BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//SEA Junction - ECPv4.9.4//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-WR-CALNAME:SEA Junction
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://seajunction.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for SEA Junction
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:"Asia/Krasnoyarsk"
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0700
TZOFFSETTO:+0700
TZNAME:+07
DTSTART:20180101T000000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID="Asia/Krasnoyarsk":20180511T100000
DTEND;TZID="Asia/Krasnoyarsk":20180511T160000
DTSTAMP:20260513T175159
CREATED:20180426T123706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20180427T002541Z
UID:8766-1526032800-1526054400@seajunction.org
SUMMARY:Workshop “Refugees and Displaced Persons in Southeast Asia: Security over Protection?”
DESCRIPTION:On 11th of May we will focus on displaced persons\, asylum seekers and refugees in Southeast Asia as part of the “Displaced and Uprooted” Series\, which SEA Junction organizes in collaboration with the TIFA Foundation. More particularly\, the workshop and related panel discussion will explore the bias towards securitization in the regional response to forced migrant flows and its implications for the rights and wellbeing of asylum-seekers\, refugees and displaced persons. The workshop is designed for the students of the Global Health Program of Thammasat University and other interested students\, while the panel is open to the public. \nBackground \nTen years ago\, Antonio Guterres – at the time High Commissioner for Refugees and currently UN Secretary General – remarked that the 21st century would be “the century of people on the move.” In discussing the nuances of this global phenomenon\, Guterres warned that new and more complex patterns of displacement and migration were emerging as a result of the intersections of climate change and environmental degradation\, armed conflicts and violence\, and growing inequalities created by globalization processes. \nOstensibly\, during the last ten years the global movement of people has become one of the most controversial and often divisive issues of our time and what Guterres warned about appears to have come true. UNHCR data for 2016 showed that 65.6 million people were forcibly displaced worldwide– a total bigger than the population of the United Kingdom and about 300\,000 more than the previous year. All regions of the world are being affected.  UNHCR’s 2015 data showed that Southeast Asia was home to more than 500\,000 refugees and asylum-seekers\, and many more are flying the region\, with the Rohingya population from Myanmar in camps in Bangladesh estimated at more than a million. \nAlthough the Rohingya exodus has become the focus of international attention\, there are many internal displaced people as well as asylum seekers in Southeast Asia who come from beyond the region itself\, for example from Bangladesh\, China\, Pakistan\, Sri Lanka\, North Korea\, Syria\, Somalia and the Balkans. \nIn Southeast Asia\, like in other parts of the world\, politicians and sectors of the media have conflated the issues of documented and undocumented migrants\, displaced persons and refugees by constructing these different groups of people as existential threats to state sovereignty and security\, national cultural identity\, and economic stability. Activists and scholars have warned that the securitization of displaced people and refugees transfers directly into how they are treated\, particularly from a security/policing perspective. Increasing acts of xenophobia and violence against migrants\, displaced persons and refugees are being reported and documented around the world\, including Southeast Asia. Critics of the securitization perspective points also to the destabilizing effect on host communities as securitization often polarizes public opinion making dialogue and problem-solving almost impossible\, thus contributing to the problems that ostensibly it aims to prevent such as loss of social cohesion \nWhat risks are emerging from the securitization of displaced people and refugees\, especially in Southeast Asia? What are the relevant current frameworks and policies in Southeast Asia to respond to the crisis of displaced and refugee people? How are these frameworks and policies contributing to mitigate the risks of securitization? \nThe planned 1-day workshop and related panel discussion aim to explore these questions to make a critical contribution toward responses that are grounded in the respect of human dignity. The workshop is designed for the students of the Global Health Program of Thammasat University and other interested students\, while the panel is open to the public. The detailed program is as follows: \nTentative Program \nWorkshop 11 May\, 10 AM – 4PM (NB: Open to students only\, registration required) \n\n\n\nTIME\nSESSION\nPRESENTERS\n\n\n10 AM-12PM\nSecuritization theory and process: an overview and relevance to the situation in Southeast Asia\nFabio Saini \nLecturer Global Health\, Thammasat University\n\n\n12 PM-1 PM\nLunch break\n \n\n\n1PM- 3 PM\nRefugees in ASEAN: Frameworks and current responses\nRafendi Djamin \nSenior Advisor Human Rights Working Group (HRWG)/AICHR Representative for Indonesia 2009-2015 \n \n\n\n3 PM -4 PM\nStudents’ reflections and discussion\nRosalia Sciortino \nAssociate Professor\, Institute for Population and Social Research Mahidol University\n\n\n\n  \nPanel Discussion:  5.30 PM – 7 PM  \nModerator: \nRosalia Sciortino\, Introduction to the panel\nDirector SEA Junction & Assoc. Professor\, IPSR\, Mahidol University \nPanelists: \nRafendi Djamin “ASEAN Refugee Policies: Security over Protection?”\nSenior Advisor Human Rights Working Group (HRWG)/AICHR Representative for Indonesia 2009-2015 \nJerrold W. Huguet “Health and Forced Migration in SEA”\nIndependent expert and Emeritus Chief of the Population and Development Section of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP)\, in Bangkok.  \n(Representative of relief organizations) TBC: “Humanitarian Response to the Refugee Crisis” \nPhoto by Mahmud Rahman (Rohingya refugee in Cox’s Bazaar) \nFor information/reservation for our events please email southeastasiajunction@gmail.com or phone/wa: +66970024140 \nNB: Events are free\, but donation most welcome! \nOrganizers \nSEA Junction\, OUR Venue on Southeast Asia  \nSEA Junction aims to foster understanding and appreciation of Southeast Asia in all its socio-cultural dimensions –from arts and lifestyles to economy and development. Conveniently located at Room 408 of the Bangkok Arts and Culture Centre or BACC (across MBK\, BTS National Stadium) SEA junction facilitates public access to knowledge resources and exchanges among students\, practitioners and Southeast Asia lovers. For more information see www.seajunction.org and join the Facebook group https://www.facebook.com/groups/1693055870976440/ \nTIFA Foundation \nTIFA Foundation is a grant making institution working for human rights and democracy in Indonesia and supporting civil society to work in key fields like access to information\, community and independent media\, legal aid\, anti-corruption\, and minority rights. In recognition of the importance of placing Indonesia within the broader regional context\, since 2016 Tifa Foundation has started the Regional Hub program cooperating with the New Mandala and now with SEA Junction. For more information see http://www.tifafoundation.org/en/ (in Indonesian). \nGlobal Health Program\, Thammasat Faculty of Public Health (MPH-GH) \nMPH-GH is a graduate program that defines global health from a socio-political perspective with an emphasis on inter-regional capacity building applying a South-to-South focus (Africa\, Asia-Pacific and Middle East). For more information see http://www.fph.tu.ac.th/eng/index.php?id=45&i=11&11-overview= \nShare on FacebookTweetFollow usSave
URL:https://seajunction.org/event/workshop-refugees-and-displaced-persons-in-southeast-asia-security-over-protection/
LOCATION:SEA Junction\, Room 408\, BACC\, 939 Rama 1 Rd\, Pathum Wan\, Khet Pathum Wan\, Krung Thep Maha Nakhon 10330 Bangkok\, Thailand\, Bangkok\, Thailand
CATEGORIES:Event
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR