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				<title>Newsletter November &December 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/282319</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 31 Dec 2017 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
				<description>&amp;nbsp;HSEPP November &amp;amp;December 2017 Digest&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP November &amp;amp;December 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;CALL FOR PAPERS
&amp;nbsp;CALL FOR PAPERS, for the panel&amp;nbsp;Bodies of Archives/Archival Bodies (P029)Due by 8th January 2018
This is part of the&amp;nbsp;Art, Materiality and Representation Conference hosted by the Royal Anthropological Institute (RAI) at The British Museum, Clore Centre and SOAS, London, 1st-3rd June 2018.Convenors: Jennifer Clarke (Gray's School of Art, RGU), Giulia Battaglia (IRMECCEN,&amp;nbsp;Université Sorbonne Nouvelle;&amp;nbsp;IIAC/EHESS) and Fiona Siegenthaler (University of Basel)Abbreviated Abstract&amp;nbsp;This panel calls for academic and artistic interventions that discuss objects, images&amp;nbsp;and/or bodies&amp;nbsp;as archives of experiences and processes.&amp;nbsp;Our panel begins with the premise that archives, prone to decay, dissolution and re-arrangement, are permanently in process. Our interest is not limited to objects, but also to the idea of the body (or collective bodies) as archives of experience.
In particular, we are interested in the archive's potential for collaborative artistic and ethnographic practices: What forms of collaborative work does the archive offer? In what ways can the collective sensibility of the archive be explored? What can we gain from a process-based notion of the archive? What implications does this have on the role of the archive in art and anthropology, and for the practices related to it in particular?
Please provide a proposal by 8th January 2018 to the following online form:

http://nomadit.co.uk/rai/events/rai2018/conferencesuite.php/panels/6079
&amp;nbsp;Proposals must consist of a paper title, a short abstract of less than 300 characters and an abstract of 250 words.&amp;nbsp;The inclusion of multimedia, film, audio, or other elements as part of the presentation would be very welcome. Please contact the convenors if you would like any further information.
For further details about the overall conference please see:


https://www.therai.org.uk/conferences/art-materiality-and-representationFull Abstract&amp;nbsp;The concept of the 'archive' had arguably received insufficient critical attention in anthropology until relatively recently despite its central role in research practices. However, recent work has highlighted the significance of archives for the future of anthropology (Kohl 2013), and ideas about the 'archive' as a static repository of history are being challenged. Interdisciplinary experimentations with forms of archive/archiving are increasingly emerging (cf. the anarchive) raising important questions about both the collaborative and processural nature of archives (Manning 2016).&amp;nbsp;This panel begins with the premise that archives, prone to decay, dissolution and re-arrangement, are permanently in process (cf.

http://grapaub.org/en/archive/). This perspective enables us to engage with cleavages and links between past knowledge and future imagination, as well as the role of representation. Our interest is not limited to objects, but also to the idea of the body (or collective bodies) as archives of experience.In particular, we are interested in the archive's potential for collaborative artistic and ethnographic practices: What forms of collaborative work does the archive offer? In what ways can the collective sensibility of the archive be explored? What can we gain from a process-based notion of the archive? What implications does this have on the role of the archive in art and anthropology, and for the practices related to it in particular?&amp;nbsp;Through this panel we call for papers and art/media interventions that explore a variety of contemporary understandings of 'archive' that open up for individuals, groups and institutions possibilities to produce creative anthropological and artistic work.&amp;nbsp;Call for Papers for a joint meeting of The Asian Society of the History of Medicine (9th meeting) and HOMSEA (History of Medicine in Southeast Asia), 27 – 30 June 2018, Jakarta&amp;nbsp;Theme: Colonial Medicine after Decolonization: Continuity, Transition, and ChangeDeadline for submission: 1 February 2018Notification of acceptance will be given by 1 March 2018.Guidelines for Submission:Submissions on all topics related to the history of medicine in Asia are welcome; submissions related to the conference theme are especially encouraged. Participants can submit full panels (2, 3, or 4 papers) as well as individual papers. Paper proposals (title, author, and an abstract in English of no more than 200 words) and a1-page curriculum vitae or panel proposals (a panel proposing of no more than 200 words with abstracts and 1-page CVs of all participants) should be sent by electronic mail to James Dunk (james.dunk@sydney.edu.au). The program committee reserves the right to suggest changes and revisions to abstracts and panel proposals.Program committee: Dr Harry Yi-Jui Wu (Hong Kong); Dr. Ning Jennifer Chang (Taipei); Prof Laurence Monnais (Montreal); A/Prof Hans Pols (Sydney); Dr. Yu-Chuan Wu (Taipei); Dr. Por Heong Hong (Kuala Lumpur); and members of the Local Arrangements Committee.Unfortunately, the ASHM cannot offer funds to defray travel expenses due to budget constraints. There is a range of affordable accommodation available near the conference venue. Participants are encouraged to apply for support from their home departments or institutions.The conference will be hosted by the Indonesian Academy of Sciences, which is located in the new buildings of the Indonesian National Library in the centre of Jakarta.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS&amp;nbsp;Appel à contributions : revue Moussons. Recherche en sciences humaines sur l’Asie du Sud-Est


Le prochain numéro généraliste de la revueMoussons. Recherche en sciences humaines sur l’Asie du Sud-Estparaîtra en novembre 2018. Il est encore temps d’y participer en envoyant votre contribution avant le 01/03/2018 à l’adresse mailto:irasia-moussons@univ-amu.fr.

Pour rappel, Moussons est une revue éditée par l’IrAsia (CNRS/Aix-Marseille Université) dédiée aux sciences humaines en Asie du Sud-Est. A vocation bilingue, la revue publie des articles en français et en anglais. Dotée d’un comité éditorial et d’un comité de lecture international, Moussons est inscrite sur la liste de l’HCERES et est indexée par l’ERIH (European Reference Index for the Humanities). La revue est publiée simultanément sous deux formes : une version papier imprimée et diffusée par les Presses universitaires de Provence (PUP) ainsi qu’une version en ligne sur OpenEdition Journals (

https://journals.openedition.org/moussons/ ), intégrée aux bouquets de revues du programme Freemium d’OpenEdition.





Les conseils aux auteurs sont disponibles à cette adresse&amp;nbsp;: 

https://journals.openedition.org/moussons/1363


&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;CALL FOR PARTICIPATIONS&amp;nbsp;Site and Space in Southeast AsiaDeadline: 14 January 2018The organisers of Site and Space in Southeast Asia seek applications for participation in a two-year funded research opportunity exploring the art, architecture, and landscape of Southeast Asia.Site and Space in Southeast Asia explores the intersections of urban space, art and culture in three cities—Yangon, Penang, and Huế—through collaborative, site-based research. With major funding from the Getty Foundation and partners from within and beyond the region, Site and Space in Southeast Asia seeks to support innovative research in the art and architectural histories of the region, foster professional networks among early career scholars, and expand engagement with an ever more global field.The concept of site offers a rich and multivalent point of entry for constructing connected histories of art, architecture, and cultural production. Engaging with cities as sites that generate cultural narratives, Site and Space in Southeast Asia will explore spaces of memory, interaction, and production across national and regional boundaries. With a chronological span from the colonial period through independence and into the contemporary, a period of dynamic, often divergent political and social development, Site and Space in Southeast Asia seeks to enrich the study of art and architectural histories of Southeast Asia through engagement with site and space.Over the course of the two-year research period commencing in June 2018, three small teams of researchers will be funded to conduct field and archival research exploring the physical and cultural histories of three project cities, with a particular interest in their artistic and built environments. Annual whole-of cohort workshops will allow comparative discussion of findings and mapping of future research directions. During the first year, collaborative research will allow a “coming to terms” with the city as site and its intersecting art historical themes. During the second year, researchers will pursue individual projects emerging from these themes. The project will culminate in one or more collective outputs to be determined through discussions with participants and institutional partners.Applications are invited from early career researchers working in related areas (including art and architectural history, landscape studies, urban studies, film studies, anthropology, etc.), and are particularly welcomed from those connected to institutions in the region; with experience in modes of spatial analysis in the humanities; and with interest in exploring digital methods in site-based research. Although research will be conducted in all appropriate languages, participants must have strong spoken and written capacity in English.Organized in partnership by researchers at the University of Sydney, Nanyang Technological University, National Gallery Singapore, the University of Malaya, the University of Toulouse, and Dumbarton Oaks, Site and Space in Southeast Asia is primarily funded by the Getty Foundation’s Connecting Art Histories initiative.Project leaders include:Caroline Herbelin (Toulouse), Field Director, HuếYin Ker (NTU), Field Director, YangonMark Ledbury (Sydney), Chief InvestigatorSimon Soon (Malaya), Field Director, PenangAdrian Vickers (Sydney), Chief InvestigatorStephen Whiteman (Sydney), Chief Investigator, Project DirectorTo apply, please complete this form including basic biographical information, two short essays and current CV.For questions relating to the project or the application process, please contact the project director, Dr Stephen Whiteman at 



	
			stephen.whiteman@sydney.edu.au

	




.&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;CALL FOR CANDIDATES&amp;nbsp;Prix 2018 de la Maison des Cultures du MondeÀ l’occasion du trentième anniversaire de sa fondation, la Maison des Cultures du Monde a créé en 2012 un prix destiné à permettre à un(e) étudiant(e) ou jeune chercheur(se) la réalisation d’un projet d'étude et de valorisation d’une forme spectaculaire et/ou musicale correspondant à cette orientation artistique. Ce prix permet au/à la lauréat(e) de compléter son projet de recherche en lui offrant la possibilité de faire venir en France dans le cadre du Festival de l’Imaginaire des artistes et/ou praticiens de la forme spectaculaire et/ou musicale qu'il/elle étudie.Le ou la lauréat(e) du Prix de la Maison des Cultures du Monde se voit offrir :- une formation de cinq jours, au cours de laquelle les chercheurs, administrateurs et techniciens de la Maison des Cultures du Monde lui font partager leurs expérience et savoir-faire. Ces 5 jours ne sont pas forcément regroupés et peuvent prendre la forme de plusieurs rencontres, à Paris et/ou Vitré.- une mission (voyage et séjour) d'une semaine maximum dans le pays de la forme spectaculaire ou/et de l’expression musicale étudiée dans les limites du projet et du budget retenus. Cette mission n’est pas une mission d’étude ou de recherche mais a pour but d’identifier les artistes et/ou praticiens qui seront invités au Festival de l’Imaginaire et d’initier le projet de leur venue en France.&amp;nbsp;La Maison des Cultures du Monde prend également en charge les frais relatifs à l’invitation en France des artistes et/ou praticiens de cette forme en fonction du projet et du budget retenus.Peut concourir au Prix de la Maison des Cultures du Monde toute personne âgée de moins de trente-cinq ans effectuant des études dans une université française (niveau master I minimum), qui dans le cadre de ses recherches s’intéresse à des formes spectaculaires et/ou musicales n’ayant jamais été présentées en France, ou l'ayant été dans une interprétation différente de celle qui fait l’objet de son attention.Les dossiers de candidature doivent être envoyés au plus tard&amp;nbsp;le 15 janvier 2018
.Le ou la lauréat(e) sera informé(e) fin janvier 2018.Les artistes ou praticiens seront invités à la 23ème édition du Festival de l’Imaginaire (2019).
Les dossiers sont à envoyer par voie électronique à :&amp;nbsp;



	
			documentation@maisondesculturesdumonde.org

	





Le Prix 2015 de la MCM a été remporté par Pierre Prouteau, actuellement doctorant au CASE, qui étudie le pin prayuk, un ensemble de musiques rituelles et festives rassemblé autour d'un incroyable sound system artisanal et ambulant qui accompagne et exalte les processions du calendrier bouddhique dans la province d'Isan, au nord-est de la Thaïlande.Pour plus de renseignements voir :&amp;nbsp;

http://www.maisondesculturesdumonde.org/actualite/prix-de-la-maison-des-cultures-du-monde-6eme-edition&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;PUBLICATIONSRevues

Le patrimoine au CambodgeAnciens rites, nouveaux usages et enjeux d’appropriationHeritage in Cambodia: Ancient Rituals, New Practices and Issues of AppropriationLa disparition constante des traces du passé proche dans la capitale Phnom Penh conduit à se questionner sur la valeur du patrimoine contemporain dans le Cambodge d’aujourd’hui. Le pays arbore sur son drapeau la représentation des temples d’Angkor, référence commune à un prestigieux passé, lointain et indépassable. Mais son histoire contemporaine est segmentée de mémoires concurrentes qui produisent chacune leurs propres formes de représentations. Les conflits politiques actuels s’enracinent dans ces représentations et empêchent la formulation d’un consensus quant à ce qui mérite d’être conservé et transmis aux jeunes générations. Dans un contexte de transformations majeures des relations sociales et de l’environnement propres à la transition économique, les Cambodgiens évoluent dans un chantier urbanistique permanent qui voudrait signifier l’avènement d’une nouvelle ère. Celle-ci peut-elle s’embarrasser de tels conflits mémoriels&amp;nbsp;? Ce numéro entend rendre compte des pratiques et usages du patrimoine contemporain par les Cambodgiens qui, dans ce contexte, revendiquent des formes d’appropriation différentiées de leurs identités. Il s’agit de s’interroger sur les rituels qui restituent la relation au passé pour résoudre les enjeux du présent. La patrimonialisation offre en effet une forme de sacralisation qui peut être exploitée comme un argument de défense des acquis mais aussi de promotion des pratiques sociales. En valorisant le caractère patrimonial de ces pratiques, conçues comme traditionnelles et donc identitaires, les acteurs de ces rituels risquent cependant de les figer dans un folklorisme désincarné. Leur efficience passe alors par la transformation des enjeux de leur performance pour de nouveaux publics.&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;Introduction


Marie&amp;nbsp;
Aberdam&amp;nbsp;et Téphanie&amp;nbsp;
Sieng




Définir le patrimoine au Cambodge&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Defining Heritage in Cambodia&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Articles


Frédéric&amp;nbsp;
Bourdier




La nature téléguidée&amp;nbsp;: mise en patrimoine d’un village dans la province de Ratanakiri&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]The Framed Nature: Cultural Legacy of a Village in Ratanakiri Province


Téphanie&amp;nbsp;
Sieng




À la conquête des marges dans le Nord-Est cambodgien&amp;nbsp;: l’enjeu du patrimoine à Ratanakiri&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Conquest of Cambodian Northeast Borders: The Question of Heritage in Ratanakiri


Marie&amp;nbsp;
Aberdam




Chantiers de pagodes dans le Cambodge colonial (1900-1940)&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Pagodas Building in Colonial Cambodia (1900-1940)


Francesca&amp;nbsp;
Billeri




The Process of Re-Construction and Revival of Musical Heritage in Contemporary Cambodia&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Le processus de reconstruction et le revival du patrimoine musical dans le Cambodge contemporain


Stéphanie&amp;nbsp;
Khoury




De rituel local à patrimoine national, réflexions sur l’expression rurale d’un théâtre au Cambodge&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]From Local Ritual to National Heritage, Remarks on the Rural Expression of a Theater in Cambodia


Sophie&amp;nbsp;
Biard




Réflexions sur l’histoire de l’exposition et de la restauration des effigies de culte anciennes au Cambodge&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Perspective on the History of Exhibition and Restoration of Ancient Cult Effigies in Cambodia


Anne-Laure&amp;nbsp;
Porée




Tuol Sleng, l’histoire inachevée d’un musée mémoire&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Tuol Sleng, the Unfinished Story of a Memorial Museum&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; Notes


Ang&amp;nbsp;
Chouléan




Le tamarin dans la cuisine des villages d’Angkor&amp;nbsp;: des Mémoires de Zhou Daguan à aujourd’hui&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]The Tamarind in the Cuisine of the Villages of Angkor: from the Memoirs of Zhou Daguan to Today


Olivier&amp;nbsp;
de&amp;nbsp;Bernon




Les collections de périodiques du Cambodge de la seconde moitié du&amp;nbsp;xxe&amp;nbsp;siècle et du début du&amp;nbsp;xxie&amp;nbsp;réunies par l’EFEO&amp;nbsp;: un patrimoine unique pour la recherche&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]The Cambodian Newspapers Collections Gathered by the EFEO (Second Part of the&amp;nbsp;xxth&amp;nbsp;– Beginning of the&amp;nbsp;xxith&amp;nbsp;Centuries): An Unique Legacy for Research&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;Comptes rendusBooks reviews


Guy&amp;nbsp;
Faure




Bernard Formoso, éd.,&amp;nbsp;Sociétés civiles d’Asie du Sud-Est continentale. Entre pilotage d’État et initiatives citoyennes
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral] Lyon, ENS éditions, 2016, 286&amp;nbsp;p.


Jean&amp;nbsp;
Baffie




Karine Peyronnie, Charles Goldblum &amp;amp; Bounleuam Sisoulath, éd.,&amp;nbsp;Transitions urbaines en Asie du Sud-Est. De la métropolisation émergente et de ses formes dérivées
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Marseille, IRASEC et IRD Éditions, collection «&amp;nbsp;Objectifs Suds. Les Défis du développement&amp;nbsp;», 2017, liste des sigles, acronymes et abréviations, illustrations, avec un cahier couleur de douze pages (24 photographies et plans), 358&amp;nbsp;p.


Jean&amp;nbsp;
Baffie




Claudine Salmon, éd., «&amp;nbsp;Chinese Deathscapes in Insulindia&amp;nbsp;»,&amp;nbsp;Archipel
, n°&amp;nbsp;92,&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]2016, 214 p.


Bernard&amp;nbsp;
Formoso




Paul T. Cohen, éd.,&amp;nbsp;Charismatic Monks of Lanna Buddhism
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Copenhagen, Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, 2017, index, 266&amp;nbsp;p.


Jean-Louis&amp;nbsp;
Margolin




Mandy Sadan, éd.,&amp;nbsp;War and Peace in the Borderlands of Myanmar&amp;nbsp;: The Kachin Ceasefire, 1994-2011
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Copenhague, NIAS Press, 2016, 517&amp;nbsp;p.


Jean&amp;nbsp;
Baffie




Serhat Ünaldi,&amp;nbsp;Working towards the Monarchy. The Politics of Space in Downtown Bangkok
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Honolulu, University of Hawai’I Press, 2016, index, illustrations (photo, plans, croquis), 267 p.


Jean&amp;nbsp;
Baffie




Sophorntavy Vorng,&amp;nbsp;A Meeting of Masks. 
Status, Power and Hierarchy in Bangkok
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]NIAS Press, 2017, glossaire des termes thaïs, illustrations, bibliographie, index, 194&amp;nbsp;p.


Bernard&amp;nbsp;
Formoso




Michael Sullivan,&amp;nbsp;Cambodia Votes. Democracy, Authority and International Support for Elections 1993-2013
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Copenhague, Nias Press, 2016, index, 341&amp;nbsp;p.


Philippe&amp;nbsp;
Le&amp;nbsp;Failler




Pierre Pascal,&amp;nbsp;Estampes du Viêt Nam
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Nîmes, Éditions Atelier BAIE, coll. «&amp;nbsp;Beaux Livres&amp;nbsp;», 2017, 256&amp;nbsp;p.


Rémi&amp;nbsp;
Desmoulière




Rémy Madinier, éd.,&amp;nbsp;Indonésie contemporaine
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Bangkok-Paris, IRASEC-Les Indes Savantes, 2016, bibliographie, index, 630&amp;nbsp;p.


Bernard&amp;nbsp;
Formoso




Michel Picard,&amp;nbsp;Kebalian. La construction dialogique de l’identité balinaise
&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Paris, Cahier d’Archipel, 44, 2017, glossaire, index, figures, 353&amp;nbsp;p.

View more about this revue&amp;nbsp;The Appropriation of Religion in Southeast Asia and Beyond Editors:&amp;nbsp;Picard
, Michel (Ed.)Table of contents (9 chapters)Introduction: Local Traditions and World Religions. Encountering ‘Religion’ in Southeast Asia and MelanesiaPicard, MichelAbout Buddhist Burma: Thathana, or ‘Religion’ as Social SpaceBrac de la Perrière, BénédicteThe (Re)configuration of the Buddhist Field in Post-Communist CambodiaGuillou, Anne YvonneRe-connecting the Ancestors. Buddhism and Animism on the Boloven Plateau, LaosSprenger, GuidoBalinese Religion in the Making: An Enquiry About the Interpretation of Agama Hindu as ‘Hinduism’Picard, MichelReturn to the Source: A Balinese Pilgrimage to India and the Re-Enchantment of Agama Hindu in Global ModernityHornbacher, AnnetteA Wall, Even in Those Days! Encounters with Religions and What Became of the TraditionBarraud, CécileEncounters with Christianity in the North Moluccas (Sixteenth–Nineteenth Centuries)Platenkamp, Jos. D. M.Continuity and Breaches in Religion and Globalization, a Melanesian Point of ViewIteanu, André

View more about this book&amp;nbsp;The Asia Pacific Journal of Anthropology, Special issue “Potent Places in Southeast Asia ».Guest eds.&amp;nbsp;Anne Y. Guillou and B. Brac de la Perrière2017, Volume 18, Issue 5

http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rtap20/18/5?nav=tocListINTRODUCTIONPotent Places and Animism in Southeast Asia,&amp;nbsp;Anne Yvonne Guillou

https://doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2017.1401324ARTICLESPotent Places in Central Vietnam: ‘Everything that Comes Out of the Earth is Cham’,&amp;nbsp;Anne-Valérie Schweyer&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

https://doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2017.1375553Khmer Potent Places: Pāramī and the Localisation of Buddhism and Monarchy in Cambodia,&amp;nbsp;Anne Yvonne Guillou

https://doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2017.1375553On Periodically Potent Places: The Theatre Stage as a Temporarily Empowered Space for Ritual Performances in Cambodia,Stéphanie Khoury

https://doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2017.1366545Singing in Dangerous Places (Flores, Lamaholot, Indonesia),&amp;nbsp;Dana Rappoport

https://doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2017.1372515From Potent Dead to Potent Places? Reflections on Muslim Saint Shrines in South Asia,&amp;nbsp;Delphine Ortis

https://doi.org/10.1080/14442213.2017.1373845</description>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>Newsletter October 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/279152</link>
				<pubDate>Tue, 31 Oct 2017 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
				<description>HSEPP October 2017 Digest&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP October 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.&amp;nbsp;
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Newsletter October 2017&amp;nbsp;
						(285.56 ko)
				

	·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;6th Global Conference on GenocideCALL FOR PAPERSMedical Faculty of Aix-Marseille University (France), 4-7 July 2018&amp;nbsp;Genocide and Mass Violence:&amp;nbsp;diagnosis, treatment, and&amp;nbsp;recovery?Humanities, social and medical sciences facing extreme violence&amp;nbsp;Conference Steering CommitteeDr. Elisabeth Anstett, CNRS, Chair of the CommitteeMme Laetitia Delouis, CNRS-AMU, Coordinator of the CommitteeMr Valery Ravix, AMU, IT manager&amp;nbsp;Conference Scientific CommitteeProf. Pascal Adalian, forensic anthropologist, AMU (France)Dr. Pamela Colombo, sociologist, EHESS (France)Prof. Jean-Marc Dreyfus, historian, the University of Manchester (UK)Dr. Francisco Ferrandiz, social anthropologist, CSIC (Spain)Prof. Caroline Fournet, legal scholar, University of Groningen (Netherlands)Prof. Sévane Garibian, legal scholar, University of Geneva (Switzerland)Dr. Gabriel Gatti, sociologist, University of Basque Country (Spain)Dr. Anne Guillou, social anthropologist, CNRS (France)Prof. Mario Ranaletti, historian,&amp;nbsp;Universidad Nacional Tres de Febrero&amp;nbsp;(Argentina)Prof. Nicky Rousseau, historian, University of Western Cape (RSA)Dr. Michel Signoli, archaeologist, CNRS (France)&amp;nbsp;ContextThe International Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS) was founded in January 2005 in Berlin to provide genocide studies with a non-partisan forum through which to present research and analysis on any aspect of genocide as well as other forms of collective violence. Because genocide is a highly contested legal, historical, sociological and political concept, INoGS has, since its founding, maintained support of research-led analysis rather than politically-defined agendas.The series of Global Conferences organized by INoGS since 2009 in Sheffield, Brighton, San Francisco, Cape Town and Jerusalem, have witnessed intensified scholarly engagement with a range of issues of fundamental importance to the field of genocide studies, including theoretical and methodological approaches to the subject, the legal and ethical bases upon which to approach episodes of extreme violence, as well as the need to develop more effective means of&amp;nbsp;stopping and preventing mass violence globally.&amp;nbsp;Conference aimsFor more than 70 years, following the seminal analysis developed by legal scholar Raphael Lemkin, academics, practitioners, and researchers from a variety of disciplines have addressed the issue of genocide and mass violence using a wide range of empirical and theoretical approaches to explore case studies throughout history. Interdisciplinary research across the humanities, legal and social sciences, as well as comparative approaches, have thus characterized genocide studies.However, even if extreme violence is relevant to various medical fields such as psychology, psychiatry and forensic anthropology, dialogue with the humanities and social sciences has been slow to develop. The 6th Global Conference of INoGS, to be held at the Medical Faculty of Aix-Marseille University (France) on 4-7 July 2018, therefore seeks to open new avenues for research on extreme violence while stimulating interdisciplinary exchanges between the humanities, social, and medical sciences. The early detection and prevention of mass violence represents a global challenge for each and every one of these fields of knowledge.This conference will thus seek to discuss various examples of past and contemporary mass crimes, delve into the causes as well as the short and long-term effects of genocidal processes, and foster dialogue between stakeholders who rarely exchange views.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Conference topicsThe organizers invite proposals for papers, panels and roundtables on any aspect of genocide and mass crime. We are especially keen to receive proposals from Latin America, Asia and Africa. Scholars working on topics such as sexual violence, forced disappearances, torture, mass trauma, forced separation of children from their families, conflict resolution, and mediation initiatives are particularly encouraged to submit abstracts. Presentations on recent experiences of mass violence, such as those in Syria, Darfur, Iraq, Mexico, Colombia, and Myanmar are expressly welcome. We encourage the submission of papers and panels on issues regarding violence contamination and containment processes. Another theme of particular interest is that of humanitarian intervention and the ethical challenges it poses.&amp;nbsp;Other topics of interest include, but are not restricted to:&amp;nbsp;Symptoms and diagnosesIndividual cases or comparative analyses of genocide and mass violenceColonialism and mass crimePrevention of collective violenceGendered violence, abduction and forced transfer of children from their families Mass trauma: voices of victimsRoles of perpetrators, bystanders and victimsForensic architecture, satellite imagery and tools for detecting mass murderMass death and migrationRefugee camps&amp;nbsp;TreatmentInternational law, criminal tribunals, and the International Criminal CourtHumanitarian and military interventionTransitional justiceMass exhumation and identification of victimsDNA banks&amp;nbsp;RecoveryThe repercussions of mass violence in both the short and long termThe politics of apology, reconciliation and restitutionGenocide denial, justifications and silencesMemorialization and commemoration of atrocitiesGenocide, mass violence and the internetRepresentations of genocide in literature, film, art, music and other mediaAcademic and educational practice within the field of genocide studies&amp;nbsp;Submission procedureParticipation is not restricted to INoGS members. We welcome interdisciplinary and theoretically-informed approaches as well as trans-disciplinary dialogue. Submissions from scholars, postgraduate students, as well as practitioners and researchers working in government, the NGO sector and other institutions are invited.From mid October 2017, prospective participants will be able to upload proposals in the form of abstracts of no more than 250 words via the conference website at&amp;nbsp;

http://inogsconference2018.com. A biographical sketch of no more than 100 words will also be required. Panel and roundtable submissions need, in addition, to explain the rationale behind the suggestion. Queries relating to this process can be sent to&amp;nbsp;



	
			admin@inogsconference2018.com

	




