlighting issues related to the city
has been listed for possible nomination as a UNESCO World
of Chiang Mai (urban issues e.g. smog, waste management,
Heritage site, an exhibition on the urban heritage of Chiang
green and clean city, healthy city etc.), community
Mai will also be organized, including roundtable discussions
development and other emerging issues. Community based
on issues of world and urban heritage.
research via participatory methods are applied and linked to both teaching and extra‐curricular activities for students in the university.
15
THONBURI 250 YEARS
17
Thonburi Local Group Contact person: Paranat Suksut
COMMUNITY/SOCIAL ENGAGEMENT IN RESEARCH UNIVERSITY
With its 250th anniversary this year, Thonburi, once the
Ratchamonkol Technology University of Lanna
kingdom’s capital for 15 years, is being commemorated for its contribution. Historically, this riverside city has been
The northern region of Thailand has long been known for
settled long before. And, even without its absent role as the
its rich natural resources for producing unique handicraft.
state’s administration hub in the present, its urban living spirit
Communities of both lowland and mountainous terrain
still continues and will absolutely live on. Despite its location
possess traditional skills of weaving natural materials into
on the different side of Chao Phraya river, in comparison
tools used for their everyday life activities. With the influx
to Bangkok’s main area, Thonburi gradually flourishes on
of modern plastic goods and change in agricultural pattern,
its own manner. Its pace is without hurry, but with abundant
handicrafts became outdated and making crafts unfeasible
soul of humanity. For instance, tiny orchards can be nestled
to continue. Rajamangala University of Technology Lanna
behind myriads of shop-houses and sprouting mega-store.
(RMUTL) and King Mongkut’s University of Technology
Unfortunately, today, Thonburi is in its turning point.
Thonburi (KMUTT) have played a vital role in revitalizing the
Mushrooming mass-transit network introduces rails into the
handicraft in local communities as supplementary income
areas, once an orchard zone. Agricultural land plots shrink.
and communities‘ identities. For more than 3 decades,
Those running fruit and vegetable farms move out. They
Assoc. Professor Vassana Saima of the Faculty of Art and
cannot cope with the soaring land price and the bombarding
Architecture at RMUTL has researched various weaving skills
gentrification. Even old architectures like temples and
and technique from numerous villages in Chiang Mai region.
palaces get affected by this drastic change.
Her work of redesigning bamboo basketry into organic-formed chandeliers has been displayed in international arenas. Latest efforts include the collaboration with Asst. Professor Woranooch Chuenruedeemol and Nanthana Boon la-or from the School of Architecture and Design, KMUTT, in designing bamboo products from the villages of Kai Noi in Mae Taeng and village of Tha Nue in Mae On District of Chiang Mai.
26
ICAS 10
THEMATIC EXHIBITIONS
18
20-23 JULY 2017
Memory: Traditional Secular and Sacred Hmong Music Book and Film, which offer the reader, viewer, and listener an
CORNELL’S ETHNOGRAPHY IN NORTHERN THAILAND
absorbing multi-sensory experience to explore the age-old
Contact person: Prasit Leepreecha
of Hmong shamans, healers, ritual specialists, headmen,
music, ceremonies, and beliefs of the Hmong. Vivid accounts musicians, and villagers are brought to life by over 350 color
These photos of some tribal groups (Hmong, Lahu, Lisu,
photographs and an enclosed 75-minute DVD in Hmong
Akha, Mien) and Khon Muang (northern Thai) in Chiang Mai
and English. (2016, Book: 281 pages, Film: 75 minutes)
and Chiang Rai provinces are selected from the collections of Suthep Soonthornpasuch and Lucien and Jane Hanks’. The three researchers took these pictures during the two
20
surveys of hill tribe villages in Northern Thailand in 1964, as
Hanks, Jane Hanks, Lauriston Sharp, Ruth Sharp, and Edward
IN MEMORY OF KING BHUMIBOL ADULYADEJ: THE UNITED STATES AND THAILAND, AN ENDURING FRIENDSHIP
van Roy. During January – March 1964, the research team
U.S. Consulate General Chiang Mai
part of the Bennington-Cornell research team. Suthep was a research assistant while main researchers were Lucien
conducted a survey of hill tribe villages near the Chiang Dao Hill Tribe Resettlement and Development Center in Chiang Mai
In remembrance of His Majesty the late King of Thailand
province. The survey’s main task was to verify these villages’
Bhumibol Adulyadej, U.S. Mission Thailand presents a series
locations and names as initially appeared in the military map.
of photos reflecting some historic moments of the enduring
In addition, the team also collected demographic data, and
friendship between the United States of America and the
socio-economic, cultural and political information. During
Kingdom of Thailand. During his reign, the late King visited the
April – June 1964, the research team moved to survey hill
United States twice: in 1960 and 1967. During the King’s first
tribe villages near the Mae Chan Hill Tribe Resettlement
visit, President Dwight D. Eisenhower hosted a state dinner
and Development Center, and along the Mae Kok River
in His Majesty’s honor and received him in the Oval Office for
in Chiang Rai province.
a private consultation. Of the fourteen speeches the late King gave during the trip, the most remarkable was his address to the U.S. Congress on “mutual goodwill and close cooperation
19
between our two countries.” In 1966, Lyndon B. Johnson became the first President of the United States to visit
HMONG SONGS OF MEMORY, HMONG THREADS OF LIFE EXHIBITION.
Thailand. Four other U.S. presidents – including Presidents
Contact person: Victoria Vorreiter
visits to America’s oldest friend and ally in Southeast Asia.
Nixon, Clinton, Bush, and Obama – have since paid state
Hmong Songs of Memory, Hmong Threads of Life MultiMedia Exhibition represents an in-depth, integrative archive amassed by Victoria Vorreiter, an American researcher, documentarian, and musician, for over a decade. The exhibit comes to life through a variety of dynamic forms – extensive photographs of daily and ritual village life, an ethnographic film with recordings, a comprehensive collection of Hmong musical instruments, artifacts, and full sets of textiles and jewelry of the four major Hmong subgroups living in the Golden Triangle – White, Striped, Black, and Blue Hmong. The exhibition is accompanied by the Hmong Songs of
27
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
PANEL SCHEDULE / OVERVIEW
THURSDAY 20 JULY 9.15 – 11.00
Morning Sessions
PANELS 1-25
See pages 29-35
11.30 – 13.15
Midday Sessions
PANELS 26-50
See pages 35-41
14.15 – 16.00
Afternoon Sessions
PANELS 51-75
See pages 41-47
FRIDAY 21 JULY 9.15 – 11.00
Morning Sessions
PANELS 76-100
See pages 48-54
11.30 – 13.15
Midday Sessions
PANELS 101-126
See pages 55-62
14.15 – 16.00
Afternoon Sessions
PANELS 127-151
See pages 62-69
16.30 − 18.15
Late Afternoon Sessions
PANELS 152-176
See pages 69-74
SATURDAY 22 JULY 9.15 – 11.00
Morning Sessions
PANELS 177-201
See pages 75-82
11.30 – 13.15
Midday Sessions
PANELS 202-226
See pages 82-89
14.15 – 16.00
Afternoon Sessions
PANELS 227-252
See pages 90-95
SUNDAY 23 JULY 9.15 – 11.00
Morning Sessions
PANELS 253-277
See pages 96-102
11.30 – 13.15
Midday Sessions
PANELS 278-302
See pages 102-107
28
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 1
PANEL 3
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 1
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 3
CHINESE DYNASTIC ART AND LITERATURE I: FEMALE MOTIVES
MIGRATION INDUSTRIES IN ASIA: BROKERAGE AND EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES
Chair: Isabelle Huber, Independent scholar, Switzerland
Convenor and chair: Tina Shrestha, National University of Singapore, Singapore
The Global Lives of a Female Dancer: Transcultural and Trans-Media Appropriation of a Chinese Motif in Europe
Tethered technologies: Reforming employment agencies
Feng He, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Germany
in Singapore’s migrant domestic work industry Jia Min Charmian Goh, National University of Singapore,
Lesbian Love in Li Yu’s (1611-1680) Play – Lianxiang ban
Singapore
Ying Wang, Mount Holyoke College, USA
Brenda Yeoh, National University of Singapore, Singapore Kellynn Wee, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Writing like a man: Tang dynasty literary trends in the poems by the courtesan Chang Hao
Everyday practice of brokerage and the work of
Loredana Cesarino, Xi’an Jiaotong Liverpool University, China
employment agents facilitating labor migration between Nepal and Malaysia Tina Shrestha, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 2 20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 2 PANEL 4
ART AND ARTISTS
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 4
Chair: Elly Kent, Australian National University, Australia
Where two artists meet: The images of M.V. Dhurandhar (1867-1944) and Osman Hamdi (1842-1910) Rianne Siebenga, Independent Researcher, Italy
DISPLACEMENT IN MOBILITY, MOBILITY IN DISPLACEMENT: SOUTHEAST ASIAN MIGRANTS, REFUGEES AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE Convenor and chair: Carlos III Piocos, De La Salle University,
Traditional art of painted clothes for Goddesses – Matano
the Philippines
Chandarvo: Artistic interpretation of cultural influences and interconnections
Performing the Space of Social Capital: A Case Study
Sofiya Karanjia, Academy of Architecture Rachana
of Rohingya Community among Muslim Border Networks
Sansad, India
Kunnawut Boonreak, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
From Sanggar to Ekonomi Kreatif: West Sumatran Artists
Narrating Sexuality, Negotiating Displacement:
and Indonesia’s Art World
Indonesian Migrant Domestic Worker’s Lesbian Fiction
Katherine Bruhn, University of California Berkeley, USA
Carlos III Piocos, De La Salle University, the Philippines
From Isolation to Open Access: Painting Myanmar today in the 21st Century Catherine M. Raymond, Northern Illinois University, USA
29
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 5
PANEL 7
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 5
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 7
BEYOND METROPOLIS: ALTERNATIVE URBAN ASIA I
SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND MORAL BEHAVIOUR I: SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
Convenor: Gopa Samanta, The University of Burdwan, India
Chair: Michiel Verver, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Chair and discussant: Valérie Clerc, IRD – French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development, France
Social preneurship of creative economy initiative as barrier of the
Small in Size but Big in Significance: Local Economy,
Bambang Pramono, Indonesian Institute of Arts Yogyakarta,
Mobility and Basic Services in Small cities in India
Indonesia
decline of established corporation: Case study Cluster Kadis
Gopa Samanta, The University of Burdwan, India
Prosperity and Inequality in the Philippines: Gains and Losses Migration and Socio-Spatial Transformation of Small Towns
of Economic Success
Bhuvaneswari Raman, Jindal Global University, India
Emma Porio, Ateneo de Manila University, The Philippines
What kind of Urban? A case study of an Indian small town
Trust in Intercultural Meetings between Vietnamese and
Diya Mehra, South Asian University, India
Swedes - Swedish Experiences in The Bai Bang Project Huong Nguyen Bergström, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Tracing Participation in Small Cities: Extent, Forms and Issues Anurima Mukherjee Basu, CEPT University, India
The Hybridization of Family Businesses in Phnom Penh, Cambodia: A Generational Lens Michiel Verver, Leiden University, the Netherlands
PANEL 6 20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 6 PANEL 8
URBAN PLANNING
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 8
Chair: Creighton Connolly, National University of Singapore, Singapore
LANGUAGE, EDUCATION, AND MULTILINGUALISM I
Production and reproduction of space in Vietnamese
Chair: Bakhtawar Khaskhali, Westminster University,
marketplaces
United Kingdom
Phuong Hoang My Nguyen, College of Management for Agriculture and Rural Development 2, Vietnam
Investigation of the Need for Cultural Related Materials in IELTS
The Street Market and the Mall: Eviction and Adaptation
Dian Kustyasari, State University of Malang, Indonesia
Speaking Preparation: Understanding Cross-Culture Issues in Bangkok’s Commercial Core Trude Renwick, University of California Berkeley, USA
Philosophy of a Common Language and the Implications for Teaching
Assembling Urbanization: Community-centred Manufacturing
Stacey Bogart, Greensboro College, USA
of Construction Components on the Island of Batam, Indonesia Lincoln L. Lewis, Ind. Researcher & Architect, Singapore
Exploring Challenges in Speaking English for Pakistani students in the UK Kolej Yayasan Pahang, Malaysia
30
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 9
Bunun People traditional cultural knowledge about
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 9
the preservation and selection of “tani” (seed) in Taiwan Langus Lavalian, Bunun Cultural Museum of Haiduan
EDUCATION AND THE NATION I: ASPIRATION AND ATTITUDES
Township, Taiwan
Chair: Hazel Dizon, University of the Philippines,
Crop, Myth, Ritual and Aspect of Time: the study
The Philippines
of Millet belief in Taiwan Bunun Indigenous People Aziman Takisdahuan, National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan
Making Foreign Women the Mother of Our Nation: What determines Taiwanese BSW Students’ attitudes? Shou-Lu Lee, Tzu Chi University, Taiwan
In the name of “Maduh” (millet): traditional indigenous agricultural knowledge represent in an University context and above
ASEAN Integration and Philippine K+12 (Senior High School):
Salizan Istandaa, National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan
Making Consent Amidst Resistance Hazel Dizon, University of the Philippines, The Philippines PANEL 12
The Impact of The World Association of al-Azhar Graduates
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 12
and its social role: The Case of Egypt and Indonesia Hiroko Kinoshita, Center for Japan-Egypt Cooperation in Science and Technology, Kyushu University, Japan
MONEY AND MORALITIES IN CONTEMPORARY ASIA – PART I Convenor and chair: Lan Anh Hoang, The University
Job demands, job resources and work engagement of
of Melbourne, Australia
guidance counselors in Tarlac, the Philippines Maria Sheila Garcia, University of the Philippines – Diliman, The Philippines
“Your vagina is a rice paddy”: Money, Modernization, Materialism, and the evolving moralities of sex in Chiang Mai Cassie deFillipo, The University of Melbourne, Australia
PANEL 10
House, car or permanent residency? Higher-wage
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 10
Chinese migrant men’s symbols of masculinity in Singapore Sylvia Ang, The University of Melbourne, Australia
GAZING ELAPSED TRADITION WHILE RETURNING OLD KNOWLEDGE: AGRICULTURE KNOWLEDGE TRANSFORMATION STUDIES OF BUNUN INDIGENOUS PEOPLE IN TAIWAN HIGHLANDS
The moral economy of casino work in Singapore Juan Zhang, University of New England, Australia
Convenor and chair: Po-Kang Hsieh, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
How Could Capitalism Become Possible? From The Perspective Of Institutions And Personal Experience, Take A Taiwan Central Highland Indigenous Community As An Example Po-Kang Hsieh, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
31
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 13
Hanafi Hussin, University of Malaya, Malaysia
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 13
Nguyen Van Chinh, Vietnam National University Hanoi, Vietnam Farabi Fakih, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES I: LAND, LANGUAGE, AND RIGHTS
Hermin Indah Wahyuni, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
Chair: Deborah Tooker, Le Moyne College, USA
Malaysia
Helena Binti Muhamad Varkkey, University of Malaya,
The myth of Fesawa: origin of intermix societies in Southern East Timor
PANEL 15
Brunna Crespi, National Museum of Natural History, France
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 15
Ayuyang sin Social Media: A study on social media impacts Philippines
ITINERARIES OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE HISTORY OF BURMA’S INTERACTIONS WITH HER NEIGHBOURS
Karryl Mae Chan Ngina, Benguet State University,
Convenor: Alexey Kirchenko, Institute of Asian
The Philippines
and African Studies, Moscow State University, Russia
on wellbeing among Cordilleran Indigenous Millenials in the
Chair: Sylvie Pasquet, National Center for Scientific
Identities, Space and Interactions: The Case of Ethno-
Research (CNRS), France
linguistic Groups in Naguilian, La Union, the Philippines Olivia Sabado Mendoza, University of the Philippines-Baguio,
Frontier accounts, ethnographies and the rise
The Philippines
of territorialities at the Arakan-Bengal border Jacques Leider, Ecole française d’Extrême-Orient, France
The Current Status of Hunter-Gatherers in Thailand: A Case of the Mlabri in Northern Thailand Shu Nimonjiya, Kyoto Bunkyo University, Japan
Rebuilding with Neighbors: transmission of brahmanical sciences in Eighteenth & Nineteenth Century Konbaung Burma Charles Carstens, Harvard University, USA
PANEL 14
True Envoys and False Emissaries: Revisiting Diplomatic
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 14
Activity Along the Burma-China Border in Mid-18th Century, with a Focus on the “Wa Mountain” Region
ROUNDTABLE – EMERGING AND CONTINUING TRENDS IN SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES I
Sylvie Pasquet, National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), France
Convenor: Maria Serena Diokno, SEASREP, the Philippines Chair: Danny Wong, SEASREP, Malaysia
The Linguistics of Interactions: Sino-Burmese
Institutional panel by: Southeast Asian Studies Regional
Diplomatic Communications during the Ming and Qing
Exchange Program (SEASREP)
Arina Mikhalevskaya, Yale University, USA
Chantana Banpasirichote Wungaeo, SEASREP, Thailand
Buddhist Statecraft and Monastic Involvement in Burmese
Ma. Mercedes Planta, University of the Philippines Diliman,
Interactions with the Qing in the Late Eighteenth and Early
the Philippines
Nineteenth Centuries
Rommel Curaming, University of Brunei Darussalam,
Alexey Kirichenko, Institute of Asian and African Studies,
Brunei, Darussalam
Moscow State University, Russian Federation
Pham Van Thuy, Vietnam National University Hanoi, Vietnam
32
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 16
History as a Mirror: Understanding Contemporary
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 16
rGyalrong Society through their History of Interaction with the Chinese Empire
DISPLAYING IDENTITY THROUGH MEDIA
Tingyu Wang, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Chair: Isabelle Cheng, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom
The Things That Bind Us Can Also Divide Us: An exploration of ethnicity across provincial borders in Southwest China
“Selling the Exotic Ethnic”: The Practice of Visual
Eveline Bingaman, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Merchandising in Filipiniana Stores & Displays Maria Socorro Lopez Romabiles, University of the Philippines,
Mwl as Mercy: Notes on Ahmao (Miao) Christianity
The Philippines
in China from Comparison of Bible Translation between 1936 and 2009
Experiencing Japanese Culture in Hong Kong: Travel, Dining
Shu-li Huang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
and Promotion Ching-fang Chang, ILOHAS Social Enterprise, Taiwan PANEL 18
Constructing National and Regional Identities in East Asian
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 18
Action Cinema
Reflections on the cultural and religious conflicts in Indonesia
SON NGOC THANH, TSUTOMU TADAKUMA, AND YIEY HUN: WAR AND PERSONAL HISTORY IN CAMBODIA’S RELATIONSHIP WITH JAPAN
Marc Yamada, Brigham Young University, USA
Intercultural communication and conflict resolution in media: as portrayed by Republika
Convenor and chair: Amaury Rodríguez, El Colegio
Andi Faisal Bakti, Universitas Pancasila, Indonesia
de México, Mexico
Umar Halim, Universitas Pancasila, Indonesia
Institutional panel by El Colegio de México, Mexico
Son Ngoc Thanh, Japan and Cambodia’s Independence PANEL 17
movement
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 17
Elizabeth Guthrie, University of Otago, New Zealand
RECIPROCITY AND INTERACTION BETWEEN THE CHINESE STATE AND ITS BORDERLANDS I: POLICY AND PEOPLE
Tsutomu Tadakuma and Yiey Hun: The View from the Village
Convenor and chair: Georg Strüver, GIGA German
Yiey Hun from a Korean Perspective
Institute of Global and Area Studies, Germany
Luisa González Barajas, El Colegio de México, Mexico
John Marston, El Colegio de México, Mexico
Discussant: Tsui-Ping Ho, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Institutional panel by Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Tsutomu Tadakuma. His life in the history of Cambodia Satomi Miura, El Colegio de México, Mexico
Cultural Figure or Political Symbol? Nong Zhigao as Tai Chief or National Hero in the Sino-Vietnamese Borderland Ya-Ning Kao, National Chengchi University, Taiwan
33
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 19
China 2185: Postmodern anxiety or Lure of Modernity?
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 19
Xuying Yu, Open University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
PRACTICING LAWS AND RIGHTS IN DEMOCRATIC INDIA
Another Version of Modernism: Lu Xun’s Translation
Convenor and chair: Tatsuya Yamamoto, Shizuoka
Xiaolu Ma, Harvard University, USA
of Russian Literature
University, Japan
Individuals and Collectives: Inventing Rights in Indian Context
PANEL 21
Kazuhiro Itakura, Hiroshima University, Japan
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 21
Resisting Militarization and Extrajucial Executions in Northeast India
DEVELOPMENTS IN HERITAGE AND PUBLIC PARTICIPATION
Makiko Kimura, Tsuda University, Japan
Chair: Keka Duttaroy, Prafulla Chandra College, India
Toward the Resurrection of Sacred Land: A Case from
Cultural Heritage Protection and Human Rights in Asia
Development of Wind Power Generation in Thar Desert
Stefan Gruber, Kyoto University, Japan
Kodai Konishi, Tokyo Gakugei University, Japan
Politics of Heritage in Yogyakarta Special Region-Indonesia: Conjunct Citizenship: Tibetan Refugees Encountering
A Critical Reflection in Welcoming the Next Leader
Multiple Actors
Theresia Octastefani, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
Tatsuya Yamamoto, Shizuoka University, Japan
Nur Azizah, Gadjah Mada University Indonesia
On city resilience: a study on urban and architectural PANEL 20
heritage in China context
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 20
Qing Mei, Tongji University, China
CONTEMPORARY FICTION ASIA-WIDE: FROM POST-COLONIAL TO POST-MODERN
Local regimes in Indonesia: Cases of four Indonesian towns Abdul Gaffar Karim, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
Chair: Taciana Fisac, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain
Confronting the governor by the ruin: Heritage activism The Travelling of Poetic Modernism in 1940s China
as a catalyst for new modalities of urban governance
and Mu Dan’s Wartime Poems
in contemporary Indonesia
Xi Liu, Xi’an jiaotong-Liverpool University, China
Lauren Yapp, Stanford University, USA
Significance of Christianity in the Oedipal Structure of Japanese SF Fantasies: Devilman and Neon Genesis Evangelion Takayuki Yokota-Murakami, Osaka University, Japan
East Asian Uses of the European Past: Recurrence and Return in Contemporary Chinese Literature Taciana Fisac, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain
34
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MORNING >MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 22
PANEL 25
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 22
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 25
UNIVERSAL CLAIMS AND PARTICULAR PRACTICES IN ASIAN RELIGIONS I
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – HERITAGE
Convenor and chair: Thien-Huong Ninh, Cosumnes River
Institute, The Philippines
Chair: Floper Gershwin Manuel, Philippine Rice Research
College, USA Discussant: Yoko Hayami, Kyoto University, Japan
Dancing at the Edge: Ritual, Heritage and Politics in Post-War Sri Lanka – PhD Pitch
New Religious Movements and National Culture in East Asia:
Eva Ambos, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Comparative Study of I Guan Dao, Daesoon Jinrihoe, & Caodaism
the Netherlands
Gyungwon Lee, Daejin University, South Korea
Discussant: Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University, Department of Anthropology, USA
Vietnamese Visions of the End of the World: Caodaism’s Practical and Prophetic Utopias
Evolving Traditions of the Buddhist Image House
Janet Hoskins, University of Southern California, USA
Understanding two centuries of art and architecture in Sri Lanka - Book Presentation
Building the land of Buddha: Saintly entrepreneurialism
Asoka De Zoysa, Vajira Jayathilaka,
and political aspirations of Theravadin Saints in Mainland
and Ganga Dissanayaka, Samkathana Research Centre,
Southeast Asia
University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka
Alexander Horstmann, Tallinn University, Estonia
Thailand’s International Meditation Centers Tourism and the global commodification of religious practices – PANEL 23
Book Presentation
20 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 23
Brooke Schedneck, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
JAPAN IN THE SENGOKU PERIOD AND ASIAN TRADING NETWORKS OF MILITARY SUPPLIES
PANEL 26
Convenor & chair: Yoshiaki Nakajima, Kyushu University, Japan
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 1
Discussant: Chitoshi Mizota, Iwate University, Japan
Relaxation and Restoration: Ming China’s management
CHINESE DYNASTIC ART AND LITERATURE II: DREAMS, FANS, AND ARCHITECTURE
of piracy in the late sixteenth century
Chair: Qing Mei, Tongji University, China
Takeshi Yamazaki, Nara University, Japan
Animals and Plants Beg for Their Lives in Song Dynasty Dreams Diplomatic relations and trade of military supplies between
Songjoo Kim, Korea University, South Korea
Western Japan and Southeast Asia in the 1570’s Toshio Kage, Nagoya Gakuin University, Japan
Books and folding fans – An Interpretation of gifts in the
Maritime trade of saltpeter in East and Southeast Asia
Fei Liu, Institute of History National Tsing Hua University,
during the late 16th century
Taiwan
Context of Ming Cultural History
Yoshiaki Nakajima, Kyushu University, Japan
Legitimacy and Novelty: Impact of Political Demand The commodity in the Nagasaki-Macau trade of the
upon Chinese Architecture, 907-979
late 16th Century
Jiren Feng, University of Hawaii at Hilo, USA
Mihoko Oka, The University of Tokyo, Japan 35
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 27
PANEL 29
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 2
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 4
ASIA-PACIFIC TRADITIONAL ARTS FESTIVAL Arts, Taiwan
MIGRATING FOR FAMILY, CARE AND LATER-LIFE FULFILMENT: JAPANESE TO SOUTHEAST ASIA
Institutional panel by Ministry of Culture, Taiwan
Convenor and chair: Leng Leng Thang, National University
Convenor: Rung-Shun Wu, National Center for Traditional
of Singapore, Singapore Rung-Shun Wu, National Center for Traditional Arts, Taiwan
Co-convenor: Mika Toyota, Rikkyo University, Japan
Yu Ling Wang, National Center for Traditional Arts, Taiwan Tien-Hsia Hsu, National Center for Traditional Arts, Taiwan
Searching for Care: Japanese Retirees in Southeast Asia Mika Toyota, Rikkyo University, Japan Leng Leng Thang, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 28 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 3
Gaining Well-being or Making a Sacrifice?: Migration of Japanese Families with Children to Johor Bahru, Malaysia
MARRIAGE MIGRATION AND SEX TRAFFICKING
Hiroki Igarashi, Chiba University, Japan
Chair: Kyoko Kusakabe, Asian Institute of Technology,
Philanthropy and Japanese retirees in Bali
Thailand
Seng-Guan Yeoh, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Marriages on the border: the case of mainland spouses in Kinmen island
PANEL 30
Lara Momesso, Portsmouth University, United Kingdom
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 5
Employment Incongruence: Interpersonal, Institutional, and Structural Barriers in the Marriage Migration Context
BEYOND METROPOLIS: ALTERNATIVE URBAN ASIA II
Tuen Yi Chiu, Asia Research Institute, National University
Convenor: Valérie Clerc, IRD - French National Research
of Singapore, Singapore
Institute for Sustainable Development, France Chair and discussant: Gopa Samanta, The University
Motherhood as Mediation: Marriage Migrant Women
of Burdwan, India
Engaged in Small Businesses in Taiwan Hsunhui Tseng, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Informal settlements and urban policies, the tangled
Jing Song, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
nexus of land. A focus on Phnom Penh, Cambodia Valérie Clerc, IRD - Institut de recherche pour le
Vietnamese brides in their quest for happiness through
développement, France
cross-national marriages Tien Quyet Ly, HCMC Open University, Vietnam
Informal settlements at the heart of urban developments: the case of Yangon and Mandalay (Myanmar)
Anti-trafficking and Nepali migrant sex workers return
Maxime Boutry, CASE – Center on Southeast Asia
home from the red light district in India
(CNRS – The French National Center for Scientific
Susanne Margret Sofia Åsman, University of Gothenburg,
Research – UMR 8170), Myanmar
Sweden
36
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
The Delhi Bias: Political discourse and spatial governance
North East India, ‘Act East’ Policy and the Trilateral Highway
of slums
Rajen Singh Laishram, Manipur Central University, India
Nipesh Palat Narayanan, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
Poverty, Justice, and India: Representing Precarity in Aman Local economic development and social changes in small
Sethi’s A Free Man
towns: The case of an old industrial town in Tamil Nadu
Manav Ratti, Salisbury University, USA
Kamala Marius, University of Bordeaux, France PANEL 33 PANEL 31
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 8
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 6
ARCHITECTURE & POLITICS IN URBAN CHINA
LANGUAGE, EDUCATION, AND MULTILINGUALISM II
Convenor and chair: Yanfei Li, University of Toronto, Canada
Chair: Emalia Iragiliati, State University of Malang, Indonesia
Discussant: Donia Zhang, York University, Canada
Teaching of Nationalism, Upper-class and Code-Switching The Politics of Vernacular Architecture: The Case
used by Multilinguals in Java and Beyond
of Beijing Alleyways and Courtyard Houses
Emalia Iragiliati and Rizky Romadhonah, State University
Yanfei Li, University of Toronto, Canada
of Malang, Indonesia
The Embedding of Foreign Culture: A Case Study
Problems in second language acquisition of Santali Children
of Architecture in University L’Aurore (1903-1952)
in Bangladesh
Yi Ren, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China
Nasima Begum, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
The Political Discourse on the Debates about the
Modernity and Literature: The Modern Other in Seminal
Reconstruction of St. Nicholas Cathedral
Literary Works from Korea, Bulgaria and Azerbaijan
Jing Xu, York University, Canada
Lyudmila Atanasova, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, South Korea
PANEL 32 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 7
PANEL 34 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 9
SOCIAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND MORAL BEHAVIOUR II: EAST AND SOUTH ASIA
EDUCATION AND THE NATION II: TEXTBOOKS
Chair: Khun Eng Kuah, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Chair: Dongbae Lee, The University of Queensland, Australia
Social Economy in Dutch Taiwan After 1630s
The ideal childhood portrayed in Chongryon Korean
Tzu-Yi Hsu, Institute of History, National Tsing Hua
language textbooks
University, Taiwan
Dongbae Lee, The University of Queensland, Australia
The Moral Economy and the Politics of Austerity in Japan
Counting histories in China
Taka Suzuki, Ohio University, USA
Sanne Albers, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
From Business to Philanthropic Networks: Chinese
Instrucción Pública The Roots of Public Education
Entrepreneurs and the SEE Project
in the Philippines, 1863-1899
Khun Eng Kuah, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Lino Dizon, Tarlac State University, The Philippines 37
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 35
PANEL 38
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 10
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 13
TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE IN CONTEMPORARY WORLD I: INDIGENOUS FARMING IN TAIWAN
INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES II: SOCIO-HISTORY AND POLITICS OF IDENTITY Chair: Deborah Tooker, Le Moyne College, USA
Convenor and chair: Su-mei Lo, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Insights from Chinese self-cultivation experiences of qigong and their links with the religious lore: local phenomenologies
Wild Edible Plants of the ‘Amis in ‘Tolan as Traditional
and phenomenological approaches in anthropology
Ecological Knowledge and the New Indigenous Farming
Evelyne Micollier, IRD (French Research Institute for
Movement in Taiwan
Development), France
Su-mei Lo, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
The Katu village: resettlement and cultural resilience Participatory Action Research on Indigenous Agriculture
in the uplands of Central Vietnam
and Edible Heritage
Kaj Århem, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Joyce Hsiu-yen Yeh, National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan
Articulated Localism: The Process of Identity Movement Toward the secularization of Masuqolusan, Ritual of Wearing
and Social Change in Lanna-ism in Northern Thailand
Necklace for Infants of the Bunun, Indigenous people of
Shunsuke Saito, Tokyo Metropolitan University, Japan
Central Taiwan Nai-wen Chang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Ronin in the Tokugawa Period: Changing Identity a nd Social Mobility
Farming Millet and Practicing Ritual: on Long Life of
Floris van Swet, Harvard University, USA
a Sacred Crop among the Cou People in Taiwan Shau-Lou Young, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Peace Processes in Southern Thailand and Southern Philippines: A Comparative Study Eugene Mark, S. Rajaratnam School of International
PANEL 37 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 12
MONEY AND MORALITIES IN CONTEMPORARY ASIA - PART II Convenor and chair: Lan Anh Hoang, The University of Melbourne, Australia
“Billions and retrogression of knowledge”? Morality, modernity and wealth in a northern Vietnamese trading village Esther Horat, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Vietnamese irregular migrants in Moscow: Money, moralities, and social contingencies in market life Lan Anh Hoang, The University of Melbourne, Australia
38
Studies, Singapore
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 39
PANEL 43
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 14
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 18
ROUNDTABLE – EMERGING AND CONTINUING TRENDS IN SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES II
JAPANESE DIPLOMACY: OLD AND NEW
Convenor: Maria Serena Diokno, SEASREP, the Philippines
of Adelaide, Australia
Convenor and chair: Purnendra Jain, The University
Chair: Danny Wong, SEASREP, Malaysia Institutional panel by: Southeast Asian Studies Regional
Japan’s quest for a permanent seat at the UNSC:
Exchange Program (SEASREP)
the China factor Peng Er Lam, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Please see Panel 14: Roundtable – Emerging and Continuing Trends in Southeast Asian Studies I
Japanese Foreign Intelligence: Towards Normality? Brad Williams, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
PANEL 42
Japan’s Foreign Aid: An Exercise in Global Networks
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 17
Purnendra Jain, The University of Adelaide, Australia
RECIPROCITY AND INTERACTION BETWEEN THE CHINESE STATE AND ITS BORDERLANDS II: STATE AND SELF
PANEL 44 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 19
Convenor and chair: Georg Strüver, GIGA German Institute of Global and Area Studies, Germany
INDIAN IDENTITY BUILDING
Discussant: Tsui-ping Ho, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Chair: Arndt Michael, University of Freiburg, Germany
Institutional panel by: Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
IR in Colonial India: South Asian International Thought Honoring King Pan at Stage: Framing Yao Religion and
Under the Raj
Ethnicity
Alexander E. Davis, La Trobe University, Australia
Mei-Wen Chen, Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taiwan
Vineet Thakur, SOAS University of London, United Kingdom
What’s in a Name? A Study of Society and State
Emerging Normative Power India
Interaction through discussion of ethnonyms among
Arndt Michael, University of Freiburg, Germany
“rGyalrong” Tibetans Dongwen Hu, Shanghai University, China
A New Window on the Past: the Sikkim (India) Palace Archives Alex McKay, Australian National University, Australia
In the Name of “Culture”: The Symbolic Competition of Martyrs Shrine and Diffusion of Hakka Identity in Contemporary Southern Taiwan Li-hua Chen, Sun Yat-sen University China
Southern Altai: Localized Identity between Four States Maksim Groza, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
39
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 45
PANEL 47
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 20
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 22
TOWARDS ASIAN ECONOMIC MODELS
UNIVERSAL CLAIMS AND PARTICULAR PRACTICES IN ASIAN RELIGIONS II
Chair: Silvio Miyazaki, University of São Paulo, Brazil
Convenor and chair: Thien-Huong Ninh,
Intellectual Property Rights in China: New Dynamics
Cosumnes River College, USA
and Changes of the Protection of Well-known Marks
Discussant: Joseph Lee, Pace University, USA
Gordon Chi Kai Cheung, Durham University, United Kingdom
Ritual Nailing and the Performance of Trust in the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: A Re-balancing
Roman Catholic Philippines
of the World Economy or A Diplomatic Triumph for China?
