Reconceptualizing Southeast Asian Studies

-----------DAY 1---------PANEL 1.01 Hours: 9.30-11.30
Reconceptualizing Southeast Asian Studies
CHUTINTARANOND Sunait (Chulalongkorn University)
Panelists:
1. Southeast Asia matters: will a dialogue of civilizations prevent cultural clashes and
geopolitical conflict?
SAVAGE Victor Roger (NUS, Singapore)
2. Inter-regional dimensions of Southeast Asian history: trade and diplomatic relations between
Siam and India during the seventeenth century
NA POMBEJRA Dhiravat (Bangkok)
3. The ‘ASEAN factor’ in Myanmar’s transition
ROBINSON Gwen Akiko (Chulalongkorn University)
4. Neither insider nor outsider or both: multi-directionality in Southeast Asian studies
HAYAMI Yoko (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
5. Recording the past of a “Peoples without History”: an urgent task for Southeast Asian scholars
WATSON ANDAYA Barbara (University of Hawai'i)
6. Reorienting the historian’s gaze toward the sea
ANDAYA Leonard (University of Hawai'i-Manoa)
PANEL 1.02 Hours: 12.50-15.50
On the Rise: Southeast Asian Studies for Region making and Networking - Roundtable
Discussion
Mario Ivan LOPEZ (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
Panel Chair: SHIN Yoon Hwan (KASEAS)
Panelists:
1. PEYCAM Philippe (IIAS, The Netherlands)
2. MCGOWAN Kaja (Cornell University)
3. HADLER Jeffrey (University of California, Berkeley)
4. THOMPSON Mark (City University of Hong Kong)
5. NGUYEN Van Chinh (Vietnam National University)
6. BAO Maohong (Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Peking University)
7. KONG Jianxun (Yunnan Academy of Social Science)
8. ABRAHAM Itty (National University of Singapore)
9. REID Anthony (Australian National University)
10. KONO Yasuyuki (CSEAS, Kyoto University)
11. SHIN Yoon Hwan (KASEAS)
12. Michele Ford (University of Sydney)
13. Mala Rajo Sathian (University of Malaya)
PANEL 1.03 Hours: 09.30-11.30
Regional Integration of East Asia
SHIN Jae Hyeok (Korea University)
Panelists:
1. Domestic origins of rising nationalism in East Asia: evidence from Japan
SHIN Jae Hyeok (Korea University)
2. Foundation of regional integration: common or divergent interests?
LEE Yong Wook (Korea University)
3. Learning by association? ASEAN centrality, the trilateral summit, and the trivialization of
regionalist norms and institutions in East Asia
SON Key Young (Korea University)
4. ASEAN centrality and regional integration of East Asia
KIM Hyung Jong (Changwon National University)
5. The U.S ‘Pivot’ to Asia and the impacts on ASEAN’s regional security
KOSAIDILOK Tanawin (Thammasart University)
6. The deficiency of regional cooperation in Southeast Asia amidst China’s rise: a gap in regional
states’ threat perceptions of China in the case of the South China Sea disputes
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