. Applicants can expect to learn the outcome of their proposals within four weeks of submission. After their proposals have been accepted participants will need to register online at&amp;nbsp;

http://inogsconference2018.com/&amp;nbsp;which contains further information about the conference, fees, accommodation options, travel advice, and other relevant matters. Participants registering before 15th&amp;nbsp;February will receive a 10% discount for early registration.&amp;nbsp;The closing date for paper, panel and roundtable submissions is 15th&amp;nbsp;March 2018.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;OFFRE DE STAGES&amp;nbsp;A L'IRASEC 2018&amp;nbsp;L’Institut&amp;nbsp;Recherche sur l'Asie du Sud-Est Contemporaine&amp;nbsp;(Irasec) accueille chaque année des stagiaires pour une durée de 4 mois au siège à&amp;nbsp;Bangkok&amp;nbsp;(Thaïlande). Ce stage offre aux étudiants l’opportunité de travailler dans un laboratoire de recherche en bénéficiant d’une ouverture sur le sud-est asiatiqueLes conditions
- Les candidats doivent être inscrits dans une université en&amp;nbsp;M1 ou M2 Recherche dans le domaine des sciences humaines et sociales sur l’Asie du Sud-Est. Des profils d’étudiants en journalisme et TIC sont également bienvenus, à condition de pouvoir justifier d’une formation en sciences sociales et d’une connaissance et/ou une expérience de la région. Les candidats doivent justifier d’une maîtrise minimum de l’anglais.- Les stagiaires touchent une gratification de 554€ par mois, les frais de voyage et frais de logement à Bangkok restant à leur charge.Le travail
- Le travail consiste principalement en des activités éditoriales et de&amp;nbsp;veille médiatique sur les pays de l'Asean&amp;nbsp;ainsi qu'à l'établissement de chronologies sur l'année en cours pour chacun des&amp;nbsp;pays d’Asie du Sud-Est en vue de la publication de l’ouvrage annuel Asie du Sud-Est. Bilans, enjeux et perspectives. Il s’agit d’un travail à plein temps.
- En plus de&amp;nbsp;ces activités éditoriales, et après entretien avec la direction de l'institut, les stagiaires ont l'opportunité de poursuivre des recherches adaptées à leurs sujets de mémoires et/ou centres d'intérêts. Ils pourront éventuellement proposer un travail de synthèse en vue d’une publication dans Asie du Sud-Est. Bilans, enjeux et perspectives.- Les stagiaires participent également à l’organisation des événements académiques et débats d’idées organisés par l’Irasec.Le calendrier
Trois postes de stagiaires sont proposés pour l'année 2018 répartis sur les périodes suivantes :&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
- de Janvier à Avril 2018
- de Mai à Août 2018
- de Septembre à Décembre 2018Nous invitons les candidats pour les sessions de janvier et de mai 2018 à&amp;nbsp;postuler dès à présent.Le dossier de candidature
- Un CV détaillant la formation en sciences humaines et sociales et Asie du Sud-Est (avec intitulés des cours).
- Une lettre de motivation précisant le sujet de recherche de master et le nom du directeur/trice, l’intérêt porté à l’Asie du Sud-Est, ce que le stagiaire peut apporter à l’Irasec et ce que l’Irasec peut lui apporter. &amp;nbsp;
- Une lettre de recommandation (facultative).Le dossier est à envoyer à la directrice&amp;nbsp;



	
			claire.tran@irasec.com

	




&amp;nbsp;et de la directrice adjointe&amp;nbsp;



	
			abigael.pesses@irasec.com

	




, avec copie au secrétariat général&amp;nbsp;



	
			administration@irasec.com

	




.Site internet :&amp;nbsp;

http://www.irasec.com/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Jeunes DOCTEUR (e)s en SHS, PSL lance son prix de thèse 2018&amp;nbsp;Pour récompenser les meilleurs travaux doctoraux dans cinq domaines des sciences humaines et sociales PSL lance un appel à candidatures pour le prix thèse SHS 2018. Les prix seront remis en juin par Patrick Boucheron professeur au Collège de France.Soutenus par les Labex&amp;nbsp;

Hastec,&amp;nbsp;

Tepsis&amp;nbsp;et&amp;nbsp;

TransferS&amp;nbsp;et les IRIS&amp;nbsp;

Création, cognition et société,&amp;nbsp;

Etudes globales,&amp;nbsp;

Governance Analytics&amp;nbsp;et&amp;nbsp;

Scripta, les prix PSL en Sciences humaines et sociales récompensent les meilleurs travaux doctoraux dans cinq domaines :


Arts et esthétique

Droit, économie, gestion

Humanités

Interfaces Sciences / Humanités

Sciences sociales


Un jury dédié à chacun des prix sera composé de cinq personnalités du domaine, dont un scientifique étranger et un représentant du Labex et/ou de l’IRIS ayant contribué au financement du prix. Les travaux lauréats recevront ainsi un prix d’une valeur de&amp;nbsp;5000 euros
&amp;nbsp;composé d'une somme de 2000 euros et d'un financement de 3000 euros pour un séjour de recherche (à Paris pour les étrangers ou chez les partenaires internationaux de PSL pour les français). Les lauréats donneront également trois séminaires dans trois établissements partenaires de PSL.Les résultats seront publiés le&amp;nbsp;15 mars 2018
&amp;nbsp;pour une remise des prix en juin 2018 par&amp;nbsp;Patrick Boucheron, Professeur au Collège de France
&amp;nbsp;lors d’une cérémonie solennelle (présence des lauréats obligatoire).·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Modalités de candidatures et critères d'attributionsPour être éligibles, les thèses doivent avoir été soutenues entre septembre 2016 et décembre 2017 dans un établissement d’enseignement supérieur français ou étranger. Elles peuvent être rédigées dans l’une des langues suivantes : français, anglais, allemand, espagnol, italien.Tout dossier de candidature doit être envoyé par courrier électronique, uniquement, à l’adresse suivante :&amp;nbsp;



	
			prix.PSL.SHS@univ-psl.fr

	




, avant le&amp;nbsp;30 décembre 2017
&amp;nbsp;et doit comporter :


Le dossier de candidature rempli (à télécharger)

Les deux pré-rapports de thèse et le rapport de soutenance

Deux lettres de recommandation détaillées (dont une du directeur de recherche)

La thèse


Bonne chance à tous les candidats !&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Pour Plus d’information&amp;nbsp;: 

https://www.univ-psl.fr/actualites/jeunes-docteures-en-shs-psl-lance-son-prix-de-these-2018&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Bourses de doctorat à l’ULB pour les ressortissants de pays en développement&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;Le Fonds des bourses de coopération de l’ULB octroie des&amp;nbsp;bourses de doctorat&amp;nbsp;ayant pour but de permettre à des&amp;nbsp;étudiants issus de pays en développement&amp;nbsp;d’effectuer leur thèse de doctorat, partiellement dans une unité de recherche de l’ULB, partiellement dans une université du Sud, dans l’optique d’un&amp;nbsp;retour et d’une valorisation des acquis dans leur pays.&amp;nbsp;Les bourses de doctorat sont octroyées pour une année académique, renouvelable trois fois (sur base d’un dossier de demande de renouvellement). La bourse n’est octroyée que&amp;nbsp;durant les mois de séjour en Belgique avec un maximum de 6 mois&amp;nbsp;par an.&amp;nbsp;Les dossiers doivent être rédigés et soumis par le promoteur de thèse ULB.&amp;nbsp; Pour accéder au règlement et dossier de candidature :&amp;nbsp;

http://www.ulb.ac.be/international/Cooperation-Universitaire-Financements.html &amp;nbsp;Les candidatures sont à envoyer par email à Virginie Scheffer,&amp;nbsp;



	
			virginie.scheffer@ulb.ac.be

	




&amp;nbsp;pour le&amp;nbsp;1er mars 2018 au plus tardpour un financement durant l’année académique 2018-2019.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;for a joint meeting of The Asian Society of the History of Medicine (9th&amp;nbsp;meeting) and HOMSEA (History of Medicine in Southeast Asia)&amp;nbsp;to be held in Jakarta, Indonesia, June 27-30, 2018&amp;nbsp;Theme:Colonial Medicine after Decolonisation:Continuity, Transition, and Change&amp;nbsp;Guidelines for Submission:&amp;nbsp;Submissions on all topics related to the history of medicine in Asia are welcome; submissions related to the conference theme are especially encouraged. Participants can submit full panels (2, 3, or 4 papers) as well as individual papers. Paper proposals (title, author, and an abstract in English of no more than 200 words) and a1-page curriculum vitae or panel proposals (a panel proposing of no more than 200 words with abstracts and 1-page CVs of all participants) should be sent by electronic mail to James Dunk (



	
			james.dunk@sydney.edu.au

	




). The program committee reserves the right to suggest changes and revisions to abstracts and panel proposals.&amp;nbsp;Deadline for submission:&amp;nbsp;1 February 2018Notification of acceptance will be given by 1 March 2018.&amp;nbsp;Program committee: Dr Harry Yi-Jui Wu (Hong Kong); Dr. Ning Jennifer Chang (Taipei); Prof Laurence Monnais (Montreal); A/Prof Hans Pols (Sydney); Dr.&amp;nbsp;Yu-Chuan Wu (Taipei); Dr. Por Heong Hong (Kuala Lumpur);&amp;nbsp;and members of the Local Arrangements Committee.&amp;nbsp;Unfortunately, the ASHM cannot offer funds to defray travel expenses due to budget constraints. There is a range of affordable accommodation available near the conference venue. Participants are encouraged to apply for support from their home departments or institutions.&amp;nbsp;The conference will be hosted by the Indonesian Academy of Sciences, which is located in the new buildings of the Indonesian National Library in the centre of Jakarta.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Call for Papers: Migrations and New Mobilities in Southeast AsiaUC Berkeley-UCLA Southeast Asian Studies Conference 2018&amp;nbsp;
April 27-28, 2018
At UC Berkeley
Conference chair: Professor Nancy Lee Peluso (Environmental Science, Policy &amp;amp; Management, UC Berkeley)
The aim of this conference, jointly sponsored by the Center for Southeast Asia Studies at UC Berkeley (Director: Professor Pheng Cheah) and the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at UCLA (Director: Professor George Dutton), is to look anew at issues concerning migration and Southeast Asia.
Migrations have characterized Southeast Asian lives and livelihoods in different ways in different eras; they have affected work, settlement patterns, resource use, small and large investments, religion, and culture. Migrations have formed and changed the composition of Southeast Asian societies and given rise to complex cultural, social, environmental, and political problems and opportunities. Past and present, migrations have been both forced and voluntary: forced to make way for certain kinds of development; triggered by violence and war; but also intentional and, at times, pioneering: to change lives, secure new livelihoods, or explore new ecologies.Contributors to this conference will discuss continuities and changes in migration practices, patterns, and personnel, addressing a wide range of historical periods, disciplines, and themes. For this conference, we solicit papers on such topics as:


labor migration and remittances;

resource extractions, claims, and trade;

shifting policies governing international movements of people, resources and capital; human rights issues raised by transnational migration;

transformations in urban and rural spaces brought by domestic and transnational migrants;

cultural changes and cultural productions associated with migrant, resource, and capital flows

the ways that mobilities have changed or are changing gender, generational, racial, and cultural relations in families, communities, and across nations.



The two centers invite submissions for presentations from scholars and graduate students conducting original research in the social sciences and humanities that address the primary theme of the conference. Abstracts (up to 500 words) should be sent to CSEAS at UC Berkeley by Friday, January 19, 2018. Abstracts should include your name, affiliation and discipline and contact information (including e-mail address).
The conference is open to all. Some travel funding is available for faculty and graduate students at UC and CSU campuses.The conference will be held UC Berkeley.
Conference website:
&amp;nbsp;

http://ieas.berkeley.edu/cseas/events/2018.04.27.html
Contact:
&amp;nbsp;CSEAS, 1995 University Ave., 520H MC 2318, Berkeley CA 94704
Tel:
&amp;nbsp;(510) 642-3609; Fax: (510) 643-7062;&amp;nbsp;E-mail:
&amp;nbsp;cseas@berkeley.edu.The Center for Southeast Asia Studies at UC Berkeley and the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at UCLA form a consortium U.S. Department of Education Title VI National Resource Center for Southeast Asian Studies.&amp;nbsp;·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS&amp;nbsp;pour la revue «&amp;nbsp;La francophonie en Asie-Pacifique (FAP)&amp;nbsp;» (date limite pour le n°2 : 15 janvier 2018)&amp;nbsp;Appel à contribution pour la revue «&amp;nbsp;La francophonie en Asie-Pacifique (FAP)&amp;nbsp;»
Date limite d’envoi des contributions pour le n°2&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;15 janvier 2018
Contact&amp;nbsp;: Tout écrit sera envoyé à l’adresse électronique ci-dessous:
La Francophonie en Asie-Pacifique / Institut Francophone International – Université Nationale du Vietnam Hanoi,
Bâtiment C3, 144 Xuan Thuy, Cau Giay, Hanoi
Email: fap@ifi.edu.vn – Tel: +84 (04) 37 450 173Ngô Tự Lập – Rédacteur en chef : Email: lapnt@vnu.edu.vnAccédez au site&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;

cliquez iciAccédez à l’appel&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;

FAP- Appel a contribution 2e numeroInstruction aux auteurs&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;

Instructions aux auteursNote de cadrage&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;

note de cadrage FAP n2
La Francophonie en Asie-Pacifique (FAP) est une revue de recherche interdisciplinaire publiée par l’Institut Francophone International – Université Nationale du Vietnam, (Hanoi) en partenariat avec les Presses Universitaires de Provence (PUP).Conçue comme un forum scientifique, cette publication unique a pour but d’assurer la publication d’articles scientifiques de qualité portant sur tous les aspects de la Francophonie dans la région.
Les premiers thèmes de la FAP sont :
Numéro 1 (09/2017) : La littérature vietnamienne francophone
Numéro 2 (03/2018) : L’architecture française en Asie-Pacifique
Numéro 3 (09/2018) : Le théâtre français et francophone en Indochine
Numéro 4 (03/2019) : La formation universitaire française et francophone face à la mondialisationNuméro 5 (09/2019): Vĩnh Bang, itinéraire atypique d’un prince oriental au psychopédagogue suisseLe 1er numéro est publié en septembre 2017 et la cérémonie d’inauguration de la revue sera prévue pour le 9 novembre à l’Espace.
La publication du 2e numéro est prévue pour mars 2018. Veuillez consulter les instructions aux auteurs et la note de cadrage. Ce numéro dont la thématique spécifique sera l’architecture française en Asie-Pacifique est réalisé en partenariat avec l’Ecole Nationale Supérieure d’Architecture de Paris Belleville et son laboratoire de recherche, l’Institut Parisien de Recherche : Architecture, Urbanistique et Société (IPRAUS).
Chaque numéro a un thème spécifique. Toutefois, la FAP ayant différentes rubriques (Espace francophone, Économie et développement, Science et technologie, Histoire, Cultureet arts, Idées, Recension et Trésors retrouvés – publication de textes rares du passé), les articles relevant de ces rubriques sont les bienvenus.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Appel à contributions pour le Séminaire « Villes Asiatiques »&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;«&amp;nbsp;La mobilité urbaine en Asie : nouvelles tendances et nouvelles pratiques de la mobilité face aux mutations urbaines&amp;nbsp;»&amp;nbsp;Organisateur&amp;nbsp;: DSA «&amp;nbsp;Architecture et projet urbain, mention «&amp;nbsp;Architecture des Territoires&amp;nbsp;» (ENSA Paris-Belleville), en collaboration avec l’IPRAUSDate d’échéance pour l’envoi un résumé (max. 300 mots) accompagné d’une courte biographie&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;10 décembre 2017Notification d’acceptation&amp;nbsp;: 20 décembre 2017Lieu du séminaire&amp;nbsp;: Salle 12, ENSA Paris Belleville, 60 bd de la Villette, 75019 ParisDate du séminaire&amp;nbsp;: 09 février 2018, 9h00 – 18h00Pour l’envoi des résumés, toute question et demande d’information&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;Yang LIU(Enseignante à l’ENSAPB, chercheuse associée à l’IPRAUS),&amp;nbsp;



	
			liuspoon7@gmail.com

	