Julius Bautista, Kyoto University, Japan
Eric Bediako, Shinawatra International University, Thailand
Christianity, Migration And The Transformation Of Marital The effect of district market segmentation on wage inequality
Conventions In The First Half Of 20th Century, Chaozhou
of urban corporations
Xiangyu Cai, Guangzhou University, China
Wenjing Wang, Renmin University of China, China
Reimagining refugeehood through religious tourism: Creating of the Orenburg-Tashkent railway and its influence on
Vietnamese Catholics and Marian pilgrimage center
development of the Central Asia (historical experience of Russia)
Thien-Huong Ninh, Cosumnes River College, USA
Sergey Lyubichankovskiy, Orenburg State Pedagogical University, Russia PANEL 48 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 23 PANEL 46 20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 21
CHINA, JAPAN, AND THE WORLD Chair: Patrick Hein, Meiji University, Japan
DEVELOPMENTS IN HERITAGE AND PRESERVATION
Japanese Residents in Wartime China: A Case of Japanese-
Chair: Mariana Pinto Leitão Pereira, International Institute
Occupied Beijing in the Late 1930s and Early 1940s
of Macau, Macau
Norihito Mizuno, Akita International University, Japan
Opening dialogues: Institutionalized politics of preserving TämpitaViha-ras in Post-War Sri Lanka
Geopolitical Perception of Hong Kong before the End of WWII:
Asoka de Zoysa, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka
Wilson Wai Shing Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Ganga Rajinee Dissanayaka, University of Kelaniya, Sri Lanka
Hong Kong
Archiving the history and iconography of Vat Taleo Kao:
A Study About the time and procedures of Asian Countries
cultural collateral damage of the Second Indochina War
Modernization – Mainly focus on the five countries: China,
Alan Potkin, NIU Center for Southeast Asian Studies, USA
Japan, South Korea, Thailand and India.
From the Japanese Perspective
Weihong Zhou, The Beijing Foreign Studies University, China
Warisan Rumah. Current practices of indigenous curation and appropriate museology in Borneo
Steamships Globalizing the World in the Late Nineteenth
Rui Oliveira Lopes, Universiti Brunei Darussalam,
Century: Impact of Trans-Pacific Route on Migration
Brunei Darussalam
between China, Japan, and the United States Yuki Ooi, Nanzan University, Japan
40
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / MIDDAY > AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 49
PANEL 52
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 24
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 2
CONSTITUTIONALISM IN ASIA Convenor and chair: Joseph Fernando, University of Malaya,
THE EVOLUTION OF THE NATIONAL PALACE MUSEUM, TAIWAN
Malaysia
Convenor: Lunghsing Chu, National Palace Museum, Taiwan Chair: Louis Gabaude, École française d’Extrême-Orient,
Creating a strong centre and state financial autonomy:
France
Federalism and the Malayan constitution, 1956-1957 Joseph Fernando, University of Malaya, Malaysia
From “Grand View ( (
)” to “The Enduring Beauty of Celadon
)” – Chinese Elements of Goryeo Celadon and Its
The Semi-Constitutional Basic Law of HKSAR and its spirit
Transmission to China
after the Legislative Election on 4 September 2016
Ming Yen Wang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Jean Berlie, EdUHK, Hong Kong
Concentration and Divergence: Pattern and Transformation of The language and religion Issues in the Borneo territories
Yongle (1403-1424) and Xuande (1426-1435) Blue-and-white
during the formation of Malaysia Constitution
Porcelain of the Ming Dynasty
Saimin Ginsari, Teacher Training College Kent Campus,
Lan-yin Huang, National Palace Museum, Taiwan
Malaysia
Linking Asian Cities: The Significance of the Album of Nagasaki Trade in the National Palace Museum PANEL 50
Lunghsing Chu, National Palace Museum, Taiwan
20 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 25
The Gateway to Asian Exploration: The Asian Vision
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – THAILAND
of the Children’s Creative Center in the Southern Branch
Chair: Trasvin Jittidecharak, Silkworm Books, Thailand
Fang-Chi Yang, National Palace Museum, Taiwan
of the National Palace Museum
Voices and Roles of Competing Groups of Elite Women in Siam’s Political and Social Transitions, 1868-1942
PANEL 53
– PhD Pitch
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 3
Natanaree Posrithong, Mahidol University International
Old Practices and New Norms: The Case of Thailand
ON THE MEANINGS OF MARGINALIZATION: MEMORIES, HISTORIES, AND STRATEGIES AMONG SOUTH ASIAN DIASPORAS
– PhD Pitch
Convenor: Giacomo Mantovan, International Institute
Filippo Maranzana de Filippis, National Chenchi
for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
University, Taiwan
Co-convenor: Ka-Kin Cheuk, Leiden University Institute
College, Thailand
for Area Studies, the Netherlands
Kingdom’s Edge – Book Presentation
Co-convenor and chair: Priya Swamy, Leiden University
Richard Humphries, Richard Humphries Photography,
Institute for Area Studies, the Netherlands
Malaysia
Discussant: Carola Lorea, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
41
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
Living through Marginalization: Indian Traders in a Local
PANEL 55
Chinese Market
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 5
Ka-Kin Cheuk, Leiden University Institute for Area Studies,
‘House Coolies’, Activists, or Adventurers? Contested
BEYOND THE METROPOLIS: SECONDARY AND SMALLER CITIES IN SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
Narratives of Marginalisation among Surinamese Hindus
Convenor, chair and discussant: Taylor Easum,
in the Netherlands
University of Wisconsin, Stevens Point, USA
the Netherlands
Priya Swamy, Leiden University Institute for Area Studies, the Netherlands
Marginal Worlds: Architecture, Urban Imaginations and Small Town Identity in Colonial Bengal
A Funerary Practice as a Construction of Diasporic Memory:
Tania Sengupta, University College London, United Kingdom
The Commemoration of LTTE Martyrs in Paris Giacomo Mantovan, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
A secondary city during the Indochina Wars (1940s-1970s): Destructions and Reconstructions of Vinh, Vietnam Tim Kaiser, University of Giessen, Germany
PANEL 54
From Ugly to Sporty: Palembang’s Image Change
20 JULY / 14.15 - 16.00 / ROOM 4
to become a ‘Sport City’ Friederike Trotier, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
SOCIAL CAPITAL AND SOCIAL WELL-BEING IN ASIA: CROSS-NATIONAL COMPARISONS FROM SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES
Guardians of Vernacular Heritage: Collective Identity and
Convenor: Masayuki Kanai, Senshu University, Japan
Rita Padawangi, Singapore University of Social Sciences,
Chair: Emma Porio, Ateneo de Manila University,
Singapore
Urban Neighborhoods in Jakarta and Surabaya, Indonesia
the Philippines
A Comparative Study of Social Well-being and its Deter-
PANEL 56
minants in Three Asian Countries: Korea, Japan, and Vietnam
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 6
Hearan Koo, Seoul National University, South Korea
MACAO AT DEVELOPMENT CROSSROADS Patterns of Social Support Networks and Their Impact
Convenor: Chan U Chan, The Macao Foundation, Macau
on Social Well-being in Korea, Japan, and Vietnam
Chair: Yufan Hao, University of Macau, Macau
Seokho Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea, Institutional panel by: The Macao Foundation, Macau
Trust and Life Satisfaction in Japan, Korea, and Vietnam
Macao at Development Crossroads
Hiroko Osaki, Seikei University, Japan
Yufan Hao, University of Macau, Macau
Dilemma between Family and Civil Society: How Trust
Macao’s Changing Role in the Shadow Silk Road
Promotes Well-being?
Tak-Wing Ngo, University of Macau, Macau
Keitaro Yazaki, Senshu University, Japan
An Analysis of Long-Term Economic Development in Macao Social Capital and Well-being in Plural Modernizations: Comparison between Japan, Korea, and Vietnam Masayuki Kanai, Senshu University, Japan
42
Chan U Chan, The Macao Foundation, Macau
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 57
The Current Situation and Issues of Recurrent Education in
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 7
Japan A case of practice at National Institute of Technology Senshu Yoshii, National Institute of Technology, Miyakonojo
FOREIGN BUSINESS INTO CHINA
College, Japan
Convenor: Yoomi Kim, Seoul National University Asia Center, South Korea
The maintenance of Uyghur language in the context of
Chair: Myungkoo Kang, Seoul National University Asia
Trilingual Education Policy: Uyghur community stakeholder’s
Center, South Korea
perspectives
Institutional panel by: Seoul National University Asia Center
Alfira Makhmutova, Nazarbayev University, Kazakstan
Building Dynamic Capabilities in Foreign Context:
Role of Cultural and Traditional Factors in Enrollment,
A Cultural History of Korean Company in China
Retention and Learning of Muslim Children
Myungkoo Kang, Seoul National University Asia Center,
Pedda Hothur Mohammad, Maulana Azad National Urdu
South Korea
University, India
Korean Business into China: From Factory Production to Market Access
PANEL 60
Jong-Cheol Kim, Seoul National University Asia Center,
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 10
South Korea
of management of distributors in Chinese corporations
TRADITIONAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE IN CONTEMPORARY WORLD II: RESILIENCE IN FOODSCAPES
– Case study on Company A, a shoes chain store
Convenor: Su-mei Lo, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Yasuhisa Abe, Kyushu University, Japan
Chair: Yih-ren Lin, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan
Governance across borders - regional headquarters as
Storied Residence and Restorative Justice: A Study on the
Expansion of sales routes and characteristics
a device to adapt institutional environment of countries
Foodscapes and Eco-spirituality of Tayal’s B’bu Area
Takashi Shimizu, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Yih-ren Lin, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan
A Comparative Analysis of Locational Characteristics
Beyond the myth as hunter-gatherer: Resilience of agriculture
of Korean and Japanese Firms in China
concept for Penan in Sarawak
Yoomi Kim, Seoul National University Asia Center,
Shi Yeu Nga, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
South Korea
Plants, Food and memory: Foodscape of the Vietnamese Migrants in Taiwan PANEL 59
Yen-Po Lin, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 9
Food, Body and Disease: Changing of The Productive
EDUCATION AND THE NATION III: REINVENTED TRADITIONS FOR THE FUTURE
Landscape among A Sejiq Village in Taiwan Chung Hao Huang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Chair: Hei Ting Wong, University of Pittsburgh, USA
(Re-)Construction of Thai teaching traditions in the institutionalized Thai classical music education – A case study of the Department of Thai Music of Chulalongkorn University Hei Ting Wong, University of Pittsburgh, USA 43
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 61
Beliefs and Movement: On the Misapprehensions
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 11
of “Hindu” Elements in the Anti-Tehri Dam Movement Shinya Ishizaka, Ehime University, Japan
DECONSTRUCTION AND RE-CONTEXTUALIZATION OF BOUNDARIES AND THE FLOW OF IDENTITIES IN THE EAST ASIA BORDERLAND: A VIEW FROM TAIWAN
The guru, spirits, and right-wing party: politics of the anti-development movement in Karnataka Miho Ishii, Kyoto University, Japan
Convenor: David Blundell, National Chengchi University, Taiwan Chair: Yayoi Mitsuda, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan
PANEL 63 20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 13
Endangered Languages and Flow of Identities: State Policies and Ethnic Boundary among the Thao People in Taiwan Yayoi Mitsuda, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan
THE RISE OF INDIGENISM IN THE CONTEXT OF CAMBODIAN AUTHORITARIAN REGIME Convenor and chair: Frédéric Bourdier, IRD, Cambodia
“We Just Want to Lead Ordinary Lives”: Internal Conflicts and
Discussant: Mane Yun, CIPO, Cambodia
the Politics of Disintegration in a Post-Disaster Indigenous Village Olimpia Kot-Giletycz, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Acts of Resistance and Indigeneity in Ratanakiri: a Way to
Preserve Railway Heritage, Preserve the Memory?
Téphanie Sieng, INALCO, France
Preserve an Identity Negotiation and Identity of Volunteers in Central Taiwan Ya Yu Kuo, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Sustaining Indigenous Peoples’ Voices and Dignity in Cambodia Mane Yun and Sreymean Loek, CIPO, Cambodia
Beiguan Music in Taiwan: Ambiguities and Dissolutions in Boundaries of Status and Region
Working for the Government and Indigenous Peoples
Ju-tuan Pan, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
in Mondulkiri (Cambodia): Challenges and Expectations Rath Vanny, Ministry of Rural Development, Cambodia
PANEL 62
Indigeneity, Transnational Networks and the Strategy
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 12
of Silent Mobilization in Cambodia Frédéric Bourdier, IRD, Cambodia
BEHIND AND BEYOND THE POLITICIZATION: THE COMMUNITIES, ENVIRONMENT, AND RELIGIONS IN INDIA TODAY
PANEL 64
Convenor and chair: Shinya Ishizaka, Ehime University,
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 14
Japan
EUROPE AND ASIA FACING TRUMP A Saint of Identity and Connection: Believers of Ravidas
Chair Philippe Peycam, International Institute of Asia Studies,
in Uttar Pradesh, India
the Netherlands
Kenta Funahashi, Ryukoku University, Japan Engseng Ho, Duke University, USA
The Sociopolitical Practice of Slum Leader through various
Gaye Christoffersen, Hopkins-Nanjing Center, China
relationships: Attempts to improve the Condition of Children’s
Jim Placzek, Thammasat University, Thailand/University
Park in a Delhi slum
of British Columbia, Canada
Tomoyuki Chaya, Kyoto University, Japan
Ernesto H. Braam, Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Singapore
44
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 65
Examining the prospect of regional financial cooperation:
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 15
a political analysis of Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank Chi Ming Victor Chan, Hang Seng Management College,
BIG DATA IN ASIA: ISSUES & CHALLENGES
Hong Kong
Convenor and chair: Shirley Sun, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore Institutional panel by: Nanyang Technological University
Reviving the past, civilising the modern: cultural governance and hegemonic discourse in China Ying Miao, Xi’an Jiaotong Liverpool University, China
Entering the Big-Data Mode: The Epistemic Relation among Humans, Robots, and Data in a Laptop Factory in China
Qualifying an Asian Barometer Survey Analysis
Ling-Fei Lin, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
on Why Chinese People Obey the State Shu-Shan Lee, Nazarbayev University, Kazakstan
The Expansion of Austronesians and the Challenges Ivy Hui-Yuan Yeh, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Rule by Capital? Private Foundations and the Governance of Non-Governmental Organizations in China
Open Data, Closed Government: Unpacking data.gov.sg
Xibai Xu, University of Oxford, United Kingdom
Hallam Stevens, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Big Data, Personalized Medicine and Cancer
PANEL 68
Shirley Sun, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 18
PANEL 66
CONTEMPORARY JAPANESE POLICY IN THE ASIAN THEATRE
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 16
Chair: Patrick Hein, Meiji University, Japan
ROUNDTABLE – THE POLITICS OF INFORMATION CONTROLS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Abe’s Japan: From Abenomics to Abenesia
Convenor and chair: Aim Sinpeng, University of Sydney,
Critical Juncture in Japan’s Foreign Aid to the Philippines
Australia
Dennis Trinidad, De La Salle University, The Philippines
Ross Tapsell, Australian National University, Australia
Japan’s Global Arms Venture & the Geopolitical Dynamics in Asia
Sawatree Suksri, Thammasat University, Thailand
Bee Yun Jo, Seoul National University, South Korea
Jeffrey Kingston, Temple University Japan Campus, Japan
Dang Nguyen, Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University, Vietnam
Ingrained Stereotype or Reality? Questioning the Prevalence
Mong Palatino, Global Voices Online, the Philippines
and Role of Collective Responsibility in Current Day Japan
Valerie Yeo, Institute of Policy Studies NUS, Singapore
Midori Hosoda, Seisa University, Japan
Sokphea Young, The University of Melbourne, Australia Nuurrianti Jalli, Ohio University, USA
Electoral campaign regulation in East Asian democracies Jong-sung You, Australian National University, Australia
PANEL 67 20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 17
CHINA’S DOMESTIC POLITICS & CHALLENGES Chair: Chi Ming Victor Chan, Hang Seng Management College, Hong Kong
45
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 70
Intangible cultural heritage: living memorial
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 20
of Bangladeshi people Dilruba Sharmin, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
EARLY OVERSEAS CHINESE NEWSPAPER FICTION PUBLISHED IN SINGAPORE AND AUSTRALIA
Identity of Ciomas Community in Oral Literature of Golok
Convenor and chair: Mei kao Kow, National University
Nurholis Rasmin and Aquarini Priyatna,
of Singapore, Singapore
Universitas Padjadjaran, Indonesia
Ciomas (Ciomas Cleaver) at the Municipality of Serang Banten
Discussant: Michael Williams, Western Sydney University, Australia
Pantun and the life of Traditional Community of Ciptagelar:
The 1909 novel The Poison of Poligamy and its Significance
Bunyamin Faisal Syarifudin and Aquarini Priyatna,
Michael Williams, Western Sydney University, Australia
Universitas Padjadjaran, Indonesia
PreservingTraditional Values and Practices
Australia’s First Chinese Novel (The Poison of Polygamy), and issues relevant to its translation and the translation
PANEL72
of literature of its type
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 22
Ely Finch, Independent Researcher, Australia
Early Chinese Newspaper Fiction Published in the Nanyang zonghui Xinbao Mei kao Kow, National University of Singapore, Singapore
CONSIDERING RELIGIOUS PRACTICES AS TOGETHERNESS: SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION AND RECONSTRUCTION OF COLLECTIVITY IN SOUTH-WEST ASIA Convenor and chair: Kenji Kuroda, National Institutes
Ethnoscapes between Civilisations: Situating Singapore’s
for Humanities, Japan
Sinophone Fiction in 1930s’ Newspapers Chee Meng Wong, Nanyang Technological University,
Being There, Under the God: A Consideration on Collectivity
Singapore
in Iranian Shiite Mourning Rituals Atsuko Tsubakihara, Ryukoku University, Japan
PANEL71 20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 21
Training Body for the Hidden Imam: the Creation of an Alternative Public Space and Indigenized Karate Culture in Contemporary Iran
DEVELOPMENTS IN INTANGIBLE HERITAGE
Kenji Kuroda, National Institutes for Humanities, Japan
Chair: Mariana Pinto Leitão Pereira, International Institute of Macau, Macau
Relating to homeland through local divine: Kerala Diasporas and Muthappan worship in the Gulf
Cartographies of Spiritual Territories: Comparative Analysis
Yoshiaki Takemura, National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
of the Morphology of Urban Spaces in the Old Quarters of South East Asia
Organizing Family Festivals in Public Space in Contemporary
Francisco Garcia Moro, Technical University of Valencia,
North India
Spain
Tetsuya Tanaka, JSPS Overseas Research Fellow, Japan
46
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
20 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL73
Fascism Carved in Stone: Monuments to Loyal Spirits
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 23
in Wartime Manchukuo and Taiwan Paul Barclay, Lafayette College, USA
WERE CHINA’S FRONTIERS MIDDLE GROUNDS?
Fascisms Seen and Unseen: The Netherlands, Japan,
Convenor and chair: Robert Antony, Guangzhou
Indonesia, and the Relationalities of Imperial Crisis
University, China
Ethan Mark, Leiden University, the Netherlands
The Dowry Land System and Chieftains of Shan-Dai Borderlands from Ming to Qing: The Construction of a Decentralized Frontier Institution
PANEL75
Jianxiong Ma, Hong Kong University of Science and
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 25
Technology, Hong Kong
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – SOUTH ASIA A Maritime Middle Ground in Northeast Asia:
Chair: Anand Yang, University of Washington, USA
The Bohai Sea in the Long Eighteenth Century Ronald Po, London School of Economics and
Kailas Histories: Renunciate Traditions and the Construction
Political Science, United Kingdom
of Himalayan Sacred Geography – Book Presentation Alex McKay, Australian National University, Australia
Hybrid Frontier: Qing China and Trans-Himalayan Networks in the Gurkha War, 1788–1793
Traditional Textiles and Costumes of Tangkhul Naga and
Lei Lin, Harvard University, USA
Maring Naga tribe of Manipur – PhD Pitch Joymati Thoudam, independent scholar, India
Middle Ground and the Yao Rebellion of 1831-1832 Robert Antony, Guangzhou University, China
Militarization of Policing, Culture of Impunity and Corruption: A Study on Human Rights Violations in
Considering ‘Middle Ground Moments’ in Later Qing
Bangladesh – PhD Pitch
Borderland History
Md. Kamal Uddin, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh
Daniel McMahon, Fu Jen Catholic University, Taiwan
Place-Making Through Practice: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Santal Architectural History – PhD Pitch PANEL74
Gauri Bharat, CEPT University, India
20 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 24
VISUALIZING FASCISM ACROSS ASIA Convenor: Julia Thomas, University of Notre Dame, USA Chair and discussant: Christopher Szpilman, Teikyo University, Japan
Subjects of a New Visual Order: Generating “New Life” in 1930s China Maggie Clinton, Middlebury College, USA
47
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 76
De Monteiro or the Rise of a Portuguese descent
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 1
family in Cambodia Suppya Nut, Inalco, France
FUKUSHIMA AS METHOD: RETHINKING POLITICS AND AESTHETICS OF JAPANESE CINEMA AND ART
Por-Tugu-Ese? The Protestant Tugu Community
Convenor and chair: Ran Ma, Nagoya University, Japan
Raan Hann Tan, Institute of Malaysian and International
of Jakarta, Indonesia Studies (IKMAS), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Malaysia
The Satirical Acceptance of Our Own Violence: Kon Ichikawa’s Pre-311 Satirical Film, Okumanchōja
Ethnicity in transition: a study of the Macanese
(Billionaire, 1954) and the Post-311 Japanese Peace
Sheyla Zandonai, Laboratoire Architecture Anthropologie,
Movement
ENSAPLV, France
Yoshinobu Tsunoo, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Portuguese, British or Eurasian? Problematizing Representing Her Own Pregnant Body: Kana Tomoko’s
the Portuguese Identity in British Hong Kong
Lullaby Under The Nuclear Sky (2016) And The Fukushima
Catherine Chan, University of Bristol, United Kingdom
Nuclear Disaster Wakae Nakane, Nagoya University, Japan PANEL 78
Disaster Utopia: Collective Behaviour In Post-Fukushima
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 3
Art Practice As The Revival Of The Avant-Garde The Arts, Japan
THE MIGRANT’S BODY: EXPLORING THE PHYSICALITY OF THE MIGRATION EXPERIENCE I
The Aesthetics and Politics of Participatory Projects
Convenor and chair: Michiel Baas, National University
in Post-Fukushima Documentary
of Singapore, Singapore
Koichiro Osaka, Kurashiki University of Science and
Ran Ma, Nagoya University, Japan
Introduction: The Migrant’s Body Changing Japanese Behavior Towards “Risk”
Michiel Baas, National University of Singapore, Singapore
From Post-War To Post-Fukushima : A Comparative Analysis Of Old And New Godzilla
Towards a conceptual map for studying the migrant’s body
Masato Dogase, Nagoya University, Japan
Peidong Yang, National Institute of Education, Singapore
Whiteness Interrupted: disruptions, negotiations and rePANEL 77
articulations of the habits of racial privilege
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 2
Francis Collins, University of Auckland, New Zealand
INTERMARRIAGE AND NEW ETHNICITIES IN PORTUGUESE ASIA, PAST AND PRESENT
Exploring young European migrants’ ambivalent position in
Convenor: Sheyla Zandonai, Laboratoire Architecture
Helena Hof, Waseda University, Japan
Anthropologie (LAA), ENSAPLV, France Chair: Suppya Nut, Inalco, France
48
Asia: The contested white body in skilled West-East migration
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 80
PANEL 81
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 5
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 6
ROUNDTABLE – THE SOUTHEAST ASIA NEIGHBORHOODS NETWORK (SEANNET): RE-SHAPING URBAN STUDIES THROUGH LOCAL CITY-MAKING KNOWLEDGE I
TRENDS AND TRAJECTORIES OF THE MEKONG REGION: UNDERSTANDING THE IMPLICATIONS OF REGIONALISATION, URBANISATION AND CLIMATE CHANGE I
Convenor: Rita Padawangi, Singapore University
Convenor and chair: Pakamas Thinphanga, Thailand
of Social Sciences, Singapore
Environment Institute (TEI), Thailand Discussant: Richard Friend, University of York,
Introduction to SEANNET
United Kingdom
Paul Rabé, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
An overview of urbanisation processes and climate
Rita Padawangi, Singapore University of Social Sciences,
vulnerability in the Mekong region
Singapore
Pakamas Thinphanga, Thailand Environment Institute (TEI), Thailand
Aukkyin Ward of Mawlamyine, Myanmar Mya Mya Khin, University of Yangon, Myanmar Chayan Vaddhanaphuti, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Adaptive capacities of Mukdahan Special Economic Zone (MSEZ) to environmental deteriorations and climate change Arika Bridhikitti, Mahasarakham University, Thailand
Wua Lai Neighborhood of Chiang Mai, Thailand Komson Teeraparbwong, Chiang Mai University, Thailand Pijika Pumketkao, ENSAPB, France
Engagement and dialogues on urbanisation and climate change challenges to contribute to the comprehensive local development planning in Hatxaifong, Lao PDR
Wat Kae Nang Leong, Bangkok, Thailand
Daniel Hayward, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Boonanan Natakun, Thammasat University Non Arkaraprasertkul, University of Sydney, Australia PANEL 82
Wards 13 and 14, Phú Nhuận, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Pha.m Thái So’n, Vietnamese-German University, Vietnam Erik Harms, Yale University, USA Marie Gibert, Paris-Diderot University, France
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 7
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC INEQUALITIES IN THE CONTEMPORARY JAPAN I Convenor and chair: Kenji Ishida, University of Tokyo, Japan
Escolta Santa Cruz District, Manila, the Philippines Alma Quinto, visual artist, the Philippines
Occupational Status and Inequality in Japan
Tessa Maria Guazon, University of the Philippines Diliman,
Sho Fujihara, University of Tokyo, Japan
the Philippines
The Effect of Social Capital on Japanese Higher Education Kampung Peneleh, Surabaya, Indonesia
Dropout
Adrian Perkasa, Universitas Airlangga, Indonesia
Minami Shimosegawa, University of Tokyo, Japan
Rita Padawangi, Singapore University of Social Sciences,
Satoshi Miwa, University of Tokyo, Japan
Singapore
Economic Contribution and Leaving Parents’ Home among Japanese Unmarried Youth Misaki Matano, Musashi University, Japan
49
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 83
Charisma Love Bertoldo Gado, Philippine Rice Research
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 8
Institute, The Philippines Diadem Esmero, Philippine Rice Research Institute,
MEMORY, MIGRATION AND NOSTALGIA: TRANSGRESSING BORDERS, TRANSGRESSIVE BOUNDARIES I
The Philippines
Convenor and chair: Mara Matta, Sapienza Università
an application of the PERMA framework in a positive
di Roma, Italy
education program in Hong Kong
Co-convenor and discussant: Habibul Khondker,
Wai Chun Cherry Au, The Education University of Hong Kong,
Zayed University, United Arab Emirates
Hong Kong
An assessment of the well-being of Chinese adolescents:
Nostalgia, Home and Identity: Tales of Migrants Habibul Khondker, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates
PANEL 85 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 10
Cultural Translation and Cinematic Narratives of Bengali Migrants in Japan: From Nostalgia of Cultural Migrants
DEVELOPMENT AND THE ENVIRONMENT
to Trans-Asian Memory
Chair: Alan Potkin, NIU Center for Southeast Asian
Zakir Raju, Independent University of Bangladesh
Studies, USA
- IUB, Bangladesh
Exporting ‘the will to compete’: power and agency Migrating through the Nation: Changing Narratives
in Saemaul Undong programs in the Philippines
of the Indo-Muslim hijra in Contemporary Bangladesh
Juliette Schwak, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Cecilia Bisogni, Università degli Studi di Napoli ‘L’Orientale’, Italy
Messages of Environmental Protection in Sundanese Folklores: the Case of Pangandaran, West Java Aquarini Priyatna, Universitas Padjadjaran, Indonesia
PANEL 84
Cece Sobarna, Universitas Padjadjaran, Indonesia
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 9
Chinese hydropower dams go global: a political ecology
EDUCATION AND EMPOWERMENT
perspective
Chair: Arlene Ozanne, University of Otago, New Zealand
May Tan-Mullins, University of Nottingham Ningbo China, China
Empowering Village Officials on Legislation: The Role of Higher Education in Indonesia
Governed from above, below and dammed in between:
Rizky Septiana Widyaningtyas, Gadjah Mada University,
the biopolitics and violence of (un)making ‘tradition’
Indonesia
in the Philippine uplands Wolfram Dressler, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Are Filipino Rice Farmers Passive or Active Information-seekers? Floper Gershwin Manuel, Philippine Rice Research Institute, The Philippines
50
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 86
PANEL 88
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 11
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 13
GLOBAL AFFECT/ASIAN SPACES
EMOTIONAL AND INTIMATE VARIATIONS: HISTORICIZING AND CONTEXTUALIZING AFFECT AMID CHANGING POLITICAL ECONOMIES
Convenor and chair: Chris Hudson, RMIT University, Australia
Guinness goes East: Irish pubs and the global imaginary
Convenor and chair: Deborah Tooker,
Chris Hudson, RMIT University, Australia
Le Moyne College/ACS, USA
The Philippines at the 1964-65 New York World Fair: Grabe,
Collective desire and moral-spiritual resistance to
or the Performance of Too-Muchness
individual emotional interiority in the rising market
William Peterson, Flinders University, Australia
economy among the Akha Deborah Tooker, Le Moyne College, USA
Goin’ to the Chapel: the production of affect in the Bali wedding chapel
Registers of Acceptance: Affecting equanimity in
Craig Latrell, Hamilton College, New York, USA
Buddhist Thailand Julia Cassaniti, Washington State University, USA
PANEL 87
Drama of Thainess: Visual Representation and Interpretation
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 12
of Thainess by Myanmar, Cambodian and Vietnamese audiences
VIOLENCE AND HUMAN RIGHTS I: CRIME, CRIMINALITY AND THE STATE
Amporn Jirattikorn, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Chair: Willem Vogelsang, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
PANEL 89 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 14
Assessing the Risk of Genocide and Political Mass Murder in Bangladesh and Myanmar
REMAKING UNITS OF ANALYSIS
Patrick Hein, Meiji University, Japan
Convenor: Seteney Shami, Social Science Research Council, USA
Asian Perspective of Extra-judicial Killing in Policing:
Chair and discussant: Engseng Ho, Duke University, USA
A Case of Bangladesh
Institutional panel by: Social Science Research Council
Md. Kamal Uddin, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh,
Transregional Research Junior Scholar Fellowship: InterAsian
Bangladesh
Contexts and Connections
The Rape Capital of India’: exploring the causes of crimes
Spiritual Citizens: Central Asian Pilgrims and the Politics
against women
of Pan-Islam and Protection in the Late Ottoman Empire
Peter Mayer, University of Adelaide, Australia
Lale Can, City University of New York, USA
Oral History, Sexual Violence & the Khmer Rouge Mass
Imagined Horizons: The Multicultural Nationscapes
Atrocity: Old Wounds, New Narratives
of Inter-Asian Cinema
Theresa De Langis, American University of Phnom Penh,
Brian Bernards, University of Southern California, USA
Cambodia
51
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
Silk Roads, Mountain Worlds: Travel and the politics
PANEL 91
of worldview in the Late Medieval South Caucasus
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 16
Kathryn J. Franklin, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, USA
THE GLOBAL K-WAVE Chair: Melanie Le Forestier, University of Toulouse, France
Worldly Afterlives: The Private Lives and Public Legacies of India’s Imperial Migrants
Intercultural perspectives on Korean culture and society
Julia Stephens, Rutgers University, USA
in two South Korean variety shows: Abnormal Summit and My Neighbor Charles
Choreographing Cold War Asia: Convergent Transnationalisms
Melanie Le Forestier, University of Toulouse, France
and Cultural Exchange in the Era of Radical Nation-Building Emily Wilcox, University of Michigan, USA
Trans-Location Fans Communities: K-Pop Fans Clubs in Indonesia Rachmah Ida, Airlangga University, Indonesia
PANEL 90 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 15
Hallyu (Korean Wave) and American youths: Transnational
HEALTH I: POLICIES AND THE AGENCY OF CLIENTS
Jung-Sun Park, California State University, Dominguez Hills, USA
Chair: Miwako Hosoda, Seisa University, Japan
Dealing in and Believing in: Economic Subculture and
Patients as Changing Agents: Case study of the patients’
Jungwon Kim, University of California, Riverside, USA
Cultural consumption, Identity and Power
Solidarity among East Asian Female K-Pop Fans participation in Japan from the perspective of the Health Social Movements Miwako Hosoda, Seisa University, Japan
PANEL 92 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 17
Living or surviving? The medical, social and economic Dong Dong, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
NON-GOVERNMENT ACTORS IN CULTURAL DIPLOMACY AND CIVIL SOCIETY EMPOWERMENT IN CHINESE SOCIETIES
The effect of participatory learning and action methods
Convenor: Jens Damm, Chang Jung University, Taiwan
conditions of people affected by rare diseases in China
in female self-help groups on knowledge and practices related to health, nutrition, water, sanitation and hygiene
Chinese Culture in Vienna: The Multiple Actors in
(HNWASH)
a Non-State Network
Lisa Bogler, University of Göttingen, Germany
Astrid Lipinsky, University of Vienna, Austria
Fleeing Aliens, the Returning Diaspora, and Suspect Virus
The Role of LGBTQ issues in Taiwan’s New Cultural
Carriers: Chinese Indonesians and the Cholera Pandemic
Diplomacy: Soft Power through Cultural Diplomacy
in Southeast Asia and China, 1960-1961
by Non-State Actors
Xiaoping Fang, Nanyang Technological University,
Jens Damm, Chang Jung University, Taiwan
Singapore
An Exploration of the Meaning of Party Building in Chinese NGOs Holly Snape, International Centre for Charity Sector Law, China
52
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
Religion in politics in East Asian societies: Explorations of
Authoritarianism in the Living Room: Politics, Senses
Buddhist beliefs and political aspirations in post-Umbrella
and Everyday life in Taiwan’s Military Villages (1946-1990s)
Movement Hong Kong
Elisa Tamburo, School of Oriental and African Studies,
Mariske Westendorp, Radboud University Nijmegen,
United Kingdom
the Netherlands PANEL 95 PANEL 93
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 20
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 18
INTERNET, POLITICS AND DEMOCRACY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA Convenor & chair: Bridget Welsh, John Cabot University, Italy
ROUNDTABLE – WRITING 21ST-CENTURY PHILIPPINES, FORGING SOUTHEAST ASIA Convenor and chair: Genevieve Asenjo, De La Salle University, the Philippines
Discussant: Aim Sinpeng, University of Sydney, Australia Genevieve Asenjo, De La Salle University, the Philippines
The Political Economy of Internet Controls
Clarissa Militante, De La Salle University, the Philippines
Bridget Welsh, John Cabot University, Italy
Vijae Alquisola, De La Salle University, the Philippines Mario Mendez, De La Salle University, the Philippines
Internet, Technology and Democracy Arnoud Zwemmer, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands PANEL 96
Political Opposition and Civil Society and the Internet
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 21
Aim Sinpeng, University of Sydney, Australia
PANEL 94
TOWARDS A PUBLIC HISTORY OF SOUTHEAST ASIA: HERITAGE, MEMORY, & COMMEMORATION I
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 19
Convenor and chair: Maitrii Aung-Thwin, National University of Singapore, Singapore
AUTHORITARIANISM IN THE MAKING I: APPARATUS, PROJECTION AND IMPACTS ON EVERYDAY LIFE DURING THE COLD WAR
La Maddukelleng in Bugis and Indonesian Historiography
Convenor: Isabelle Cheng, University of Portsmouth,
Asian and Caribbean Studies, the Netherlands
Kathryn Wellen, Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast
United Kingdom Chair: Georg Strüver, GIGA Institute of Asian Studies,
Intellectual history, public history in the Philippines:
Germany
a discussion with Bagong Kasaysayan’s practitioners
Institutional panel by: Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
Elsa Clavé, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany
Built to Fight: Militarised Authoritarianism in Taiwan and
Dang Yun Hak: Craft and meaning of a deified local hero
the Dictator’s Unattainable Goals during the Cold War
in the current Zeitgeist of the Lanten – Yao Mun – of Laos.
Isabelle Cheng, University of Portsmouth, United Kingdom
Joseba Estevez, University of Münster, Germany
State Power and Literature in the Early Post-War Taiwan
The Margins Write-Back: The past in Thailand’s Deep
Táňa Dluhošová, Oriental Institute, Czech Academy
South through Fiction and Museums
of Sciences, Czech Republic
Mala Rajo Sathian, University of Malaya, Malaysia
53
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 97
Ong Sum Ping and his others: Making history in northern
21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 22
Borneo in Yuan and Ming times Johannes Kurz, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Brunei
RELIGIOUS TRANSFORMATION I: INNOVATION AND TRADITION Chair: Albert Welter, University of Arizona, USA
PANEL 99 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 24
Between Ascetic Introspection and Aesthetic Awareness: The Transformation of Buddhist Meditation
LAW AND EMPIRE IN ASIA
Albert Welter, University of Arizona, USA
Convenor: Ashley Wright, Washington State University, USA Chair: Anand Yang, University of Washington, USA
Holy and money: a socio-economic analysis of the Vaishnava Sahajiya tradition in West Bengal, India
The Many Incarnations of the Criminal Tribes Act in Colonial
Amnuaypond Kidpromma, Lancaster University,
and Postcolonial India
United Kingdom
Anand Yang, University of Washington, USA
“Qigong as a tool of conversion in two New Religious
Imperial Chronotopes: Law & Time in Indian Ocean Narratives
Movements.” Tiandi Jiao: from China to Taiwan and
Nienke Boer, Yale-NUS College, Singapore
the diaspora. The Sheng Zhen Society: from China to Philippines and the western world
‘Waging war against the King’: The influence of British
Philippe Aspe, Ecole du Centre Tao, France
colonial law on international criminal law, and the reverse, at Delhi, Tokyo and Dhaka
When Tradition Isn’t Enough: Physical Intimacy
Kirsten Sellars, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
as Religious Innovation in India and Thailand
Hong Kong
R. Jeremy Saul, College of Religious Studies, Mahidol University, Thailand PANEL 100 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 25 PANEL 98 21 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 23
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – POLITICS Chair: Tak-Wing Ngo, University of Macau, Macau
COLONIAL HISTORY OF INDONESIA I: 17TH-19TH CENTURY
Revitalising the Silk Road. National and International
Chair: Johannes Kurz, Universiti Brunei Darussalam,
Reactions to China’s Foreign Policy Initiative
Brunei
– Book Presentation Richard Griffiths, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Luso-Asian women as cultural intermediaries in seventeenth century Batavia Kathleen Burke, King’s College London, United Kingdom
Jimmy Carter & Communist World: US Relations with Communist Countries during Carter Administration (China, Vietnam & North Korea) – PhD Pitch
The impact of the post-Padri War Diaspora in the
Khue Do, Seoul National University, South Korea
‘Malay Peninsula’ Abdur-Razzaq Lubis, Areca Books, Malaysia
Oscillate Mildly: Revisiting Japanese Foreign Policy in post-Soviet Central Asia (1991-2016) – PhD Pitch Nikolay Murashkin, Griffith Asia Institute, Australia
54
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 101
PANEL 103
21 JULY / 11.00 – 11.30 / EXHIBITION AREA
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 2
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
TAKING THE RIGHT TO ENGAGE: ALTERNATIVE ARTISTIC AND CREATIVE PRACTICES FOR URBAN PUBLIC SPACE IN HONG KONG
Understanding algorithm written in Sanskrit and Chinese Charlotte Pollet, National Chiao-Tung University, Taiwan
Convenor: Minna Valjakka, National University
Freedom of Information Law and the Empowerment
of Singapore, Singapore
of Urban Poor and Middle Class in India
Chair: Minna Valjakka, National University of Singapore,
Md Aftab Alam, University of Delhi, India
Singapore Discussant: Dominique Lämmli,
Tracing Global Flows of Imagination
Zurich University of the Arts; FOA-FLUX, Switzerland
Nat Sattavet, University of Vienna, Austria
Sound Walks as Humanistic Pedagogy of Art – Clash of Markets and Interdependence: A Case Study
Hong Kong as Case
on China-U.S. Higher Education Student Exchange
Yang Yeung, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Zeynepcan Akar, Bogazici University, Turkey
From Improvisation to Transformation: Collective A content analysis of children’s storybooks about
connectivity in Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement (2014)
Chinese-born adoptees: Survival networks as contributors
Wen Yau, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
to girls’ pre-adoption lives Jacki Fitzpatrick, Texas Tech University, USA
Objects of protest – Countervisuality and Hong Kong’s Umbrella Movement Frank Vigneron, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
PANEL 102
Hong Kong
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 1
Urban Hacking as Creative Resilience for Hong Kong
IMAG(IN)ING THE INVISIBLE: NUCLEAR DISASTER IN JAPANESE LITERATURE, THEATRE AND PHOTOGRAPHY
Minna Valjakka, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Convenor and chair: Kristina Iwata-Weickgenannt, Nagoya University, Japan Discussant: Ran Ma, Nagoya University, Japan
Who has the right to speak, and are we prepared to listen? Literary discourses in post-Fukushima Japan Kristina Iwata-Weickgenannt, Nagoya University, Japan
Chernobyl in Post-Fukushima Japanese Theatre – Setoyama Misaki’s Invisible Clouds Barbara Geilhorn, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
Ruins, Lives, and Totality: “Invisibles” in Nakasuji Jun’s Photographs of Post-Fukushima Nuclear Disasters Tomoko Seto, Yonsei University South Korea 55
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 104
PANEL 106
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 3
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 5
THE MIGRANT’S BODY: EXPLORING THE PHYSICALITY OF THE MIGRATION EXPERIENCE II Convenor: Michiel Baas, National University of Singapore,
ROUNDTABLE – THE SOUTHEAST ASIA NEIGHBORHOODS NETWORK (SEANNET): RE-SHAPING URBAN STUDIES THROUGH LOCAL CITY-MAKING KNOWLEDGE II
Asia Research Institute, Singapore
Convenor: Paul Rabé, International Institute for Asian
Chair: Denise L. Spitzer, University of Ottawa, Canada
Studies, the Netherlands Chair: Rita Padawangi, Singapore University of Social
Performing Foreign Culinary Culture: Migrant Workers
Sciences, Singapore
in Shanghai’s Global Foodscapes James Farrer, Sophia University, Japan
Krupa Rajangam, SAYTHU and National Institute of Advanced Studies, India
Body transformations in temporary labour migration:
Aming Liu, Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, China
narratives of Nepalese migrants returned from South Korea
Jayde Lin Roberts, University of Tasmania, Australia
Seonyoung Seo, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Rohit Negi, School of Human Ecology, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
“The lower classes smell”: how disgust legitimates ethnicity,
Harry den Hartog, Urban Language Studio,
class and citizenship in a context of migration
Shanghai, China
Sylvia Ang, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Bengali songs on the (migrated) body: identity, longing
PANEL 107
and belonging through the repertoire of dehatattva songs
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 6
Carola Lorea, International Institute for Asian Studies,
PANEL 105
TRENDS AND TRAJECTORIES OF THE MEKONG REGION: UNDERSTANDING THE IMPLICATIONS OF REGIONALISATION, URBANISATION AND CLIMATE CHANGE II
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 4
Convenor and chair: Pakamas Thinphanga, Thailand
the Netherlands
Environment Institute (TEI), Thailand
ROUNDTABLE – ALTERNATIVE GENEALOGIES OF TRANSPACIFIC CRITIQUE AND THE FUTURE OF ASIAN DIASPORA STUDIES Convenor: Jodi Kim, University of California, Riverside, USA
Women’s adaptations to new developments caused by urbanization and climate change in Truong Yen commune, Ninh Binh province, Vietnam Hoa Lo Thanh, Centre for Environment and Community
Iyko Day, Mount Holyoke College, USA
Research (CECR), Vietnam
Grace Hong, UCLA, USA Mariam Lam, University of California, Riverside, USA
Urban Climate Change Resilience in Bago in Lower Myanmar
Jodi Kim, University of California, Riverside, USA
Ei Shwe Sin Phyo, University of Yangon, Myanmar
Urban Political Ecology of Spatial Planning and climate change: A case study from Battambang Try Thuon, Royal University of Phnom Penh, Cambodia
56
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 108
Emerging Asian diasporas in Central Europe – A comparative
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 7
study of Chinese, Indian and Vietnamese communities in Poland
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC INEQUALITIES IN THE CONTEMPORARY JAPAN II
Zuzanna Burska, Collegium Civitas, Poland
Convenor: Kenji Ishida, University of Tokyo, Japan Chair: Sho Fujihara, University of Tokyo, Japan
PANEL 110 21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 9
Has School to Work Transition in Japan Changed?
Poverty Dynamics among Japanese Unmarried Women
UNDERSTANDING JAPAN-ASEAN RELATIONS THROUGH RESEARCH COOPERATION: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
Yusuke Hayashi, Musashi University, Japan
Convenor: Yoshimi Osawa, Kyoto University, Japan
Kenji Ishida, University of Tokyo, Japan
Chair: Mamoru Shibayama, Kyoto University ASEAN Center,
Income Inequality in an Aging Society: The Case of Japan
Thailand
Shin Arita, University of Tokyo, Japan
Discussant: Masaki Sato, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Singapore Office, Singapore
The Effect of Birth Order on Intergenerational Class Inheritance in Japan
Analysis on Research Collaboration Status of Japan
Natsuho Tomabechi and Satoshi Miwa,
and Southeast Asia and its History
University of Tokyo, Japan
Yoshimi Osawa, Kyoto University, Japan
Recent Trend on International Research Collaboration of Japan PANEL 109
and Southeast Asia
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 8
Ayako Fujieda, Kyoto University, Japan
MEMORY, MIGRATION AND NOSTALGIA: TRANSGRESSING BORDERS, TRANSGRESSIVE BOUNDARIES II
Japan-ASEAN Science Technology and Innovation Platform:
Convenor and chair: Mara Matta, Sapienza Università
Innovation Platform, Japan
Potentials and Challenges Akira Takagi, Japan-ASEAN Science, Technology and
di Roma, Italy Co-convenor and discussant: Habibul Khondker, Zayed University, United Arab Emirates
Memories of Home, Houses of Memory: Constructing Worlds Through Words Mara Matta, Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy
Celebrating ‘swadesh’ in ‘bidesh’: Durga Puja in Rome Sanjukta Das Gupta, Sapienza Università di Roma, Italy
Polish diaspora in South Asia – history and future perspectives Piotr Opaliński, MFA, Poland
57
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 111
PANEL 113
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 10
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 12
URBAN FARMS, ORGANIC FOOD, AND INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE
VIOLENCE AND HUMAN RIGHTS II: POST-CONFLICT SITUATION AND RESPONSES
Chair: Hao-Tzu Ho, Durham University, United Kingdom
Chair: Brian Carl Shaw, Independent Researcher, Hong Kong
The Different Face of Urban Living: Hands-on Food Growing
Culture and Law: the Case of the Law on Domestic Violence
in Post-colonial Hong Kong
Prevention and Control in Rural Vietnam
Hao-Tzu Ho, Durham University, United Kingdom
Bich Tuyen, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan
A Preliminary Investigation on Dietary Change in
The Desuups of Bhutan: volunteers in a broad-based, informed
an Indigenous Village, Makota’ay, Eastern Taiwan
and effective citizen emergency response programme
Wei Chi Chang, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan
Brian Carl Shaw, Independent Researcher, Hong Kong
Political Economy of Alternative Organic Certification
Hermeneutic Experience as Paradigm of Conflict
Systems in the Philippines
Transformation: The Case of the Bangsamoro Conflict in
Alaine Johnson and Marvin Jose Montefrio, Yale-NUS
Mindanao, Southern Philippines
College, Singapore
Vlademire Kevin Delos Santos Bumatay, University of the Philippines Baguio, The Philippines
Governing organic agri-food and the privileging of ‘model farms’ in the Philippines Marvin Joseph Montefrio, Yale-NUS College, Singapore
Malaysian Conflict Reporting of “Our Wars” – From Malayan Emergency to Konfrontasi Pushpa Al Bakri Devadason, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
The Role of Arts in Engaging the Filipino Rural and Urban Youth in Agriculture Charisma Love Gado and Floper Gershwin Manuel,
PANEL 114
Philippine Rice Research Institute, The Philippines
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 13
MILLENNIALS’ LIFESTYLE PANEL 112
Chair: Titia van der Maas, International Institute for Asian
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 11
Studies, the Netherlands
ROUNDTABLE – CIVIC SOCIETY ISSUES IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: THREE TAIWANESE ARTISTS’ APPROACH FOR MUTUAL LEARNING
Young Millenials in Jakarta Constructing Identity
Convenor: Margaret Shiu, Bamboo Curtain Studio, Taiwan
Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia
through ‘Pretty Dining’ in Information and Consumer Era Raphaella Dewantari Dwianto and Herilinda Fitria,
Chair and discussant: Carol Cassidy, Lao Textiles Co, Laos Institutional panel by: Ministry of Culture, Taiwan
Living it up?! A Comparative Study of Youth in Hong Kong and Beijing
Shefong Chung, Tree Music and Art, Taiwan
Gladys Pak Lei Chong, Hong Kong Baptist University,
Chiao Chung, Assignment Theatre, Taiwan
Hong Kong
Margaret Shiu, Bamboo Curtain Studio Taiwan
Girls Gone Wild Through Becoming K-Pop Fans: The Cultural Resonance of Muslim Girls’ K-Pop Fandom in Indonesia Lusvita Nuzuliyanti, Leiden University, the Netherlands 58
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 115
Health as a project and illness as an experience
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 14
– Online Learning and Self-medication of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM)
RETHINKING LOCATION AND SCALE
Dacheng Yao, Waseda University, Japan
Convenor: Seteney Shami, Social Science Research Council, USA
The challenges of Integrating Complementary & Alternative
Chair and discussant: Prasenjit Duara, Duke University, USA
Medicine (CAM) into Mental Health Care in Asia
Institutional panel by: Social Science Research Council
Andrian Liem, University of Queensland, Australia
Transregional Research Junior Scholar Fellowship: InterAsian Contexts and Connections
Perceptions, practices and ritual uses associated with
Soundscapes of Belonging: The Inter-Regional Social Life
Vanessa Cholez, National Museum of Natural History, France
beneficial and harmful trees in eastern Himalayas of Listening and Voicing Among Nomadic Hunter-Pastoralists in the Circa-Altai Border Region (Russia-Mongolia)
Radioactive Health: Nuclear Medicine in Post-WWII Japan
Robert O. Beahrs, University of Pittsburgh, USA
Shi Lin Loh, Keio University, Japan
Memory, Resilience and Climate Change: an ethnography of flood and cyclone in South Asia
PANEL 117
Debojyoti Das, Oxford University, United Kingdom
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 16
Cashmere: Value, Knowledge, and Intellectual Property in an InterAsian Industry
MEDIASCAPES I: FREEDOM OF PRESS UNDER THREAT
Kathryn Graber, Indiana University, USA
Chair: Cherian George, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
Capital Brokers in Emerging Markets Kimberley Kay Hoang, University of Chicago, USA
From Scattered Ideas to Concept: The Chinese Reception of Western Press Freedom in Modern Chinese History
Significant Others: Love, Loyalty and Difference in Early
Yi Guo, Macquarie University, Australia
Modern Persianate Friendships Mana Kia, Columbia University, USA
Defining and defending media independence: Norms and practices of Asian news organisations Cherian George, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
PANEL 116 21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 15
Impact of Television Commercials on Children: A comparative
HEALTH II: THE ROLE OF ALTERNATIVE AND INDIGENOUS MEDICINE
Md. Asaduzzaman, University of Chittagong, Bangladesh
Chair: Laurent Pordié, National Center for Scientific
Development of Media and Its Governance in Bangladesh
Research (CNRS), France
Shafiul Islam, University of Rajshahi, Bangladesh, Bangladesh
Study on Rural and Urban Children of Bangladesh
Korean Oriental Medicine and Philippine Indigenous Medicine: Traditions in Modernity Arnel Estrada Joven, University of Asia and the Pacific, The Philippines
59
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 118
PANEL 120
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 17
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 19
CHANGING RELATIONS WITH CHINA I: SOUTHEAST ASIA Chair: Michael Williams, Western Sydney University,
AUTHORITARIANISM IN THE MAKING II: APPARATUS, PROJECTION AND IMPACTS ON EVERYDAY LIFE DURING THE COLD WAR
Australia Assessing Xi’s diplomacy
Convenor and chair: Isabelle Cheng, University
Jianwei Wang, University of Macau, Macau
of Portsmouth, United Kingdom Institutional panel by: Journal of Current Chinese Affairs
The Pauk Phaw under Construction: China-Myanmar Relationship in development
Learning to Drink Sorghum Liquor: Taste and Consumption
Tingshu Zhu, Research Institute for Languages and Cultures
in Jinmen under Martial Law, 1949–1992
of Asia, Mahidol University, Thailand
Changhui Chi, National Quemoy University, Taiwan
XTug o’ war: Vietnam’s strategy for survival between great
Economic Trajectories of Three Women: Female Labor and
powers
the Changing Household Economy in Jinmen in the era of
Barbara Kratiuk, University of Warsaw, Poland
authoritarian rule Hsiao-chiao Chiu, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
PANEL 119
Shadows of authoritarianism in democratic South Korea
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 18
and Taiwan: The memorials of Park Chung-hee and Chiang Kai-shek
MALAYSIA TODAY: SUB-NATIONAL, NATIONAL AND TRANSNATIONAL DILEMMAS
Hardina Ohlendorf, Mahidol University International College, Thailand
Convenor: Kee Beng Ooi, Penang Institute, Malaysia Institutional panel by: Penang Institute PANEL 121
Malaysia, Southeast Asia and Globalisation’s New Challenges
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 20
Kee Beng Ooi, Penang Institute, Malaysia
– A critical reflection on power-sharing models in Malaysia
RETHINKING EDUCATION IN CAMBODIA AND THAILAND IN A TRANSNATIONAL ERA: NEW BOOKS
Chin Huat Wong, Penang Institute, Malaysia
Convenor and chair: Gerald Fry, University of Minnesota, USA
Chinese Mercantile Networks of Penang in the 19th century:
Transnational Education Crossing ‘the West’ and ‘Asia’:
Implications for modern Penang’s Transformation into A Hub
Adjusted Desire, Transformative Mediocrity, and Neo-colonial
for Talents
Disguise
Yee Tuan Wong, Penang Institute, Malaysia
Le Ha Phan, University of Hawaii, USA
Is two-party system possible for a bipolar society under FPTP?
“From halal, hearse to hudud: Contesting Malay identities in Najib’s Malaysia Mustafa Kamal Anuar, Penang Institute, Malaysia
60
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
Rethinking Thai Education: An Old Elephant in Search
PANEL 123
of a New Mahout
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 22
Gerald Fry, University of Minnesota, USA Rosarin Apahung, Pathumthani University, Thailand
RELIGIOUS TRANSFORMATION II: INNOVATION AND TRADITION
The Political Economy of Schooling in Cambodia:
Chair: Albert Welter, University of Arizona, USA
Issues of Quality and Equity Sitha Chhinh, Royal University of Phnom Penh,
Significance of Lai Haraoba Festival in North-East India:
Cambodia
A Case Study of Sekmai Haraoba Khwairakpam Rakesh Singh, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India
PANEL 122 21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 21
Earning merits - an ancient and current practise of the citizen of Myanmar
TOWARDS A PUBLIC HISTORY OF SOUTHEAST ASIA: HERITAGE, MEMORY, & COMMEMORATION II
Thomas Bruhn, freelance, Germany
Convenor and chair: Maitrii Aung-Thwin, National University
Community Church (MCC) of Quezon City, the Philippines
of Singapore, Singapore
Grazielle Kawi Micklay, University of the Philippines Baguio,
Religion and Identity Maintenance: The Metropolitan
The Philippines
Personal Histories, National Pasts: Memoirs of the National History Commission in Myanmar, 1974-2008
Chasing Miracles in Quiapo: Symbolism and Expression
Maitrii Aung-Thwin, National University of Singapore,
of Popular Devotion to Nuestro Padre Jesus Nazareno
Singapore
Mark Inigo Tallara, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Cambodia at the Moment of National History in the Making: Translations and the Recreations of National Narrative Theara Thun, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 124 21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 23
Public History as New Space and New Ground Maria Serena Diokno, SEASREP, the Philippines
COLONIAL HISTORY OF INDONESIA II: 20TH-21ST CENTURY
Towards a Public History of Thailand’s Deep South:
Chair: Arnoud Arps, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Amateur Researchers and the Local Production of an Autonomous Past
Manoeuvring in the Colonial City: City Politics and Indonesian
Muhammad Bin Mohamad, National University of
Nationalism in Dutch Colonial City Surabaya, 1920s-1940s.
Singapore, Singapore
Andi Achdian, Universitas Nasional, Indonesia
Islamic Periodicals in Colonial Indonesia Yasuko Kobayashi, Nanzan University, Japan
The laughing giant and the people: Prosthetic memory, cinema and the Indonesian War of Independence Arnoud Arps, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
61
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / MIDDAY > AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 125
PANEL 127
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 24
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 1
INTERDISCIPLINARY STUDIES ON CHAOZHOU HISTORY
ROUNDTABLE – CULTURAL LEADERSHIP AND THE MEKONG HUB
Convenor and chair: Joseph Lee, Pace University, USA
Convenor and chair: Frances Rudgard, Cambodian Living Arts, Cambodia
Food and Culture: A Social History of Seafood Consumption
Institutional panel by: Japan Foundation Asia Center
in Ming-Qing Chaoshan Chunghao Kuo, Taipei Medical University, Taiwan
Arlette Quỳnh-Anh Trần, Post Vidai Collection, Vietnam Phina So, Cambodian Living Arts, Cambodia
A Preliminary GIS Analysis on the Urban Commercial
Meta Moeng, Kon Len Khnhom Arts Space, Cambodia
Geography in Early 20th-Century Swatow (Shantou)
Borin Kor, Institut francais du Cambodge, Cambodia
Shi Xie, Sun Yat-Sen University, China
Anouza Phothisane, Laobangfai Prime Association, Laos
Sojourners and Transnationalism: Emigrant Communities in Chaozhou, 1949-1958
PANEL 128
Hui Wang, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 2
The Chaoshan Migrants and Traditional Medicine Trade
PHOTOGRAPHERS AND ETHNOGRAPHERS
in Postwar Taiwan (1945-1995)
Chair: Nienke Boer, Yale-NUS College, Singapore
Lin-Yi Tseng, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Telling and Selling Stories: Narrative Pattern of Japanese Souvenir Photograph in Late Nineteenth Century PANEL 126
Shixin Liang, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg,
21 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 25
Germany
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – LITERATURE
Pictorial Commonplaces in 19th century Southeast
Chair: Paul van der Velde, International Institute for Asian
Alexander Supartono, Edinburgh Napier University,
Studies, the Netherlands
United Kingdom
The Sound of Salt Forming: Short Stories by the Post-80s
Chaoshan Culture Heritage Between the Global and the Local
Generation in China - Book Presentation
– From 19th Century Treaty Port Photography to 21st Century
Asia Photographs
Geng Song, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Glocal Chaoshan Culture Digital Archives (STU Library)
Discussant: Ying Zhu, City University of New York, USA
Karsten Krueger, Shantou University College of Liberal Arts, China
Inside the Womb: Reading the ‘Home’ in the Short Stories by Contemporary Women Writers of Manipur
Fantasies of the Self: Multiples, Illusions and Poems in the
– PhD Pitch
Photographic Culture of Modern China
Gitarani Leisangthem, University of Delhi, India
Shengqing Wu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
Northern Asia as the Cradle of Ethnography Han F. Vermeulen, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Germany 62
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 129
Land Use Planning in the Highlands of Northern Thailand:
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 3
Case Study of Khun Wang, Chiang Mai, Thailand Karika Kunta, National Institute of Development
THE MIGRANT’S BODY IN ASIA: EXPLORING THE PHYSICALITY OF THE MIGRATION EXPERIENCE III
Administration (NIDA), Thailand
Convenor: Michiel Baas, National University of Singapore,
of Klong Dan, Thailand
Asia Research Institute, Singapore
Pannin Sumanasrethakul, National Institute of Development
Chair: Peidong Yang, National Institute of Education,
Administration (NIDA), Thailand
Public procurement and corruption in ASEAN: A case study
Singapore
Being sexual and racial Others: Young Chinese’s interracial
PANEL 131
dating experience in New Zealand
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 5
Alex Yang Li, The University of Auckland, New Zealand
Femininity and Discipline in Cross-Border Marriage:
URBAN LANES AND NEIGHBOURHOODS I: PRODUCTION OF SPACE AND EVERYDAY LIFE
The Experience of Central Asian Women in South Korea
Convenor: Creighton Connolly, National University
Mi-Jeong Jo, Goethe University of Frankfurt, Germany
of Singapore, Asia Research Institute, Singapore Co-convenor and chair: Mike Douglass,
Embodying the good migrant in ageing: Negotiating positive
National University of Singapore, Singapore
subjectivities through paid work Michelle Gedang Ong, University of the Philippines, The Philippines
Unpacking the notion of neighbourhood from Ho Chi Minh City’s alleyways Marie Gibert, University Paris Diderot, France
Body at Work: Migrant Beer Sellers in Southeast Asia Denise Lee Spitzer, University of Ottawa, Canada
The Mega Project and its consequences for the Inner City Neighbourhood: The Case of Langham Place, Hong Kong Kong-Chong Ho, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 130 21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 4
‘Lane Neighborhood’ as a Time-Space Envelope of Everyday
LAND, URBAN DEVELOPMENT AND HOUSING IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Myungrae Cho, Danook University, South Korea
Convenor and chair: Chaitawat Boonjubun, University
From Sailor Street to Đồng Khanh Boulevard: Two Centuries
of Helsinki, Finland
of Chợ Lớn’s Evolution
Discussant: Anne Haila, University of Helsinki, Finland
Mei Feng Mok, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Life: the Case of Seochon, Seoul
Buddhist monks as social housing providers: The case of Bangkok Chaitawat Boonjubun, University of Helsinki, Finland
63
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 132
China’s Role on common-pool resources management
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 6
in GMS Rangsan Sukhampha, Valaya Alongkorn Rajabhat
MAKING ‘PLACE’ IN SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA I
University, Thailand
Convenor: Erik de Maaker, Leiden University,
ASEAN-China: Securing the Regional Security of New
the Netherlands
Silk Road Project
Chair: Ratna Saptari, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Nimid Ang, East Asian Studies Center, Ramkhamhaeng
Discussant: Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University, USA
University, Thailand
Contesting and Defining Heritage in Provincial Spaces Erik de Maaker, Leiden University, the Netherlands
PANEL 135 21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 9
Land use, Livelihood and Change of Family Structure Nyunt Nyunt Win, University of Mandalay, Myanmar
ROUNDTABLE – THE FUTURE OF CENTRAL ASIAN STUDIES
Hidden histories: Orality and Place. Family and life
Convenor and chair: Willem Vogelsang, International
histories from a commercial district town in Central India
Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
Surajit Sarkar, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
Co-convenor: Irina Morozova, Leibniz-Institute for South and South-East European Studies, Germany
Duplicating the Local: GI and the Politics of ‘Place’
Irina Morozova, Leibniz-Institute for South and South-East
in Kanchipuram
European Studies, Germany
Aarti Kawlra, Madras Institute of Development Studies
Siddharth Saxena, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Chennai, India
Ablet Kamalov, Turan University, Kazakhstan Timur Dadabaev, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Authenticating the History of an Industrial Town:
Jumpei Kubota, Research Institute for Humanity
The Gate of the Kudus Kretek City
and Nature, Japan
Ratna Saptari, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Tetsuro Chida, Nagoya University of Foreign Studies, Japan
PANEL 133 21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 7
PANEL 136 21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 10
ASEAN AND CHINA’S NEW SILK ROAD: BEYOND TRADE AND ECONOMIC Center, Ramkhamhaeng University, Thailand
CLIMATE CHANGE FROM THE PERSPECTIVES OF SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES ACROSS ASIA
Institutional panel by: East Asian Studies Center,
Convenor and chair: Chaya Vaddhanaphuti, Chiang Mai
Ramkhamhaeng University
University, Thailand
Convenor and chair: Nimid Ang, East Asian Studies
Discussant: Mike Hulme, King’s College London,
Is there such a thing as The” Green Silk Road” for
United Kingdom
China – ASEAN Cooperation? Krisana Vaisamruat, East Asian Studies Center,
A critical climate anthropology
Western University, Thailand
Mike Hulme, King’s College London, United Kingdom
64
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
The effects of tactical messages in communications
PANEL 138
about climate-related risks on decisions of fish farmers
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 12
Louis Lebel, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Science and Situated knowledge: coffee growers and
LABOURING IN GLOBAL ASIA: ASPIRATIONS, IDENTITIES AND PRACTICES I
adaptation strategies for climate change in South India
Convenor: Kumiko Kawashima, Macquarie University, Australia
Anshu Ogra, Jawaharlal Nehru University, India
Chair and discussant: Brenda Yeoh, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Towards Resilient Disaster Adaptation: Understanding the Local Realities
Learning Not to Labor: Vocational Education, Migrant Youth,
Nuttavikhom Phanthuwongpakdee, Thammasat
and Future Making in Urban China
University, Thailand
Minhua Ling, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Nexus between community climate-change adaptation
The Meanings of Work and the Desires for Life: Exploring
and broader institutional change: Implication from local
Career and Geographic Mobilities of Young Immigrant
experience
Professionals in Japan
Chol Bunnag, Thammasat University Thailand
Gracia Liu-Farrer and Helena Hof, Waseda University, Japan
Transnational Migration and Encore Careers: Older Japanese PANEL 137
IT experts in Dalian, China
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 11
Kumiko Kawashima, Macquarie University, Australia
PHILANTHROPIC GIVING AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
PANEL 139
Convenor and chair: Rosalia Sciortino, Mahidol University,
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 13
Thailand Discussant: Mary Zurbuchen, American Council of Learned Societies, USA
SOCIAL CHANGE AND NOTIONS OF BEAUTY IN EAST ASIA Convenor and chair: Anett Dippner, Freie Universitaet
Philanthropic realities and challenges in Southeast Asia
Berlin, Germany
Rosalia Sciortino, Mahidol University, Thailand
Investing in beauty: Social insecurity and neoliberal Legacies of Cultural Philanthropy in Asia
subjectification in China
Mary Zurbuchen, American Council of Learned Societies,
Anett Dippner, Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany
United States of America
Aesthetic and Therapeutic Governance in China: Gender, IsIamic Philantrophy in Indonesia: Modernization,
Body and Eating Disorders
Islamization and Social Justice
Jie Yang, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Amelia Fauzia, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Cosmetic surgery in urban China: The institutionalization of the new global-local beauty ideals Valeria Lotti, Freie Universitaet Berlin, Germany
Beautiful Men and the Re-negotiation of Masculinity in Japan Ronald Saladin, German Institute for Japanse Studies (DIJ), Japan 65
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 140
PANEL 141
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 14
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 15
TRANSREGIONALIZING CONCEPTS
HEALTH III: CROSS-BORDER CARE(S)
Convenor: Seteney Shami, Social Science Research
Chair: Toake Endoh, Kobe University, Japan
Council, USA Chair and discussant: Aihwa Ong,
Political causes of the “drifting” of Japan’s nurse and caregiver
University of California Berkeley, USA
immigration policy
Institutional panel by: Social Science Research Council
Toake Endoh, Kobe University, Japan
Transregional Research Junior Scholar Fellowship: InterAsian Contexts and Connections
Medical Tourism and Transgender Rights in Thailand Rebecca Farber, Boston University, USA
Views of the Asian Other: Educational Reform and Models of Modernity Mimi Hanaoka, University of Richmond, USA
Characteristics of Good Patients: Reflections on Mobility and Treatment Adherence along the Thailand-Myanmar border Naomi Tschirhart, University of Oslo, Norway
The Eastern International: Soviet Orientalism, Anti-Imperialism, and Relations with the Middle East, 1917-1973
PANEL 142
Masha Kirasirova, New York University Abu Dhabi,
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 16
United Arab Emirates
Tea Countries: labor and political economic thought
MEDIASCAPES II: FRAMING DIGITAL IDENTITIES
in China and India, 1834-1937
Chair: Julian Hopkins, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Andrew Liu, Villanova University, USA
Around the World with Thailand: The Evolution of a Global The Asian Origins of Global Drug Control, c. 1860-1921
Imaginary
Steffen Rimner, University of Tokyo, Japan
Adam Knee, Lasalle College of the Arts, Singapore
The Old Empire and the New Reasoning: Interpretative
“Framing” Tokyo’s 2020 Olympics in the News
Communities Between the European Academy and
Beryl Hawkins, Temple University, Japan campus, Japan
the Buddhist Monastery in Revolutionary Inner Asia (1911-1940)
Digital Futures: South/East Asian Media Temporalities
Matthew W. King, University of California,
and the Expansion of the Sphere of Politics
Riverside, USA
Arnika Fuhrmann, Cornell University, USA
Regulating e-entertainment? An ethno-corporative approach to the perception frames over Internet Governance for e-gaming in China Albert Garrich Alabarce, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Internet and Digital Media research in rural Malaysia Christine Horn, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia
66
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 143
PANEL 145
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 17
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 19
CHANGING RELATIONS WITH CHINA II: EAST ASIA
RUSSIA’S PIVOT TO ASIA
Chair: Michael Williams, Western Sydney University, Australia
Singapore
Convenor: Pushpa Thambipillai, ISEAS-Yusuf Inshak Institute, Chair: Cheng-Chwee Kuik, National University of Malaysia,
Recovering Northeast Asia’s Relationship?: Role of Genron NPO
Malaysia
Misato Matsuoka, Tokai University, Japan
The Role of the Russian Far East in Northeast Asia’s Integration Sino-Japanese infrastructure diplomacy in the New Silk Road:
Tamara Troyakova, Far Eastern Federal University, Russian
Evolution and drivers
Federation
Nikolay Murashkin, Griffith Asia Institute, Australia
Russia’s Inroads into Southeast Asia: Too Little Too Late? The Survival of Chinese Non-Profit Organizations for East Asian
Pushpa Thambipillai, ISEAS-Yusuf Inshak Institute, Singapore
Language Learning and China’s Relations with its Neighbors Weinan Wang, Beijing Normal University, China
Chinese Views of Russia’s Role in Southeast Asia Gaye Christoffersen, Johns Hopkins University, SAIS, Nanjing Center, China
PANEL 144 21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 18 PANEL 146
THE GEOPOLITICS OF TOURISM AND DEVELOPMENT IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 20
Convenor: Mary Mostafanezhad, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA
TRANSLATION AND THE POLITICS OF LANGUAGE
Chair: Brooke Schedneck, Institute of Southeast Asian
Chair: Idris Mansor, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
Affairs, USA
Traditional communication in the Malay Traditional Manuscript The Touristic Mobilities of Migrants in the Thai-Burma
Syair Alif Ba Ta
(Myanmar) Border-Zone.
Roslina Binti Abu Bakar, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Malaysia
Tani Sebro and Jordan Hallbauer, Miami University, USA
The Role of Translation in the Process of Islamization in Malaysia Volunteer Tourism and Development in Buddhist Settings
Idris Mansor, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
Brooke Schedneck, Institute of Southeast Asian Affairs, USA
Hangeul facing the 10th anniversary in Indonesia: The Script From Rite of Passage to Intangible Cultural Heritage:
brought to the Cia-Cia on Buton Island, Southeast Sulawesi
Incorporation of the Salak Yom Buddhist Ritual into Global
HyoJin Kim, Waseda University, Japan
Discourses of Heritage and Development Alexandra Denes, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Interrogating the Conception of Monolithic Muslim Community in South Asia: Comparative Contexts of Discrimination in India,
Enflamed Livelihoods: The Environmental Geopolitics
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Nepal
of Tourism and the Haze Crisis in Northern Thailand
MD Aftab Alam, University of Delhi, Zakir Husain Delhi
Mary Mostafanezhad, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA
College, India
67
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 147
The voice of King Siliwangi: ancestors as bridges between
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 21
the past, present and the future Jörgen Hellman, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
THE CULTURAL HERITAGE OF CHAMPA KINGDOM(S): NEW ARCHAEOLOGICAL FINDS AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL SURVEY IN THUA THIEN HUE PROVINCE
Islamization processes in eastern Indonesia Emilie Wellfelt, University of Cologne, Sweden
Convenor and chair: Ky Tran Phuong, Association
The way of the ancestors in modern Savu society
of Vietnamese Archaeologists, Vietnam
Geneviève Duggan, Independent scholar, Singapore
From the Mountains to the Sea: Sojourn in the Central Highlands of Vietnam and the Overland Trading Networks
PANEL 149
through Peninsular Indochina
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 23
Ky Tran Phuong, Association of Vietnamese Archaeologists, Vietnam Rie Nakamura, University of Durham, United Kingdom
SOUTHEAST ASIAN (POST)COLONIAL HISTORIES Chair: Jan Dressler, Asia-Africa-Institute, University
New Archaeological Findings On Champa Culture
of Hamburg, Germany
In The Region Of Quang Binh, Quang Tri And Thua Thien Hue Provinces (Central Vietnam)
The Renaissance of Cambodia during the Reign of King
Van Quang Nguyen, Hue University, Vietnam
Ang Duong (1848-1860) and the Siamese Contribution Jan Dressler, Asia-Africa-Institute, University of Hamburg,
Mỹ So’n in Green: A painting of the Champa Sanctuary
Germany
of Mỹ So’n by Đàng Năng Thọ’ Rie Nakamura, University of Durham, United Kingdom
The Mandate of Heaven and the Shift in China’s Recognition of Vietnam’s Rulers, 1790-1802 Boon Dar Ku, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
PANEL 148 21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 22
Religious Creolization in Burma: The History of BurmaManipur Slave Gathering Warfare and the Religious Practices
RELIGIOUS CHANGE IN HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES; CASES FROM JAVA AND EASTERN INDONESIA
Bryce Beemer, Smithsonian Institution, USA
Convenor and chair: Hans Hägerdal, Linnaeus University,
Japanese occupation and independence movement
Sweden
in Vietnam, 1940-1945
Discussant: Helen Creese, University of Queensland,
Van Kim Nguyen and Pham Van Thuy,
Australia
Vietnam National University Hanoi, Vietnam
Institutional panel by: Linnaeus University Missionary discourses in late 19th century Savu Hans Hägerdal, Linnaeus University, Sweden
68
of Manipuri Descendants in Modern Myanmar
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / AFTERNOON > LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 150
PANEL 152
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 24
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 1
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – KOREA
THE IDEA OF SOUTHEAST ASIA: CURATORIAL RESEARCH AND COLLABORATIONS
Chair: Jong-Cheol Kim, Seoul National University Asia Center, South Korea
Convenor, chair and discussant: Chuong-Dai Vo, Asia Art
Building and Exporting the Competitiveness Society:
Archive, Hong Kong
for a sociological analysis of the reproduction of global
Institutional panel by: Asia Art Archive
capitalism – PhD Pitch Juliette Schwak, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Exhibition Histories and Archives: Chiang Mai
S.A.R.
Social Installation Gridthiya Gaweewong, Jim Thompson Art Center, Thailand
K-Popping: Korean Women, K-Pop, and Fandom – PhD Pitch Jungwon Kim, University of California, Riverside, USA
Does ‘place’ matter for contemporary curatorial practice? Sandy Hsiu-chih Lo, Independent curator, Taiwan
PANEL 151
Borders or Border Less
21 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 25
Mahbubur Rahman, Britto Arts Trust, Bangladesh
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – DEVELOPMENT
PANEL 153
Chair: May Tan-Mullins, University of Nottingham Ningbo
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 2
China, China
(Routledge, 2016) – Book Presentation
COMING TO GRIPS WITH A NEW ENVIRONMENT: ACCULTURATION AND DISLOCATION
Helena Varkkey, Department of International and Strategic
Chair: Nienke Boer, Yale-NUS College, Singapore
The Haze Problem in Southeast Asia: Palm Oil and Patronage
Studies, University of Malaya, Malaysia Discussant: Vedi Hadiz, Asia Institute, University of Melbourne, Australia
Notes from the Tropics: Travel writing on Indonesia in the Age of Colonization Joy Kearney, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Renewable Energy Policies in South Asia: The World Bank’s Solar Lighting Strategies and Design Principles
Re-visioning a Familiar Landscape
– Book Presentation
Victoria Eaves-Young, University of Tasmania, Australia
Sam Wong, University College Roosevelt, the Netherlands
The Swedish knitting instructor of the Dzungar court The Development Dilemma: Displacement in Meghalaya
Lisa Hellman, Freie University Berlin, Germany
1947-2010 – Book Presentation Bitopi Dutta, Dublin City University, Ireland
69
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 154
Who cares? The role of overseas-born workers in aged care
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 3
in New Zealand Arlene Ozanne, University of Otago, New Zealand
CHINESE DYNASTIC ART AND LITERATURE: PAINTINGS, CERAMICS, AND RUBBINGS
Decent work for migrant domestic workers in Taiwan
Chair: Hongwei Lu, University of Redlands, USA
and Macau Sio-Iu Pao, Macau Social Welfare Bureau, Macau
Jiang He (ca. 1734-ca. 1810) Painting Manual and the Shaping of Knowledge and Method of Bamboo Painting in Chinese Tradition
PANEL 156
Lai Na Wan, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 5
The Making of Shu Fu Wares in Yuan Dynasty (1279-1368) and their Relations to the Foreign Trade
URBAN LANES AND NEIGHBOURHOODS II: ART, HERITAGE, AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES
Chung Hung Li, Maritime Silk Road Society, Hong Kong
Convenor: Creighton Connolly, National University of Singapore, Singapore
The Trend of reproducing elite art by making rubbings:
Mike Douglass, National University of Singapore, Singapore
A case study of the Dongshutang rubbing collection in Ming
Chair: Rita Padawangi, Singapore University of Social
China (1368-1644)
Sciences, Singapore
Sarah Sau-Wah Ng, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
Discussant: Minna Valjakka, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 155
Creative and Cultural Industries and Heritage (Un-)Making
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 4
in Historic District: Dadaocheng, Taipei as an Example Desmond Sham, Asia Research Institute, NUS, Singapore
FOREIGN WORKERS IN ELDERLY CARE AND DOMESTIC WORK SECTORS IN ASIA-PACIFIC REGION
Community Vitalization with Tacit Creativities Motohiro Koizumi, Rikkyo University, Japan
Convenor and chair: Maria Reinaruth Carlos, Ryukoku University, Japan
‘Guess I’m Next to be Erased’: Street Art, Landscape
Institutional panel by: Ryukoku University
Politics and Urban Regeneration in George Town, Penang Creighton Connolly, National University of Singapore,
Opening Japan elderly care and domestic services labor markets to foreign workers Maria Reinaruth Carlos, Ryukoku University, Japan
Integrating migrants into Japanese society: centers of international exchange and migrant adaptation Viktoriya Kim and Philip Streich, Osaka University, Japan
Japan’s New Public Commons, disaster reconstruction and resilient migrants Maria Ikeda, Kyoto Sangyo University, Japan
70
Singapore
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 157
Training transfer as organizational citizenship behavior
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 6
Khin Sandar Thein, Yangon University of Economics, Myanmar
ROUNDTABLE - MAKING ‘PLACE’ IN SOUTH AND SOUTHEAST ASIA II
Return on investment from training: the case study
Convenor and chair: Erik de Maaker, Leiden University,
of Thai automotive industry
the Netherlands
Tassanee Homklin, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Aarti Kawlra, Madras Institute of Development Studies Chennai, India
PANEL 160
Clara Park, International Institute of Social Studies,
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 9
the Netherlands
Netherlands
“USEFUL KNOWLEDGE” FOR THE COMMUNITY AND THE COUNTRY: EDUCATION, SCIENCE AND ‘PROGRESS’ IN BRITISH-INDIA
Sanderien Verstappen, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Convenor: Michael Brunner, Federal Institute of Technology
Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University, USA
(ETH), Switzerland
Ratna Saptari, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences,
Chair: Harald Fischer-Tiné, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Thidar Win, University of Mandalay, Myanmar Surajit Sarkar, Ambedkar University Delhi, India Paul Rabé, International Institute for Asian Studies, the
Leiden University, the Netherlands
“Hearken to the Voice of Science”: Modern Education, Useful Knowledge, and Scientific Sikhism at Khalsa College, PANEL 158
Amritsar, 1890-1947
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 7
Michael Brunner, ETH Zürich, Switzerland
INDUSTRIAL HUMAN RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT IN MAINLAND ASEAN
‘Instituting a Discipline’. Dharma Shiksha in the Dayananda
Convenor and chair: Yoshi Takahashi, Hiroshima University,
Ankur Kakkar, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Anglo-Vedic Schools of Punjab
Japan Discussants: Tuan Nham Phong, Vietnam National
‘Educating’ Minds and ‘Training’ Bodies: Orphans in Colonial
University, Hanoi, Vietnam
North India, 1860-1920
Xayphone Kongmanila, National University of Laos, Laos
Soni Soni, Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), Switzerland
Human resource development in local manufacturing
The ‘Practical’ Turn in Education: Artisans and the Lucknow
firms in Myanmar
Industrial School
Yuri Sadoi, Meijo University, Japan
Arun Kumar, Centre for Modern Indian Studies, University of Goettingen, Germany
Human resource development and technology transfer of Thai firms in mainland ASEAN Kriengkrai Techakanont, Thammasat University, Thailand
Enhancing training transfer through training design adjustment: a case of Myanmar-Japan Center for Human Resource Development Than Than Aung, Myanmar-Japan Center for Human Resource Development, Myanmar 71
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 163
Impact of Religion on Muslim Women in Bangladesh:
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 12
A Historical and Contemporary Perspective Nazmunnessa Mahtab, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
LABOURING IN GLOBAL ASIA: ASPIRATIONS, IDENTITIES AND PRACTICES II
A Study on the Changing Status of Muslim Women
Convenor: Kumiko Kawashima, Macquarie University,
in Sri Lanka
Australia
Izzathul Mareena Reffai, Almuslimaath Jammiyathul
Chair and discussant: Brenda Yeoh, National University
Daayiyyaath, Sri Lanka
of Singapore, Singapore
Learning to labour for luck and pleasure: Taiwanese youth,
PANEL 165
vocational training and casino capitalism
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 14
Melody Lu, University of Macau, Macau
Labour of Luck: Young Filipino Workers in Integrated
TRANSNATIONAL INDUSTRIES AND LOCAL IMPLICATIONS
Casino Resorts in Macau and Singapore
Chair: Timothy Simpson, University of Macau, Macau
Juan Zhang, University of Queensland, Australia
Fostering Economic Cross-Border Interactions in the Conditionality and chance: Migration brokers and the
Greater Mekong Subregion
production of precarity among migrant domestic workers
John Walsh, Shinawatra University, Thailand
in Singapore Kellynn Wee, Jia Min Charmian Goh and Brenda Yeoh,
Improving Natural Resource Governance in Myanmar?
National University of Singapore, Singapore
The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative Adam Simpson, University of South Australia, Australia
PANEL 164
Electronic Baccarat Calculations and the Production
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 13
of the Post-Socialist Chinese Subject Timothy Simpson, University of Macau, Macau
TRAJECTORY OF MUSLIM WOMEN IN SOUTH ASIA: A DEVELOPMENT DISCOURSE
Typologies and Analogies in Chinese Valuation of Burmese
Convenor and chair: Farida Siddiqui, Maulana Azad National
Jadeite
Urdu University, India
Henrik Kloppenborg Møller, Lund University, Sweden
Discussant: Shaik Abdul Thaha, Maulana Azad National Urdu University, India PANEL 166
Financial Inclusion through Riba Free Micro Finance
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 15
in India: The Context of Excluded Muslim Women Farida Siddiqui, Maulana Azad National Urdu University,
HEALTH IV: FEMALE HEALTH IN ASIA
India
Chair: Katharina Richert, Heidelberg University, Germany
ICT, Empowerment and Muslim Women: A Case Study
Making menstrual health education for adolescents
of Hyderabad BPO Industry in India
comprehensive and inclusive: Findings from qualitative
Shaik Abdul Thaha, Maulana Azad National Urdu
interviews from urban, rural and tribal Maharashtra, India
University, India
Mukta Gundi and Malavika Subramanyam, Indian Institute of Technology Gandhinagar, India
72
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
21 JULY / LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS
Stories of Menarche from rural India
PANEL 169
Rashmi Choudhary, Panjab University, India
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 18
Evaluating the impact of the WHO’s Safe Childbirth
POPULISM IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Checklist in Indonesia – A Randomized Controlled Trial
Convenor and chair: Andreas Ufen, German Institute
Katharina Richert, Heidelberg University, Germany
of Global and Area Studies (GIGA), Germany
Lennart Kaplan, University of Göttingen, Germany
Discussant: Marco Bünte, Monash University, Malaysia Institutional panel by: German Institute of Global and Area
How Female Labour Force Participation Changes Fertility
Studies (GIGA)
Preference In Developing Countries: New Evidence From Southeast Asia
The faces of populism in Southeast Asia
Ly Dieu Phan, Nanyang Technological University,
Andreas Ufen, German Institute of Global and Area Studies
Singapore
(GIGA), Germany
Populism and Islam in Indonesia PANEL 167
Vedi Hadiz, Asia Institute, The University of Melbourne,
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 16
Australia
MEDIASCAPES III: COUNTERING THE OFFICIAL STORY
Reactionary populism in Thailand?
Chair: Arnoud Arps, University of Amsterdam,
Campus, Malaysia
Michael Connors, University of Nottingham, Malaysia
the Netherlands
All change or same old, same old: Xi Jinping’s sovereign
PANEL 171
Chinese Internet
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 20
David Kurt Herold, HK Polytechnic University, Hong Kong
Satire and Political Mobilization in Malaysia
FICTION VERSUS REALITY IN CHINA AND INDONESIA
Asha Rathina Pandi, National University of Singapore,
Chair: Sam Wong, University College Roosevelt,
Singapore
the Netherlands
Malaysia, Scandal and Media Framing in Online International
Female virtue in Peranakan Chinese writings in colonial Java
Newspapers
Grace V. S. Chin, Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast
Ghislaine Lewis, Monash University, Malaysia
Asian & Caribbean Studies (KITLV), the Netherlands
Tibetan History Telling on the Indo-Chinese Borderland:
Fictionalizing contemporary Chinese history to challenge
a Case Study of The Tibet Mirror
amnesia: Yan Lianke’s Si shu
Natalia Moskaleva, Saint-Petersburg State University,
Alessandra Pezza, INALCO de Paris, France
Russia
Writing the Nation: Comparing Pramoedya’s and Suharto’s The Dialogue on National Identity: The Image of Rural Areas
Indonesia
in Contemporary Vietnamese Cinema
Hoyri Mohamad, Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University, Japan
Giang Hoang Cam, Vietnam National University, Vietnam
73
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / LATE AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 173
PANEL 175
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 22
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 24
ISLAM AND GENDER
GENDER AND LITERATURE: FEMALE AND MALE PERSPECTIVES
Chair: Tutin Aryanti, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Indonesia
Chair: Manuela Ciotti, Aarhus University, Denmark
Segregated or not Segregated: Women’s Participation in the Mosque
The Return of Arjuna: New Masculinities and Sexualities
Tutin Aryanti, Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Indonesia
in the Eyes of the Millennial Writers of Indonesian Teen Popular Fiction
Gender, Islam, and Power: The Impact of Social changes
Diah Ariani Arimbi, Airlangga University, Indonesia
and modernization on women leadership in Pesantren (Islamic education institution)
Wars and Women in Southeast Asian Literature
Mina Elfira, Universitas Indonesia, Indonesia
Novita Dewi, Sanata Dharma University, Indonesia
Trans/Forming the Divine: Lived Articulations of Gender
“Femininity” in Vietnamese contemporary short story
and Spirituality by Malaysian Muslim Trans Men
Thi Nam Hoang Nguyen, Vietnam National University,
Joseph N Goh, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Hanoi, Vietnam
PANEL 174
PANEL 176
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 23
21 JULY / 16.30 – 18.15 / ROOM 25
COLONIAL HISTORY OF THE PHILIPPINES
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – HEALTH
Chair: Adonis Elumbre, University of the Philippines Baguio,
Chair: Laurent Pordié, National Center for Scientific Research
The Philippines
(CNRS), France
Negrito image-identity as the National image-identity of
Medical Pluralism for Southern Indian Communities:
the Filipinos during the Filipino-American War, 1899 -1913
From the Perspective of Contemporary Non-codified Medicine
Analyn Munoz, University of the Philippines Baguio,
– PhD Pitch
The Philippines
Sachi Matsuoka, The graduate school of Asian and African Area studies, Kyoto University, Japan
A Re-asserting Region in a Transitioning Nation: The Cordillera of the Philippines during the Commonwealth, 1935-1941
Healing and Wellbeing: Culture, Practices and Role
Adonis Elumbre, University of the Philippines Baguio,
of Government of Sri Lanka – PhD Pitch
The Philippines
Nirekha De Silva, Griffith Law Futures Centre, Australia
Baguio City 1941-1945: A Cosmopolitan City in a time of War
Knowledge, practices and perceptions of arborous
Jose Mathew Luga, University of the Philippines Baguio,
environment in Eastern Himalayas – PhD Pitch
The Philippines
Vanessa Cholez, National Museum of Natural History, France
Philippine Foreign Policy on the Sabah Claim: From Boom to Wane Jaconiah Shelumiel Manalaysay, Philippine-California Advanced Research Institutes, The Philippines
74
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 177
Tradition and the performative text in Tólubommalāta
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 1
Aruna Bommareddi, Indian Institute of Technology Mandi, India
ARCHAEOLOGY IN EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
Lines, images and objects: Anthropology, art and performing
Chair: Wai Yee Sharon Wong, The Chinese University
identities in contemporary South Asia
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Pedro Pombo, Indian Institute of technology Gandhinagar, India
Besides the Customs of Cambodia: Some New Findings between Chinese Historical Documents and Archaeological Data between Southeast Asia and China
PANEL 179
Wai Yee Sharon Wong, The Chinese University
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 3
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
The Invention of the Blue-and-White Pilgrim Flask in the
OVERSEAS CHINESE: BETWEEN ASSIMILATION AND ISOLATION I
Fifteenth Century China Trade
Chair: Tina Shrestha, National University of Singapore,
Xuan Chen, Palace Museum, China
Singapore
Metallic Objects of Pyu Period and Ancient Iron Furnaces
Everyday Life of Overseas Chinese and their interaction
near Theyekittayar Ancient City
with the Host Society in Yokohama Chinatown
Ni Ni Khet, Inya Institute, Myanmar
Yee Lam Elim Wong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Study of Dai Viet architectural ceramics in the Le so dynasty (1428-1527) through Historical documents and
Becoming Modern and Staging the Modern: the Spring Willow
Archaeological sources from Northern Vietnam and
Society and Chinese Studying in Japan in the Early 20th Century
its effects
Yumin Ao, Kennesaw State University, USA
Ngo Lan, Institute of Archaeology, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences (Vass), Vietnam
Where is “Homelands”: The Home-Building of the Burmese-Chinese Migrants from State Farm for Returned Overseas Chinese in Guangdong
PANEL 178
Chen-hsiao Chai, National Museum of History, Taiwan
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 2
POLITICS AND PLAYS: ACTIVISM IN ART I Chair: Minna Valjakka, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Translating political thought: an exploration of dramatic translation Arnab Banerji, Loyola Marymount University, USA
New gestures in an ancient performance: a case study from the Tamil Diaspora Cristiana Natali, University of Bologna, Italy
75
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 180
PANEL 182
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 4
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 6
TRANSNATIONAL MOBILITY IN AND OUT OF KOREA: IDENTITY ON THE MOVE
ASIAN MIGRATION AND INTRA-HOUSEHOLD DYNAMICS
Convenor: Yonson Ahn, Goethe University of Frankfurt, Germany
Convenor: Choon Yen Khoo, National University
Chair: Yonson Ahn, Goethe University of Frankfurt, Germany
of Singapore, Singapore Chair: Brenda Yeoh, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Negotiating a sense of belonging and ‘home’ of Korean
Institutional panel by: National University of Singapore
Guestworkers in Germany Yonson Ahn, Goethe University of Frankfurt, Germany
Marital Dissolution and Transnational Householding in Indonesia Silvia Mila Arlini, National University of Singapore, Singapore
North Korean refugees on the go across borders Yeun Hee Kim, Daegu University, South Korea
What’s Up with the Family? The Filipino Transnational Household Eight Years On Theodora Lam, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 181 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 5
Negotiation new norms: Migration, marriage and social
URBAN DEVELOPMENTS
Maria Platt, National University of Singapore, Singapore
change in Ponorogo Indonesia Chair: Napong Tao Rugkhapan, University of Michigan, USA
The Entanglements of Migration and Marriage: Negotiating The City, Aspiration, and Broken Promises: Uneven
Mobility Projects among Young Women from Migrant-sending
development and culture change in young Cambodian
Villages in Ponorogo, Indonesia
experience
Choon Yen Khoo, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Kenneth Finis, Macquarie University, Australia
A comparison of national identity and future outlook
PANEL 183
among highly educated urban youth in China and Taiwan
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 7
Desiree Remmert, European Research Centre on Contemporary Taiwan, Taiwan
ECONOMY: PRODUCT LOCALISATION AND (NON)UNIONISATION I
Urban Flow between Mobilities: A study of Vehicles
Chair: John Lambino, Kyoto Tachibana University, Japan
and Security Guard in Contemporary Metro Manila Zenta Nishio, Kyoto University, Japan
Labour union strategy and non-regular worker unionisation: An institutionally adjusted insider-outsider model for Japan
Urban Anxieties in Philippine Regional Films
Nicolo Rosetti, Kyoto University, Japan
Katrina Ross Tan and Laurence Marvin Castillo, University of the Philippines Los Baños, The Philippines
An examination of active local development and the local power for economic reproduction
The dynamics of poverty in Chinese cities
John Lambino, Kyoto Tachibana University, Japan
Heather Zhang, University of Leeds, United Kingdom
Differentials in consumer’s preference among Asian nations and Product Localization Motohiro Kurokawa, Takasaki City University of Economics, Japan 76
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 184
Adat revitalization in Democratization in North Lombok
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 8
Debbie Prabawati Suwito, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
INSTITUTIONAL AND INDIVIDUAL FACTORS IN THE MOBILITY OF ASIAN HIGHER EDUCATION STUDENTS
Urban Progressives – Urban Poor Activist Struggles in
Convenor and chair: Sophia Woodman, University
Denmark
Metropolitan Jakarta Mark Philip Stadler, Asian Dynamics Initiative (ADI),
of Edinburgh, United Kingdom Discussant: Yasemin Soysal, University of Essex, United Kingdom
PANEL 186 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 10
Which Institutional Configuration Attracts International
Hector Cebolla Boado, UNED Madrid, Spain
THE DILEMMA AND GOVERNANCE OF MEKONG REGION DEVELOPMENT AND ENVIRONMENTAL COOPERATION
Roxana Baltaru, University of Essex, United Kingdom
Convenor and discussant: JoonPyo Lee, Seoul National
Students? A Study of Chinese and Japanese Students in British Universities
University, South Korea
Migration, Education and Employed Mobility Among South
Chair: Eunhui Eom, Seoul National University, South Korea
Korean Migrant Families in Beijing Xiao Ma, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Hydropower as an effective energy option response to climate change?: Conflicting relationship between hydropower and
International tracks have different gauges: approaches to
climate risk in the case of Tonle Sap, Cambodia
attracting and integrating Chinese students in the UK and
Sun-Jin Yun, Seoul National University, South Korea
Germany Sophia Woodman, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Dams in Laos – a solution to sustainable development? Seungho Lee, Korea University, South Korea
PANEL 185 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 9
The Ideals and Reality of Greater Mekong Subregion Connectivity: Focus on Road Transportation Sangkook Lee, Yonsei University, South Korea
DEMOCRACY, CITIZENSHIP AND CUSTOMARY PRACTICES IN INDONESIA Chair: Hans Hägerdal, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Rural Economy and Income Diversification: Evidence from Paksapmai Village in Laos Taeyoon Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea
Reading Land Grabbing Narrative in Two Indonesian
Yongeun Lee, Seoul National University, South Korea
Literary Works: Women, Urban Space, and Remote Area Usma Nur Dian Rosyidah, Airlangga University, Indonesia
The United States, China, Japan’s Strategies on Mekong Governance and Implications for Korea
Pontianak’s Local Regime: Competition among Ethnic
Yohan Lee, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies,
Groups for State
South Korea
Longgina Novadona Bayo, Dias Prasongko and Haryanto, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
77
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 187
“Ideal Life” as Depicted in Japanese Women’s Magazines:
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 11
Changing Women’s Roles and Socio-economic Stratification in the 1990’s
HERITAGE AND IDENTITY IN EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
Mika Hattori Vermeulen, Nagoya University of Foreign Studies, Japan
Chair: Cecilia Dal Zovo, Institute of Heritage Sciences, Spain
Constructing and marketing beauty in Indonesia Jeaney Yip, University of Sydney, Australia
Locating and dislocating subaltern groups of China’s maritime periphery Edyta Roszko, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
PANEL 189 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 13
Using heritage, making boundary in present Taiwan Miki Nakanishi-Tsubota, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan
WAR AND HUMANITARIANISM IN ASIA, C. 1900-1950 Convenor: Maria Framke, University Rostock, Germany
Cherishing the Dark Past: The Heritage of the Native Chieftancy in Contemporary Southwest China
«Keep them pure, fit, and brotherly!»: The Indian YMCA’s
Jan Karlach, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University,
‘Army Work’ in the Great War (1914-1920)
Hong Kong
Harald Fischer-Tiné, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
Climate Justice and Indigenous Socio-Cultural Resilience:
From war relief to war making: Overseas aid from the
Cases from Taiwan
Straits Settlements and the legacies of World War One
Chun-Chieh Chi, National Dong-Hwa University, Taiwan
Mark Frost, University of Essex, United Kingdom
Self-reference in Vietnamese mealtime ritual invitations:
Non-state humanitarian relief during World War II:
where are the selves?
The Indian Burma refugees
Duyen Thi Mai Dang, Massey University, New Zealand
Maria Framke, University Rostock, Germany
“I am sure, readers want to give any help they can”: Mobilising PANEL 188
relief to famine-stricken Bengal during World War II, 1943-45
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 12
Joanna Simonow, ETH Zurich, Switzerland
ASPECTS OF FEMALE IDENTITY Chair: Manuela Ciotti, Aarhus University, Denmark
PANEL 190 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 14
Uniform Civil Code and women in India Arunima Deka, OKDISCD, India
REFRAMING MYANMAR IN THE 21ST CENTURY I Chair: Sharon Bell, Massey University, New Zealand
Women’s Leadership Identity in a Global Context Maria Guajardo, Soka University, Japan
The Aspirations of Myanmar’s Kachins Who Are Studying in Baguio City, Northern Philippines Farland D. Valera, Tun Aung Naw and Renz Mylbert Tabora, University of Baguio, The Philippines
78
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
Consumption and Cooperation: Follow up a Case Study of
PANEL 192
Social Capital in a Village in Northern Shan State, Myanmar
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 16
Ralph Gust-Frenger, National Chi Nan University, Taiwan
Ethnic health system development in Shan State, Myanmar
MOBILE TECHNOLOGY AND THE PARADOXES OF CONNECTIVITY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA I
Sharon Bell, Massey University, New Zealand
Convenor: Panarai Ostapirat, Thammasat University,
Possibilities for transformation or more of the same?
Thailand
Being Akha, Becoming Modern: Transregional religious
Chair: May Ingawanij, University of Westminster,
networks and the making of divergent Akha Worlds
United Kingdom
in the Upper Mekong Region
Discussant: Prasert Rangkla, Thammasat University,
Micah Morton, ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore
Thailand Institutional panel by: Thammasat University
PANEL 191
The Art of Speaking on the Line
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 15
Arthit Suriyawongkul, Foundation for Internet and Civic Culture, Thailand
COMBINING DRUGS: POLYTHERAPY AND THE ASSOCIATION OF MEDICINAL SUBSTANCES IN ASIA
Civil Cyber Society: Cyber activism and the
Convenor and chair: Laurent Pordié, National Center
Yukti Mukdawijitra, Thammasat University, Thailand
Rise of Civic Movements in Vietnam
for Scientific Research (CNRS), France Institutional panel by: CERMES3 (Research Unit of Science,
Thailand 4.0: Sociotechnical Imaginaries of Connectivity
Médicine, Health and Society - CNRS/EHESS/INSERM)
and Social Change under Authoritarian Rule Richard MacDonald, Goldsmiths, University of London,
Models of Drug Effects in Combination Drug Therapies
United Kingdom
in India: Combination or Contradiction? Stefan Ecks, Edinburgh University, United Kingdom
Digital technologies, power, and intermediation in Myanmar and India
Re-assembling Drugs in Cambodia. An Anthropology
Elisa Oreglia, SOAS University of London,
of thnam psohm
United Kingdom
Laurent Pordié, National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS), France
Yachud in Thailand: The Public Health Scenario, Health Professions Responses, and Consumers Perspectives Niyada Kiatying-Angsulee, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Global Pharmaceutical Mixtures: Artemisinin-based Therapies from Formulations to Molecular Combinations (1975-2005) Jean-Paul Gaudillière, INSERM-EHESS, France
Informing Vita plus: A Case Study of the Reconfiguration of Filipino Health Herbs Anita Hardon, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands
79
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 193
Disparities in Education: Social Quality in Thai’s Views
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 17
Ratchawadee Sangmahamad, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
ASIAN DIPLOMACY AND POLICY I Chair: MD Aftab Alam, University of Delhi, Zakir Husain
Community Integrity Building: Learning Practice from
Delhi College, India
Three Local Governments in Thailand Nittaya Ponok, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
Monster or trusted friend? Sir Harry Parkes and the Meiji Restoration in Japan Robert Morton, Chuo University, Japan
PANEL 195 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 19
Britain and the Bonins David Chapman, University of Queensland, Australia
ASEAN AND REGIONAL DYNAMICS Chair: Richard Griffiths, Leiden University, the Netherlands
The US-Japanese Trade Relations in the 1910s Yoshiaki Katada, Meijo University, Japan
Bridging the Intra-ASEAN Division of Cooperative Military
From OVOP to OTOP and beyond: Local development
Olli Suorsa, City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Arrangements policies, rural empowerment politics and political leadership in Asia-Pacific
David vs Goliath: The Philippine-China Dispute Over
Valentin Noble, Kyoto University, Japan
Contested Seas Raymund Liongson, University of Hawaii-Leeward, USA
PANEL 194
South China Sea Changes: Effect upon ASEAN
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 18
Jim Placzek, Thammasat University, Thailand
BUILDING MEANINGFUL DEMOCRACY IN THAILAND
The Role of ASEAN in India’s Act East Policy Elangbam Bijoykumar Singh, Manipur University, India
Convenor and chair: Thawilwadee Bureekul, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
ASEAN CSR networks and the evolution of “business
Institutional panel by: King Prajadhipok’s Institute
and human rights”: A nexus of the regional governance of CSR and human rights
Support for Democracy in Thailand
Toru Oga, Kyushu University, Japan
Thawilwadee Bureekul, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand PANEL 196
Access to Community Rights: The right to public
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 20
participation in environmental and natural resource Pattama Subkhampang, King Prajadhipok’s Institute,
JAPANESE LANGUAGE AND SOFT POWER IN ASIA I
Thailand
Convenor and chair: Kayoko Hashimoto, The University
management and preservation
of Queensland, Australia
Student council and its role in motivating democracy in schools Lertporn Udompong, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
80
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
Cool Japan, but not the language?
