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June 2023
Call for Papers: 26th International Joint World Tourism Conference
The Conference will focus on a broad range of topics related to education and research in culture/heritage and tourism/hospitality. The Conference organizers invite papers, abstracts and presentation proposals relevant to culture and tourism, hospitality management. Considering the theme of the conference, Paper with any of the following or related subjects would be appropriate for presentation: Any kind of issues in culture/heritage and tourism/hospitality/food service/convention/events. Cross-cultural studies in tourism/hospitality. Emerging issues in education and training. Studies and case studies on tourism/hospitality…
Find out more »July 2023
Call for Proposals: Southeast Asia Council Designated Panels
Association for Asian Studies Annual Conference 2024 The Southeast Asia Council (SEAC) of the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) is seeking a panel or roundtable proposal for SEAC designated panels. Each year SEAC is allocated two Designated Panels, which are accepted directly onto the Annual Conference Program without Program Committee review or approval. The SEAC Designated Panels should reflect current developments in the field of Southeast Asian Studies, or address areas the Council feels require greater attention from Southeast Asianists,…
Find out more »August 2023
Call for Papers for Conference on Social Faultlines in Indonesai: Persistance and Change in An Evolving Landscape
With around 279.1 million people in 2022, Indonesia has the fourth largest population in the world after China, India, and the US. Also known as the largest archipelagic country, the Indonesian population is spread over 17,504 islands. The wide geographical variation in Indonesia is accompanied by a high diversity of the social and cultural backgrounds of its population. This diversity has been a critical element in the political, economic, and socio-cultural life of the nation since its inception. Highly diverse…
Find out more »Call for Abstract and Panel Proposals: 5th ASLE/ASEAN Ecocritical Conference Theme of the Conference – Posthuman Southeast Asia
Overview As human actions continue to undermine the sustainability of Earth’s ecosystems and the stability of the planet as a whole, posthumanism seeks to overcome the legacies of humanism by exploring from a non-anthropocentric perspective the ongoing entanglements of humans and nonhumans. A variety of approaches to the human, the nonhuman, the inhuman, and the posthuman have been at the center of recent work in ecocriticism and across the environmental humanities. Many scholars view posthumanism as a paradigmatic change that…
Find out more »September 2023
Call for Paper: Documenting Power and Resistance in Southeast Asia and Southeast Asian America
Overview It invites participants to reconsider the role of historical collections in relation to concepts of care and restitution and as forms of empowerment against state-sponsored violence and community erasure. We take our title from the notion of the archive as a living and dynamic force, considering how the archive and the act of archiving can empower, but also contaminate and be contaminated. We look at different kinds of archives and their dangers of contamination: colonial documents and photographs, records…
Find out more »October 2023
38th ASEAN Roundtable: ASEAN in a Fragmented Global Order
The ASEAN Studies Centre at the ISEAS – Yusof Ishak Institute is pleased to invite you to attend the 38th ASEAN Roundtable on 3 October 2023 (Tuesday). The theme of this year’s ASEAN Roundtable is “ASEAN in a Fragmented Global Order”. The Roundtable will examine ASEAN’s central role as the primary forum for dialogue and cooperation in Southeast Asia and its relevance in shaping the future of the region. We are honored to have H.E. Dr. Kao Kim Hourn, Secretary-General…
Find out more »Call for Papers: Canadian Council on Southeast Asian Studies (CCSEAS) 2023
Southeast Asia is a fertile area in which to examine the question of how societies express their resilience, this particularly in this post-pandemic context combining with worldwide economic restructuration. The notion of resilience itself invites critical inquiries from many disciplinary perspectives. How is resilience activated in Southeast Asian societies and cultures? How do historical legacies such as colonialism, communist revolutions, nationalist wars, and authoritarian regimes affect resilience, in the past as much as in the contemporary world? How do social…
Find out more »Call for Paper: Dynamics of Labor Migration in Southeast Asia
Rising Voices in Southeast Asian Studies A SEAC/AAS Initiative for AAS-in-Asia 2024 Association for Asian Studies in Asia Conference 2024 (AAS-in-Asia 2024@Yogyakarta) The Southeast Asia Studies Council (SEAC) of the Association for Asian Studies (AAS) is seeking paper proposals from up-and-coming scholars – including graduate students – to join a “Rising Voices” panel on the topic of “Dynamics of Labor Migration in Southeast Asia.” (See below for eligibility). We seek to recruit emerging scholars from Southeast Asian countries to form…
Find out more »6th Conference on Human Rights: Indigeneity and Human Rights in Asia and the Pacific Towards a Just Society: Challenges and Opportunities?
Background The relationship between indigeneity and human rights has long caused various challenges to promoting democracy and fulfilling human rights in Asia and the Pacific region. Some of the basic rights of indigenous people have continued to strengthen as indicated by the existence of political and legal movements. However, it was also found that indigenous people groups were actually marginalized in the development of democracy. Some reasons behind this challenges are the absence of a single term related to indigeneity…
Find out more »November 2023
Call for Paper: The 5th SEASIA Biennial International Conference 2024
Deadline of Submission -November, 2023 Conference date- July 18-20, 2024 Overview This conference is a platform for centering Southeast Asian scholarship within Asia. Insofar as global academic metropoles are recognized centers of knowledge production, the notion of De/Centering involves the twin processes of provincializing capitals of power while affirming the unique and compelling contributions of, and from, the region. “De/Centering” is defined here as a shift in one’s analytical position away from a dominant center towards the periphery in order…
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