,&amp;nbsp;Christine BELMONTE&amp;nbsp;(Responsable administrative du DSA «&amp;nbsp;Architecture des territoires&amp;nbsp;»),&amp;nbsp;



	
			belmonte.ensapb@gmail.com

	




Présentation par les organisateurs&amp;nbsp;: Le Séminaire «&amp;nbsp;Villes Asiatiques&amp;nbsp;» a lieu chaque année dans le cadre du DSA «&amp;nbsp;Architecture et projet urbain&amp;nbsp;: Architecture des Territoires » de l’ENSA Paris-Belleville. Il est organisé en lien avec le laboratoire IPRAUS et l’UMR AUSSER, dont l’un des principaux axes de recherche porte sur les villes asiatiques. Il offre une occasion de découvrir, comprendre, questionner les enjeux émergents dans cette région du monde, d’échanger entre étudiants, enseignants, chercheurs et praticiens, et de présenter de manière actualisée les spécificités et évolutions urbaines d’un territoire de manière à actualiser les spécificités des trajectoires urbaines des métropoles asiatiques.[1]Le séminaire de 2018 porte sur la «&amp;nbsp;mobilité urbaine », sujet au cœur du développement urbain en Asie. Au cours de ces dernières années, les voyages et ateliers dans le cadre du programme de DSA «&amp;nbsp;Architecture et projet urbain » nous ont permis d’observer des mutations économiques, urbaines et sociales liées à la mobilité. Plusieurs pistes d’investigations sont visées par ce séminaire, d’abord sur la mobilité «&amp;nbsp;dure&amp;nbsp;», c’est-à-dire la mobilité liée aux infrastructures, qui reste toujours un facteur moteur dans la transformation urbaine. Des nouvelles lignes de trains ou de métro sont souvent associées à des stratégies territoriales, tandis que des gares et stations participent à la rénovation urbaine à l’échelle locale. Les exemples sont multiples&amp;nbsp;: la nouvelle ligne de métro à Hanoï, qui relie le centre-ville à l’aéroport, a suscité la densification et le développement de nombreux projets&amp;nbsp; sur l’autre rive du Fleuve Rouge&amp;nbsp;; à Shanghai, les promoteurs immobiliers ont manifesté leur intérêt à développer des projets aux abords des stations de métro, au centre ville et dans les zones périurbaines[2]. De quelles manières ces grands projets influencent-ils la mutation urbaine&amp;nbsp;? Est-ce qu’ils répondent à la fois aux politiques territoriales et aux principes d’aménagement à «&amp;nbsp;l’échelle du particulier&amp;nbsp;»[3]&amp;nbsp;?En même temps, le retour de la «&amp;nbsp;mobilité douce&amp;nbsp;» réoriente les aménagements urbains. En Chine, les vélos en libre-service ont considérablement facilité le déplacement de courtes distances ou «&amp;nbsp;du dernier kilomètre&amp;nbsp;» des habitants. Des projets de nouvelles promenades pour les piétons sont élaborés dans plusieurs villes chinoises. D’ailleurs, la mobilité douce est aussi considérée comme une solution «&amp;nbsp;durable&amp;nbsp;» dans de nombreux projets d’éco-villes ou d’éco-quartiers en Asie. Comment le développement de la mobilité douce change-t-il le paysage urbain&amp;nbsp;? Les espaces publics associés bénéficient-ils aussi de nouveaux aménagements pour les piétons et les vélos&amp;nbsp;?Une troisième question concerne les changements de mode de vie liés à la mobilité urbaine. A Bangkok, les nouvelles lignes de métro surélevées amènent les activités commerciales dans les passages entre les stations et les bâtiments. Depuis seulement quelques années, le numérique joue un rôle plus important dans le service du transport. Dans certains pays asiatiques, le téléphone mobile est presque obligatoire pour appeler un taxi (ou Uber), localiser et louer un vélo en libre-service. On trouve aussi des informations pratiques pour des services autours des stations de métro. On vit dans une époque de connectivité accrue. En facilitant la vie quotidienne des habitants, est-ce que les solutions numériques participent aussi à la modification des espaces urbains&amp;nbsp;et de la relation sociale entre les usagers ? Comment ces nouvelles pratiques ont-elles changé la vie sociale des habitants&amp;nbsp;?Les pistes citées ici ne sont pas exhaustives. Le séminaire est ouvert à toute autre proposition liée à la question de mobilité urbaine en Asie.
[1] ENSA Paris-Belleville, plaquette DSA «&amp;nbsp;Architecture et projets urbains », 2016.
[2] Clément MUSIL, «&amp;nbsp;…&amp;nbsp;»,&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;C. Mazzoni, L. Fan, A. Grigorovschi, Y. Liu (dir.),&amp;nbsp;Shanghai, Kaleidoscopic city, La Commune, Paris, 2017.[3] Pierre CLEMENT, la Chine comme terrain d’expérimentation, conférence à South China University of Technology à Guangzhou, 2015.&amp;nbsp;·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; CONFERENCES&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Roundtable : ‘Cities in Transition in Southeast Asia. New Challenges for Urban Development’&amp;nbsp;


The French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (

IRD) organises a roundtable entitled&amp;nbsp;‘Cities in Transition in Southeast Asia. New Challenges for Urban Development’,&amp;nbsp;in partnership with the Research Institute on Contemporary Southeast Asia (

IRASEC) and&amp;nbsp;

Alliance Française Bangkok, in the presence of the Ambassador of France in Thailand.

Speakers from various disciplines (architecture, urban planning, and geography) will discuss issues raised by urban development in South-East Asia, through the cases of Bangkok, Hanoi, Phnom Penh and Vientiane, as well as original solutions to face those challenges.

Download the&amp;nbsp;

program.






Speakers :
 - Dr Karine Peyronnie (Urban Geographer / IRD)
 - Dr Charles B. Mehl (Development Sociologist / Mekong Environment and Resource Institute)
 - Pr Banasopit Mekvichai (Director of the Urban Design Program / Chulalongkorn University)
 - Pr Bounleuam Sisoulath (Deputy Minister of Public Works and Transport of Lao PDR)
 - Dr Clément Musil (Geographer and Urban Planner / AUSser Research Unit)
 - Phanim Cheam (Vice-Chief of the Urban Planning Office at Phnom Penh)
 - Prof Bundit Chulasai (Architect / Chulalongkorn University)
 - Pr Charles Goldblum (Urban Planner / AUSser Research Unit)
 
 Date&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;Wednesday, November 22nd 2017, at 6:00pm
 Place&amp;nbsp;: Auditorium de l’Alliance Française&amp;nbsp;

Bangkok, 179 Thanon Witthayu
 Free entrance
 Simultaneous interpretation&amp;nbsp;: english, french &amp;amp; thai Contact &amp;amp; Inscription&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;



	
			helene.nourdin@ird.fr

	







&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; OTHERS&amp;nbsp;Funding OpportunitiesINoGS is pleased to announce that funding is available to subsidize the attendance of scholars and PhD students from the Global South and from countries experiencing major financial difficulties. The number of grants available is limited.Prospective presenters from the Global South and from countries experiencing major financial difficulties are thus invited to apply for support to attend the conference under the conference website’s “SCHOLARSHIPS” tab, after their paper or panel proposal has been accepted. The closing date for applications is 28th&amp;nbsp;February 2018 and awards will be announced before the end of March 2018. Please refer to the conference website for details.Queries relating to the conference may be sent either to Elisabeth Anstett at&amp;nbsp;



	
			e.anstett@corpsesofmassviolence.eu

	




&amp;nbsp; or to&amp;nbsp;



	
			info@inogsconference2018.com

	




&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Application on Khmer Rouge HistoryWith support of The European Union and Rei Foundation Limited, Bophana Center has created a multimedia Application on Khmer Rouge History which is available on both App Store and Play Store. The application includes written texts, videos, audio and photos archives.&amp;nbsp;This project is a proposed reparation project before the Khmer Rouge Tribunal.&amp;nbsp;Can you kindly share the link below for our friends who are interested in Khmer Rouge History.iOS -&amp;nbsp;

https://itunes.apple.com/kh/app/khmer-rouge-history/id1262423973?mt=8Android -&amp;nbsp;

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.bophana.krhistory&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;</description>
			</item>
					<item>
				<title>HSEPP Newsletter August & September 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/277040</link>
				<pubDate>Sat, 30 Sep 2017 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
				<description>HSEPP August &amp;amp; September 2017 Digest&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP August &amp;amp; September 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.&amp;nbsp;
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Newsletter August &amp;amp;September 2017&amp;nbsp;
						(291.89 ko)
				

	·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;CKS Ph.D. &amp;amp; Senior Fellowship Competition for Cambodian and U.S. Scholars&amp;nbsp;Deadline: November 15th, 2017&amp;nbsp;This program is open to Cambodian and U.S. doctoral candidates and scholars who have already earned their Ph.D. in the social sciences and humanities. Scholars can pursue research in other countries in mainland Southeast Asia (Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, Burma, Southern China) provided that part of their research is undertaken in Cambodia.&amp;nbsp;Ph.D. Dissertation Research Fellowships&amp;nbsp;Senior Fellowships are open to scholars in all disciplines in the social sciences and the humanities to pursue further research in Cambodia and Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;Senior Research Fellowships&amp;nbsp;Senior Fellowships are open to scholars in all disciplines in the social sciences and the humanities to pursue further research in Cambodia and Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;Short-term awards are available for up to four months.&amp;nbsp;Long-term awards are available for six to nine months.&amp;nbsp;Fellowships for four months or less have some travel restrictions.&amp;nbsp;Criteria for Evaluation&amp;nbsp;The Selection Committee will assess each application on the basis of the project description, the candidate’s academic and/ or professional record and the quality of references. Members of the Selection Committee represent different academic disciplines, so the applicant must explain the nature and significance of the project in terms understandable to a non-specialist audience. Candidates MUST be Cambodian or U.S. citizens. Funding for the Center for Khmer Studies Fellowship Program is provided by a grant from the Council of American Overseas Research Centers.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;For Cambodian and U.S. Scholars, please follow this link: 

http://www.khmerstudies.org/fellowships/usa-fellowships&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Institut National des Langues et Civilisations Orientales (INALCO) /CEK Fellowship&amp;nbsp;The following provides further information about the fellowship opportunities available at CKS. These fellowships are for French Scholars and are typically available on a yearly basis.PH.D. &amp;amp; Senior Fellowship Competition for French Scholars&amp;nbsp;Deadline: November 15, 2017&amp;nbsp;The Center for Khmer Studies, the American Overseas Research Center in Cambodia, invites applications from French scholars in the arts, social sciences and humanities, who wish to conduct research in Cambodia.&amp;nbsp; Ph.D. fellowships are available for a maximum of eleven months for doctoral dissertation research. Senior long-term (6 to 9 months) and short-term (4 to 6 months or less) fellowships are available for scholars who already hold a Ph.D. The fellowship is funded by the Scaler Foundation and is open to French citizens, or to EU citizens who have French degrees.&amp;nbsp;BOURSES DE RECHERCHE AU CAMBODGE POUR DOCTORANTS ET POST-DOCTORANTS FRANÇAIS&amp;nbsp;Date limite : 15 Novembre 2017&amp;nbsp;Pour l’année 2016-2017, le Centre d’Études Khmères (Center for Khmer Studies), membre des American Overseas Research Centers, lance un appel à candidatures pour des bourses de recherche de terrain de niveaux doctoral et post-doctoral au Cambodge dans les domaines des arts, des sciences sociales et des lettres. Les bourses doctorales peuvent être de courte durée ou d’un maximum de 11 mois, les bourses post-doctorales pour un maximum de 9 mois. Les ressortissants français, ainsi que les ressortissants de l’Union européenne pouvant attester de diplômes de l’enseignement supérieur français ou en cours d’études supérieures en France, sont autorisés à postuler. Les bourses de recherche CKS sont mis à disposition des chercheurs français grâce à la généreuse contribution de la Scaler Foundation.&amp;nbsp;For more information please follow this link: 

http://www.khmerstudies.org/fellowships/french-fellowships&amp;nbsp;Appel à candidature bourse doctorale Erasmus+ Cambodge 2017-2018&amp;nbsp;Bourse de terrain au Cambodge de dix mois à deux doctorant(e)s inscrit(e)s à l’École doctorale n°265 Langues, littératures et sociétés du monde (appel ouvert du jusqu'au 6 octobre 2017 pour le 1er semestre et jusqu'au 5 janvier 2018 pour le 2e semestre)&amp;nbsp;Conditions d’éligibilité&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;
- Être inscrit à l’École doctorale n°265&amp;nbsp;Langues, littératures et sociétés du monde pour l’année universitaire 2017/2018,
- Aucune condition de nationalité,
- Les étudiants étrangers (Hors Europe) doivent avoir un titre de séjour en règle pendant leur mobilité,
- Ne pas être déjà parti en Erasmus (étude ou stage) au cours du Doctorat,
- Durée de la mobilité comprise entre 3 mois et 12 mois, une préférence sera accordée aux mobilités longues.- Ne pas bénéficier d'autres financements provenant de l'Union européenne pour la réalisation de cette mobilité.&amp;nbsp;Calendrier de candidature&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;

    Départ
    
    &amp;nbsp;Date limite de candidatures
    
    &amp;nbsp;Information de la décision de sélection
    




    Pendant le 1ersemestre
    
    6 octobre 2017
    
    16 octobre 2017
    




    Pendant le 2esemestre
    
    5 janvier 2018
    
    15 janvier 2018
    




&amp;nbsp;Composition du dossier de candidatures&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;
- CV,
- Lettre de motivation (2 pages maximum),
- Projet de recherche sur le terrain,
- Contrat pédagogique (lien vers le modèle) rempli en accord avec son/ses directeur(s) de thèse. Les objectifs scientifiques ainsi que les conditions de validation du cursus effectué à l'étranger sont à déterminer avant le départ.
- Lettres du / des directeur(s) de thèse.&amp;nbsp;Critères de sélection :&amp;nbsp;
Les doctorants seront sélectionnés sur la base de leur projet de recherche et de la pertinence de leur mobilité pour leurs travaux. Un plan de diffusion des travaux des candidats, soit par le biais de participation à des colloques soit par le biais d’enseignement dans le premier cycle de l’Université royale des Beaux-Arts sont fortement souhaités.
À qualité de candidature égale, la préférence ira aux étudiants issus de milieux défavorisés et une attention particulière sera portée à l’égalité homme-femme.
&amp;nbsp;
Montant de l’allocation Erasmus +&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;
- frais de voyage (aller-retour France-Cambodge)&amp;nbsp;: forfait de 1100€
- frais de séjour&amp;nbsp;: 650€/mois
&amp;nbsp;
L'allocation sera versée en une seule fois au moment du départ. Le doctorant devra être particulièrement vigilant à ne pas modifier ses dates de séjour. À défaut, un nouveau calcul devra être effectué en fin de mobilité qui pourra entraîner une demande de remboursement des sommes trop perçues.
&amp;nbsp;
Dossier à envoyer à&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;
Naoil Bendrimia, chargée de projets universitaires avec le Cambodge&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;



	
			naoil.bendrimia@inalco.fr

	





etClaire Tovar, coordinatrice du projet Manusastra&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;



	
			manusastra.sedyl@inalco.fr

	