Spirit Possession, ‘Saffron Washing’, And The Mainstreaming
Kayoko Hashimoto, The University of Queensland, Australia
Of Religious Innovation In Contemporary Thai Buddhism Erick White, Cornell University, USA
Japanese language education in the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere and the kokuji mondai (national script
Searching For The Missing Dead In Vietnam
problem)
Oscar Salemink, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
Astghik Hovhannisyan, Hitotsubashi University, Japan
Narratives Of Diviners In Contemporary Thailand Media and cultural policies and Japanese language education
Edoardo Siani, SOAS University of London, United Kingdom
in Japanese-occupied Singapore, 1942-1945 Masakazu Matsuoka, Hitotsubashi University, Japan PANEL 199 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 23 PANEL 197 22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 21
POST-WW1 VISIONS OF THE INTERNATIONAL ORDER IN EAST ASIA
ROUNDTABLE – TRIBUTE TO BENEDICT ANDERSON: A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION ON HIS WORKS AND IMPACT ON ASIAN STUDIES
Convenor: Gerard Godart, Hokkaido University, Japan
Convenor: Charnvit Kasetsiri, Thailand
Affirmation, Contestation, Divergence: The Impact of 1919
Chair: Peter Carey, University of Indonesia, Indonesia
on Perceptions of ‘Asia’ in China and Japan
Chair: Roger Brown, Saitama University, Japan
Torsten Weber, German Institute for Japanese Studies Malinee Khumsupa, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
DIJ Tokyo, Japan
Melani Budianta, University of Indonesia, Indonesia Penny Edwards, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Future War and Future Peace after 1919: The Imperial
Yew-Foong Hui, Hong Kong Shue Yan University, Hong Kong
Japanese Army in the Wake of the First World War Gerard Godart, Hokkaido University, Japan
PANEL 198
WWI and the Rise of Radical Right Wing Ideology in Japan
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 22
Christopher Szpilman, Teikyo University, Japan
SPIRITS, DEITIES AND DIVINATION: COMPARATIVE APPROACHES TO RITUAL IN MAINLAND SOUTHEAST ASIA I
Domestic Renovation and Elite Criticism of the Post-WWI
Convenor and chair: Peter Jackson, Australian National
Roger Brown, Saitama University, Japan
International Order: The Case of the Golden Pheasant Academy
University, Australia Co-convenor: Bénédicte Brac de la Perrière, Centre Asie du Sud-Est, CNRS/EHESS, France
The Place of the Bottataung Lady: The Growing Fame of a Religious Figure on Burma’s Spirit Possession Scene Bénédicte Brac de la Perrière, Centre Asie du Sud-Est, CNRS/EHESS, France
81
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MORNING > MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 200
Maudu’: A Way of Union with God - Book Presentation
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 24
Muhammad Sila, Research Division, the Ministry of Religion, the Republic of Indonesia, Indonesia
ROUNDTABLE – NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN THE AFRICA-ASIA’S AXIS OF KNOWLEDGE
Digital Indonesia - Book Presentation
Convenor: Lloyd Amoah, African Association for Asian
Edwin Jurrriens, University of Melbourne, Australia
Studies, Ghana
Discussant: Ross Tapsell, Australian National University,
Co-convenor: Philippe Peycam, International Institute
Australia
for Asian Studies, the Netherlands Aarti Kawlra, International Institute for Asian Studies,
PANEL 202
the Netherlands
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 1
Jatin Dua, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
ARCHAEOLOGY IN INDIA I
Cláudio Pinheiro, Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil
Chair: Alexander Stolyarov, Institute of Oriental Studies
Tom Asher, Social Science Research Council, USA
of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
Engseng Ho, Duke University, USA Il-Soo Kim, Korea-Africa Centre, South Korea
Early Agricultural Communities of Middle Ganga Plain
Rohit Negi, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
Ranjit Pratap Singh, Banaras Hindu University, India
Yoichi Mine, Japan International Cooperation Agency, Japan Dorothy Tang, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Understanding Past Climate: Archaeological investigations of Indus northwest India Ravindra Nath Singh, Banaras Hindu University, India
PANEL 201
Cameron Andrew Petrie, University of Cambridge, United
22 JULY / 9.15 – 11.00 / ROOM 25
Kingdom
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – INDONESIA
Tradition of Genealogy Narration in North Indian Early
Chair: Willem Vogelsang, International Institute for Asian
Mediaeval Copperplate Land Grants (4th -13th centuries A.D.)
Studies, the Netherlands
Alexander Stolyarov, Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
Hate Spin: The Manufacture of Religious Offense and its Threat to Democracy - Book Presentation
Ancient Pilgrimage and Trade Routes: A Note on Scared
Cherian George, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
Geography of Sarnath (India) and Lumbini (Nepal)
S.A.R.
Nandji Rai, Banaras Hindu University, India
Entanglement: Individual and Participatory Art Practice in Indonesia - PhD Pitch Elly Kent, Australian National University, Australia Discussant: Edwin Jurriens, University of Melbourne, Australia
82
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 203
Protests by Chinese indentured workers in French Congo,
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 2
1929-1933 Julia Martinez, University of Wollongong, Australia
POLITICS AND PLAYS: ACTIVISM IN ART II Chair: Minna Valjakka, National University of Singapore,
Overseas Chinese in the History of Thailand during
Singapore
the 20th century Petr Moskalev, St. Petersburg State University, Russia
Illusionary Victory: Shanghai’s Propaganda Posters in the 1950s Le He, Cornell University, USA
PANEL 205 22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 4
The Art of War & Peace: the role of North Vietnamese John Michael Swinbank, JMS Mirage Corporation, Australia
POSTCOLONIAL DISPLACEMENTS: MIGRATION, NARRATIVES AND PLACE-MAKING IN SOUTH ASIA
Wild Beast: The Politics of Desire in Contemporary China
Convenor and chair: Erik de Maaker, Leiden University,
Hongwei Lu, University of Redlands, USA
the Netherlands
Visual Communication in the Vietnam Wars 1946-1975
Discussant: Sanderien Verstappen, Leiden University,
Performativity and the Politics of Identity in Postcolonial
the Netherlands
Macao in the Internet Age Zhongxuan Lin, University of Macau, Macao
Partition Migration And Rehabilitation: Minority Displacement And Dispossession In Bengal
Political world view in Mor lam
Subhasree Ghosh, University Of Calcutta, India
Weerachon Gedsagul, Ramkhamhaeng University, Thailand
Indelible Linkages: Mizo Societies at the Indo-Myanmar Borderlands PANEL 204
William Singh, Pachhunga University College, India
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 3
Negotiating space and identity in a post-colonial metropolis:
OVERSEAS CHINESE: BETWEEN ASSIMILATION AND ISOLATION II
middle and lower class refugee squatters in suburban Calcutta Aditi Mukherjee, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Chair: Tina Shrestha, National University of Singapore, Singapore
A Postcolonial Tribe: Asserting and Challenging The Two Nations Theory among the ‘Pakistani’ and
Chinese Assimilation and the Anti-Chinese Movement
‘Indian’ Diaspora
in the United States 1848-1882
Sanderien Verstappen, University of Amsterdam,
Yucheng Qin, University of Hawaii-Hilo, USA
the Netherlands
‘Shameful forms of oppression’: Chinese Indentured Labour
Upland Mobilities: Myth, Migration and Settlement in the
in British North Borneo during the 1920s
Indo-Bangladesh Borderlands
Claire Lowrie, University of Wollongong, Australia
Erik de Maaker, Leiden University, the Netherlands
83
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 206
PANEL 208
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 5
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 7
RURAL TO URBAN MIGRATION AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
ECONOMY: PRODUCT LOCALISATION AND (NON)UNIONISATION II
Chair: Lincoln L. Lewis, Ind. Researcher & Architect, Singapore
Chair: John Lambino, Kyoto Tachibana University, Japan
Rescuing communities through restoration of Japanese
Empowerment of Scheduled Tribe Women Through Micro
traditional buildings in depopulating areas
Finance: An Impact Study of SHGs in Mawkynrew Block,
Barry Natusch, Nihon University, Japan
East Khasi Hills District, Meghalaya Pynshongdor L. Nongbri, St. Anthony’s College, India
The Settlement Intention of Rural Migrants in Urban China Pu Hao, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
Productivity Growth of FDI in Nepal: A test of Solow Growth Approach
Betting on the Big or Assisting the Small: Market Dynamics,
Raghu Bir Bista, Tribhuvan University, Nepal
State Policies, and the Contest for the Future of Chinese Agriculture
The Dialectics of Cultural Production: Branding Indigo-Dyed
Qian Zhang, Singapore Management University, Singapore
Textile in Thailand Chanjittra Chanorn, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
“Migration and civilization”: A Foucault’s perspective on the social service provision for rural-urban migrants in China Fengshuo Chen, Shenzhen Center for NPO Research and
PANEL 209
Evaluation, China
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 8
PANEL 207
HIGHER EDUCATION AND DEVELOPMENT IN CAMBODIA: THE QUESTION OF ONTOLOGY AND QUALITY
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 6
Convenor: Natharoun Ngo, Center for Khmer Studies,
LAND AND THE DYNAMICS OF EXCLUSION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Cambodia Chair: Sreang Chheat, Center for Khmer Studies, Cambodia
Convenor and chair: Mukdawan Sakboon, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Graduate Attributes and Employability Skills: The Case of Cambodian Higher Education
Changes in status and utility of lands in Mae Sot Special
Leang Un, Royal University of Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Economic Zone Development: Socio-economic, and cultural Impacts and movement of community and civil society
STEM Education in Cambodia: Drives and Impact
Mukdawan Sakboon, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Phirom Leng, Cambodia Development Resource Institute, Cambodia
Of Rice, Sago, and Palm Oil: Land use & resource management in the context of Ancestral Domain in the Philippines
Transitioning from University to the Labour Market:
Jessie Varquez, University of the Philippines, the Philippines
A Cambodian Experience Rosa Yi, Royal University of Phnom Penh, Cambodia
The Brokerage of Dispossesion: State actors brokerage in Indonesia’s food estate projects Laksmi A. Savitri, University of Gadjah Mada, Indonesia
84
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 211
Portuguese and English media in Macau’s post-handover
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 10
media ecology José Carlos Matias dos Santos, Macau Portuguese and
SOUTHEAST ASIA AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES
English Press Association, Macau
Chair: Andrew Wells-Dang, Independent scholar, Vietnam
The Original Idea and Changing Concept of “Ao Mun Yen” Lok Fong Agnes Lam, University of Macau, Macau
Social capital and cultural patterns in building disaster and climate change resilience: A review of Vietnamese
Beyond the theatricalities of the Dóci Papiaçam di Macau:
scholarship in the last decade
the social role of community theatre
Kien Nguyen, Monash University, Australia
Mariana Pinto Leitão Pereira, International Institute of Macau, Macau
Reforming the Mekong River Commission: increasing its political and environmental relevance in the region Ana Maria Felício, GIZ, Laos
PANEL 213 22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 12
The Contested Meanings over Natural Capital: Cases from the Payment for Forest Environmental
LGBTQI ISSUES ACROSS ASIA
Services (PFES) in Central Vietnam
Chair: Floper Gershwin Manuel, Philippine Rice Research
Fumikazu Ubukata, Okayama Universiry, Japan
Institute, The Philippines
“The Suppressing Factors of Gender Equity Education Act PANEL 212
of Taiwan (GEEA) vs Same Sex Marriage policy (SSMP)
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 11
– how to prevent GEE Chuan Ling Yong, Asia Europe Institute, Malaysia
DECONSTRUCTING IDENTITY: SELF AND COMMUNITY IN THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF POST 1999 MACAU
Indonesia: Stormy Days for LGBT Douglas Esmond Sanders, Mahidol University, Thailand
Convenor: José Luís Sales Marques, Institute of European Studies of Macau, Macau
The Construction of the In-Between Identity of the Khawaja sara in Pakistan
Cultural policies in the Macau SAR: Deconstructing the
Gaoli Liu, Kyoto University, Japan
public agenda for cultural and creative industries José Luís Sales Marques, Institute of European Studies of Macau, Macau
The Emergence of Male Transvestitism and The Transformation of Masculinity among the Bugkalot (Ilongot) of Northern Philippines
Preserving food as an identity marker: Intergenerational
Shu-Yuan Yang, Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica,
change in Macanese
Taiwan
Margarida Cheung Vieira, Institute of European Studies of Macau, Macau
85
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 214
Displacement & the future of Myanmar: A problem of pluralism
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 13
Kirsten McConnachie, University of Warwick, United Kingdom
CITIZEN PARTICIPATION IN EAST-ASIAN COUNTRIES
Mobilising affinity ties: Kachin internal displacement and the
Convenor, chair and discussant: Emilie Frenkiel,
Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho, National University of Singapore,
Université Paris Est Créteil, France
Singapore
geographies of humanitarianism at the China-Myanmar border
Co-chair: Chloé Froissart, Tsinghua University, China
Violent geographies: Ordering space at the margins of the Citizen Activism in Thailand: How and Why Political
Myanmar state
Participation Has Changed Among Different Groups
Patrick Meehan, School of Oriental and African Studies
of Thai Citizens, 2001-2013
(SOAS), United Kingdom
Stithorn Thananithichot and Attasit Pankaew, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
Infrastructural Violence & the Politics of Transparency in Burma
Wichuda Satidporn, Srinakharinvirot University, Thailand
Robert Farnan, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Civic hackers in Taiwan: can online deliberation further democratize democracy?
PANEL 216
Emilie Frenkiel, Université Paris Est Créteil, France
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 15
Using Citizen Participation to design a new model of
ISSUES IN VULNERABLE GROUPS’ HEALTH AND WELFARE: RISKS AND RESOURCES IN DEVELOPED AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES OF ASIA
environmental governance. The Role of Environmental NGOs in the Chinese Authoritarian Regime. Chloé Froissart, Tsinghua University, China
Convenor and chair: Miwako Hosoda, Seisa University, Japan
Citizen Participation in Legislative Procedures: Comparative Study of Cambodia and Thailand
Encountering Harm on the Mekong Migration Trail: Risks
Nawat Sripathar, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
and Resistance among Unobserved and Unserved Border
Ompunoot Tangthavorn, King Prajadhipok’s Institute, Thailand
Populations in Southeast Asia Lynn Thiesmeyer, Keio University, Japan
The Role of Civil Society in the Philippine Election Nattakarn Sukolratanametee, King Prajadhipok’s Institute,
Trust matters: The regulation of the health system in India
Thailand
Michael Calnan, Kent University, United Kingdom
Social health insurance and the accessibility to health services PANEL 215 22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 14
of migrant construction workers in the informal sector in Vietnam Khanh An Tran, Center for Creative Initiatives Health and
REFRAMING MYANMAR IN THE 21ST CENTURY II
Population, Vietnam
Chair: Patrick Meehan, SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom
The Challenge of Healthcare Governance: An implementation of the Integrated Community Care System in Japan
“Hybrid Governance” and the Politics of Legitimacy in the Myanmar Peace Process Ashley South, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
86
Miwako Hosoda, Seisa University, Japan
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 217
Confederates in Waiting: East Germany and the Rise
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 16
of the Khmer Rouge Christian Oesterheld, Mahidol University International
MOBILE TECHNOLOGY AND THE PARADOXES OF CONNECTIVITY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA II
College (MUIC), Thailand
Convenor: Panarai Ostapirat, Thammasat University,
India-Thailand’s Soft Power Diplomacy and Security
Thailand
Relations
Chair: Richard MacDonald, Goldsmiths, University of London,
Piyanat Soikham, University of St Andrews,
United Kingdom
United Kingdom
Discussant: Yukti Mukdawijitra, Thammasat University, Thailand Institutional panel by: Thammasat University
PANEL 219 22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 18
Mediated Proximity and the Burmese Mobile Technoscape Prasert Rangkla, Thammasat University, Thailand
THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF NEW AUTHORITARIANISM IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Mobile Technologies and the Making of Persons in
Convenor: Carl Middleton, Chulalongkorn University,
Post-socialist Laos
Thailand
Panarai Ostapirat, Thammasat University, Thailand
Chair: Chantana Banpasirchote Wungaeo, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Leisure as a Vocation: Elderly Persons and Quest for Time Spending in Karaoke Restaurants
Authoritarian infrastructure: Political power and
Arjin Thongyuukong, Thammasat University, Thailand
hydropower in Southeast Asia Carl Middleton, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
PANEL 218
Thailand 4.0: The Rise of a Neo-authoritarian
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 17
Developmental State in Thailand Naruemon Thabchumpon, Chulalongkorn University,
ASIAN DIPLOMACY AND POLICY II
Thailand
Chair: Valentin Noble, Kyoto University, Japan
The One Belt One Road (OBOR) initiative and its influence ‘Brainwashing’: Cultural Smuggling of a Cold War Lexicon
on the political situation of China’s neighbouring countries.
in Asia (via Hong Kong)
Wolfram Schaffar, University of Vienna, Austria
Kenny Kwok-kwan Ng, Baptist University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Authoritarian development, frontier capitalism and indigenous counter-movements in Myanmar
The Nixon Doctrine and Its Impacts On the U.S. Relations
Rainer Einzenberger, University of Vienna, Austria
with Asian Allies (South Korea, Thailand and the Philippines) Khue Dieu Do, Seoul National University, Graduate School of International Studies, South Korea
Geopolitics of Humanitarianism: Colonialism, Public Health, and the Red Cross Movement in Interwar Asia Yoshiya Makita, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
87
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 220
Accessing the soft power of Japanese language in Australia:
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 19
Young Korean migrants studying Japanese as a foreign
ASIAN STUDIES IN LATIN AMERICA & THE GLOBAL SOUTH
Esther Lovely, The University of Queensland, Australia
language
Convenor: Cláudio Pinheiro, Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil
PANEL 222 22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 21
Asian Studies in Argentina: Quantitative growth or Ignacio Villagran, Buenos Aires University, Argentina
ROUNDTABLE - ETHICAL DILEMMAS IN HERITAGE EDUCATION, PRACTICE AND RESEARCH IN ASIA
Asian through Latino Eyes: Overview of Asian studies
Convenor and chair: Willem Vogelsang, International
in Latin America
Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
qualitative development?
Cláudio Pinheiro, Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil Lynn Meskell, Stanford University, USA
Being a (Brazilian) Researcher and Friend in India
Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University, USA
Fabiola Gomes, Brasilia University, Brazil
Shu-Li Wang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan Elena Paskaleva, Leiden University, the Netherlands
Between Yoga and Science, Footnotes on Ontological the
Liling Huang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Transits Between Asia and Latin America
Gertjan Plets, Utrecht University, the Netherlands
Claudia W. Poletto, Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Brazil
Trilateral Cooperation for Development: Brazil and Japan
PANEL 223
in Latin America and Africa
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 22
Silvio Miyazaki, University of São Paulo, Brazil
PANEL 221
SPIRITS, DEITIES AND DIVINATION: COMPARATIVE APPROACHES TO RITUAL IN MAINLAND SOUTHEAST ASIA II
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 20
Convenor: Peter Jackson, Australian National University, Australia
JAPANESE LANGUAGE AND SOFT POWER IN ASIA II
Co-convenor and chair: Bénédicte Brac de la Perrière, Centre Asie du Sud-Est, CNRS/EHESS, France
Convenor and chair: Kayoko Hashimoto, The University of Queensland, Australia
A World Ever More Enchanted: Modernity Makes Magic In 21st Century Southeast Asia
The role of native speakers in high school Japanese programs
Peter Jackson, Australian National University, Australia
in South Korea, Indonesia and Thailand Kaoru Kadowaki, Setsunan University, Japan
Participation Mystique, Coincidentia Oppositorum, and Paradoxical Logic: Do we Need a ‘Romantic Rebellion’
Japanese language in the wake of Hong Kong’s Umbrella
to explicate the practical meaningfulness of popular
Revolution: Is it a type of soft power?
religious practices in contemporary Thailand?
Kazuyuki Nomura, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Benjamin Baumann, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin,
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Germany
88
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
Dreaming About The Neighbors: Magic, Orientalism and
PANEL 226
Entrepreneurship in the Consumption of Thai Religious
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 25
Goods In Singapore Andrew Johnson, Princeton University, USA
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – MODERNITY AND URBANISM Chair: Paul Rabé, International Institute for Asian Studies,
PANEL 224
the Netherlands
22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 23
The Horizon of Modernity: Subjectivity and Social Structure
DECOLONIALISING EAST ASIAN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
in New Confucian Philosophy – Book Presentation
Convenor: Ching-Chang Chen, Ryukoku University, Japan
the Netherlands
Ady Van den Stock, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Chair: Maria Reinaruth Carlos, Ryukoku University, Japan
Chinese Subjectivities and the Beijing Olympics Rethinking President Obama’s Pivot to Asia Policy:
– Book Presentation
American Exceptionalism and the Construction of an
Gladys Pak Lei Chong, Hong Kong Baptist University,
America World Order
Hong Kong S.A.R.
Chin-Kuei Tsui, National Chung Cheng Universtiy, Taiwan
Urban Loopholes: Creative Alliances of Spatial Production Reconciliation and History: from diplomatic relations
in Shanghai’s City Center – Book Presentation
to dialogue for understanding
Ying Zhou, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R.
Kosuke Shimizu, Ryukoku University, Japan
Discussant: Iris Belle, Tongji University, China
To Be or Not to Be “Chinese”? Understanding Taiwan’s
Intercultural Communication from an Interdisciplinary
Inconsistent Involvement in China’s Maritime Disputes
approach: When genes and neurons joined the discourse
in East Asia
– Book Presentation
Ching-Chang Chen, Ryukoku University, Japan
Phuong-Mai Nguyen, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands
PANEL 225 22 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 24
ROUNDTABLE – INDIAN OCEAN FUTURES Convenor and chair: Jatin Dua, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands Engseng Ho, Duke University, USA Françoise Vergès, College d’etudes Mondiales, France Tom Asher, Social Science Research Council, USA Nira Wikramasinghe, Leiden University, The Netherlands Rohit Negi, Ambedkar University Delhi, India Carpanin Marimoutou, University of La Réunion, Reunion Islands
89
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 227
Insular and indianocean perspectives: rethinking,
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 1
recounting and writing the Indian Ocean from Reunion Island and Mauritius through connected literary
ARCHAEOLOGY IN INDIA II
representations and novels
Chair: Alex McKay, Australian National University, Australia
Elisa Huet, University of La Réunion, Reunion Islands
Nalanda: Masterpieces of Art objects suffering Negligence
‘Oceans roll between us’: Interracial intimacy in Victorian
Gautam Kumar Lama, Banaras Hindu University, India
England: A case study based on the London Foundling Hospital archive
Understanding Harappan Ceramics of North West India
Florence Pellegry, University of La Réunion, Reunion Islands
Arun Kumar Pandey, Banaras Hindu University, India
Some Aspects of Copper Metallurgy at Ganeshwar
PANEL 229
and Khanak
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 3
Dheerendra Pratap Singh, Banaras Hindu University, India
Mesolithic Rajasthan: A Case Study of Ganeshwa Sagorika Chakraborty, Banaras Hindu University, India
THE SOCIAL IMPACT OF INTERNAL MIGRATIONS IN CHINA: PLANNED MIGRATION AND ECONOMIC MIGRATION Convenor and chair: Florence Padovani, Paris 1 - Sorbonne University, France
PANEL 228 22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 2
The three gorges dam resettlees in Shanghai and Guangdong, memory, trauma and adaptation of families
READING THE INDIAN OCEAN THROUGH LANGUAGE TEXTS AND IMAGE
Florence Padovani, Paris 1 – Sorbonne University, France
Convenor: Vilasnee Tampoe-Hautin, University
Unravelling Ambivalent Mobilities: The Social Memory,
of La Réunion, Reunion Islands
Bicultural Identity and Livelihood Strategies of Young
Chair: Carpanin Marimoutou, University of La Réunion,
Dam Migrants in Guangdong
Reunion Islands
Wing-Chung Ho, The City University of Hong Kong,
Discussant: Florence Pellegry, University of La Réunion,
Hong Kong
Reunion Islands Institutional panel by: University of La Réunion
Migrant Women and Entrepreneurship in China Jing Song, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Literary Figuration of Slaves and Runaway Fugitives (marrons) in Indian Ocean Creole Literature
What are the left-behind left behind? Migration experience,
Carpanin Marimoutou, University of La Réunion,
social capital, and developmental outcomes of children in China
Reunion Islands
Qiaobing Wu, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
From “Indian to indigenous”: the troublesome trajectory of Sri Lankan cinema (1928-1968)
‘Yinju’, a Better Way of Life? Lifestyle Migration in
Vilasnee Tampoe-Hautin, University of La Réunion,
Domestic China
Reunion Islands
Peng Wang, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
90
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 230
PANEL 232
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 4
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 6
AFRICANS IN CHINA AND CHINESE IN AFRICA
HERITAGE, POSTCOLONIALISM, AND CITIES Chair: Mariana Pinto Leitão Pereira, International Institute of Macau, Macau
Africans in China: Race, Identity and Culture Rose Alice Sackeyfio, Winston Salem State University, USA
Of railway and a Clock Tower: Notes on time, mechanisation
Chinese in Africa: an analysis of Chinese restaurants’
Anubhav Pradhan, Jamia Millia Islamia, India
and spatiality in mid-Victorian Delhi employers and employees in Lusaka, Zambia Zhongwen Zhang, Zhejiang Daily Press, China
What’s in a Name: Naming practices, the Colonial Uncanny
Capturing voices on the ground – An ethnographic
Neha Lal, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, India
and Neoliberal Desires in Contemporary Delhi study to uncover perceptions of Confucius Institutes in South Africa
Belonging: A Study of Identity Negotiation of the Chinese
Fenja Monique Rimkus, Hong Kong Polytechnic University,
Peranakan in Phuket, Thailand
Hong Kong
Herbary Yu Zhang, Lingnan University, Hong Kong
‘What is Local?’ – Physical Boundaries and Intangible Values, PANEL 231
George Town World Heritage Site
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 5
Salma Nasution Khoo, Areca Books, Malaysia
ROUNDTABLE - TRANSLATION IMPOSSIBLE: THE ETHICS, POLITICS AND PRAGMATICS OF RADICAL LITERARY TRANSLATION
PANEL 233 22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 7
Convenor and chair: Matthew Pritchard, University of Leeds, United Kingdom
THE MANY FACES OF TOURISM Chair: Anna Romanowicz, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Carola Lorea, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
The Gaze upon Chinese Tourists: a Comparative Study
Daniela Cappello, Heidelberg University, Germany
of Japanese and South Korean Media’s Coverage
Maddalena Italia, SOAS, University of London, United
Seongbin Hwang, Rikkyo University, Japan
Kingdom Noelle Counord, EHESS, France
Adat Resistance: Legal Pluralism, Sacred Space and
Hina Nandrajog, University of Delhi, India
the Resort Development in Benoa Bay, Bali
Arnab Banerji, Loyola Marymount University, USA
Agung Wardana, Gadjah Made University, Indonesia
Matthew Pritchard, University of Leeds, United Kingdom
Voluntourism in Delhi-based NGOs. On mobility as a cultural capital Anna Romanowicz, Jagiellonian University, Poland
Tourism a medium to achieve socio-cultural sustainability in South Asia Kirti Krishan and Desh Deepak Dwivedi, Cluster Innovation Centre, India 91
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 235
PANEL 238
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 9
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 12
NATIONAL INTEGRATION AND THE DIVERGENT ASPIRATIONS: “THE DYNAMICS IN INDONESIA IN RECENT YEARS”
CHANGING FAMILIES AND GENDER RELATIONS
Convenor: Idawati Yara, Indonesian Academy of Sciences,
Single-Parent Family and Academic Achievement in Japan:
Indonesia
A Comparative Analysis of Students in OECD Countries
Chair: Taufik Abdullah, Indonesian academy of Sciences,
Tomohiro Saito, The University of Tokyo, Japan
Chair: Katja Rangsivek, Burapha University, Thailand
Indonesia Institutional panel by: Indonesian Academy of Sciences
Do the Young People in Korea and Japan Give Up Having a Family?: Types of Recognizing Hope and Reality toward
Awaiting an Avalanche in Indonesian Higher Education
Family Formation of the Youth in Korea and Japan
Mayling Oey, University of Indonesia, Indonesia
Miseon Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea Myungkoo Kang, Seoul National University Asia Center,
Indonesia 21st Century Economic Challenges
South Korea
Armida Alisjahbana, Indonesian academy of Sciences, Indonesia
Urban jobs and rural family: Working young people The Political Dynamic of Nation State
in the Mekong Delta, Vietnam
Ramlan Surbakti, Indonesian academy of Sciences, Indonesia
Setsuko Shibuya, Seisa University, Japan
PANEL 236
PANEL 240
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 10
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 14
TURNING LAND INTO CAPITAL: DEVELOPMENT AND DISPOSSESSION IN THE MEKONG REGION
MIGRATORY FORCES: DISRUPTION OR SETTLEMENT?
Convenor and chair: Philip Hirsch, University of Sydney,
Chair: Seo Yeon Park, University of South Carolina, USA
Australia
Advocates for Detained Migrants: The Role of Pro-Migrant Commoditization, consolidation and crony capitalism:
Civic Groups in Japan
the political economy of land governance in Cambodia
Kazue Takamura, McGill University, Canada
Jean-Christophe Diepart, Mekong Region Land Governance, Cambodia
To Be or not to Be a Refugee? Sri Lankan Tamils in Tamil Nadu
Carl Middleton, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Anne-Sophie Bentz, University Paris Diderot, France
Concession development: Timber financing and risk
Mistrusting brothers: institutions, service exchanges and
modulation at Laos’s infrastructure frontier
inhabited memories in South Korean governance of North
Mike Dwyer, University of Bern, Switzerland
Korean settlers Seo Yeon Park, University of South Carolina, USA
Movement, countermovement and regionalization of capital in Thailand’s land relations Philip Hirsch, University of Sydney, Australia
Turning land into capital: responses and resistance Carl Middleton, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
92
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 241
PANEL 243
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 15
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 17
FOOD SECURITY AND CULTURAL RELEVANCE OF TRADITIONAL FERMENTED FOOD SYSTEMS OF ASIA FACING CLIMATE CHANGE
MODERN MONARCHIES IN ASIA: A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Convenor: Yongyut Chalermchat, Chiang Mai University,
Madison, USA
Thailand
Chair and discussant: Laurel Kendall,
Chair: Kalidas Shetty, North Dakota State University, USA
American Museum of Natural History, USA
Institutional panel by: Faculty of Agro-industry, Chiang Mai
Institutional panel by: Association for Asian Studies (AAS)
Convenor: Katherine Bowie, University of Wisconsin-
University
Monarchy in Brunei: Past, Present and Future Korean Diet (K-Diet): Characteristics and Historical Background
Keat Gin Ooi, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia
Dae-Young Kwon, Korea Food Research Institute, South Korea
Ensuring the Success of Democracy in Bhutan – A King’s Vision Fermented foods in India
Sonam Kinga, Upper House, Parliament of Bhutan, Bhutan
Ramakotireddy Kondamadugula, SRI Biosphere Private Lmited, India
Changing Symbolism of the Symbol Emperor Helen Hardacre, Harvard University, USA
Malaysian fermented foods Yaya Rukayadi, University Putra Malaysia, Malaysia PANEL 244
Fermented foods in Thailand
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 18
Chartchai Kanongnuch, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
CHANGING RELATIONS WITH CHINA: FROM THE SILK ROAD TO THE PACIFIC PANEL 242
Chair: Gordon Chi Kai Cheung, Durham University, UK
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 16
Window to A Wider Perspective: Fifteen Century Ming Dynasty
SOCIAL AND MOBILE MEDIA USE IN MALAYSIA: EVERYDAY USES AND LOCAL CONTEXTS
Political Philosophy and Its Maritime Exploits Margaret Chu, Royal Commonwealth Society in Hong Kong
Convenor and chair: Julian Hopkins, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Chinese Foreign Policy Toward Central Asian Nations and Russian Response
Exploring Mobile and Algorithmic Socialities: Whatsapp
Hong-Yi Lien, National Chengchi University, Taiwan
and Facebook in Everyday Malaysia Julian Hopkins, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
The Role of South Asia in China’s Maritime Silk Road Initiative Chien-peng Chung, Lingnan University, Hong Kong
Examining social network site usage in the sociocultural context
Contesting notions of the ‘Pacific Century’
Karen Golden, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia
Thomas Wilkins, University of Sydney, Australia
The Lowyat Racial Brawl on Twitter: Understanding
Chinese NOCs’ acquisitions in Latin America: Motivations,
Online Communication Flows from Offensive and Hate
interests and strategies
Speech to Offline Escalation
Miriam Laura Sanchez, City University of Hong Kong,
Sandra Hanchard, DataViz My, Malaysia
Hong Kong 93
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
PANEL 245
Translating Honor, Valor and Love: On the Late Qing Chinese
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 19
Translated Biographies of Horatio Nelson from Japanese Wendong Cui, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
ROUNDTABLE – ASIAN STUDIES IN LATIN AMERICA & THE GLOBAL SOUTH
Shenzen, China
Convenor and chair: Cláudio Pinheiro, Rio de Janeiro
Thai-ifying the Chinese, Sinonizing the T(h)ais: Academic
Federal University, Brazil
Nationalism and Cultural Diplomacy in the late Cold War Sittithep Eaksittipong, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Lloyd Amoah, Legon Centre for Asian Studies, Ghana Tom Asher, Social Science Research Council, USA Taciana Fisac, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid, Spain
PANEL 247
Amaury Garcia Rodriguez, El Colegio de México, Mexico
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 21
Seth Jacobowitz, Yale University, USA
Silvio Miyazaki, University of São Paulo, Brazil
ROUNDTABLE – GLOBAL DISCOURSE, STATE POLICY AND LOCAL IMPACTS OF HERITAGE-MAKING IN ASIA
Marina de Regt, VU University Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Convenors: Yew-Foong Hui, Hong Kong Shue Yan University,
Paul van der Velde, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Hong Kong, Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao, Academia Sinica,
the Netherlands
Taiwan, Shu-Li Wang, Academia Sinica, Taiwan and
Ignacio Villagran, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina
Philippe Peycam, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Sheyla Zandonai, University of Macau, Macau
the Netherlands
José Luís Sales Marques, Institute of European Studies of Macau, Macau
Yew-Foong Hui, Hong Kong Shue Yan University, Hong Kong PANEL 246
Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University, USA
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 20
Lynn Meskell, Stanford University, USA Liling Huang, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
TRANSNATIONAL CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS AND ASIA
Gertjan Plets, Utrecht University, the Netherlands
Convenor and chair: Sittithep Eaksittipong, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
PANEL 248 22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 22
Remaking Civilization: The Anglo-American Left and China, 1900-1922 Dongqing Wang, Guangdong University of Foreign Studies, China
SPIRITS, DEITIES AND DIVINATION: COMPARATIVE APPROACHES TO RITUAL IN MAINLAND SOUTHEAST ASIA III Convenors: Peter Jackson, Australian National University,
From “Countryman” to “Cosmopolitan”: Late Qing
Australia, Bénédicte Brac de la Perrière, Centre Asie du
Intellectuals Encountering Western Urban Modernity
Sud-Est, CNRS/EHESS, France
Zheng Lin, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzen,
Chair: Erick White, Cornell University, USA
China
Simultaneous Possessions: Space, Place and Time in Northern Thai Spirit Mediumship Irene Stengs, Meertens Institute, the Netherlands
94
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
22 JULY / AFTERNOON SESSIONS
The Buddhist-Mediumistic Pantheon in Northeast
Alexandra Dalferro, Cornell University, USA
Thailand: A Symbiotic Relationship
Annie Heckman, University of Toronto, Canada
Visisya Pinthongvijayakul, Chandrakasem Rajabhat
Antonia Behan, Bard College, USA
University, Thailand
Kathleen Gutierrez, University of California, Berkeley, USA Meredyth Lynn Winter, Harvard University, USA
Engaging With Spirits Of The Dead In Cambodia –
Rajarshi Sengupta, University of British Columbia, Canada
Negotiations Between Buddhist And Spirited Practices
Sandra Sardjono, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Paul Christensen, Georg-August Universität Göttingen,
Sophie Pitman, Columbia University, USA
Germany
Yin Cai, University of Chicago, USA
Ritual Propitiation Of Child Spirits In Thailand: Haunting Fetuses And Playful Ghosts
PANEL 251
Megan Sinnott, Georgia State University, USA
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 25
PANEL 249
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – CHINESE–JAPANESE RELATIONS
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 23
Chair: Patrick Hein, Meiji University, Japan
REPRESENTATION OF THE LOST PARADISE AND POSTCOLONIAL (RE)IMAGINATION: COLONIAL ARCHIVE, RACIAL SCIENCE AND MEDIA RECOGNITION OF THE TROPICAL ZONES
A Sociocultural Analysis of Motivation forLearning the Japanese
Convenor and chair: Yongwoo Lee, New York University, USA
Language in Contemporary Hong Kong – PhD Pitch Kazuyuki Nomura, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong S.A.R. Discussant: Kayoko Hashimoto, The University of Queensland, Australia
Imaginary Topography of the Colonized Mind : Transwar Korean Popular Music and the Enchanted Colonial Subject
Inheritance and the Life of the Cantonese Migrants in
between Military Fanaticism and Tropical Malady/Melody
Yokohama Chinatown – Case Study on Shatenki and the Xie
Yongwoo Lee, New York University, USA
Family – PhD Pitch Yee Lam Elim Wong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Torrid Fictions in American (U.S.) Photographs of the
Hong Kong S.A.R.
“Philippine Islands” 1898-1946 J. Pilapil Jacobo, Ateneo de Manila University, the Philippines
Learning from the Rising Sun: Japanese Presence in Hong Kong in the 1970s and 1980s – PhD Pitch Wilson Wai Shing Lee, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
PANEL 250
Hong Kong S.A.R.
22 JULY / 14.15 – 16.00 / ROOM 24
Pathways of Transculturation: Chinese Cultural Encounters
WEAVING KNOWLEDGE: LANNA WEAVING AND DYEING
with Russia and Japan (1880-1930) – PhD Pitch Xiaolu Ma, Harvard University, China
Convenors: Pamela H. Smith, Columbia University, USA, Nussara Tiengkate, Jai-Sook Studio, Thailand, Annapurna Mamidipudi, University of Maastricht, the
PANEL 252
Netherlands, and Non Arkaraprasertkul, University
22 JULY / 16.00 – 16.30 / EXHIBITION AREA
of Sydney, Australia
POSTER PRESENTATIONS Please see Panel 101. 95
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 253
PANEL 255
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 1
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 3
CONTEMPORARY ART, SOCIETY AND REPRESENTATION IN ASIA I
“FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS?”: INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO MOBILITY, DIASPORAS AND CONTESTED IDENTITIES OF ASIAN MIGRANTS
Convenor and chair: Edwin Jurriens, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Convenor and chair: Naomi Chi, Hokkaido University, Japan
Intertwined ecologies: environmental aesthetics in Indonesian
Discussant: Hirofumi Utsumi, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan
contemporary art Edwin Jurriens, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Growing Pains?: Foreign Brides in Japan and Korea Naomi Chi, Hokkaido University, Japan
Art and institution: the politics of representation of contemporary art Chui Fun Selina Ho, The University of Melbourne, Australia
’Not in my name’: Transformation of Identity in Contemporary British Muslim Writings Hisae Komatsu, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan
Relating to Asian Art in the Twenty-First Century Michelle Antoinette, Australian National University, Australia
Transnational Anti-caste Movement & identity in British Society Maya Suzuki, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan
PANEL 254
Characteristics of the Community of Overseas Vietnamese
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 2
Yukino Tsutsui, Otemon Gakuin University, Japan
ORALITY & SOCIETY: WRITING NON-LITERATE CULTURE, PERFORMANCE AND MEMORY IN CONTEMPORARY ASIA AND PACIFIC ISLANDS
PANEL 257 23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 5
Convenor and chair: Reiko Iida, Kyoto University, Japan
“Writing” Cultural Image: A Case study of Palau,
AID, INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND DEVELOPMENT IN ASIA
Micronesia in the West Pacific Islands
Chair: Kearrin Sims, James Cook University, Australia
Akari Konya, Ochanomizu University, Japan
Development Cooperation with Chinese Characteristics: The Speakers of Monastic Sign Language: Cases
A view from Laos
of Germany and Japan
Kearrin Sims, James Cook University, Australia
Kanako Shibata, University of Tsukuba, Japan
Post-tsunami seascapes: Discourses of identity and the The Impact of Hujum Factory on the Gender Norms
politics of claiming rights in Southern India
of Rural Uzbekistan during the Soviet Period
Sally Beckenham, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Fumoto Sono, Hokkaido University, Japan
Transitions in Space, Frames and Discourse: Myanmar, Toward Writing about Popular Culture: A Case Study
Thailand and the Social Movement Network of Dawei
on Lāvnī in the State of Maharashtra, India
Anselm Feldmann, University of Birmingham,
Reiko Iida, Kyoto Univeristy, Japan
United Kingdom
96
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 259
PANEL 260
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 7
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 8
LOCAL TRANSFORMATIONS AND THE RECONFIGURATIONS OF SOCIAL HIERARCHIES AND MOBILIZATION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
ROUNDTABLE – CONNECTED UNIVERSITIES, ENGAGED CURRICULA I (CLOSED MEETING)
Convenor and chair: Ratna Saptari, Leiden University,
Thailand and Philippe Peycam, International Institute for
the Netherlands
Asian Studies, the Netherlands
Convenors: Avorn Opatpatanakit, Chiang Mai University,
Chairs: Aarti Kawlra, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Capital mobility, corporate paternalism and the labour
Leiden, the Netherlands and Chayan Vaddhanaphuti, Chiang
process in the Indonesian cigarette industry
Mai University, Thailand
Ratna Saptari, Leiden University, the Netherlands Tin Tin Aung, Mandalay University, Myanmar
Gender, identity and labour politics in the Batik production
Penda Ba, Université Gaston Berger, Saint Louis, Senegal
chain: The case of home-workers in Central Java
Madhurjya Bezbaruah, Gawuhati University Northeast India
Ina Hunga, Satya Wacana Christian University, Indonesia
Studies Centre, India Wan-Chen Chang, Taipei National University of the Arts,
Understanding the fluidity of hierarchy: A study of the
Taiwan
small-scale miners and Benguet Mining Corporation in
Jo-Shui Chen, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Itogon, Benguet, the Philippines
Albert Chau, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong
Marie Joyce Godio, Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact, Thailand
Min-Chin Chiang, Taipei National University of the Arts, Taiwan
The gender and generational dimension of rural dispossession
Duncan Dobbelman, Bennington College, Vermont, USA
in Myanmar: from resistance and mobilization to identity
Hans van Ess, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Germany
and self-determination
Carol Gluck, Columbia University, USA
Clara Park, International Institute of Social Studies, the
Myunkoo Kang, Seoul National University Asia Center,
Netherlands
South Korea Hsi-Chuan Liu, Taipei National University of the Arts, Taiwan Judi Mesman, Leiden University College, the Netherlands Samuel Kwame Offei, University of Ghana, Ghana Isabel Roche, Bennington College, Vermont, USA Sanjay Kumar Sharma, Ambedkar University Delhi, India Françoise Vergès, College d’etudes Mondiales, France Chuong-Dai Vo, Asia Art Archive, Hong Kong
97
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 261
Changing Marine Resources in Japan: Abalone, Kelp,
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 9
Sea urchin Kazunobu Ikeya, National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
KAREN EDUCATION FROM BOTH SIDES AT BOTH SIDES OF THE THAI-MYANMAR BORDER
Reduction of transaction costs: a case study of the market
Convenor, chair and discussant: Shirley Worland,
Hiroyoshi Karashima, National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
economy of Mongolian pastoralists
Chiang Mai University, Thailand
The nexus of literacy/non-literacy and development
Indigenous trading networks across the Bering Strait
of refuges living on the Thai-Myanmar border zones
from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries
Shirley Worland, Chiang Mai University, Thailand
Nobuhiro Kishigami, National Museum of Ethnology Japan
Education uncertainty as Karen youth prepare for
PANEL 263
repatriation to their homeland
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 11
Sutthida Keereepaibool, Regional Of Social Science and Sustainable Development (RCSD), Thailand
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND CHANGING WORLD VIEWS IN RURAL CAMBODIA I
Building capacity for young highlander children
Convenor and discussant: Frédéric Bourdier, IRD, Cambodia
through education
Chair: Astrid Norén-Nilsson, Lund University, Sweden
Vinai Boonlue, Seven Fountains Jesuit Retreat Center, Thailand
Cash crops: a good deal for Cambodian farmers? Seng Suon, Centre for Development Oriented Research in
Karen Knowledge Networks and Transitional
Agriculture and Livelihood Systems (CENTDOR), Cambodia
Community Based Organizations Nexus in Hpa’an, Karen State, Myanmar
Grassroots Movements Lobbying the International Finance
Saw Kay Ramoe Wae, Burma Children Medical Fund,
Corporation
Thailand
Frédéric Bourdier, IRD, Cambodia
Peasants, Land Struggles and State Formation Processes PANEL 262
in Contemporary Cambodia
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 10
Jean-Christophe Diépart, Mekong Region Land Governance, Cambodia
PRODUCTION AND DISTRIBUTION OF NATURAL RESOURCES IN NORTHEAST ASIA
Oeur Il, Analyzing Development Issues Center, Cambodia
Convenor: Hiroyoshi Karashima, National Museum
Chanrith Ngin, Royal University of Phnom Penh, Cambodia
of Ethnology, Japan Chair: Kazunobu Ikeya,
The Last Khmer Rouge Bastion in Pailin: Frontier, Capitalism
National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
and Coercion
Discussant: Sakkarin Na Nan,
Krisna Uk, Association for Asian Studies, United Kingdom
Rajamangala University of Technology, Thailand Institutional panel by: National Museum of Ethnology
98
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 264
PANEL 266
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 12
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 14
MEDIA AND GENDER: IMAGE PROJECTING
EAST ASIAN INTELLECTUAL NETWORKS
Chair: Tracy K. Lee, Chu Hai College of Higher Education,
Chair: Matthew West, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Televising the Cosmopolitan Subject: Male Images on the
Narrative, Actor-Networks, and Materiality: Steps Towards
Chinese TV Screen
an Anthropology of Knowledge with Responsibility from
Geng Song, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Taiwan’s Knowledge Economy Matthew West, The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
Neoliberal subjectivity of (Hong) Kong girls in the
Hong Kong
social media Tracy K. Lee, Chu Hai College of Higher Education,
Theosophical network between modern China and Japan:
Hong Kong
focusing on Wu Ting-fang and H. P. Shastri’s Theosophical movement
Performing Televisual Malay: The Feminizing of ‘Senario’
Chienhui Chuang, Osaka University, Japan
Luqman Lee, SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom
Chinese Intellectuals’ Organization for a United Asia: Of martyred women and crying men: Gender in popular
The Minzu Guoji in 1930s’ Guomindang Writing
Philippine loveteam films.
Craig Smith, Australian National University, Australia
Chrishandra Sebastiampillai, Monash University Malaysia, Malaysia PANEL 268
“The Transgender Body in Performance”. Performing Arts
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 16
and Transgender Identity in India: Case of the Jogappas Prerna Subramanian, Indian Institute of Technology
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN VIETNAM
Gandhinagar, India
Convenor and chair: Andrew Wells-Dang, Independent scholar, Vietnam
The Dynamics of Political and Economic Participation among Disadvantaged Groups in Vietnam Tran Lam Nguyen, Oxfam in Vietnam, Vietnam
Institutional Paradox: Fragments and Partial Openings in the Structure of Power in Vietnam Nhu Truong, McGill University, Canada
Prospects for political change in Vietnam: A review of “transition” theories Andrew Wells-Dang, Independent scholar, Vietnam
99
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 269
Marginalization Ulama in Sharia Politics in Aceh Selatan
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 17
Willy Purna Samadhi, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
SECURITY CHALLENGES IN THE ASIA PACIFIC
Clients, Citizens, Voters: Ambiguities of preferences and
Convenor and chair: Tai Wei Lim, Singapore University
persistent patronage in Sumatra, Indonesia
of Social Sciences, Singapore
Deasy Simandjuntak, ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute, Singapore
Discussant: Zhengqi Panj, Singapore University of Social Sciences, Singapore
Labor movements amidst democratic consolidation in the
Economics and War in Asia: The Politics of International
Ruel Dupan Caricativo, University of the Philippines Baguio,
Trade in Value-Added
The Philippines
Philippines and Indonesia, 1986-2016
Zhengqi Pan, Singapore University of Social Sciences, Singapore
Mapping Democratisation: A Tale of Indonesia and Myanmar Sonu Trivedi, Zakir Husain Delhi College, University of Delhi,
Mother’s Beloved and a Secret War
India
Kit Ying Lye, Singapore University of Social Sciences, Singapore PANEL 271
Lesser Known ‘Essential Industries’: Leather, Tanneries,
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 19
Footwear and Wartime Expropriation in Thailand, 1940-1945 Thomas Bruce, SOAS, University of London, United Kingdom
INTERFAITH TRANSLATION AND DIALOGUE Chair: Emilie Wellfelt, University of Cologne, Sweden
Who will guard the guardians? Hong Kong cop films and the anxieties of accountability
Buddhist Iconography in “Islamic” Paintings of Century Asia
Janice Kam, Singapore University of Social Sciences,
and Iran: 13th-15th Centuries
Singapore
Yusen Yu, Heidelberg University, Germany
After Street Warfare: What gives? A case study of
The Meaning of Faith: A Dialogue between Buddhism and
Post-Occupy Central movement in Hong Kong
Islam
Tai Wei Lim, Singapore University of Social Sciences,
Abdulla Galadari, Al-Maktoum College, United Arab Emirates
Singapore
Kakure Kirishitan Survivors Roger Vanzila Munsi, Nanzan University, Japan PANEL 270 23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 18
The National Bible Society of Scotland’s Annotations on the Chinese Gospel of Mark: A Means to Mediate between the
DEMOCRACY, DECENTRALIZATION, AND LOCAL POLITICS I: SOUTHEAST ASIA
George Kam Wah Mak, Hong Kong Baptist University,
Chair: Hans Hägerdal, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Hong Kong
From Bullet to Ballot, Indonesia’s Assymetrical
The Paradox of Gandhian Secularism: The Metaphysical
Decentralization Policy : Case Studies of Nanggroe Aceh
Implication behind Gandhi’s ‘Individualization of Religion’
Darussalam and Papua
Eijiro Hazama, University of Tokyo, Japan
Umi Lestari, Gadjah Mada University, Indonesia
100
Bible and Its Chinese Readers
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING SESSIONS
PANEL 273
PANEL 275
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 21
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 23
POSITIONING NORTH EAST INDIA I: MATERIAL CULTURE, REPRESENTATION, GENDER
COLONIAL HISTORY OF INDIA, 18TH-20TH CENTURY Chair: Alex McKay, Australian National University, Australia
Convenor: Surajit Sarkar, Ambedkar University Delhi, India Chair: Dharitri Chakravartty, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
Fair Game: Cross-Cultural Bargain Hunting in Eighteenth
Institutional panel by: Centre for Community Knowledge and
Century India and Denmark
the North East Forum, Ambedkar University
Josefine Baark, Independent Scholar, Hong Kong
Nature, Culture & Science: Entomophagy in North Eastern India
The Artifice of Trust as Procedure. The Production of Formality
Oinam Helmata Devi, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
and Informality on Monetary Markets in Late Colonial Northern India
Perception of food, dress & identity beyond cultural boundaries
Sebastian Schwecke, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Gangmumei Kamei, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
the Netherlands
Reading Gender in Writing Culture in India’s North East Region
The Development of Bombay City after the Opening of the
Lovitoli Jimo, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
Railway in the Mid-Nineteenth Century Michihiro Ogawa, Kanazawa University, Japan
PANEL 274 23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 22
Beyond Katherine Mayo and Mother India: Sustaining a Radical Politics of Caste and Gender in Late Colonial India Uma Ganesan, Manchester University, USA
FUNERALS AND DEATHSCAPES I Chair: Tani Sebro, Miami University, USA
The revolutionaries of Anushilan Samiti in Bengal and their
Material Consecrations in Early Modern Transfers: Surfaces
Keka Duttaroy, Prafulla Chandra College, India
interprovincial connections in Tippera (1935-1947) and Sacred Bodies Linking South East Asian, China, and Europe Marco Musillo, Kunsthistorisches Institut, Italy
“Can Ghosts Die?”: Repositioning Magico-religious Belief Systems, Materiality and Modernity in Contemporary Southeast Asia Zarina Muhammad, LaSalle College of the Arts, Singapore
Death Rituals Make Heroes: Funerals for Civilians Killed by Political Violence and their Political Role in Thailand Katja Rangsivek, Burapha University, Thailand
Visualizing Death and the Corpse: Perspectives on Postmortem-Photography in India Uwe Skoda, Aarhus University, Denmark
101
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MORNING > MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 277
PANEL 279
23 JULY / 9.15 - 11.00 / ROOM 25
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 2
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – CHINESE ART
ARCHAEOLOGY IN INDIA III
Chair: Isabelle Huber, Independent scholar, Switzerland
Chair: Alexander Stolyarov, Institute of Oriental Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia
Representations and Urban Interventions: Visual Arts in Contemporary China – Book Presentation
Regional Harappan Culture of NW Haryana, India:
Minna Valjakka, National University of Singapore, Singapore
An Assessment of Hakra and Sothi- Siswal Ceramics in light of Recent Excavations
Body in the Forbidden City – PhD Pitch
Amit Ranjan, Banaras Hindu University, India
Peng Liu, Macau University of Science Technology, Macau
Salient features of transition from Palaeolithic to Mesolithic Death, Sacrifice and Monumentality: Study of the Cultural
in Middle Son valley in Sidhi Region: Madhya Pradesh
Materials in the Work of Chen Zhen, Gu Wenda and Huang
Sunil Kumar Singh, Banaras Hindu University, India
Yong Ping – PhD Pitch Remy Jarry, China Academy of Art, China
Cultural Transformation of Harappans (An Assessment of legacy in Ganga Valley)
Gulangyu - Book Presentation
Anupriya Rai, Banaras Hindu University, India
Qing Mei, Tongji University, China PANEL 280 PANEL 278
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 3
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 1
CONTEMPORARY ART, SOCIETY AND REPRESENTATION IN ASIA II
ECONOMIC, POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL DYNAMICS OF BORDERLANDS IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Convenor and chair: Edwin Jurriens, University of Melbourne,
Convenor: Yekti Maunati, Indonesian Institute of Sciences,
Australia
Indonesia Chair: Sri Purwaningsih, Indonesian Institute of Sciences,
Memory and the Avant Garde: Exploring Trauma in Indonesian
Indonesia
Conceptual Art Practices, 1970s-1980s
Discussant: Taufik Abdullah, Indonesian Academy
Wulandani Dirgantoro, Forum Transregionale Studien,
of Sciences, Indonesia
Germany
Is transformation from Cross Border to International The Edible Archive: Reflections on Lina Adam’s The Culinary
trade possible? Case study from the Border Areas between
History of Singapore Performance Art Re-presented
Nunukan Regency of North Kalimantan and Tawau-Sabah
Francis Maravillas, University of Technology Sydney, Australia
I Ketut Ardhana, Udayana University, Indonesia
Sites of Resistance in Southeast Asia
Living in the Border Areas of Indonesia and Malaysia:
Yu Jin Seng, University of Melbourne, Australia
Potentials and Challenges Sri Purwaningsih, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Indonesia
Borders Development in Vietnam: Trade and Traders in the Lao Bao Cross-border Area Lamijo lamijo, Indonesian Institute of Sciences, Indonesia 102
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 281
PANEL 284
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 4
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 7
ROUNDTABLE – INDIA’S FOREIGN POLICY 2014-2017: REFLECTIONS AND PERSPECTIVES
OPPOSITION TO LAND GRABBING IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Convenor and chair: Arndt Michael, University of Freiburg,
Chair: Lincoln L. Lewis, Independent Researcher
Germany
& Architect, Singapore
Arndt Michael, University of Freiburg, Germany
Can National and International Legal Frameworks Mitigate
Alexander E. Davis, La Trobe University, Australia
Land Grabbing and Dispossession in Southeast Asia?
Piyanat Soikham, University of St Andrews, United Kingdom
Andreas Neef, University of Auckland, New Zealand
Barbara Kratiuk, University of Warsaw, Poland
Rubber plantation and changes in livelihoods in Northern Laos and Northern Shan State: What creates different gender PANEL 282
outcomes?
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 5
Kyoko Kusakabe, Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand
URBANIZATION: REFLECTING ON THE PAST, ENVISIONING THE FUTURE
Spaces for participation: gendered experiences and responses
Chair: Napong Tao Rugkhapan, University of Michigan, USA
Rosa de Vos, Wageningen University, the Netherlands
to palm oil plantation development in West Kalimantan Izabela Anna Stacewicz, University of Reading, United
The Notion of Public Space as it is Understood Through
Kingdom
the Double Lens of “Western” versus “Eastern” Discourse: a Case Study of Tokyo
Land acquisition for industrial plantation development
Zdenka Havlova, University of Tokyo, Japan
in Indonesia during the era of free, prior and informed consent (FPIC)
Borderland marginality and memory: Colonial and
Afrizal Afrizal, Andalas University, Indonesia
postcolonial encounters refashioning indigenous spaces and identity in the Chittagong Hill of Bangladesh Monojit Chakma, Primeasia University, Bangladesh
PANEL 285
Mirko Guaralda, Queensland University of Technology,
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 8
Australia
From a village in the foothills of the Himalayas to a big city :
ROUNDTABLE – CONNECTED UNIVERSITIES, ENGAGED CURRICULA II (CLOSED MEETING)
Tracing the urban growth of Siliguri in Norh Bengal, India
Convenor: Avorn Opatpatanakit, Chiang Mai University,
Karubaki Datta, North Bengal University, India
Thailand and Philippe Peycam, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
The Creative City and Southeast Asian Cities
Chairs: Aarti Kawlra, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Phitchakan Chuangchai, University of Warwick,
Leiden, the Netherlands and Chayan Vaddhanaphuti, Chiang
United Kingdom
Mai University, Thailand
Victor Sassoon and the “Magical Buildings” of Shanghai
Please see Panel 260: Roundtable – Connected Universities,
Po Yin Stephanie Chung, Hong Kong Baptist University,
Engaged Curricula I for the list of partcipants
Hong Kong
103
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 286
The integration of a former Khmer Rouge stronghold
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 9
into the Cambodian national territory. Land management,
DISCREPANT STUDENT MOBILITIES AND UNLIKELY DESTINATIONS IN CHINA, VIETNAM, AND THE PHILIPPINES
Anne Guillou, French National Center of Scientific Research,
Convenor and chair: Yasmin Ortiga, National University
From a river to a lake: dam building, local memories and
of Singapore, Singapore
transformation of interethnic relationships in Northern Laos
Discussant: Francis Collins, University of Auckland,
Olivier Evrard, French National Research Institute for
New Zealand
Sustainable Development, France
Transnational Education, English and the Idea of ‘the West’:
Local reaction and adaptation to government’ flood
tourist development and ritual activities Cambodia
Globalizing and Encountering a Regional University in Vietnam
management projects: Water communities of West Bangkok
Le Ha Phan, University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA
Prin Jhearmaneechotechai, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Producing Future Migrant Workers for the World: Constructing the Unlikely Education Hub in Manila Yasmin Ortiga, National University of Singapore, Singapore
PANEL 288 23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 11
Compromise, chance, and complicity in international student university
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND CHANGING WORLD VIEWS IN RURAL CAMBODIA II
Peidong Yang, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
Convenor and chair: Frédéric Bourdier, IRD, Cambodia
mobility: Indian medical students at a provincial Chinese
Discussant: Astrid Norén-Nilsson, University of Lund, Sweden PANEL 287 23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 10
Social Mobilisation and the Making of Cambodian Citizenship Today: Social Movements, Party Politics and Individuals
RESHAPING LANDSCAPES IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: MACRO POLICIES AND LOCAL IMAGINARIES
Astrid Norén-Nilsson, University of Lund, Sweden
Convenor: Stéphane Rennesson, IRASEC, Thailand
Articulating diverse frameworks of action - Reflections on
Chair and discussant: Gopa Samanta, The University
ongoing processes of claiming rights as Bunong villagers
of Burdwan, India
confronted to economic corporations in Bu Sra, Cambodia
Institutional panel by: IRASEC
Neth Prak, Bunong Indigenous People Association, Cambodia
Embedded cosmos and forest managements
Foreign aid and social movements in Cambodia
Abigaël Pesses, IRASEC, Thailand
Sokphea Young, The University of Melbourne, Australia
Dwelling with Nagas and beetles in Thailand
Emerging Roles of the Self-Help Communities and Their
Stéphane Rennesson, IRASEC, Thailand
Resistance Power to the State: Case Studies of Indigenous People Communities in Cambodia Chandara Khun, Open Development Cambodia (ODC), Cambodia
104
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 289
PANEL 291
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 12
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 14
THE INFLUENCE OF (NEW) MEDIA ON SOCIETY-PERSPECTIVES AND CHALLENGES FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES
EAST ASIAN ‘INTELLECTUAL FEVERS’ Chair: Ady Van den Stock, International Institute for Asian Studies, the Netherlands
Convenor: Poothullil Mathew Martin, University of Mumbai, India
The making of a liberal exemplar: Chu Anping and modern
Chair and discussant: Sunder Rajdeep,
Chinese intellectual biography
University of Mumbai, India
William Sima, Australian National University, Australia
Institutional panel by: University of Mumbai
Historical reflections on the concept of “wisdom” in the Health Communication Leads to Prevention of Disabilities
context of modern Chinese intellectual history
Among School Children
Ady Van den Stock, International Institute for Asian Studies,
Humayun Jafri, University of Mumbai, India
the Netherlands
Poothullil Mathew Martin, University of Mumbai, India
The Epistemological Import of the Analects Marginalization of Persons with Disability in Leading
Kelly Agra, University of the Philippines Baguio,
National Newspaper Dailies of South Asia Countries
The Philippines
– a Content Analysis Study Sagar Bhalerao, Rizvi College of Arts, Science and Commerce, India
PANEL 293 23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 16
Communication Patterns in Public Service Advertisements Sunder Rajdeep, University of Mumbai, India
PARADIGMATIC DILEMMAS OF STATE AND REGIMES: POLITICAL ORDER AND DEMOCRACY IN EAST AND SOUTHEAST ASIA
A Short Study on the Effects of Public Service Advertisement
Convenor: Nhu Truong, McGill University, Canada
– The Challenges and Barriers for Persons with Disabilities.
on Gender Bias in Accessible and Non-Accessible Format Amrin Moger, University of Mumbai, India
State-Building and Democratization: The Sequencing Debate and Evidence from East Asia Tuong Vu, University of Oregon, USA
State Formation in Thailand Erik Kuhonta, McGill University, Canada
Authoritarian Responsiveness: Social Unrest and Legislative Developments in Vietnam and China Nhu Truong, McGill University, Canada
105
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 295
Towards an Indigenous Poetics of Northeast India
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 18
Shelmi SanKhil, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
DEMOCRACY, DECENTRALIZATION, AND LOCAL POLITICS II: SOUTH ASIA
Spiritualism, Superstition and Politics among the Bodos
Chair: Hans Hägerdal, Linnaeus University, Sweden
Dharitri Chakravartty, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
Democratization in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan
Identity, Politics and Marginalisation in North Bengal
(2002-2013).
Rinju Rasaily, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
of Assam
Zahid Anwar, University of Peshawar, Pakistan
Politics of the Peripheral Space: Locating Assam in the Democratic Deepening in India : Some Predicaments
Asian Landscape
Sohini Guha, University of Delhi, India
Ivy Dhar, Ambedkar University Delhi, India
Protean Institution: The impact of the changing composition of parliament on Indian democracy
PANEL 299
Ronojoy Sen, National University of Singapore, Singapore
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 22
The Environmental Question in Kerala, South India:
FUNERALS AND DEATHSCAPES II
A Critical Perspective on State - Civil Society Relations
Chair: Tani Sebro, Miami University, USA
Darley Jose Kjosavik, Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU), Norway
Death Business: The Development of Chinese Funeral Industry in Malaysia
Decentralization and Patron-Client Relations: Implications
Miau Ing Tan, University of Malaya, Malaysian Chinese
for Public Service Delivery in the Case of Chittagong City
Research Center, Malaysia
Corporation in Bangladesh Mamtaj Uddin Ahmed, City University of Hong Kong,
Reconstructing Migrant Lives from Death Registers:
Hong Kong
A Case Study of Hokkien Cemetery in Kuala Lumpur Heong Hong Por, University of Malaya, Malaysian Chinese Research Center, Malaysia
PANEL 298 23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 21
Moral Regulations of Deathscapes in China: A Feng Shui
POSITIONING NORTH EAST INDIA II: IMAGINING LIVED SPACES
Yan Ding, National University of Singapore, Singapore
Convenor and chair: Surajit Sarkar, Ambedkar University
Death, Mourning, and Mental States: Early Confucian Texts
Delhi, India
on Mortuary Concepts, Practices, and Affective Behavior
Institutional panel by: Centre for Community Knowledge
Ulrike Middendorf, University of Heidelberg, Germany
Perspective
and the North East Forum, Ambedkar University
Pluralism, Subjectivity, and Modes of Religious Authority in Contemporary Urban Shanghai Funerals Huwy-min Liu, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong
106
ICAS 10
PANEL SCHEDULE
20-23 JULY 2017
23 JULY / MIDDAY SESSIONS
PANEL 300
Neoliberal labour migration regimes and changing class
23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 23
identities of migrants: the case of Nepal-South Korea
CROSSING EURASIA, 1948-1991: BORDERS, MOBILITY, AND ENCOUNTERS IN COLD WAR
Seonyoung Seo, National University of Singapore,
migrations – PhD Pitch South Korea
Convenor: Boram Shin, Asia-Pacific Research Center at Hanyang University, South Korea
“Eating alone is painful”: An interdisciplinary and
Chair: Siddharth Saxena, Cambridge Central Asia Forum,
ethnographically inspired sociolinguistic investigation
United Kingdom
into Vietnamese meal – PhD Pitch Duyen Thi Mai Dang, Massey University, New Zealand
Central Asia as Soviet window to the Asian Third World before and after Sino-Soviet split: Instrumentalisation of Islam and Regionalisation of Socialism? Nikolay Murashkin, Griffith Asia Institute, Australia
Between Two Asias: Soviet Koreans in North Korea, 1952-1958 Boram Shin, Asia-Pacific Research Center at Hanyang University, South Korea
Borders, Identities and Nationness in the Socialist ‘Asian Periphery’ Diana Kudaibergenova, Lund University, Sweden
PANEL 302 23 JULY / 11.30 – 13.15 / ROOM 25
BOOK & PHD PRESENTATIONS – MIGRATION Chair: Tina Shrestha, National University of Singapore, Singapore
From Outsiders to In-Betweens: Identity Negotiation of Southeast Asian Female Migrants in Hong Kong – PhD Pitch Herbary Yu Zhang, Lingnan University, Hong Kong S.A.R.
Bangladeshi Migrant workers in Brunei: Migration, Employment and Networking Process – PhD Pitch Rayhena Sarker, Institute of Asian Studies, University Brunei Darussalam, Brunei Darussalam
107
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This unique online collection provides students and researchers with the declassified documentary record about the successes and failures of the U.S. intelligence community in the Far East during the Cold War (1945-1991). Particular emphasis is given to America’s principal antagonists in Asia during the Cold War era: the People’s Republic of China, North Korea and North Vietnam. However, countries such as Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines, Malaysia, Singapore and Australia are covered as well.
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CSEAS CSEAS is Japan’s premier research Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS), Kyoto University. Founded in 1963, the Center has been committed to research in the region and conducts transdisciplinary cutting edge research across a broad range of areas. CSEAS is oriented toward life-oriented research approaches attuned to region diversity and forming academic networks that deal with transnational issues.
PROJECTS CSEAS promotes large-scale projects and is a founding member of the consortium for Southeast Asian Studies in Asia (SEASIA) (est 2013). It currently runs the Japan-ASEAN platform for transdisciplinary studies (2016-21) and the Japan-ASEAN Science, Technology and Innovation Platform: Promotion of Sustainable Development Research (JASTIP)(2015-19), among others.
CSEAS houses one of the most comprehensive collections of materials on Southeast Asia in Japan. With over 250,000 items including special collections and original materials in vernacular languages, the library is an essential foundation for the promotion of research activities. It also receives visiting librarians as foreign fellows.
CSEAS JOURNALS Open Access Online Journal
RESEARCH
Southeast Asian Studies published three times a year ISSN: 2186-7275 ISSN: 2423-8686
th Sou east
CSEAS MONOGRAPHS ian Stud As A s in sia ie
CSEAS offers scholars and post-doctoral researchers opportunities for interdisciplinary and international research. It’s renowned fellowship program offers a space to conduct research and exchange ideas in a rich research environment.
LIBRARY
SEA IA S
Kyoto CSEAS Series on Asia Studies
Moral Politics in the Philippines: Inequality, Democracy and the Urban Poor Wataru Kusaka NUS Press and Kyoto University Press,2017
The Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs examines political, social and economic developments in the region, as well as intra-regional and transregional relations. www.CurrentSoutheastAsianAffairs.org
The Journal of Current Chinese Affairs offers insights into current developments in Greater China and into China’s contemporary and future role in the region and beyond. www.CurrentChineseAffairs.org Contributions to our internationally refereed academic journals are welcome. Please check the websites for more information. Join our panels at ICAS 10, incl. “Populism in Southeast Asia” (convened by A. Ufen and M. Bünte) and “Authoritarianism in the Making (Taiwan)” (convened by I. Cheng). Meet the editors and staff of both journals at ICAS 10 in the exhibition hall at booth A9.
Anzeige_Journals_neu.indd 1
15.05.2017 10:41:36
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initiative to position the National University of Singapore as a leader in global Asian Studies. Attuned to Asia’s interconnectedness and its deepening integration at the local level, the CAS PhD program was established in recognition that future thought leaders would require a thorough understanding of Asian dynamics in breadth and depth. One of the program’s distinctive features is its attention to inter-Asian connections across regional boundaries and cultural zones. Our specially tailored curriculum provides an innovative, interdisciplinary training for students interested in the critical analysis of the myriad links that span Asia’s regions and sub-regions. Housed within a robust Asian Studies Division and complimenting existing PhD programs in East, Southeast, Northeast and South Asia, the CAS program is part of a vibrant intellectual community that is a pillar of graduate studies in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences. The opportunity to experience Asia from the inside-out, rather than gazing at it from afar, provides a nuanced understanding of the region’s dynamics and global trajectories. Our position within and proximity to Asia’s many regions constitutes a distinct advantage for students in the CAS PhD program who are excited by the prospect of We look forward to you joining us in Singapore & becoming a member of the Asian Studies community at NUS.
Visit our website at http://www.fas.nus.edu.sg/cas. For further inquiries, please contact Dr. Maitrii Aung-Thwin, email: hismvat@nus.edu.sg.
Bringing Southeast Asia to the World The Rise of China and the Chinese Overseas: A Study of Beijing’s Changing Policy in Southeast Asia and Beyond Leo Suryadinata
Southeast Asian Affairs 2017
The Veil of Circumstance: Technology, Values, Dehumanization and the Future of Economics and Politics
edited by Daljit Singh and Malcolm Cook US$42.90 9789814762861
Jørgen Ørstrøm Møller
US$29.90 9789814762649
This book deals with Beijing’s policy which has been a response to the external events involving the Chinese overseas as well as the internal needs of China.
Living Next to the Giant: The Political Economy of Vietnam’s Relations with China under Doi Moi Le Hong Hiep US$39.90 9789814459631
This book examines how the interaction between political and economic factors under Doi Moi has shaped Vietnam’s China policy and bilateral relations since the late 1980s. Land and Development in Indonesia: Searching for the People’s Sovereignty edited by John F McCarthy and Kathryn Robinson US$29.90 9789814762083
The contributors to this volume assess progress on these issues through case studies from across the archipelago: from large-scale land acquisitions in Papua, to asset ownership in the villages of Sulawesi and Java, to tenure conflicts associated with the oil palm and mining booms in Kalimantan, Sulawesi and Sumatra. Myanmar’s Mountain and Maritime Borderscapes: Local Practices, BoundaryMaking and Figured Worlds edited by Oh Su-Ann
US$45.90 9789814762557
Southeast Asian Affairs 2017 provides an informed and readable analysis of the events and developments in the region in 2016.
An excellent and important book, wide-ranging (and comprehensive), drawing together many strands which we have already observed ourselves into a single coherent analysis with many original insights. Stuart Larkin, Consulting Economist
The 3rd ASEAN Reader
Power Sharing in a Divided Nation: Mediated Communalism and New Politics in Six Decades of Malaysia’s Elections
compiled by Ooi Kee Beng, Sanchita Basu Das, Terence Chong, Malcolm Cook, Cassey Lee, and Michael Yeo Chai Ming
Johan Saravanamuttu
US$45.90 9789814620611
The articles in The Third ASEAN Reader study the trends and events of recent years, and discuss the immediate future of Southeast Asia.
US$29.90 9789814695435
This book argues that Malaysia’s electoral politics have historically been premised on a hybridized model of communalism and consociationalism.
From Traders to Innovators: Science and Technology in Singapore since 1965
Against All Odds: Singapore’s Successful Lobbying on the Cambodia Issue at the United Nations
Goh Chor Boon
Barry Desker
US$24.90 9789814695787
Today, more than ever, the state of a country’s science and technology is a critical factor for economic competitiveness and long-term growth. This book traces the development of science and technology policies and initiatives in Singapore since 1965.
US$9.00 9789814762502
Vietnam’s invasion and occupation of Cambodia on 25 December 1978 shattered the peace in Southeast Asia. The geo-political fabric of the region could have changed forever if nothing was done to oppose the invasion. Leading the charge was tiny Singapore, with her diplomats spearheading the thrust.
Investigating the Popularity of Surabaya’s Mayor Tri Rismaharini
Spirits and Ships: Cultural Transfers in Early Monsoon Asia
Ulla Fionna
edited by Andrea Acri, Roger Blench and Alexandra Landmann
US$7.00 9789814786041
US$54.90 9789814762755
US$45.90 9789814695763
This edited volume adds to the literature on Myanmar and its borders by drawing attention to the significance of geography, history, politics and society in the construction of the border regions and the country.
Indonesia’s decentralization and direct local elections have produced several credible popular local leaders. One of them is Surabaya’s mayor, Tri Rismaharini (Risma), who gained much attention for her impressive work ethics and her commitment in improving the city.
This volume seeks to foreground a borderless history and geography of South, Southeast, and East Asian littoral zones that would be maritime-focused from the early historical period to the present.
Please visit ISEAS website for full catalogue at https://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg/
Peter Lang Publications in Asian Studies
ISBN 978-3-0343-1551-7 discounted price: USD 57.–
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Special offer Participants at the International Convention of Asia Scholars, Chiang Mai, 20–23 July 2017, can order with a special, one-time 30 % discount. This offer is valid until 23 August 2017. www.peterlang.com
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New and Forthcoming in Asian Studies from Rowman & Littlefield
China’s Political System Edited by Sebastian Heilmann
Women in Imperial China By Bret Hinsch
Visual Cultures of the Ethnic Chinese in Indonesia By Abidin Kusno
The Qing Dynasty and Traditional Chinese Culture By Richard J. Smith
Book Series
Asian Cultural Studies Edited by Koichi Iwabuchi
This series aims to advance transnational intellectual dialogue over diverse issues that are shared in various Asian countries and cities. While the examination of cultural issues in a particular socio-historical context is crucial, trans-Asia perspectives will further enrich such investigations by giving a fresh insight from other Asian experiences and through the consideration of transnational connections.
For information regarding submissions, please contact Holly Tyler, Senior Commissioning Editor: htyler@rowman.com
25% off with code ICASRL17 when you order online at
rowman.com
University of Washington Press
Writing the South Seas
Imagining the Nanyang in Chinese and Southeast Asian Postcolonial Literature
The Social Life of Inkstones Artisans and Scholars in Early Qing China Dorothy Ko
global souTh asia
The Gender of Caste
Brian C. Bernards
WILLIaM sangkI and nanhee MIn hahn Books
Modern Language InItIatIve Books
on east asIa
288 pp., $50.00 hc
330 pp., 105 ILLus., 78 In coLor, $45.00 hc
352 pp., 33 ILLus., $45.00 hc
On Cold Mountain
In the Circle of White Stones
Sensitive Space
A Buddhist Reading of the Hanshan Poems Paul Rouzer
Moving through Seasons with Nomads of Eastern Tibet
280 pp., $30.00 pB
Gillian G. Tan studIes on ethnIc groups In chIna
Forests Are Gold
176 pp., 19 ILLus., $25.00 pB
Pamela D. McElwee
Chinese Encounters in Southeast Asia
Trees, People, and Environmental Rule in Vietnam cuLture, pLace, and nature 312 pp., 12 ILLus., $30.00 pB
The Emotions of Justice
Gender, Status, and Legal Performance in ChosŎn Korea Jisoo M. Kim
How People, Money, and Ideas from China Are Changing a Region Edited by Pál Nyíri and Danielle Tan foreword by Wang gungwu 312 pp., 9 ILLus., $30.00 pB
Taipei
korean studIes of the henry M. Jackson
City of Displacements
Representing Dalits in Print Charu Gupta
Fragmented Territory at the IndiaBangladesh Border Jason Cons 224 pp., 9 ILLus., $45.00 hc
Forgery and Impersonation in Imperial China Popular Deceptions and the High Qing State Mark McNicholas 280 pp., 3 ILLus., $50.00 hc
Idle Talk under the Bean Arbor A Seventeenth-Century Chinese Story Collection
schooL of InternatIonaL studIes
Joseph R. Allen
224 pp., 15 ILLus., $30.00 pB
288 pp., 35 ILLus., $30.00 pB
With Ziran the Eccentric Wanderer Edited by Robert E. Hegel
ClassiCs of Chinese ThoughT
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The New Way
Commentary on the “Spring and Autumn Annals” Three Volumes Translated by Stephen Durrant, Wai-yee Li, and David Schaberg 2243 pp., chInese and engLIsh, $240.00 hc
Exemplary Figures / Fayan Yang Xiong Translated by Michael Nylan 368 pp., chInese and engLIsh, $75.00 h C
Protestantism and the Hmong in Vietnam Tâm T. T. Ngô 240 pp., 12 ILLus., $50.00 hc
Mapping Chinese Rangoon
Place and Nation among the Sino-Burmese Jayde Lin Roberts 224 pp., 27 ILLus., $50.00 hc
Imperial Bandits
Outlaws and Rebels in the China-Vietnam Borderlands Bradley Camp Davis 288 pp., 16 ILLus., $30.00 pB
Aina the Layman
320 pp., 4 ILLus., $50.00 hc
Reporting for China
How Chinese Correspondents Work with the World Pál Nyíri 216 pp., $25.00 pB
Transforming Patriarchy Chinese Families in the Twenty-First Century
Edited by GonÇalo Santos and Stevan Harrell 312 pp., $30.00 pB
Onnagata
A Labyrinth of Gendering in Kabuki Theater Maki Isaka 272 pp., $30.00 pB
U.S. orders: www.washington.edu/uwpress ROW: www.combinedacademic.co.uk
Publishing in Asia, on Asia, for Asia and the World Visit our booth B16 for a 20% discount on these and related titles
240 pp | S$32.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-50-6
472 pp | S$42.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-26-1
286 pp | S$24.00 | Case 978-981-4722-49-0
336 pp | S$38.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-20-9
304 pp | S$38.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-32-2
320 pp | S$38.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-19-3
History of Medicine in Southeast Asia Series 368 pp | S$38.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-05-6
Kyoto CSEAS Series on Asian Studies 248 pp | S$38.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-52-0
Kyoto CSEAS Series on Asian Studies 358 pp | S$55.00 | Case 978-981-4722-38-4
334 pp | S$38.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-27-8
290 pp | S$36.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-39-1
462 pp | S$52.00 | Paper 978-981-4722-23-0
560 pp | S$58.00 | Case 978-981-4722-21-6
518 pp | S$60.00 | Case 978-981-4722-01-8
2 Volumes | 1514 pp S$245.00 | Case 978-9971-69-871-3
162 pp | S$48.00 | Case 978-981-4722-35-3
240 pp | S$46.00 | Case 978-981-4722-36-0
288 pp | S$42.00 | Case 978-981-4722-51-3
Publishing in Asia, on Asia, for Asia and the World Visit our booth B16 for a 20% discount on these and related titles
Forthcoming Titles
White Butterflies Colin McPhedran
304 pp | Paper 978-981-4722-58-2
232 pp | Paper 978-981-4722-60-5
520 pp | Case 978-981-4722-62-9
226 pp | Paper 978-981-4722-61-2
288 pp | Paper 978-981-4722-67-4
NUS PRESS JOURNALS
For subscription information, visit https://nuspress.nus.edu.sg/pages/journals SOUTHEAST OF NOW:DIRECTIONS IN CONTEMPORARY AND MODERN ART IN ASIA Editors: Isabel Ching, Thanavi Chotpradit, Brigitta Isabella, Eileen Legaspi-Ramirez, Yvonne Low, Vera Mey, Roger Nelson, Simon Soon, and Vuth Lyno
Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia is published twice a year (March and October) and it aims to look and listen closely to the discursive spaces of art in, from, and around the region that is referred to as Southeast Asia, from a historical perspective. The inaugural March 2017 issue is now available. The next issue (Vol. 1, No. 2, October 2017) will feature articles by Yin Ker, Matt Cox, Fiona Lee, Leonor Veiga, Brian Curtin, S. Sudjojono, Brigitta Isabella, Clare Veal, and Fiona Amundsen. Free digital previews of Vol. 1, No. 1 (March 2017) and Vol. 1, No. 2 (October 2017) are available via Project MUSE (https://muse.jhu.edu/journal/716).
CHINA: AN INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
JOURNAL OF BURMA STUDIES
Editor: Zheng Yongnian
Editors: Catherine Raymond, Alicia Turner, and Lilian Handlin
Published quarterly by NUS Press, National University of Singapore, on behalf of the East Asian Institute, China: An International Journal focuses on contemporary China, including Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, and covers the fields of politics, economics, society, geography, law, culture and international relations.
Published twice a year, the Journal of Burma Studies seeks to publish the best scholarly research focused on Burma/Myanmar and its minority and diasporic cultures from a variety of disciplines, ranging from art history and religious studies, to economics and law. The Journal is jointly sponsored by the Burma Studies Group and the Center for Burma Studies at Northern Illinois University.
W: https://nuspress.nus.edu.sg | T: +65 6776 1148 | E: nusbooks@nus.edu.sg | Twitter: @NUS_Press
AMER I P
N UNIVE CA
ITY RS
CENTER FOR SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES at the AMERICAN UNIVERSITY OF PHNOM PENH
HN
OM PEN
H
The Center for Southeast Asian Studies at AUPP brings an innovative and interdisciplinary approach to the study of Southeast Asia at a time of rapid changes in the regional and geo-political landscape. In our complex world, never has global citizenship based on cross-cultural understanding been more important.
The Southeast Asian Studies Minor Featuring CSEAS scholars from around the world as visiting professors at AUPP, the CSEAS Minor emphasizes an interdisciplinary approach to exploring the pressing concerns of the region through arts and culture, economics, politics, law, and environmental studies.
The Research Hub The center welcomes faculty, scholars, and graduate students to become affiliates to CSEAS@AUPP while undertaking independent research in Cambodia, and provides office space, access to academic resources and networks, and opportunities for public presentations.
Academic Exchanges Targeted to undergraduate students outside of Cambodia, CSEAS@AUPP can help to arrange for academic study at AUPP and semester, year-long or summer exchanges.
Immersion CSEAS @ AUPP can assist in the design and delivery of academic study tours in Cambodia and throughout the region, ensuring study trips are of the highest academic quality and immersion experiences promote cross-cultural understanding. Faculty from visiting institutions can also contact the center about the use of AUPP’s state-of-the-art teaching facilities.
Research. Exchange. Immersion. E: cseas@aupp.edu.kh | FB: @cseasataupp | T: +855 23 99 00 23 Addr: No. 50, St. 315, Boeung Kak 2, Touk Kork, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Join us and make a lasting difference At the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre, we put our researchers into fields, classrooms and labs across the region to do real work. From agriculture to business, health and law, we’re making sure Australia and Southeast Asia develop together to face the challenges of the 21st century. Sign up now as an associate member to be part of this influential research community.
17/6410
CRICOS 00026A
sydney.edu.au/sseac
Pacific Affairs Recent Articles:
Perilous Waters: People Smuggling, Fishermen, and Hyper-precarious Livelihoods on Rote Island, Eastern Indonesia Constructed Hierarchical Government Trust in China: Formation Mechanism and Political Effect Settlement without Consensus: International Pressure, Domestic Backlash, and the Comfort Women Issue in Japan Participatory Inequality in the Online and Offline Political Engagement in Thailand Ongoing Rebel Violence in Autonomous Regions: Assam, Northeast India
An International Review of Asia and the Pacific
#ReadUP Find CAP at exhibition stand #B18
All titles available to order at www.combinedacademic.co.uk
International Institute for Asian Studies www.iias.asia
Connect with the global world of Asian Studies through IIAS Publish your article in The Newsletter Publish your book in one of our series Join our fellowship programme Post your information on our website Take part in one of our worldwide events – or co-organise one of your own!
Connect through www.iias.asia IIAS is a humanities and social sciences institute and knowledge exchange platform based in Leiden (the Netherlands). Aiming to contribute to a better understanding of Asia as well as to rethink Asian Studies in a global context, IIAS works to encourage dialogue and link expertise, actively involving scholars and experts from different disciplines and world regions in all its activities. IIAS’ current research clusters are; ‘Asian Cities’, ‘Global Asia; and ‘Asian Heritages’.
Visit us at booth B20
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS / A-Z
Name
Panel number
A
Name
Panel number
Aung-Thwin, Maitrii
Abdul Thaha, Shaik
164
Abdullah, Taufik
21
235, 280
Abe, Yasuhisa
57 124
Ba, Penda Baark, Josefine
Agra, Kelly
291
Baas, Michiel
Ahmed, Mamtaj Uddin
295
Bakti, Andi Faisal
180
Baltaru, Roxana
101, 252
260, 285 275 78, 104, 129 16 184
Banerji, Arnab
178, 231
Banpasirichote Wungaeo,
Al Bakri Devadason, Pushpa
113 101, 146, 193, 252
Albers, Sanne
34
Alisjahbana, Armida Salsiah
235
Alquisola, Vijae Ambos, Eva Amoah, Lloyd
Chantana
14, 39, 219
Barclay, Paul
74
Baumann, Benjamin Bautista, Julius
199
Bruce, Thomas Richard
269
Bruhn, Katherine
2
Bruhn, Thomas
123
Brunner, Michael Philipp
160
Bte Muhammad, Zarina
274
Budianta, Melani
197 113
Bunnag, Chol
136
47
Bünte, Marco
169
Beahrs, Robert O.
115
Bureekul, Thawilwadee
194
25
Beckenham, Sally
257
Burke, Kathleen
98
45
Burska, Zuzanna
109
Bediako, Eric
33
Beemer, Bryce
149
Begum, Nasima
33
Ang, Sylvia
12, 104
Anuar, Mustafa Kamal
81
Brown, Roger
Bumatay, Vlademire Kevin
133
Antony, Robert
Bridhikitti, Arika
223
Ang, Nimid Antoinette, Michelle
198, 223, 248
95 200, 245
Anantya Romadhonah, Rizky
243
Bénédicte
284
Akar, Zeynepcan
30
Bowie, Katherine Brac De La Perrière,
Afrizal, Afrizal
Ahn, Yonson
Panel number
Boutry, Maxime
B
Achdian, Andi
Alam, Md Aftab
96, 122
Azizah, Nur
Name
253 73 119
C
Behan, Antonia
250
Cai, Xiangyu
Bell, Sharon
190
Cai, Yin
250
47
Belle, Iris
226
Calnan, Michael
216
Bentz, Anne-Sophie
240
Can, Lale
89
Anwar, Zahid
295
Berlie, Jean A.
49
Cappello, Daniela
231
Ao, Yumin
179
Bernards, Brian
89
Carey, Peter
197
121
Bezbaruah, Madhurjya P
Apahung, Rosarin Ardhana, I Ketut Århem, Kaj Arimbi, Diah Ariani
280 38
260, 285
Bhalerao, Sagar
289
Bharat, Gauri
75
175
Bijoykumar Singh, Elangbam
108
Bingaman, Eveline
Caricativo, Ruel Carlos, Maria Reinaruth
270 155, 224
Carstens, Charles
15
195
Cassaniti, Julia
88
17
Cassidy, Carol
112
Arkaraprasertkul, Non
80, 250
Binti Abu Bakar, Roslina
146
Castillo, Laurence Marvin
181
Arps, Arnoud
124, 167
Bir Bista, Raghu
208
Cebolla Boado, Hector
184
Aryanti, Tutin
173
Bisogni, Cecilia
Asaduzzaman, Md.
117
Blundell, David
Asenjo, Genevieve
95
Boer, Nienke
Arita, Shin
Asher, Tom
200, 225, 245
Bogart, Stacey Bommareddi, Aruna
178
Chan, Chan U
56
Boonjubun, Chaitawat
130
Chan, Chi Ming Victor
67
Boonlu, Vinai
261
Chan, Catherine S.
77
4
Chang, Ching-Fang
16
Chang, Nai-Wen Buni
35
84
128
282 241
97
260, 285
179
Chakma, Monojit
227
33
Aung, Tin Tin
Chai, Chen-Hsiao
Chalermchat, Yongyut
Atanasova, Lyudmila
158
61 99, 128, 153
Chakraborty, Sagorika
Aspe, Philippe
Aung, Than Than
1
8
Bogler, Lisa
Au, Wai Chun Cherry
Cesarino, Loredana
90
28
Åsman, Susanne
83
Boonreak, Kunnawut Bourdier, Frédéric
63, 263, 288
ICAS 10
Name
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
Panel number
Chang, Wei-Chi Chang, Wan-Chen
111 260, 285
Name
20-23 JULY 2017
Panel number
Connolly, Creighton
6, 131, 156
Name Dong, Dong
Connors, Michael
169
Douglass, Mike
Chanorn, Chanjittra
208
Counord, Noelle
231
Dressler, Wolfram
Chapman, David
193
Creese, Helen
148
Dressler, Jan
Chau, Albert Wai Lap
260, 285
Crespi, Brunna
Chaya, Tomoyuki
62
Cui, Wendong
Chen, Li-Hua
42
Curaming, Rommel
Chen, Mei-Wen
42
Chen, Xuan Chen, Fengshuo Chen, Ching-Chang Chen, Jo-shui Cheng, Isabelle Cheuk, Ka-Kin
177
Dadabaev, Timur
224 16, 94, 120 53
14, 39
D
206 260, 285
13 246
Panel number
Dua, Jatin
90 131, 156 85 149 200, 225
Duara, Prasenjit
115
Duggan, Genevieve
148
Dutta, Bitopi
151
Duttaroy, Keka
21, 275
135
Dwianto, Raphaella Dewantari
Dal Zovo, Cecilia
187
Dwivedi, Desh Deepak
233
Dalferro, Alexandra
250
Dwyer, Michael
236
Damm, Jens
114
92
Dang, Duyen Thi Mai
187, 302
E
Das, Debojyoti
115
Eaksittipong, Sittithep
Cheung Vieira, Margarida
212
Das Gupta, Sanjukta
109
Easum, Taylor
Chheat, Sreang
209
Datta, Karubaki
282
Eaves-Young, Victoria
153
Ecks, Stefan
191
Cheung, Gordon Chi Kai
45, 244
Chhinh, Sitha
121
Davis, Alexander E.
Chi, Chang-Hui
120
Day, Iyko
Chi, Chun-Chieh
187
De Langis, Theresa
255
De Maaker, Erik
132, 157, 205
260, 285
De Regt, Marina
245
Chi, Naomi Chiang, Min-Chin
44, 281 105 87
246 55
Edwards, Penny
197
Einzenberger, Rainer
219
Elfira, Mina
173
Elumbre, Adonis
174
Chida, Tetsuro
135
De Silva, Nirekha
176
Endoh, Toake
141
Chin, Grace
171
De Vos, Rosa
284
Eom, Eunhui
186
28
De Zoysa, Asoka
25, 46
120
Defillipo, Cassie
12
Cho, Myung-Rae
131
Deka, Arunima
188
Cholez, Vanessa
116, 176
Den Hartog, Harry
106
F
Chong, Gladys Pak Lei
114, 226
Chiu, Tuen Yi Chiu, Hsiao-Chiao
Estevez, Joseba Evrard, Olivier
96 287
Denes, Alexandra
144
Faisal Syarifudin, Bunyamin
Christensen, Paul
248
Dewi, Novita
175
Fakih, Farabi
Christoffersen, Gaye
145
Dhar, Ivy
298
Fang, Xiaoping
90
Farber, Rebecca
141
Chu, Lunghsing
52
Diepart, Jean-Christophe
Chu, Margaret
244
Ding, Yan
Chuang, Chienhui
266
Diokno, Maria Serena
Chuangchai, Phitchakan
282
Chung, Chiao Chung, Shefong Chung, Chien-Peng Ciotti, Manuela Clavé, Elsa Clerc, Valérie Clinton, Margaret Collins, Francis
236, 263 299 14, 39, 122
71 14, 39
Farnan, Robert
215
Farrer, James
104
Dippner, Anett
139
Fauzia, Amelia
137
112
Dirgantoro, Wulan
278
Feldmann, Anselm
257
112
Dissanayaka, Ganga
25, 46
Felício, Ana
211
9
Feng, Jiren
26
244 175, 188 96 5, 30 74 78, 286
Dizon, Hazel Dizon, Lino
34
Fernando, Joseph M.
49
Dluhošová, Táňa
94
Finch, Ely
70
Do, Khue
100, 218
Finis, Kenneth
181
Dobbelmann, Duncan
260, 285
Fisac, Taciana
20, 245
Dogase, Masato
76
Fischer-Tiné, Harald Josef
71, 189
129
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS / A-Z
Name
Panel number
Fitzpatrick, Jacki Framke, Maria Franklin, Kathryn J. Frenkiel, Emilie
101, 252 189 89 214
Name
Panel number 295
Ho, Chui Fun
253
Guillou, Anne Yvonne
287
Ho, Tsui-Ping
17, 42
Gundi, Mukta
166
Ho, Engseng
89, 200, 225
Guo, Yi
117
Hoang, Lan Anh
81
Froissart, Chloé
214
Guthrie-Higbee, Elizabeth
Frost, Mark
189
Gutierrez, Kathleen
Fry, Gerald
121
Fuhrmann, Arnika
142
H
Fujieda, Ayako
110
Hadiz, Vedi
Funahashi, Kenta
82, 108 62
Gust-Frenger, Ralph
Gabaude, Louis Gado, Charisma Love
52
18 250
Hoang Cam, Giang Hof, Helena
Hägerdal, Hans
148, 185, 270, 295
Haila, Anne
130
12, 37 167 78, 138
Homklin, Tassanee
158
Hong, Grace
105
Hopkins, Julian Horat, Esther Horn, Christine Horstmann, Alexander
142, 242 37 142 22
16
Hoskins, Janet
22
144
Hosoda, Midori
68
Hanaoka, Mimi
140
Hosoda, Miwako
Hanchard, Sandra
242
Hovhannisyan, Astghik
196
Hsiao, H.H. Michael
247
Hallbauer, Jordan 84, 111
190
151, 169
Halim, Umar G
Panel number
Guha, Sohini
Friend, Richard
Fujihara, Sho
Name
Galadari, Abdulla
271
Hao, Yufan
Ganesan, Uma
275
Hao, Pu
206
Hsieh, Po-Kang
Hardacre, Helen
243
Hsu, Tien-Hsia
27
Hardon, Anita
191
Hsu, Tzu-Yi
32
80
Hu, Dongwen
42
Huang, Shu-Li
17
Garcia, Maria Sheila Garcia Moro, Francisco
9 71
56
90, 216
10
García Rodríguez, Amaury A. 18, 245
Harms, Erik
Garrich Alabarce, Albert
142
Hashimoto, Kayoko
Gaudilliere, Jean-Paul
191
Havlova, Zdenka
282
Huang, Lan-Yin
52
Gaweewong, Gridthiya
152
Hawkins, Beryl
142
Huang, Chung Hao
60
Gedsagul, Weerachon
203
Hayami, Yoko
Geilhorn, Barbara
102
Hayashi, Yusuke
117, 201
Hayward, Daniel
George, Cherian Ghosh, Subhasree Gibert-Flutre, Marie Ginsari, Saimin Gluck, Carol
205 80, 131 49 260, 285
196, 221, 251
22
Hazama, Eijiro
Huber, Isabelle
81
Hudson, Chris
271
He, Feng
1
He, Le Heckman, Annie
Huang, Liling
108
Huet, Elisa Hui, Yew-Foong
203
Hulme, Mike
250
Humphries, Richard
Godart, Gerard Clinton
199
Hein, Patrick
Godio, Marie Joyce
259
Hellman, Jörgen
148
Hussin, Hanafi
Goh, Joseph N.
173
Hellman, Lisa
153
Hwang, Seongbin
Golden, Karen
242
Helmata, Oinam
273
Gomes, Fabiola
220
Herold, David Kurt
167
González Barajas, Luisa Alejandra 18 Graber, Kathryn Griffiths, Richard Groza, Maksim Gruber, Stefan Guajardo, Maria Guazon, Tessa Maria
130
115 100, 195
48, 68, 87, 251
Herzfeld, Michael
25, 132, 157, 222, 247
Hunga, Arianti Ina Restiani
222, 247 1, 277 86 228 197, 247 136 50 259 14, 39 233
I Ida, Rachmah
91
Igarashi, Hiroki
29
Hirsch, Philip
236
Iida, Reiko
254
42
Ho, Hao-Tzu
111
Ikeda, Maria
155
21
Ho, Kong-Chong
131
Ikeya, Kazunobu
262
Ho, Elaine
215
Il, Oeur
263
Ho, Wing-Chung
229
Indah Wahyuni, Hermin
188 80
14, 39
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
Name
Panel number
Ingawanij, May Adadol
192
Iragiliati, Emalia
33
Ishida, Kenji
82, 108
20-23 JULY 2017
Name
Panel number
Karim, Abdul Gaffar Karlach, Jan
Name
Panel number
Knee, Adam
142
187
Kobayashi, Yasuko
124
21
Kasetsiri, Charnvit
197
Koizumi, Motohiro
156
62
Katada, Yoshiaki
193
Komatsu, Hisae
255
Ishizaka, Shinya
62
Kawashima, Kumiko
138, 163
Kondamadugula,
Islam, Shafiul
117
Kawlra,
Ishii, Miho
Istandaa, Salizan
10
Itakura, Kazuhiro
19
Aarti
Ramakotireddy 132, 157, 200, 260, 285
Kay Hoang, Kimberley
Kongmanila, Xayphone
115
Konishi, Kodai
241 158 19
Italia, Maddalena
231
Kearney, Joy
153
Konya, Akari
254
Iwata Weickgenannt, Kristina
102
Keereepaibool, Sutthida
261
Koo, Hearan
54
243
Kor, Borin
Kendall, Laurel J
Kent, Elly
Jackson, Peter
198, 223, 248
Khanongnuch, Chartchai
2, 201 241
Kot-Giletycz, Olimpia Kow, Mei kao
127 61 70
Jacobowitz, Seth
245
Khaskhali, Bakhtawar
Jafri, Humayun
289
Khet, Ni Ni
177
Krishan, Kirti
233
Jain, Purnendra
43
Khin, Mya Mya
80
Krueger, Karsten
128
66
Khondker, Habibul
Ku, Boon Dar
149
Jalli, Nuurrianti
8
83, 109
Kratiuk, Barbara
118, 281
Jarry, Remy
277
Khumsupa, Malinee
197
Kuah, Khun Eng
Jhearmaneechotechai, Prin
287
Khun, Chandara
288
Kubota, Jumpei
Jimo, Lovitoli
273
Kia, Mana
115
Kudaibergenova, Diana
300
32 135
Jirattikorn, Amporn
88
Kiatying-Angsulee, Niyada
191
Kuhonta, Erik
293
Jittidecharak, Trasvin
50
Kidpromma, Amnuaypond
97
Kuik, Cheng-Chwee
145
Jo, Bee Yun
68
Kim, Songjoo
26
Kumar, Arun
Jo, Mi-Jeong
129
Kim, Seokho
54
Kumar Sharma, Sanjay
57
Johnson, Alaine
111
Johnson, Andrew Joven, Arnel Jurriens, Edwin
Kumar Singh, Sunil
279
223
Kim, Jodi
105
Kunta, Karika
130
116
Kim, Hyojin
146
Kuo, Ya Yu
Kim, Viktoriya
155
Kuo, Chunghao
201, 253, 278
K Kadowaki, Kaoru
221
Kage, Toshio Kaiser, Tim
Kim, Yoomi
Kim, Yeun Hee
180
Kuroda, Kenji
Kim, Taeyoon
186
Kurokawa, Motohiro
Kim, Il-Soo
200
Kurz, Johannes
23
Kim, Miseon
238
Kusakabe, Kyoko
55
Kim, Jong-Cheol
57, 150
Kustyasari, Dian
Kakkar, Ankur
160
Kim, Jungwon
91, 150
Kwame Offei, Samuel
Kam, Janice
269
Kimura, Makiko
Kamalov, Ablet
135
King, Matthew W,
140
Kamei, Gangmumei
19
273
Kinga, Sonam
243
Kanai, Masayuki
54
Kingston, Jeff
68
Kang, Myungkoo
57, 238, 260, 285
Kinoshita, Hiroko
9
17
Kirasirova, Masha
140
Kao, Ya-Ning Kapoor, Rashmi
166
Karanjia, Sofiya
2
Karashima, Hiroyoshi
160 260, 285
262
Kwon, Dae-Young
61 125 72 183 98 28, 284 8 260, 285 241
L L. Nongbri, Pynshongdor Laishram, Rajen Singh Lal, Neha
208 32 232
15
Lam, Peng Er
43
Kishigami, Nobuhiro
262
Lam, Mariam
105
Kjosavik, Darley
295
Lam, Theodora
182
Kirichenko, Alexey
131
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS / A-Z
Name
Panel number
Name
Panel number
Name
Panel number
Lam, Agnes, Iok Fong
212
Lin, Zheng
246
Mantovan, Giacomo
Lam Nguyen, Tran
268
Ling, Minhua
138
Manuel, Floper
Lama, Gautam Kumar
227
Ling Wang, Yu
Lambino, John Paragas
183
Liongson, Raymund
Lamijo, Lamijo
280
Lipinsky, Astrid
92
Maravillas, Francis
278
Lämmli, Dominique
103
Liu, Xi
20
Mareena Reffai, Izzathul
164
Lan, Ngo Thi
177
Liu, Fei
Latrell, Craig
86
Liu, Aming
106
Marius, Kamala
30
Lavalian, Langus
10
Liu, Andrew
140
Mark, Eugene
38
Le Forestier, Melanie
91
Liu, Gaoli
213
Mark, Ethan
74
136
Liu, Peng
277
Marston, John
18
Liu, Huwy-Min Lucia
299
Martinez, Julia
204
260, 285
Matano, Misaki
Lebel, Louis Lee, Shou-Lu
9
Lee, Gyungwon
22
Liu, Hsi-Chuan
Lee, Dongbae
34
Liu-Farrer, Gracia
67
Lee, Shu-Shan
27 195
26
Gershwin
53 25, 84, 111, 213
Maranzana De Filippis, Filippo
Marimoutou, Carpanin
50
225, 228
82
138
Mathew Martin, Poothullil
289
Lo, Thanh Hoa
107
Matias Dos Santos, Jose Carlos 212
Lee, Yohan
186
Lo, Sandy Hsiu-Chih
152
Matsuoka, Misato
Lee, Seungho
186
Lo, Su-Mei
Lee, Yongeun
186
Loh, Shi Lin
Lee, Joonpyo
186
Lorea, Carola
Lee, Sangkook
186
Lotti, Valeria
Lee, Yongwoo
249
Lee, Tracy
264 264
Lu, Melody Chia-Wen
Lee, Luqman
35, 60 116 53, 104, 231
Matsuoka, Sachi
176
Matsuoka, Masakazu
196
Matta, Mara
139
Maunati, Yekti
Lovely, Esther
221
Mayer, Peter
Lowrie, Claire
204
Mcconnachie, Kirsten
163
Mckay, Alex
Lee, Joseph
47, 125
Lu, Hongwei
Lee, Wilson Wai Shing
48, 251
Lubis, Abdur-Razzaq Luga, Jose Mathew
28
Mei, Qing
Leider, Jacques
15
Leisangthem, Gitarani
126
Ly Quyet, Tien
Leng, Phirom
209
Lye, Kit Ying
Lestari, Umi
270
Lyubichankovskiy, Sergey
Lewis, Ghislaine
167
Lewis, Lincoln Li, Yanfei
6, 206, 284 31
154, 203
143
83, 109 280 87 215 44, 75, 227, 274
McMahon, Daniel
73
98
Meehan, Patrick
215
174
Mehra, Diya
269 45
Mendez, Mario Jr Mendoza, Olivia Mercedes Planta, Ma.