&amp;nbsp;For more information&amp;nbsp;: 

http://www.inalco.fr/actualite/appel-candidature-bourse-doctorale-erasmus-cambodge-2017-2018&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

Position, Postdoctoral Fellowship in Southeast Asian Studies, Rice UniversityThe Chao Center for Asian Studies (CCAS) at Rice University is currently accepting applications for the Henry Luce Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship in Southeast Asian Studies to begin January 1, 2018 (pending funding approval). The search is open to any aspects of academic research in Southeast Asia with a transnational orientation. By “transnational,” we mean an approach that devotes particular attention to the movement of people, products, ideas, beliefs, ethics, technologies, etc. across established borders and boundaries.APPLICATIONS ARE ACCEPTED ONLY THROUGH
&amp;nbsp;Rice University’s electronic system, and complete instructions are available at&amp;nbsp;

https://jobs.rice.edu/postings/search
Website: 

http://chaocenter.rice.edu 
Posting Date: 09/11/2017Closing Date 12/10/2017For full details, see&amp;nbsp;

https://www.h-net.org/jobs/job_display.php?id=55487&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Call for papers:&amp;nbsp;Recentering Critical Tourism Studies, 4-6/03/2018, Yogyakarta, Indonesia&amp;nbsp;Final deadline for abstract and panel submission : 15/10/2017&amp;nbsp;The Asia Pacific is one of the fastest growing regions in the world for both international and domestic tourism. The growth of this region has radically altered the global tourism landscape and contributed to new modes of tourism practice, while engendering a decentering of Anglo-Western centrism in tourism theory. In this inaugural conference of the Critical Tourism Studies Asia Pacific network (CTS-AP), we seek to draw attention to the multiple modalities and recenterings of critical tourism scholarship.The aim of this conference is to stimulate new conversations that examine issues across tourism theory, policy and practice. By highlighting perspectives in and beyond the region, we address how the “center” of tourism scholarship is mediated by ongoing shifts in the global political economy, tourism geopolitics and environmental governance.We seek to re-frame the centers and peripheries of critical tourism studies through focused and critical analyses of tourism ideologies, practices, and policies, bringing a particular interest to how they circulate transnationally, regionally and locally through complex and manifold interconnections within the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.We welcome papers and presentations from scholars and practitioners that employ a critical approach to tourism studies. We anticipate the participation of practitioners, travel writers and tourism-focused scholars from across a range of disciplines such as anthropology, geography, sociology, political science, and cultural, environmental, women’s, area, and tourism studies.More information :&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/call-for-papers.htmlSupportive publicationsOur academic journal partners may invite selected papers to be submitted for possible publication subject to the usual peer review process.Voir la liste des revues :&amp;nbsp;

http://www.criticaltourismstudies.com/call-for-papers.html&amp;nbsp;Call for papers :&amp;nbsp;Sacred Sites/Sacred Stories: Global Perspectives, 5-7 April 2018, ANU College of Asia &amp;amp; the Pacific, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia&amp;nbsp;Abstract Deadline: 15 October 2017&amp;nbsp;The study of sacred sites is a prominent feature in a number of disciplines. Sacred sites and stories and pilgrimage are the theme of the conference. Topics of enquiry range from the role of sacred sites in religious traditions, through to how sacred sites form part of the development of modern tourist industries, the role of sacred sites in international relations and the ways in which sacred sites can be the focus for disputes. At a time when many sacred sites and their stories face challenges due to economic development, environmental change and the impact of mass pilgrimage and tourism the conference offers an opportunity for wide-ranging discussions of the past, present and future of sacred sites and stories and their significance in the world today.The conference will have the following panels·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Pilgrimage and Tourism·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Historical Perspectives·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Visual Arts and Architecture·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Indigenous Tradition·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Competition and Contestation&amp;nbsp;We welcome proposals for paper presentations that address the theme of one of these panels. Individual papers that are relevant to the main theme but are not aligned with any of the proposed panel streams will also be considered for presentation.Panel Proposals :While proposals for individual papers are welcome, applicants are also encouraged to collaborate with peers to propose panels of 3-4 papers that converge on a particular theme.&amp;nbsp;In view of the major role that Australia and the Asia Pacific region plays in national and international discussions about sacred sites and sacred stories we particularly welcome panels on Asian, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Pacific perspectives on sacred sites. We also welcome papers covering a range of time frames, from pre-history to the contemporary era, and from all traditions and locations.Plus d’informations sur :&amp;nbsp;

http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/cap-events/2017-10-15/sacred-sitessacred-stories-global-perspectives-abstract-deadline&amp;nbsp;Call for papers: 10th Biennial Association for Southeast Asian Cinemas Conference, July 23-26, 2018, Yogyakarta,&amp;nbsp;Indonesia: The Politics of Faith, Spirituality, and Religion in Southeast Asian CinemasDeadline for the submission of abstracts : 30/10/2017Possible topics include, but are by no means limited to:&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;


Representation of religion, religious&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;themes, and spirituality in cinema

Faiths, identity-based politics, sectarianism

Cinema as a vehicle for the adaptation and continual development of religious or traditional&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;ideologies and systems of thought

Cinema as a mediator between religious and political authorities and the public

Cinematic reference to, or quotation of, traditional systems of belief and forms of expression

Cinema and Institutional investment in defining and promoting tradition

Faith/religion and reception, exhibition, distribution (ex. themed festivals)

Films as interventions into religious politics/cultures and sectarian politics

Faith/religion/spirituality, film, and consumer culture

Religion and censorship

Islamic themed films as a contemporary phenomena in Indonesia and Malaysia (and elsewhere)


&amp;nbsp;Please send an abstract (max. 300 words) and short bio (max. 100 words) to: Katinka Van Heeren (

cvanheeren@hotmail.com), Patrick Campos (

patrick.campos@gmail.com), and Sophia Harvey (

soharvey@vassar.edu).&amp;nbsp;See:&amp;nbsp;

http://www.cseashawaii.org/deadlines/conferences/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Request for workshop proposals : Conference on InterAsian Connections VI: Hanoi, 4-7/12/2018, hosted by the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences&amp;nbsp;Organized by:&amp;nbsp;Social Science Research Council InterAsia Program, Duke University Global Asia Initiative, Göttingen University Global and Transregional Studies Platform, the Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Hong Kong, Asia ResearchInstitute at the National University of Singapore, Seoul National University Asia Center, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, and Yale University – collectively the Organizers.&amp;nbsp;Request for Workshop Proposals&amp;nbsp;The deadline for application submissions is&amp;nbsp;31&amp;nbsp;October 2017.&amp;nbsp;InterAsian Connections VI: Hanoi is the sixth in a series of conferences showcasing innovative research from across the social sciences and related disciplines that explores themes that transform conventional understandings of Asia. Crossing traditional area studies boundaries and creating international and interdisciplinary networks of scholars working to theorize the intersection of the “global” and the “regional” in a variety of contexts, Asia is reconceptualized as a dynamic and interconnected historical, geographical, and cultural formation stretching from West Asia through Eurasia, South Asia and Southeast Asia, to East Asia.&amp;nbsp;The 2018 Hanoi conference—comprised of both closed, director-led thematic workshops and plenary sessions open across workshops and to the general public—will be structured to enable intensive “working group” interactions on specific research themes as well as broader interactions on topics of mutual interest and concern. Each workshop will have two directors with different institutional affiliations, preferably representing different disciplines.&amp;nbsp;Joint proposals are invited from faculty members at accredited universities and colleges in any world region who are interested in co-organizing and co-directing a thematic workshop that addresses one of the following broadly conceived workshop themes (click here to see full description of workshop themes):&amp;nbsp;


Sites of InterAsian Interaction

Territorial Sovereignties and Historical Identities

Transregional Religious Networks

Environmental Humanities in Asia

Rethinking Conceptual Frameworks for the Rise of Asian Cities

Infrastructures and Networks


&amp;nbsp;More information:&amp;nbsp;

https://www.ssrc.org/programs/child-component/interasia-program/interasian-connections-conference-series/interasian-connections-vi-hanoi-2018/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Call for papers : Asian Studies Association of Australia Conference 2018, 3-5 July 2018, Sydney Southeast Asia Centre&amp;nbsp;We are proud to host the 22nd biennial conference of the Asian Studies Association of Australia (ASAA).&amp;nbsp;
Co-organised by the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre, the China Studies Centre and the School of Languages and Culture, this conference will bring together academics from across the disciplines&amp;nbsp;with a shared interest in Asia. The conference is open to scholars, students and community members wishing to share their research and hear about the latest developments in Asian Studies. The theme for 2018, Area studies and beyond, builds upon the traditional interdisciplinary fields of research within Asian Studies and seeks to move beyond them, to celebrate the full breadth and depth of interest in Asia across all fields of research.&amp;nbsp;Call for papers&amp;nbsp;Proposal submissions are now open for panels, individual papers and workshops.&amp;nbsp;The deadline for submissions is 1 November 2017.&amp;nbsp;We strongly encourage multi-country or multi-disciplinary representation, as well as genderbalance and the inclusion of a combination of junior and senior scholars, in all proposals.&amp;nbsp;Voir:&amp;nbsp;

http://sydney.edu.au/sydney-southeast-asia-centre/events/Asian-Studies-Association-of-Australia-Conference-2018.html&amp;nbsp;Postdoctoral Fellow in Southeast Asian Studies&amp;nbsp;The Chao Center for Asian Studies (CCAS) at Rice University is currently accepting applications for the Henry Luce Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship in Southeast Asian Studies to begin January 1, 2018 (pending funding approval). The search is open to any aspects of academic research in Southeast Asia with a transnational orientation. By “transnational,” we mean an approach that devotes particular attention to the movement of people, products, ideas, beliefs, ethics, technologies, etc. across established borders and boundaries.The annual stipend is $50,000, with an additional $5,000 for research and travel expenses, and a one-time relocation allowance of $3,000 will also be provided. Renewal for the second year will be contingent upon the appointee’s performance in the first year.Concentration / Degree Type&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Ph.D. degree at the time of appointment in one of the following fields: anthropology, art history, Asian studies, Asian American studies, cinema, comparative literature, Sanskrit studies, global health studies, history, political science, religion, sociology, or women’s/gender/sexuality studies.For more detail information: 

https://jobs.rice.edu/postings/11649&amp;nbsp;Request for workshop proposals : Conference on InterAsian Connections VI: Hanoi, 4-7/12/2018, hosted by the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences&amp;nbsp;Organized by:&amp;nbsp;Social Science Research Council InterAsia Program, Duke University Global Asia Initiative, Göttingen University Global and Transregional Studies Platform, the Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Hong Kong, Asia ResearchInstitute at the National University of Singapore, Seoul National University Asia Center, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, and Yale University – collectively the Organizers.&amp;nbsp;Request for Workshop Proposals&amp;nbsp;The deadline for application submissions is&amp;nbsp;31&amp;nbsp;October 2017.&amp;nbsp;InterAsian Connections VI: Hanoi is the sixth in a series of conferences showcasing innovative research from across the social sciences and related disciplines that explores themes that transform conventional understandings of Asia. Crossing traditional area studies boundaries and creating international and interdisciplinary networks of scholars working to theorize the intersection of the “global” and the “regional” in a variety of contexts, Asia is reconceptualized as a dynamic and interconnected historical, geographical, and cultural formation stretching from West Asia through Eurasia, South Asia and Southeast Asia, to East Asia.The 2018 Hanoi conference—comprised of both closed, director-led thematic workshops and plenary sessions open across workshops and to the general public—will be structured to enable intensive “working group” interactions on specific research themes as well as broader interactions on topics of mutual interest and concern. Each workshop will have two directors with different institutional affiliations, preferably representing different disciplines.Joint proposals are invited from faculty members at accredited universities and colleges in any world region who are interested in co-organizing and co-directing a thematic workshop that addresses one of the following broadly conceived workshop themes (click here to see full description of workshop themes):·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Sites of InterAsian Interaction·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Territorial Sovereignties and Historical Identities·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Transregional Religious Networks·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Environmental Humanities in Asia·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Rethinking Conceptual Frameworks for the Rise of Asian Cities·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Infrastructures and NetworksMore information:&amp;nbsp;

https://www.ssrc.org/programs/child-component/interasia-program/interasian-connections-conference-series/interasian-connections-vi-hanoi-2018/&amp;nbsp;ARI Job Opportunities 2017/18Positions are intended for outstanding, active researchers to work on an important piece of Asia-related research in the social sciences or humanities.
Applicants should only apply for ONE of the four types of job opportunity (i.e. Senior Research Fellow, Research Fellow, Postdoctoral Fellow, or Visiting Senior Research Fellow). Apart from the quality of the programme of intended research and the applicant’s track record, positions will be awarded on the basis of the relationship of the topic of their research to the agendas of &amp;nbsp;ARI’s research clusters as listed in&amp;nbsp;

Research clusters and their focus (click here) 
Applicants need to indicate the particular Research Cluster to which they are applying. In cases where there may be overlapping research interests, you may list up to a maximum of two clusters.During their term at ARI, recipients are expected to work closely with their Research Cluster leader, engage fully with the activities of the Institute, and acknowledge ARI in their publications. Additional requirements, where relevant, are set out in the separate details for each type of position.&amp;nbsp;Pour toutes les informations nécessaires voir :&amp;nbsp;

https://ari.nus.edu.sg/Page/ARI-JobOpportunities2017-18&amp;nbsp;·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; REVUES·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; La revue Péninsule No73Mémoire collective chez les Khmers et leurs voisins. Sous la direction de Joseph Thach·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; SommairePrésentation&amp;nbsp;- Joseph Thach p. 3-5&amp;nbsp;Articles&amp;nbsp;-&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Marie Aberdam , La généalogie politique des Pok-Thiounn : réflexion sur l'élaboration d'alliances dans la haute administration khmère du Protectorat et leur postérité politique (c.1914-1992) - p. 7-24-&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Stéphanie Khoury , La pratique de rites théâtraux comme vecteur de transmission d'un passé collectif dans l'espace rural cambodgien - p. 25-51-&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Lucie Labbé, Apsaras de pierre, apsaras de de chair : occurrences et réappropriation du passé dans la danse classique khmère - p. 53-79-&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Fabienne Luco, Angkor ou le paysage palimpseste : les traces dans le paysage comme supports à la transmission d'histoires - p. 81-108-&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Marie-Sybille de Vienne, Les Sultans de Brunei, héritiers du Funan et descendants du prophète : écriture de l'histoire et manipulations des sources dans la construction d'une identité nationale - p. 109-160-&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Gilles Delouche, Quelle lecture faire des chroniques royales d'Ayutthaya ? - p. 161-188Comptes-rendus&amp;nbsp;I. Le développement économique et ses limites.Cambodge et Viêt NamSophal Ear. Aid Dependance in Cambodia : How Foreign Assistance Undermines Democracy, 2013 - Hakchenda Khun p. 189-195Do Benoit Hiên and Pham Quang Minh. Nouvelles élites écoomiques vietnamiennes, 2015 - Clémence Le Meur p. 196-199&amp;nbsp;II. Viêtnam, Représentations croiséesChristopher E. Goscha. Indochine ou Vietnam ? 2015 - Niphaphone Nhongvongsithi p. 200-203Michel Espagne and Hoai Huong Aubert-Nguyen. Le vietnam, une histoire de tranferts culturels, 2015 - Emeline Desbois p. 203-206&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; PUBLICATIONS&amp;nbsp;NICOLAS LAINÉ, &amp;quot;Surveiller les animaux, conserver l'espace. Enjeux et défis de la surveillance de la tuberculose des éléphants au Laos&amp;quot;, Revue d'anthropologie des connaissances 2017/1 (Vol. 11, No1), p.23-44.

View article&amp;nbsp;Éric Bourdonneau, Mémoires du Cambodge, &amp;nbsp;

EFEO - Magellan &amp;amp; Cie, 2017&amp;nbsp;Fauveaud G., 2016, &amp;quot;Residential Enclosure, Power and Relationality. Rethinking Sociopolitical Relations in Southeast Asian Cities&amp;quot;, International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 40/4, p. 849-865

View article&amp;nbsp;Stéphanie KHOURY&amp;quot;La pratique des rites théâtraux comme vecteur de transmission d’un passé collectif dans l’espace rural cambodgien&amp;quot;, 2016, Péninsule n.73 (2), pp. 25-51

View article&amp;nbsp;Stéphanie KHOURY « Le pinpeat du Cambodge », in Instruments et cultures: Introduction aux percussions du monde, Paris, Cité de la musique (Coll. Musiques du monde), 2007, 16p.&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;Pascale Hancart Petitet (2017): Abortion politics in Cambodia social history, local forms and transnational issues, Global Public Health.

View article&amp;nbsp;Pascale Hancart Petitet, 2017, DU(NON) DÉSIRE D’ENFANTReproduction humanine et Violence, structurelle au Cambodge,Paru dans&amp;nbsp;: Charton Laurence, Joseph J. Lévy, (2017) Désir d’enfant et désir de transmission, Anthropologie et Sociétes,Volume 41, numéro 2&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;special issues focused on climate and land-use transformations in Southeast Asia&amp;nbsp;

From land grab to agrarian transition? Hybrid trajectories of accumulation and environmental change on the Cambodia–Vietnam borderAlice Beban &amp;amp; Timothy Gorman

The Journal of Peasant Studies&amp;nbsp;Vol. 44 , Iss. 4,2017&amp;nbsp;

Inside and outside the maps: mutual accommodation and forest destruction in CambodiaCourtney Work &amp;amp; Ratha Thuon

Canadian Journal of Development Studies / Revue canadienne d'études du développement&amp;nbsp;Vol. 38 , Iss. 3,2017

The political ecology of cross-sectoral cumulative impacts: modern landscapes, large hydropower dams and industrial tree plantations in Laos and CambodiaIan G. Baird &amp;amp; Keith Barney

The Journal of Peasant Studies&amp;nbsp;Vol. 44 , Iss. 4,2017Struggling against excuses: winning back land in CambodiaLaura Schoenberger

The Journal of Peasant Studies&amp;nbsp;Vol. 44 , Iss. 4,2017</description>
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				<title>HSEPP Newsletter June &July 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/277039</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 31 Jul 2017 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
				<description>HSEPP June and July 2017 Digest&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP June and July 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.&amp;nbsp;
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Newsletter June&amp;amp;July 2017&amp;nbsp;
						(297.41 ko)
				

	·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;nbsp;Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia&amp;nbsp;CFP: The French program Autoritas, a project funded by PSL (Paris Sciences &amp;amp; Lettres University), is focused on the study of the relationship between modes of authority and aesthetic practices from South Asia to Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;The project is conducted jointly by four French research units: The CASE (Center for Southeast Asian Studies), the CEIAS (Center for South Asian Studies), the LAS (Social Anthropology Laboratory) and the GSRL (Societies, Religions &amp;amp; Secularities Group). By opening a dialogue among historians, art historians, epigraphists and archaeologists on the one hand, and anthropologists and ethnomusicologists on the other, the EHESS, the EFEO, the Collège de France and the EPHE pool their resources to bring together research results coming from a multidisciplinary approach aimed at examining the relationship between the aesthetic phenomenon and authority.&amp;nbsp;The conference&amp;nbsp; Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia intends to think comparatively about the relationship between aesthetic phenomena and authority in a region, South and Southeast Asia, where the aesthetic dimension plays a particularly important role in the legitimation strategies of different types of authority, be they religious, politic or artistic, and where the diversity of societies range from stateless communities to kingdoms and sultanates via various models of states.This meeting will gather together researchers from several social science fields (history, art history, literature, archaeology, epigraphy, ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, social anthropology) and several cultural areas, inviting a dialogue between scholars of South and Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;Date : May 23-25, 2018&amp;nbsp;Venue : Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris&amp;nbsp;Deadline: Please submit a 300-word abstract and a short biographical note by September 30th 2017.&amp;nbsp;For more informations and for abstract submission please visit the conference website : 

https://autoritas.sciencesconf.org/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Call for papers: Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The French program Autoritas, a project funded by PSL (Paris Sciences &amp;amp; Lettres University), is focused on the study of the relationship between modes of authority and aesthetic practices from South Asia to Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;The project is conducted jointly by four French research units: The CASE (Center for Southeast Asian Studies), the CEIAS (Center for South Asian Studies), the LAS (Social Anthropology Laboratory) and the GSRL (Societies, Religions &amp;amp; Secularities Group). By opening a dialogue among historians, art historians, epigraphists and archaeologists on the one hand, and anthropologists and ethnomusicologists on the other, the EHESS, the EFEO, the Collège de France and the EPHE pool their resources to bring together research results coming from a multidisciplinary approach aimed at examining the relationship between the aesthetic phenomenon and authority.&amp;nbsp;The conference&amp;nbsp; Modes of Authority and Aesthetic Practices from South to Southeast Asia intends to think comparatively about the relationship between aesthetic phenomena and authority in a region, South and Southeast Asia, where the aesthetic dimension plays a particularly important role in the legitimation strategies of different types of authority, be they religious, politic or artistic, and where the diversity of societies range from stateless communities to kingdoms and sultanates via various models of states.This meeting will gather together researchers from several social science fields (history, art history, literature, archaeology, epigraphy, ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology, social anthropology) and several cultural areas, inviting a dialogue between scholars of South and Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;Date : May 23-25, 2018&amp;nbsp;Venue : Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Paris&amp;nbsp;Deadline: Please submit a 300-word abstract and a short biographical note by September 30th 2017.&amp;nbsp;For more informations and for abstract submission please visit the conference website : 

https://autoritas.sciencesconf.org/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;7th International East Nusantara Conference, 14-15/05/2018, Kupang, NTT, Indonesia&amp;nbsp;Deadline : 15 October 2017&amp;nbsp;The Seventh International East Nusantara Conference aims to create a platform whereby linguists and anthropologists can discuss the latest insights of their work relating to the languages and peoples of East Nusantara, Indonesia. The conference also seeks to bring together scholars from relevant fields such as (oral) history, archaeology, and genetics, with the specific aim of understanding migration patterns and the history of contact in the region. For the purposes of this conference, the East Nusantara region is taken to include Austronesian as well as non-Austronesian communities in eastern Indonesia (east of Bali) and Timor Leste.Abstracts addressing any topic relating to to the languages and cultures of East Nusantara are especially welcome.&amp;nbsp;Plus d’informations sur : 

http://linguistlist.org/callconf/browse-conf-action.cfm?ConfID=287156&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Exhibiting the Fall: Remembering and Representing War and its Aftermath in Asia (4 - 5 Sept. 2017, National Museum of Singapore)&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;75 years ago, Singapore, then a British colony, fell to a new imperial master – Japan. The Fall of Singapore on 15 February 1942 marks a painful moment in the island’s modern history that was followed by some 3 ½ years of brutal occupation. For Japan, the capture of Singapore represented the pinnacle of its conquests in the Pacific War and its imperial expansion into Southeast Asia. Even decades after Japan’s eventual surrender in 1945, the repercussions of this violent expansion could be felt not only in Singapore but all throughout the region – and some of this conflict’s unresolved legacies reverberate to this day, permeating the social, political and economic structure of East and Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;This conference – jointly organised by the National Museum (NMS) of Singapore and the Leverhulme research network “War Memoryscapes in Asia Partnership” (WARMAP) – looks at how World War II and its aftermath have been remembered and represented in Asia. It features both scholars and museum experts from Europe, Asia, and Oceania with years of research and curatorial experience in the field. Together, they will explore and discuss (1) the production, representation and consumption of war memory, (2) nationalism and nation-building as forces and frameworks for memory, (3) regionalism, diplomacy, and the politics of remembrance, and (4) material culture and museums. The keynote address will be delivered by renowned China specialist Professor Rana Mitter (University of Oxford).&amp;nbsp;The conference will take place at the National Museum of Singapore on 4-5 September 2017. For further enquiries, please contact Xiu Li of NMS (



	
			xiu_li_tan_from.tp@nhb.gov.sg

	




) &amp;nbsp;or Dr. Daniel Schumacher of WARMAP (



	
			dschum@essex.ac.uk

	




).&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;SEA Studies Symposium 2018 – Call for Panels and Papers
&amp;nbsp;The 7th Southeast Asian Studies Symposium will be held at the beautiful and modern Indonesian Medical Education and Research Institute (IMERI) building, part of the Faculty of Medicine of Universitas Indonesia, in Jakarta, Indonesia, from&amp;nbsp;22 to 24 March 2018
. As part of this,&amp;nbsp;

the Call for Panels and Papershas been released (below).
The theme for the 7th Symposium is “What is Southeast Asia? Exploring Uniqueness and Diversity
”, and the Symposium is being organised in collaboration with&amp;nbsp;the School of Environmental Science, Universitas Indonesia, and the&amp;nbsp;Indonesian Environmental Science Association. We invite all who are passionate about Southeast Asia to join us in Jakarta.Submissions on all topics related to Southeast Asia are welcome. Please visit&amp;nbsp;

http://projectsoutheastasia.com/academic-events/sea-symposium-2018/cfpp &amp;nbsp;for more information.&amp;nbsp;The deadline for submissions is&amp;nbsp;15 October 2017
.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Offre de financement de 2 étudiant.e.s de maîtrise en géographie, Département de géographie, Université de Montréal, Canada.&amp;nbsp;Les étudiant.e.s réaliseront leur mémoire entre septembre 2017 et juin 2019. Cependant, en fonction des financements disponibles, l'offre est aussi ouverte aux étudiant.e.s de Licence qui ne commenceront leur maîtrise qu'en septembre 2018.&amp;nbsp;Date limite de candidature : 15 novembre 2017.&amp;nbsp;Thème de la recherche : &amp;quot;Immobilier et dynamiques urbaines en Asie du Sud-Est : approches critiques&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp;Objectifs: Sous la supervision de Gabriel Fauveaud, professeur invité au département de géographie et au programme d'études internationales de l'Université de Montréal, les étudiant.e.s intégreront une équipe de recherche dont les travaux portent sur les dimensions économiques, politiques, sociales et territoriales des productions, pratiques et stratégies immobilières en Asie du Sud-Est. Le projet s’intéresse tant aux espaces périurbains que centraux.&amp;nbsp;Terrains privilégiés : Phnom Penh (la capitale du Cambodge) et Yangon (la capitale économique du Myanmar).Pour déposer sa candidature, au plus tard le 15 novembre 2017: - Soumettre un dossier regroupant les pièces suivantes : un CV détaillé, une copie des relevés de notes récents (baccalauréat et maîtrise), une lettre de motivation et deux écrits (travaux académiques, rapports, articles…) démontrant vos capacités rédactionnelles et analytiques ; - Les candidat.e.s retenu.e.s en entrevue seront contacté.e.s au plus tard vers la fin novembre, pour se joindre à l’équipe en janvier 2018 ; - Pour envoyer le dossier et pour toute question : 



	
			gabriel.fauveaud@umontreal.ca

	




·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Exposition&amp;nbsp;« Avec les danseuses royales du Cambodge », 15/06/2017 au 07/09/2017, Galerie de l’Institut Français du Cambodge&amp;nbsp;En 1927, George Groslier, directeur du musée National, entreprend pour conserver la mémoire des postures de danse du ballet royal, un exceptionnel travail de documentation photographique. Longtemps resté à l’écart, le corpus de négatifs sur verre a été récemment catalogué et numérisé. Après leur présentation au Musée National du Cambodge en 2012 puis à New York, Paris et Siem Reap, ces photographies sont exposées à l’Institut Français du Cambodge.Exposition conçue par le MNC et l’EFEO à Phnom Penh (avec le soutien de l’IFC et de l’UNESCO)&amp;nbsp;Voir : 

https://institutfrancais-cambodge.com/expo-avec-les-danseuses-royales-du-cambodge/&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;·&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; PUBLICATIONSMichael Vickery’s Publications&amp;nbsp;Dissertation&amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;After&amp;nbsp;Angkor, the&amp;nbsp;Chronicular&amp;nbsp;Evidence for the Fourteenth to Sixteenth Centuries&amp;quot;, Yale&amp;nbsp;University, Ph.D., December 1977.&amp;nbsp;Ann Arbor:&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Michigan, University Microfilms.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Books&amp;nbsp;Cambodia 1975-1982, Boston, South End Press; Sydney, George Allen &amp;amp;&amp;nbsp;Unwin, 1984; second edition, Chiang Mai, Silkworm Books, 1999.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1984cambodia.pdf