M Ma, Jianxiong
Li, Alex Yang
129
Ma, Xiao
Li, Chung Hung
154
Ma, Xiaolu
Liang, Shixin
128
Ma, Ran
Liem, Andrian
116
Macdonald, Richard
73 184 20, 251
13 14, 39 222, 247 260, 285
Miao, Ying Michael, Arndt
67 44, 281
76, 102
Micklay, Grazielle
123
192, 217
Micollier, Evelyne
38
244
Mahtab, Nazmunnessa
164
Middendorf, Ulrike
269
Mak, George Kam Wah
271
Middleton, Carl
Lin, Yen-Po
60
Makhmutova, Alfira
Lin, Yih-Ren
60
Makita, Yoshiya
218
Mila Arlini, Silvia
Lin, Ling-Fei
65
Mamidipudi, Annapurna
250
Min Charmian Goh, Jia
Lin, Lei
73
Manalaysay, Jaconiah Shelumiel 174
Mine, Yoichi
Mansor, Idris
Mitsuda, Yayoi
132
95
Mesman, Judi
Lim, Tai Wei
203
21, 26, 277
Meskell, Lynn
Lien, Hong-Yi
Lin, Zhongxuan
5
59
146
Mikhalevskaya, Arina
299 219, 236 15 182 3, 163 200 61
ICAS 10
Name
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
Panel number
Miura, Satomi
18
Miwa, Satoshi
82, 108
Miyazaki, Silvio
45, 220, 245
Mizota, Chitoshi Mizuno, Norihito
Name
20-23 JULY 2017
Panel number
Neef, Andreas Negi, Rohit
284 106, 200, 225
Name
Panel number
Opalinski, Piotr
109
Opatpatanakit, Avorn
260, 285
Ng, Sau Wah
154
Oreglia, Elisa
192
23
Ng, Kenny Kwok Kwan
218
Ortiga, Yasmin
286
48
Nga, Shi Yeu
60
Osaka, Koichiro
76
Moeng, Meta
127
Ngina, Karryl Mae
13
Osaki, Hiroko
54
Moger, Amrin
289
Ngo, Natharoun
Mohamad, Muhammad
Ngo, Tak-Wing
Arafat Bin
209 56, 100
Osawa, Yoshimi
110
Ostapirat, Panarai
192, 217
122
Nguyen, Dang
66
171
Nguyen, Thi Nam Hoang
175
Mohammad, Pedda Hothur
59
Nguyen, Trung Kien
Mok, Mei Feng
131
Nguyen, Phuong-Mai
Møller, Henrik
165
Nguyen Bergström, Huong
7
Padovani, Florence
28
Nguyen Hoang My, Phuong
6
Palat Narayanan, Nipesh
30
Montefrio, Marvin Joseph
111
Nguyen Van, Kim
149
Palatino, Raymond
66
Morozova, Irina
135
Nham Phong, Tuan
158
Pan, Ju-Tuan
61
Morton, Micah
190
Nimonjiya, Shu
13
Pan, Zhengqi
269
Morton, Robert
193
Ninh, Thien-Huong
Pandey, Arun Kumar
227
Moskalev, Petr
204
Nishio, Zenta
Pao, Sio Iu
155
Moskaleva, Natalia
167
Noble, Valentin
193, 218
Park, Jung-Sun
144
Nomura, Kazuyuki
221, 251
Park, Seo Yeon
Mohamad, Hoyri
Momesso, Lara
Mostafanezhad, Mary Mukdawijitra, Yukti
192, 217
Mukherjee, Aditi
205
211 226
22, 47 181
Nongmaithem Singh, Willliam Norén-Nilsson, Astrid
205
263, 288
Ozanne, Arlene
84, 155
P Padawangi, Rita
55, 80, 106, 156 229
91 240
Park, Clara Mi
157, 259
Paskaleva, Elena
222
5
Novadona Bayo, Longgina
185
Pasquet, Sylvie
Munoz, Analyn
174
Nur Dian Rosyidah, Usma
185
Pellegry, Florence
Munsi, Roger Vanzila
271
Nut, Suppya Helene
77
Pereira, Mariana
100, 143, 300
Nuzuliyanti, Lusvita
114
Perkasa, Adrian
80
Pesses, Abigaël
287
Mukherjee Basu, Anurima
Murashkin, Nikolay Musillo, Marco
274 O
N Na Nan, Sakkarin Nakajima, Yoshiaki
Octastefani, Theresia 262 23
Nakamura, Rie
147
Nakane, Wakae
76
15 228 46, 71, 212, 232
Peterson, William 21
86
Peycam, Philippe 200, 247, 260, 285
Oesterheld, Christian
218
Pezza, Alessandra
171
Oey, Mayling
235
Phan, Ly
166
Oga, Toru
195
Phan, Le-Ha
Ogawa, Michihiro
275
Phanthuwongpakdee,
Nakanishi-Tsubota, Miki
187
Ogra, Anshu
136
Nandrajog, Hina
231
Ohlendorf, Hardina
120
121, 286
Nuttavikhom
136
Phothisane, Anouza
127
Narzary Chakravartty, Dharitri 273, 298
Oka, Mihoko
23
Phyo, Ei Shwe Sin
107
Nasution Khoo, Salma
Oliveira Lopes, Rui
46
Pilapil Jacobo, J
249
232
Natakun, Boonanan
80
Ong, Michelle
129
Pinheiro, Claudio
Natali, Cristiana
178
Ong, Aihwa
140
Pinthongvijayakul, Visisya
200, 220, 245
Nath Singh, Ravindra
202
Ooi, Yuki
48
Piocos, Carlos III
Natusch, Barry
206
Ooi, Kee Beng
119
Pitman, Sophie
250
Naw, Tun Aung
190
Ooi, Keat Gin
243
Placzek, Jim
195
248 4
133
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS / A-Z
Name
Panel number
Platt, Maria
182
Plets, Gertjan
222, 247
Po, Ronald
73
Poletto, Claudia Wanessa
220
Pollet, Charlotte
101, 252
Pombo, Pedro
Name
Panel number
Rasmin Marta, Nurholis Rathina Pandi, Asha Ratti, Manav Remmert, Desiree
178
Ren, Yi
Ponok, Nittaya
194
Rennesson, Stéphane
Por, Heong Hong
299
Renwick, Trude
Pordié, Laurent
116, 176, 191
Porio, Emma
7, 54
Posrithong, Natanaree Potkin, Alan
50 46, 85
71
Sattavet, Nat
101, 252
Saul, Jeremy
97
Savitri, Laksmi
2
Saxena, Siddharth
181
Schaffar, Wolfram
31 287 6
Schwak, Juliette
85, 150
Schwecke, Sebastian
275 137
166
Sciortino, Rosalia
230
Sebastiampillai,
140
Roberts, Jayde
106
185
Roche, Isabel
Pradhan, Anubhav
232
Romabiles, Maria Socorro
260, 285
Prak, Neth
288
16
219 25, 144
Rimkus, F. Monique Rimner, Steffen
207 135, 300
Schedneck, Brooke
Richert, Katharina
Prabawati Suwito, Debbie
Panel number
167 32
Raymond, Catherine
Name
Chrishandra
264
Sebro, Tani
144, 274, 299
Sellars, Kirsten Eve
99
Sen, Ronojoy
295 278
Romanowicz, Anna
233
Seng, Yu Jin
7
Rosetti, Nicolo
183
Sengupta, Tania
Prasongko, Dias
185
Roszko, Edyta
187
Sengupta, Rajarshi
Pritchard, Matthew
231
Rudgard, Frances
127
Seo, Seonyoung
Rukayadi, Yaya
241
Seto, Tomoko
102
Sham, Desmond
156
Pramono, Bambang
Priyatna, Aquarini
71, 85
Pumketkao, Pijika
80
Purwaningsih, Sri Sunarti
280
Q Qin, Yucheng
S 230
Sadoi, Yuri
158
113 241
238
Shibata, Kanako
254
207
Shibayama, Mamoru
110
Saladin, Ronald
139
Shibuya, Setsuko
238
Salemink, Oscar
198
Shimizu, Takashi
57
212, 245
Shimizu, Kosuke
224
Quang Nguyen, Van
147
Saito, Tomohiro
Quinto, Alma
80
Sakboon, Mukdawan
Quỳnh-Anh Trần, Arlette
127
Rabé, Paul
Sales Marques, Jose Luis 80, 106, 157, 226
71
Shaw, Brian
38
261
89, 115, 140
Sharmin, Dilruba Shetty, Kalidas
Saito, Shunsuke
Ra Moe Wae, Saw Kay
250 104, 302
Shami, Seteney
Sackeyfio, Rose Alice 204
R
55
Samadhi, Willy
270
Samanta, Gopa
5, 30, 287
Shimosegawa, Minami Shin, Boram
82 300
Rahman, Mahbubur
152
Sanchez Cesar, Miriam Laura
244
Shiu, Margaret
112
Rai, Nandji
202
Sanders, Douglas
213
Shrestha, Tina
3, 179, 204, 302
Rai, Anupriya
279
Sangmahamad,
Siani, Edoardo
198 164
Rajangam, Krupa
106
Ratchawadee
194
Siddiqui, Farida
Rajdeep, Sunder
289
Sankhil, Shelmi
298
Siebenga, Rianne
83
Saptari, Ratna
Raju, Zakir Rakesh Singh, Khwairakpam Raman, Bhuvaneswari
123 5
132, 157, 259
Sardjono, Sandra Sarkar, Surajit
Rangkla, Prasert
192, 217
Sarker, Rayhena
Rangsivek, Katja
238, 274
Sathian, Mala
250 132, 157, 273, 298 302
2
Sieng, Tephanie
63
Sila, Muhammad
201
Sima, William
291
Simandjuntak, Deasy
270
96
Simonow, Joanna
189
Ranjan, Amit
279
Satidporn, Wichuda
214
Simpson, Timothy
165
Rasaily, Rinju
298
Sato, Masaki
110
Simpson, Adam
165
134
ICAS 10
Name
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
Panel number
Name
Sims, Kearrin
257
T
Singh, Ranjit Pratap
202
Takagi, Akira
Singh, Dheerendra Pratap
227
Sinnott, Megan
248
Sinpeng, Aim
66, 93
20-23 JULY 2017
Panel number
Name
Panel number
Tschirhart, Naomi
141
110
Tseng, Hsunhui
28
Takahashi, Yoshi
158
Tseng, Lin-Yi
Takamura, Kazue
240
Tsubakihara, Atsuko
125
Takemura, Yoshiaki
72
Tsui, Chin-Kuei
Skoda, Uwe
274
Takisdahuan, Aziman
10
Tsunoo, Yoshinobu
Smith, Pamela
250
Tallara, Mark Iñigo
Smith, Craig
266
Tamburo, Elisa
Snape, Holly
92
So, Phina
127
Sobarna, Cece
85
Tampoe-Hautin, Vilasnee Tan, Raan Hann Tan, Katrina Ross
Soikham, Piyanat
218, 281
Tan, Miau Ing
Song, Geng
126, 264
Tanaka, Tetsuya
Song, Jing
28, 229
Tang, Dorothy
123
72 224
Tsutsui, Yukino
76 255
94 228 77 181 299
U Ubukata, Fumikazu Uddin, Md. Kamal Udompong, Lertporn
211 75, 87 194
Ufen, Andreas
169
200
Uk, Krisna
263
72
Soni, Soni
160
Tan-Mullins, May
85, 151
Un, Leang
209
Sono, Fumoto
254
Tapsell, Ross
66, 201
Utsumi, Hirofumi
255
South, Ashley
215
Techakanont, Kriengkrai
158
Soysal, Yasemin
184
Teeraparbwong, Komson
80
Spitzer, Denise
104, 129
Sripathar, Nawat
Thabchumpon, Naruemon
219
V. Militante, Clarissa Vaddhanaphuti, Chaya
95 136
214
Thai Son, Pham
Stadler, Mark Philip
185
Thambipillai, Pushpa
145
Vaddhanaphuti, Chayan 80, 260, 285
Stengs, Irene
248
Thananithichot, Stithorn
214
Vaisamruat, Krisana
133
Valera, Farland
190
Stephens, Julia
89
Thang, Leng Leng
Stevens, Hallam
65
Thein, Khin Sandar
Stolyarov, Alexander
202, 279
Thiesmeyer, Lynn
Strüver, Georg
17, 42, 94
Thinphanga, Pakamas
Subkhampang, Pattama
194
Thomas, Julia
Subramanian, Prerna
264
Thongyuukong, Arjin
Sukhamtha, Rangsan
133
Thoudam, Joymati
Sukolratanametee, Nattakarn
214
Thun, Theara
Suksri, Sawatree Sumanasrethakul, Pannin
66 130
74
Van Den Stock, Ady
226, 291
217
Van Der Maas, Titia
114
75
Thuon, Try
107
Van Swet, Floris
38
Tiengkate, Nussara
250
Van Thuy, Pham
14, 39, 149
108
Vanny, Rath
Suorsa, Olli
195
Supartono, Alexander
128
Surbakti, Ramlan
235
Suriyawongkul, Arthit
192
Suzuki, Taka
32
Trinidad, Dennis
Suzuki, Maya
255
74, 199
14, 39
126, 245
Tooker, Deborah
Szpilman, Christopher
103, 156, 178, 203, 277
Van Chinh, Nguyen
260, 285
65
53
Minna
81, 107
Van Ess, Hans
263
203
216
Valjakka,
Van der Velde, Paul
Suon, Seng
Swinbank, John Michael
29 158
122
Sun, Shirley
Swamy, Priya
80
V
Tomabechi, Natsuho
63
13, 38, 88
Varkkey, Helena
Toyota, Mika
29
Varquez, Jessie
Tran, Bich Tuyen
113
Vergès, Françoise
Tran, Ky Phuong
147
Vermeulen, Han
128
Tran, Khanh An
216
Vermeulen, Mika
188
68
Verstappen, Sanderien
270
Verver, Michiel
Trotier, Friederike
55
Vigneron, Frank
Troyakova, Tamara
145
Trivedi, Sonu
Truong, Nhu
268, 293
Villagran, Ignacio Vo, Chuong-Dai
14, 39, 151 207 225, 260, 285
157, 205 7 103 220, 245 152, 260, 285
135
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANTS / A-Z
Name Vogelsang, Willem
Panel number 87, 135, 201, 222
Vu, Tuong
293
W
Name
Panel number
Wong, Yee Lam Elim
179, 251
Yu, Xuying
20
184
Yu, Yusen
271
Worland, Shirley
261
Yu Zhang, Herbary
99
Yun, Mane Yun, Sun-Jin
Walsh, John
165
Wu, Rung-Shun
27
Wan, Lai Na
154
Wu, Shengqing
128
Wu, Qiaobing
229
1
Panel number
Woodman, Sophia Wright, Ashley
Wang, Ying
Name
232, 302 63 186
Z
Wang, Tingyu
17
Zandonai, Sheyla
Wang, Wenjing
45
X
Wang, Ming Yen
52
Xie, Shi
Wang, Jianwei
118
Xu, Jing
31
Zhang, Qian Forrest
206
Wang, Hui
125
Xu, Xibai
67
Zhang, Zhongwen
230
Zhang, Donia 125
Zhang, Heather
31 181
Wang, Weinan
143
Wang, Peng
229
Y
246
Yamada, Marc
16
Zhou, Ying
Yamamoto, Tatsuya
19
Zhu, Tingshu
118
Wang, Dongqing Wang, Shu-Li
222, 247
Zhang, Juan
77, 245
Zhou, Weihong
12, 163 48 226
Wardana, Agung
233
Yamazaki, Takeshi
23
Zhu, Ying
126
Weber, Torsten
199
Yang, Fang-Chi
52
Zurbuchen, Mary
137
Yang, Jie
139
Zwemmer, Arnoud
93
Yang, Shu-Yuan
213
Wee, Kellynn
3, 163
Wellen, Kathryn
96
Wellfelt, Emilie
148, 271
Yang, Anand
Wells-Dang, Andrew
211, 268
Yang, Peidong
78, 129, 286
93
Yao, Dacheng
116
97, 123
Yapp, Lauren
21
Welsh, Bridget Welter, Albert West, Matthew
266
Westendorp, Mariske White, Erick
92 198, 248
Wickramasinghe, Nira
225
75, 99
Yara, Idawati H.M.
235
Yau, Wen
103
Yazaki, Keitaro
54
Yeh, Joyce Hsiu-Yen
35
Widyaningtyas, Rizky Septiana
84
Yeh, Ivy Hui-Yuan
65
Wilcox, Emily
89
Yen Khoo, Choon
182
Wilkins, Thomas Williams, Brad Williams, Michael
244 43 70, 118, 143
Yeo, Valerie
66
Yeoh, Seng-Guan
29
Yeoh, Brenda
3, 138, 163, 182
132
Yeung, Yang
103
Win, Thidar
157
Yi, Rosa
209
Winter, Meredyth
250
Yin Stephanie Chung, Po
282 188
Win, Nyunt
Wong, Hei Ting
59
Yip, Jeaney
Wong, Chee Meng
70
Yokota-Murakami, Takayuki
Wong, Chin Huat
119
Yong, Chuan Ling
Wong, Yee Tuan
119
Yoshii, Senshu
59
177
You, Jong-Sung
68
Young, Shau-Lou
35
Wong, Wai Yee, Sharon Wong, Danny Wong, Kwok Sam
136
14, 39 151, 171
Young, Sokphea
20 213
66, 288
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS / A-Z
A
Brigham Young University
Aarhus University
Brill
Academia Sinica
Britto Arts Trust
Akita International University
Brown University
Almuslimaath Jammiyathul Daayiyyaath
Bunong Indigenous People Association
Alpha Education Consultancy
Bunun Cultural Museum of Haiduan Township
Ambedkar University Delhi
Burapha University
American Council of Learned Societies
Burma Children Medical Fund
American Museum of Natural History American University of Phnom Penh
C
Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences
California State University at Dominguez Hills
Amsterdam University Press
Cambodia Development Resource Institute
Analyzing Development Issues Centre
Cambodian Living Arts
Andalas University
Cambridge University Press
Areca Books
Center for Environment Community and Research
Arizona State University
Center for Asian Studies, University of Ghana
Asia Art Archive
Center for Creative Initiatives in Health and Population
Asia Europe Institute
Center for Environmental Planning and Technology
Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact
(CEPT)
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
Center for Khmer Studies
Asia-Africa-Institute, University of Hamburg
Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Kyoto University
Asian Center, University of the Philippines
Centre Asie du Sud-Est (CASE/CNRS)
Asian Dynamics Initiative (ADI), University of Copenhagen
Centre for Development Oriented Research in Agriculture
Asian Institute of Technology
and Livelihood Systems (CENTDOR)
Asia-Pacific Research Center, Hanyang University
Centre for Modern Indian Studies, University of Goettingen
Associated Press, Bangkok
Chandrakasem Rajabhat University
Association for Asian Studies
Chang Jung University
Association of Vietnamese Archaeologists
Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation for International
Asutosh College
Scholarly Exchange
Ateneo de Manila University
Chiang Mai University
Australian National University
Chiba University China Academy of Art
B
Chu Hai College of Higher Education
Bamboo Curtain Studio
Chulalongkorn University
Banaras Hindu University
Chuo University
Baptist University Hong Kong
City University of Hong Kong
Bard Graduate Center
City University of New York
Beijing Foreign Studies University
Cluster Innovation Centre
Beijing Normal University
College D’Êtudes Mondiales (FMSH)
Benguet State University
College of Management for Agriculture and
Bennington College
Rural Development
Berhampur University
College of Religious Studies, Mahidol University
Bogazici University
Collegium Civitas
Boston University
Columbia University
Brasilia University
Combined Academic Publishers
137
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS / A-Z
Cornell University
Gauhati University
Cosumnes River College
Georg-August Universität Göttingen
Cotton State University
Georgetown University
Craft Link, Vietnam
Georgia State University
Czech Academy of Sciences
German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ), Tokyo German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA)
D
Global Voices Online
Daegu University
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt
Daejin university
Goldsmiths, University of London
Dankook University
Griffith Law Future Centre
DataViz My, Malaysia
Guangdong University of Foreign Studies
De La Salle University-Manila
Guangzhou University
Deutsche Gesellschaft fur internationalen Zusammmenarbeir (GIZ)
H
Dongguan center for NPO evaluation
Hamilton College
Dublin City University
Hang Seng Management College
Duke University
Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
Durham University
Harvard University Harvard Yenching Institute
E
Heidelberg University
Ecole du Centre Tao, Tours
HIPE Publications
École française d’Extrême-Orient (EFEO)
Hiroshima Jogakuin University
Edinburgh Napier University
Hiroshima University
Ehime University, Matsuyama
Hitotsubashi University
El Colegio de México, Center for Asian and African Studie
Ho Chi Minh City Open University
Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands
Hokkaido University
Entrepot Publishing Sdn Bhd
Hong Kong Baptist University
Estácio de Sá University
Hong Kong Polytechnic University
European Research Center on Contemporary Taiwan
Hong Kong Shue Yan University Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
F
Hong Kong University Press
Far Eastern Federal University
Hue University
Federal Institute of Technology (ETH)
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Flinders University Forum Transregionale Studien, Berlin
I
Foundation for Internet and Civic Culture, Bangkok
ILOHAS Social Enterprise
Freie Universität Berlin
Independent University of Bangladesh (IUB)
French National Center of Scientific Research (CNRS)
Indian Institute of Technology Mandi
French National Research Institute for Sustainable
Indiana University
Development Fu-Jen Catholic University, Taiwan
Indonesian Academy of Sciences Indonesian Institute of Arts Yogyakarta Indonesian Institute of Sciences
G Gadjah Mada University Gaston Berger University
138
Institut de la Recheche sur l’Asie du Sud-Est (IRASEC), Bangkok Institut francais du Cambodge
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
Institut Nationales des Langues et Civilisation Orientales (INALCO)
20-23 JULY 2017
Knox College Kobe University
Institute of European Studies of Macau
Korea Food Research Institute
Institute of Heritage Sciences
Korea University
Institute of International Education
Korea-Africa Centre
Institute of Malaysian and International Studies (IKMAS)
Kurashiki University of Science and The Arts
Institute of Sociology, Academia Sinica
Kyoto Bunkyo University
Institute of Southeast Asian Affairs (CMU)
Kyoto Sangyo University
International Center for Charity Sector Law (ICCSL)
Kyoto Tachibana University
International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS)
Kyoto University
International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS)
Kyushu University
International Institute of Macau International Institute of Social Studies (ISS)
L
International Master’s Program in Cultural and
La Trobe University
Creative Industries (TNUA)
Laasalle College of the Arts
Inya Institute
Laboratoire Architecture Anthropologie
ISEAS-Yusuf Ishak Institute
Lafayette College
Iwate University, Japan
Lancaster University Lao Textiles Co
J
Laobangfai Prime Association
Jagiellonian University
Le Moyne College
Jai-Sook Studio, Chiang Mai
Lécole des Hautes etudes en Sciences Socciale (EHESS)
James Cook University
Leibniz-Institute for South and South-East European Studies
James H.W. Thompson Foundation
Leiden University
Jamia Millia Islamia
Leiden University College
Japan Center for Asian Historical Records
Leiden University Institute for Area Studies (LIAS)
Japan International Cooperation Agency
Lingnan University
Japan Science and Technology Agency
Linnaeus University
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
London School of Economics and Political Science
Japan-ASEAN Science, Technology and Innovation Platform
Loyola Marymount University
Jawaharlal Nehru University
Ludwig-Maximilians-University
Jim Thompson Art Center
Lund University
Jindal Global University JMS Public Relations
M
John Cabot University
Macau Portuguese and English Press Association
Johns Hopkins University, SAIS, Nanjing Center
Macau University of Science Technology Macquarie University
K
Mahasarakham University
Kanazawa University
Mahidol University, International College (MUIC)
Kasetsart University
Manchester University
Keio University
Mandalay University
Kennesaw State University
Manipur Central University
Khalifa University
Maritime Silk Road Society
King Prajadhipok’s Institute
Massey University
King’s College London
Maulana Azad National Urdu University
139
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS / A-Z
Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology
National Tsing Hua Univerisity
Max Planck Institute, Florence
National University of Laos
McGill University
National University of Malaysia
Meertens Institute, Amsterdam
National University of Singpore (NUS)
Meiji University
National War College
Meijo University
Nazarbayev University
Mekong Region Land Governance
New York University
Miami University
New York University Abu Dhabi
Middlebury College
NIAS Press
Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport, Bangkok
Nihon University
Ministry of Rural Development, Bangkok
North Bengal University
Monash University
North Dakota State University
Monash University Malaysia
Northern Illinois University, Center for Southeast
Monash University Malaysia, School of Arts and Social Sciences
Asian Studies Northern Smile Travel
Moscow State University
Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)
Mount Holyoke College
NUS Press Pte Ltd
Musashi University Myanmar-Japan Center for Human Resource Development
O Ochanomizu University Ohio University
N
Okayama University
Nagoya Gakuin University
Omeo Kumar Das Institute of SociaL Change and
Nagoya University
Development (KDISCD)
Nagoya University of Foreign Studies
Open Development Cambodia (ODC)
Nanyang Technological University
Orenburg State Pedagogical University
Nanzan University
Osaka University
Nara University
Otemon Gakuin University
National Chengchi University
Oxfam in Vietnam
National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS)
Oxford University
National Center for Traditional Arts National Chenchi University
P
National Chi Nan University
Pace University
National Chiao-Tung University
Pachhunga University College
National Chung Cheng University
Palgrave Macmillan
National Dong-Hwa University
Panjab University
National Institute for the Humanities
Paris-Belleville National School of Architecture (ENSAPB)
National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA)
Paris-Diderot University
National Institute of Technology
Parliament of Bhutan
National Museum of Ethnology
Pathumthani University
National Museum of History
Payap University
National Museum of Natural History
Peking University
National Palace Museum
Penang Institute
National Quemoy University
Pentecostal Church of Hong Kong
National Taiwan University
Philippine Rice Research Institute
140
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
Philippine-California Advanced Research Institutes
Seisa University
Portsmouth University
Senshu University
Post Vidai Collection, Vietnam
Seoul National University (SNU)
Prafulia Chandra College, Kolkata
Setsunan University
Primeasia University
Seven Fountains Jesuit Retreat Center
Prince of Songkla University
Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences (SASS)
Princeton University
Shanghai Jiaotong University Shantou University Center for Global Studies
R
Shinawatra International University
Rachana Sansad Academy of Architecture
Shizuoka university
Radboud University Nijmegen
Silkworm Books
Rajamangala University of Technology
Simon Fraser University
Rajiv Gandhi University
Singapore Management University
Ramkhamhaeng University
Singapore University of Social Sciences
Reinisch-Westfaelische Technische Hochschule (RWTH),
SKH Lam Woo Memorial Secondary School
Aachen
Smithsonian Institution
Renmin University of China
Social Science Research Council (SSRC)
Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
Social Welfare Bureau
Richard Humphries Photography
Societe de Cooperation pour le Development
Rikkyo University
International (SOCODEVI)
Rio de Janeiro Federal University
Soka University
Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University
Sophia University
River Books
Sorbonne Paris1 University
Rizvi College of Arts, Science and Commerce
Soth-South Exchange Programme for Reseach on the
Royal Commonwealth Society in Hong Kong
History of Dvelopment (SEPHIS)
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT), Vietnam
South Asian University
Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian & Caribbean
South East Asia Junction (SEA Junction), Bangkok
Studies (KITLV)
Southeast Asian Studies Regional Exchanfe Program
Royal University of Phnom Penh
(SEASREP)
Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg
Springer Nature
Russian Academy of Sciences
SRI Biosphere Private Lmited
Rutgers University
Srinakharinvirot University
Ryukoku University
St. Anthony’s College Stanford University
S
State University of Malang
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
Stellenbosch University
Saint-Petersburg State University
Sun Yat-sen University
Saitama University
Swinburne University of Technology
Salisbury University Sanata Dharma University
T
Sapienza Università di Roma
Taipei Medical University
Satya Wacana Christian University
Taipei National University of the Arts
Saythu and National Institute of Advanced Studies
Takasaki City University of Economics
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Tallinn University
Seikei University
Tara Books PVT LTD
141
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS / A-Z
Tarlac State University
Turan University
Tata Institute of Social Sciences
Tzu Chi University
Taylor & Francis Asia Pacific Teacher Training Institute Kent Campus
U
Technical University of Valencia
Udayana University
Teikyo University
Universidad Autonoma de Madrid
Temple University Japan Campus
Universidad Nacional de Educacion a Distancia (UNED)
Texas Tech University
Universitas Airlangga
Thailand Environment Institute (TEI)
Universitas Indonesia
Thammasat University
Universitas Nasional, Jakarta
The Asian Library, Leiden University
Universitas Negeri Semarang
The Australian National University
Universitas Padjadjaran
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Universitas Pancasila
The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzen
Universitas Pendidikan Indonesia, Bandung
The City University of New York
Universite Bordeaux Montaigne, L’equipe les Africains
The Education University of Hong Kong (EdUHK)
dans le Monde
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Université de La Réunion
The Immigrant Institute
Université Gaston Berger, Saint Louis
The Macao Foundation
Université Paris Est Créteil
The Ministry of Religious Affairs
Universiti Brunei Darussalam
The New School
Universiti Putra Malaysia
The Open University of Hong Kong
Universiti Sains Malaysia
The University of Hong Kong
University College London
The University of Adelaide
University College Roosevelt, Middelburg
The University of Auckland
University of Adelaide
The University of Burdwan
University of Amsterdam
The University of Melbourne
University of Arizona
The University of Queensland
University of Asia and the Pacific
The University of Sydney
University of Auckland
The University of Tokyo
University of Baguio
The Urban Climate Resilience in Southeast Asaia
University of Bern
Partnership (UCRSEA)
University of Birmingham
Tokai University
University of Bologna
Tokyo Gagugei University
University of Bristol
Tokyo Metropolitan University
University of British Columbia
Tokyo University of Foreign Studies
University of Buenos Aires, Gino Germani Research Institute
Tokyo University of the Arts
University of California - Berkeley
Tongji University
University of California - Riverside
Toyo Bunko
University of Cambridge
Tree Music and Art
University of Chicago
Tribhuvan University
University of Chittagong
Tsinghua University Sino-French Center in
University of Cologne
Social Sciences
University of Copenhagen
Tsuda University
University of Delhi
Tufts University
University of Dhaka
142
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
20-23 JULY 2017
University of Durham
University of Portsmouth
University of Edinburgh
University of Queensland
University of Essex
University of Rajshahi
University of Freiburg
University of Redlands
University of Gadjah Mada
University of Richmond
University of Ghana
University of Rostock
University of Giessen
University of São Paulo
University of Gothenburg
University of South Australia
University of Göttingen
University of South Carolina
University of Hawaii at Hilo
University of Southern California
University of Hawaii at Manoa
University of St Andrews
University of Hawaii-Leeward
University of Sydney
University of Heidelberg
University of Tasmania
University of Helsinki
University of Technology Sydney
University of Hong Kong
University of the Philippines
University of Indonesia
University of the Philippines - Baguio
University of Kelaniya
University of the Philippines - Diliman
University of Kent
University of the Philippines - Los Banos
University of Lausanne
University of Tokyo
University of Leeds
University of Toronto
University of Lignan
University of Toulouse 2. Le Laboratoire d’Études
University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
et de Recherches Appliquées en Sciences (LERASS) University of Tsukuba
University of Maastricht
University of Vienna
University of Macau
University of Warsaw
University of Malaya
University of Warwick
University of Manchester
University of Washington
University of Mandalay
University of Washington Press
University of Michigan
University of Westminster
University of Michigan (UM) China Data Center
University of Wisconsin - Madison
University of Milan-Bicocca
University of Wisconsin - Stevens Point
University of Minnesota
University of Wollongong
University of Mumbai
University of York
University of Münster
University of Zurich
University of Naples “L’Orientale”
University Paris Diderot
University of Notre Dame
University Southern California
University of Nottingham - Ningbo China
Uppsala University
University of Nottingham - Malaysia Campus
Urban Language Studio
University of Oregon
Utrecht University
University of Oslo University of Otago
V
University of Ottawa
Valaya Alongkorn Rajabhat University
University of Oxford
Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences (VASS)
University of Peshawar
Vietnam National University
University of Pittsburgh
Vietnamese-German University
143
ICAS 10
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS
LIST OF PARTICIPANT AFFILIATED INSTITUTIONS / A-Z
Vikas College of Arts, Science and Commerce Villanova University W Wageningen University Wanfang Data Corporation (International) Ltd Waseda University Washington State University West China Normal University, School of History & Culture Western Sydney University Western University Westminster University Winston Salem State University X Xi’an Jiaotong-Liverpool University Y Yale University Yale-NUS College Yangon University Yangon University of Distance Education Yangon University of Economics Yonsei University York University Yunnan Minzu University Z Zayed University Zhejiang Daily Press Group Zürich University of the Arts
144
20-23 JULY 2017
ICAS 10
NOTES
20-23 JULY 2017
NOTES
145
ICAS 10
NOTES
146
NOTES
20-23 JULY 2017
ICAS 10
NOTES
20-23 JULY 2017
147
ICAS 10
NOTES
148
NOTES
20-23 JULY 2017
Design: Paul Oram | www.pauloram.nl
ICAS 10
CONFERENCE PROGRAMME
ICAS 10 WEBSITE ICAS.ASIA/ICAS10
20-23 JULY 2017