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1999cambodia.pdf&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea, Politics, Economics and&amp;nbsp;Society,&amp;nbsp;Frances&amp;nbsp;Pinter (Publishers), London, Lynne&amp;nbsp;Rienner&amp;nbsp;Publishers, Inc.,&amp;nbsp;Boulder, 1986.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1986kampuchea.pdf&amp;nbsp;Society, Economics and Politics in Pre-Angkor&amp;nbsp;Cambodia: The 7th-8th Centuries. Tokyo,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies for&amp;nbsp;Unesco, The Toyo Bunko, 1998.&amp;nbsp;Cambodia: A Political Survey.&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh,&amp;nbsp;Funan&amp;nbsp;Press, 2007.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2007cambodia.pdf&amp;nbsp;CollectionsKicking the Vietnam Syndrome in Cambodia,&amp;nbsp;collected writings 1975-2010. &amp;nbsp;Published on-line, 2010, at

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Chapters in books&amp;nbsp;1. &amp;quot;The Composition and Transmission of the&amp;nbsp;Ayudhya&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;Chronicles&amp;quot;, In&amp;nbsp;Perceptions of&amp;nbsp;the Past in Southeast Asia, ed., by Anthony Reid and David Marr, ASAA&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asia Publications Series, 1979, pp. 130-154.&amp;nbsp;2. &amp;quot;Looking Back at&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;[1945-1974]&amp;quot;, in Ben Kiernan and&amp;nbsp;Chantou&amp;nbsp;Boua, eds.,&amp;nbsp;Peasants and&amp;nbsp;Politics in&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;nbsp;1942- 1981,&amp;nbsp;London, Zed Press, 1982, pp. 89-113.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1976looking.pdf&amp;nbsp;3. &amp;quot;Democratic&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea, Themes and Variations&amp;quot;, in David P. Chandler and Ben Kiernan, eds.,&amp;nbsp;Revolution and its Aftermath in&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea: Eight Essays. Monograph Series No. 25, Yale&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asia Studies,&amp;nbsp;New Haven, 1983, pp. 99-135.4. &amp;quot;Some Remarks on Early State Formation in&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;quot;, in&amp;nbsp;South­east Asia&amp;nbsp;in the 9th to 14th Centuries, edited&amp;nbsp;by David G. Marr and A.C. Milner, Research School of Pacific Studies,&amp;nbsp;Australian&amp;nbsp;National&amp;nbsp;University, Canberra, and Institute of Southeast Asian Studies,&amp;nbsp;Singapore, 1986, pp. 95-115.5. &amp;quot;Refugee Politics: The Khmer&amp;nbsp;Camp&amp;nbsp;System&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;Thailand&amp;quot;, in David A.&amp;nbsp;Ablin&amp;nbsp;and Marlowe Hood, eds.,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Cambodian Agony, M.E. Sharpe, Inc.,&amp;nbsp;New York, 1988, pp. 293-331.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1988refugee.pdf6. &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;quot;, in Douglas Allen and Ngo&amp;nbsp;Vinh&amp;nbsp;Long, eds.,&amp;nbsp;Coming to Terms,&amp;nbsp;Indochina, the United States&amp;nbsp;and the War,&amp;nbsp;Westview&amp;nbsp;Press,&amp;nbsp;Boulder,&amp;nbsp;Colorado, 1991, pp. 89-128.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;7. &amp;quot;The Ram&amp;nbsp;Khamhaeng&amp;nbsp;Inscription, A Piltdown Skull of Southeast Asian History?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;TheRam&amp;nbsp;Khamhaeng&amp;nbsp;Controversy, Collected Papers, Edited by James R. Chamberlain,&amp;nbsp;Bangkok, The&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society, 1991, pp. 3-52.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991ram.pdf8. &amp;quot;Piltdown Skull--Installment 2&amp;quot;, in&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Ram&amp;nbsp;Khamhaeng&amp;nbsp;Controversy, Collected Papers,Edited by James R. Chamberlain,&amp;nbsp;Bangkok, The&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society, 1991, pp. 333-418.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991piltdown.pdf9. &amp;quot;The Cambodian Economy: Where Has it Come From, Where is it Go­ing?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;Indochina Economic Reconstruction and International Cooperation, edited by Tsutomu&amp;nbsp;Murano&amp;nbsp;and Ikuo&amp;nbsp;Takeuchi,&amp;nbsp;Tokyo, Institute of Developing Economies, 1992, pp. 47-62.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;10. &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;quot;, in&amp;nbsp; Joel&amp;nbsp;Krieger, ed.,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Oxford&amp;nbsp;Companion to Politics of the World, New York-Oxford,&amp;nbsp;Oxford&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;Press (1993), pp. 106-07.11. &amp;quot;Human Rights in&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;quot;, with Naomi&amp;nbsp;Roht-Arriaza, in&amp;nbsp;Impunity and Human Rights in International Law and Practice, edited&amp;nbsp;by Naomi&amp;nbsp;Roht-Arriaza.&amp;nbsp;New York&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Oxford, Oxford University Press, 1995, chapter 18, pp. 243-251.12. &amp;quot;The Constitution of&amp;nbsp;Ayutthaya&amp;quot;, in&amp;nbsp;Thai Law: Buddhist Law,&amp;nbsp;Essays on the Legal History of&amp;nbsp;Thnailand,&amp;nbsp;Laos&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Burma. Edited by Andrew Huxley,&amp;nbsp;Bangkok: White Orchid Press, 1996, pp. 133-210.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996constitution.pdf&amp;nbsp;13. “Kambodscha”.&amp;nbsp;Chapter 13 in&amp;nbsp;Südost&amp;nbsp;Asien&amp;nbsp;Handbuch.&amp;nbsp;Herausgegeben&amp;nbsp;von Bernhard&amp;nbsp;Dahm&amp;nbsp;und&amp;nbsp;Roderich&amp;nbsp;Ptak. München,&amp;nbsp;Verlag&amp;nbsp;C.H. Beck, 1999, pp. 251-262.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1999kambodscha.pdf14.&amp;nbsp; “Two Historical Records of the&amp;nbsp;Kingdom&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Vientiane”, in Christopher E.&amp;nbsp;Goscha&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Sören&amp;nbsp;Ivarsson&amp;nbsp;(eds.),Contesting Visions of&amp;nbsp; the&amp;nbsp;Lao Past Lao Historiography at the Crossroads,&amp;nbsp;Copenhagen, NIAS Press, 2003.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2003two-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;*15. Four articles in&amp;nbsp;Historical Encyclopedia of Southeast Asia, edited by Dr.&amp;nbsp;Keat&amp;nbsp;Gin&amp;nbsp;Ooi, 2004.16.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;Histoire&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Champa&amp;quot;, in&amp;nbsp;Tresors&amp;nbsp;de&amp;nbsp;l'Art&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Vietnam&amp;nbsp;La Sculpture&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Champa,&amp;nbsp;Paris,&amp;nbsp;Musée&amp;nbsp;Guimet, 2005, pp. 23-35.&amp;nbsp;17.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Territorialmächte&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;der&amp;nbsp;Prä-Angkor-Zeit&amp;nbsp;Funan&amp;nbsp;und&amp;nbsp;Zhenla&amp;quot;, pp. 29-32; and &amp;quot;Geistliche&amp;nbsp;und&amp;nbsp;weltliche&amp;nbsp;Macht&amp;quot;, pp. 91-92,&amp;nbsp; in&amp;nbsp;Angkor&amp;nbsp;Göttliches&amp;nbsp;Erbe&amp;nbsp;Kambodschas, UNESCO 200618. &amp;quot;Introduction&amp;quot;, in&amp;nbsp;Bayon: New&amp;nbsp;Perpectives, ed. Joyce Clark,&amp;nbsp;Bangkok, River Books, 2006, pp. 10-27.&amp;nbsp;19. “L’inscription&amp;nbsp;thaï&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Phnom&amp;nbsp;Kulên&amp;nbsp;K 1006”, in Yoshiaki Ishizawa, Claude Jacques,&amp;nbsp;Khin&amp;nbsp;Sok,&amp;nbsp;Manuel&amp;nbsp;d’épigraphie&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Cambodge, Vol. 1, EFEO,&amp;nbsp;Paris, 2007, pp. 155-167&amp;nbsp;20. “A Short History of&amp;nbsp;Champa”, in&amp;nbsp;Champa&amp;nbsp;and the Archaeology of&amp;nbsp;Mỹ&amp;nbsp;So’n&amp;nbsp;(Vietnam), Andrew Hardy, Mauro&amp;nbsp;Cucarzi,and&amp;nbsp;Patrizia&amp;nbsp;Zolese, editors,&amp;nbsp;Singapore, NUS Press, 2009, pp. 45-60.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
21. “‘1620,’ A Cautionary Tale”, in Michael Arthur&amp;nbsp;Aung-Thwin&amp;nbsp;&amp;amp; Kenneth R. Hall, eds.,&amp;nbsp;New Perspectives on&amp;nbsp;
the History and Historiography of Southeast Asia, Continuing Explorations
&amp;nbsp;(London:&amp;nbsp;Routledge, 2011), pp. 157-166.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2011cautionary.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Articles and review articles&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;1. &amp;quot;Thai Regional Elites and the Reforms of King&amp;nbsp;Chulalongkorn&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Asian StudiesXXIX, 4 (August 1970), 863-881.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1970thai.pdf&amp;nbsp;2. &amp;quot;The Khmer Inscriptions of&amp;nbsp;Tenasserim: A Reinterpretation&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of the&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society(JSS) LXI, 1 (January 1973), 51-70.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;3. Review article on Robert B. Jones,&amp;nbsp;Thai Titles and Ranks Including a Translation of Traditionsof&amp;nbsp;Royal Lineage in&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;by King&amp;nbsp;Chulalongkorn,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXII, 1 (January 1974), pp. 159-174.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1974review-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*4. &amp;quot;A Note on the Date of the&amp;nbsp;Traibhūmikathā&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXII, 2 (July 1974), pp. 275-284.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1974note-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;5. &amp;quot;The Lion Prince and Related Remarks on Northern History&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXIV, 1 (January 1976),&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 326-377.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1976lion.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;6. Review article on&amp;nbsp;Jeremias&amp;nbsp;van&amp;nbsp;Vliet,&amp;nbsp;The Short History of the Kings of Siam,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXIV,2 (July 1976), pp. 207-236.&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1976review-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;7. &amp;quot;Looking Back at&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Westerly&amp;nbsp;(University&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Western Australia), No. 4, December 1976.&amp;nbsp;8. &amp;quot;The 2/k.125 Fragment, a Lost Chronicle of&amp;nbsp;Ayutthaya&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXV, 1 (January 1977), 1-80.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;9. &amp;quot;A Guide&amp;nbsp;Through&amp;nbsp;Some Recent&amp;nbsp;Sukhothai&amp;nbsp;Historiography&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXVI, 2 (July 1978), 182-246.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1978guide-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;10. &amp;quot;A New&amp;nbsp;Tāµnān&amp;nbsp;About&amp;nbsp;Ayudhya&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXVII, 2 (July 1979), pp. 123-86.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1979new.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;11. &amp;quot;King&amp;nbsp;Mangrai&amp;nbsp;and the Le-shih,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXVIII, 1 (January 1980), pp. 126-127.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;12. &amp;quot;Democratic&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea: CIA to the Rescue&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars,14/4 (1982), pp. 45-54. &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1982democratic.pdf&amp;nbsp;13. &amp;quot;L'Inscription&amp;nbsp;K 1006&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Phnom&amp;nbsp;Kulen&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Bulletin de&amp;nbsp;l'Ecole&amp;nbsp;Française&amp;nbsp;d'Extrême-Orient, LXXI, 1982, pp. 77-86.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1982linscription.pdf&amp;nbsp;14. &amp;quot;Qui&amp;nbsp;était&amp;nbsp;Na/Nong, savant(s)&amp;nbsp;cambodgien(s) des XVIII/XIX&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;siècles?&amp;quot;, ASEMI (Asie&amp;nbsp;du sud-est&amp;nbsp;et&amp;nbsp;monde&amp;nbsp;insulindien),&amp;nbsp;Cambodge&amp;nbsp;I, Vol. XIII, 1-4, Paris, 1982, 81-86.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;15. Serge&amp;nbsp;Thion&amp;nbsp;et&amp;nbsp;Michael Vickery, &amp;quot;Cambodge:&amp;nbsp;Quelques&amp;nbsp;problèmes&amp;nbsp;de la reconstruction&amp;quot;, ASEMI,&amp;nbsp;Cambodge, vol. XIII, 1-4, Paris, 1982, 395-420.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;16. &amp;quot;Prolegomena to Methods for Using the&amp;nbsp;Ayutthayan&amp;nbsp;Laws as Historical Source Material&amp;quot;,JSS,&amp;nbsp;vol&amp;nbsp;72 (1984), 37-58.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1984prolegomena-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;17. &amp;quot;The Reign of&amp;nbsp;Sūryavarman&amp;nbsp;I and Royal Factionalism at&amp;nbsp;Angkor&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies,Vol. 16, No. 2, September 1985, 226-244.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1985reign.pdf&amp;nbsp;18. &amp;quot;Cambodia's Tenuous Progress&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Indochina&amp;nbsp;Issues&amp;nbsp;no. 63, January 1986. Center forInternational Policy, Indochina Project,&amp;nbsp;Washington,&amp;nbsp;D.C.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;19. &amp;quot;Some New Evidence for the Cultural History of Central Thailand&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society'sNewsletter, Volume 2, Number 3 (September 1986), 4-6.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1986some.pdf&amp;nbsp;20. &amp;quot;From&amp;nbsp;Lamphun&amp;nbsp;to Inscription No. 2&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society Newsletter, 3/1 (March 1987), pp. 2-6.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1987from.pdf&amp;nbsp;21. &amp;quot;Criminal Law in the&amp;nbsp;Peoples&amp;nbsp;Republic&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Contemporary&amp;nbsp;Asia,Vol. 17, No. 4 (1987), 508-518.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;22. &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;1988&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;ASIEN&amp;nbsp;(German Association for Asian Studies,&amp;nbsp;Hamburg), Nr. 28, July 1988, pp. 1-19.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;23. &amp;quot;A Critique of the Lawyers Committee for International Human Rights,&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;nbsp;Mission&amp;nbsp;of November 1984&amp;quot;,Journal of&amp;nbsp; Contemporary&amp;nbsp;Asia&amp;nbsp;vol. 18, No. 1, 1988, pp. 108-116.&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;24. &amp;quot;How Many Died in&amp;nbsp;Pol&amp;nbsp;Pot's&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;quot;, Correspondence,&amp;nbsp;Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, 20/1 (1988), pp. 70-73.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;25. &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;(Kampuchea): History, Tragedy, and Uncertain Future&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, Vol. 21, Nos. 2-4 (April-Dec. 1989), pp. 35-58.&amp;nbsp;26. &amp;quot;La&amp;nbsp;kremlinologie&amp;nbsp;face au&amp;nbsp;Cambodge&amp;quot; (translated by M.-Cl.&amp;nbsp;Orieux),&amp;nbsp;Affaires&amp;nbsp;cambodgiennes 1979-1989, Asie-Débat-5,&amp;nbsp;Paris&amp;nbsp;L'Harmattan, 1989, pp. 129-35.&amp;nbsp;27. &amp;quot;Comments on&amp;nbsp;Cham&amp;nbsp;Population Figures&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, Vol. 22, No. 1, Jan.-Mar. 1990, pp. 31-33.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;28. &amp;quot;Cambodian Political Economy, 1975-1990&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Cultural Survival Quarterly, Volume 14, Number 3, 1990, pp. 23-27.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;29. &amp;quot;Cultural Survival in Language and Literature in&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;Today&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Cultural Survival Quarterly, Volume 14, Number 3, 1990, pp. 49-52.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;30. &amp;quot;The Rule of Law in&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Cultural Survival Quarterly, Volume 14, Number 3, 1990, pp. 82-83.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;31. &amp;quot;Notes on the Political Economy of the&amp;nbsp;Peoples&amp;nbsp;Republic&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;nbsp;(PRK)&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Contemporary&amp;nbsp;Asia,Vol. 20, No. 4 (1990), pp. 435-65.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 50-81.&amp;nbsp;32. &amp;quot;The&amp;nbsp;Old&amp;nbsp;City&amp;nbsp;of 'Chaliang'--'Srī&amp;nbsp;Satchanalai'--'Sawankhalok', a Problem in History and Historiography&amp;quot;,Journal of the&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society, Vol. 78, Part 2 (1990), pp. 15-29.&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1990old-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;33. &amp;quot;Cambodia: November-December 1990&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Thai-Yunnan&amp;nbsp;Project Newsletter, No. 12,March 1991, Department of Anthropology,&amp;nbsp;Research&amp;nbsp;School&amp;nbsp;of Pacific Studies,&amp;nbsp;Australian&amp;nbsp;National&amp;nbsp;University.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;34. &amp;quot;Cambodia: November-December 1990&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Contemporary&amp;nbsp;Asia, Vol. 21, No. 2 (1991), pp. 274-282.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;35. &amp;quot;The Campaign&amp;nbsp;Against&amp;nbsp;Cambodia: 1990-1991&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Indochina&amp;nbsp;Issues&amp;nbsp;93, August 1991.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;36. &amp;quot;On&amp;nbsp;Traibhūmikathā&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of the&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society, Vol. 79, Part 2, 1991, pp. 24-36.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991on-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;37. &amp;quot;Loan Words and Devoicing in Khmer&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Mon-Khmer Studies&amp;nbsp;XVIII-XIX (1989-1990), pp. 240-250.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1989-1990loan.pdf&amp;nbsp;38. &amp;quot;A 'Modern' Number Term in Old Khmer&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Mon-Khmer Studies, XXI (1992), pp. 191-3.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1992modern.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;39. &amp;quot;Evidence for Prehistoric Austronesian-Khmer Contact and Linguistic Borrowing&amp;quot;,Mon-Khmer Studies, XXI (1992), pp. 185-89.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1992evidence.pdf&amp;nbsp;40. &amp;quot;The Cold War and&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Oriental Studies&amp;nbsp;30, Centre of Asian Studies,University of&amp;nbsp;Hong Kong, 1992, pp. 87-118.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;41. &amp;quot;What and Where&amp;nbsp; was&amp;nbsp;Chenla?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Recherches&amp;nbsp;nouvelles&amp;nbsp;sur&amp;nbsp;le&amp;nbsp;Cambodge.&amp;nbsp;Publiées&amp;nbsp;sous&amp;nbsp;la direction de F.&amp;nbsp;Bizot. École&amp;nbsp;française&amp;nbsp;d'Extrême-Orient,&amp;nbsp;Paris, 1994, pp. 197-212.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1994what.pdf&amp;nbsp;42. &amp;quot;Cambodia: a Political Survey&amp;quot;, Discussion Paper No. 14,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Department of Political and Social Change,&amp;nbsp;Research&amp;nbsp;School&amp;nbsp;of Pacific Studies,&amp;nbsp;Australian&amp;nbsp;National&amp;nbsp;University,&amp;nbsp;Canberra, 1994.&amp;nbsp;43. &amp;quot;The Cambodian People's Party: Where Has it Come From, Where is it Going?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asian Affairs 1994. Singapore.&amp;nbsp;Institute&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asian&amp;nbsp;Studies.&amp;nbsp;1994, pp. 102-17.&amp;nbsp;44. &amp;quot;Piltdown 3: Further Discussion of the Ram&amp;nbsp;Khamhaeng&amp;nbsp;Inscription&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Journal of the&amp;nbsp;Siam&amp;nbsp;Society, Volume 83, Parts 1 &amp;amp; 2 (1995), pp. 103-198.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1995piltdown3-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;45. &amp;quot;What to do About&amp;nbsp;The Khmers&amp;quot;, review article on David P. Chandler and Ian&amp;nbsp;Mabbett,&amp;nbsp;The Khmers, in&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 27, part 2 (September 1996), pp. 389-404.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996what.pdf&amp;nbsp;46. &amp;quot;The Khmer Inscriptions of&amp;nbsp;Roluos&amp;nbsp;(Preah&amp;nbsp;Ko&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Lolei): Documents from a Transitional Period in Cambodian History&amp;quot;,in&amp;nbsp;Seksa&amp;nbsp;Khmer, Nouvelle&amp;nbsp;Série&amp;nbsp;No. 1 (janvier&amp;nbsp;1999),&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh, pp. 47-92.&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1999khmer.pdf&amp;nbsp;47. “Coedès’ Histories of&amp;nbsp;Cambodia”,&amp;nbsp;Silpakorn&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;International Journal&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok,&amp;nbsp;Thailand), Volume 1, Number 1,January-June 2000, pp. 61-108.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2000coedes.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;48. “Resolving the Chronology and History of 9th-Century&amp;nbsp;Cambodia”,&amp;nbsp;Siksācakr, Newsletter of the Center for Khmer Studies(CKS) No. 3,&amp;nbsp;Siemreap, July 2001, pp. 17-23.&amp;nbsp;49. “Funan&amp;nbsp;Reviewed: Deconstructing the Ancients”,&amp;nbsp;Bulletin de&amp;nbsp;l'École&amp;nbsp;Française&amp;nbsp;d'Extrême-Orient, 90-91, 2003-2004, pp. 101-143.&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2003funan.pdf&amp;nbsp;, 

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2003funan-rev.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;*&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;50. “Cambodia&amp;nbsp;and its Neighbors in the 15th&amp;nbsp;Century”, Asia Research Institute Working Paper Series No. 27,&amp;nbsp;Singapore, 2004.&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2004cambodia.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;51. &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;and its Neighbors in the 15th&amp;nbsp;Century”&amp;nbsp;( short&amp;nbsp;version of no. 50), in Geoff Wade &amp;amp; Sun&amp;nbsp;Laichen, editors,Southeast Asia in the Fifteenth Century, The China Factor, Singapore, NUS Press, National University o Singapore, 2010, pp.271-306.&amp;nbsp;52. &amp;quot;A Misstep toward a New History of Cambodia&amp;quot;, Review article on Karl-Heinz&amp;nbsp;Golzio,&amp;nbsp;Geschichte&amp;nbsp;Kambodschas. Das&amp;nbsp;Land&amp;nbsp;der&amp;nbsp;Khmer von Angkor&amp;nbsp;bis&amp;nbsp;zur&amp;nbsp;Gegenwart,&amp;nbsp;München:&amp;nbsp;Verlag&amp;nbsp;C.H. Beck 2003. In&amp;nbsp;Zeitschrift&amp;nbsp;der&amp;nbsp;Deutschen Morgenländischen&amp;nbsp;Gesellschaft, Band 155, Heft 1, 2005, pp. 239-251.&amp;nbsp;53. &amp;quot;Champa&amp;nbsp;Revised&amp;quot;, 2005, long version available as&amp;nbsp;ARI WPS No. 37&amp;nbsp; at&amp;nbsp;the following URL:

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2005champa.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;54. &amp;quot;Champa&amp;nbsp;Revised&amp;quot;, short version to be published in a conference book by Asia Research Institute,&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Singapore.&amp;nbsp;55. &amp;quot;&amp;nbsp;Bayon: New Perspectives&amp;nbsp;Reconsidered”,&amp;nbsp;Udaya,VII, 2006, pp. 101-176.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2006bayon.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Unpublished conference papers&amp;nbsp;1. “Comparisons of Revolution and Non-Revolution in Asia”, confer­ence of the Asian Studies Association of Australia,&amp;nbsp;Adelaide, 13-18 May 1984.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;2. “Borders of&amp;nbsp;Cambodia”, conference on “Southeast Asian Borders in Regional Context”,&amp;nbsp;Australian&amp;nbsp;National&amp;nbsp;University,&amp;nbsp;Canberra, October 1993.&amp;nbsp;3. “Democracy and Human Rights in&amp;nbsp;Cambodia”, Michael Vickery and&amp;nbsp;Ramses&amp;nbsp;Amer,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh,&amp;nbsp;Penang, and&amp;nbsp;Stockholm&amp;nbsp;1996

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996democracy.pdf&amp;nbsp;4. “The&amp;nbsp;Nogai&amp;nbsp;Diplomatic Correspondence with&amp;nbsp;Moscow”, Michael Vickery,&amp;nbsp;Yale&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;1969.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1969nogai.pdf&amp;nbsp;5. “A legend concerning&amp;nbsp;Jayavarman&amp;nbsp;II”, first presented at EFEO Paris in September 2004, since revised (and&amp;nbsp;subject to further revision).

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2004legend.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Scholarly Reviews&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;1. Three collections of Thai historical documents,&amp;nbsp;Journal of the Siam Society&amp;nbsp;(JSS) LX, 1 (January 1972), 396-409..&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;2.&amp;nbsp; A collection of Thai historical documents,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LX, 2 (July 1972), 318-328.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;3.&amp;nbsp; A volume of Thai historical&amp;nbsp; documents,&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Ro’a&amp;nbsp;dra&amp;nbsp;taº&amp;nbsp;cau&amp;nbsp;pra:derāj&amp;nbsp;kru&amp;nbsp;ratanakosindr&amp;nbsp;rājakāl&amp;nbsp;dī&amp;nbsp;1(‘On the Appointment of Vassal Rulers in the First&amp;nbsp;Bangkok&amp;nbsp;Reign’),&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXI, 1 (January 1973), 351-356.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;4.&amp;nbsp; H.L. Shorto,&amp;nbsp;A Dictionary of the Mon Inscriptions from the Sixth to the Sixteenth Centuries,JSS&amp;nbsp;LXI, 2 (July 1973), 205-209.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;5.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Yoneo&amp;nbsp;Ishii,&amp;nbsp;et. al.,&amp;nbsp;Glossarial Index of the&amp;nbsp;Sukhothai&amp;nbsp;Inscriptions,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXII, 1 (January 1974), 256-258&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;6.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Yoneo&amp;nbsp;Ishii,&amp;nbsp;et.al.,&amp;nbsp;An Index of Officials in Traditional Thai Governments,&amp;nbsp;JSS&amp;nbsp;LXIII, 2 (July 1975), 419-430.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;7.&amp;nbsp; David Wyatt,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Crystal&amp;nbsp;Sands: The Chronicles of&amp;nbsp;Nagara&amp;nbsp;Sri&amp;nbsp;Dharmaraja, in&amp;nbsp;Journal ofSoutheast Asian Studies, Vol. VIII, No. 1 (March 1977), pp. 118-120.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;8.&amp;nbsp; Osborne,&amp;nbsp;Milton,&amp;nbsp;Before&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea, in&amp;nbsp;Asian Studies Association of&amp;nbsp;Australia&amp;nbsp;Review, 1980, pp. 125-27.&amp;nbsp;9.&amp;nbsp; Klaus Rosenberg,&amp;nbsp;Nation und&amp;nbsp;Fortschritt&amp;nbsp;Der&amp;nbsp;Publi­zist&amp;nbsp;Thien&amp;nbsp;Wan und Die&amp;nbsp;Modernisierung&amp;nbsp;Thailands&amp;nbsp;unter&amp;nbsp;König&amp;nbsp;Culalongkon&amp;nbsp;(r.1868-1910),Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, XIII, 2, September 1982.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;10.&amp;nbsp; Grant Evans,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Yellow Rainmakers, in&amp;nbsp;Australian Outlook, 1984, p. 54.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;11. Martin Stuart-Fox (ed.),&amp;nbsp;Contemporary&amp;nbsp;Laos.&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Queensland&amp;nbsp;Press.&amp;nbsp;St. Lucia, 1982, in&amp;nbsp;Australian Outlook&amp;nbsp;1984, pp. 124-25.&amp;nbsp;12.&amp;nbsp; Kenneth R. Hall,&amp;nbsp;Maritime Trade and State Development in Early&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asia,&amp;nbsp;Journal of&amp;nbsp;Asian Studies, 1987, pp. 211-213.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1987maritime.pdf&amp;nbsp;13.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Laws of&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asia&amp;nbsp;Vol. I: The Pre-Modern Texts, Edited by M.B. Hooker, 1986,&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies&amp;nbsp;(Singapore), Vol. 19, No. 2, 1988, pp. 363-363.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; CHECK&amp;nbsp;14.&amp;nbsp; Elizabeth Becker,&amp;nbsp;When the War Was Over&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Nayan&amp;nbsp;Chanda,&amp;nbsp;Brother Enemy, inASIEN, German Association for Asian Studies,&amp;nbsp;Hamburg, Nr. 28, July 1988, pp. 116-117.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;15.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Mayoury&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;Pheuiphanh&amp;nbsp;Ngaosyvathn,&amp;nbsp;Chao&amp;nbsp;Anou&amp;nbsp;1767- 829&amp;nbsp;pasason&amp;nbsp;lao&amp;nbsp;lee&amp;nbsp;asi akhane&amp;nbsp;['Chao&amp;nbsp;Anou, 1767-1829, the Lao people and&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asia'],&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 21, 2 (September 1990), 441-45.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1990chao.pdf&amp;nbsp;16.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The Travels of Mendes Pinto, edited and translated by Rebecca D.&amp;nbsp;Catz, in&amp;nbsp;Asian Studies Review&amp;nbsp;(Australia),Volume&amp;nbsp;14, Number 3 (April 1991), pp. 251-253.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991travels.pdf&amp;nbsp;17. &amp;quot;George&amp;nbsp;Condominas,&amp;nbsp;From&amp;nbsp;Lawa&amp;nbsp;to Mon, from&amp;nbsp;Saa' to Thai&amp;quot;, Review article in&amp;nbsp;Thai-Yunnan&amp;nbsp;Project Newsletter,&amp;nbsp;Australian&amp;nbsp;National&amp;nbsp;University, Number Thirteen, June 1991, pp. 3-9.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1991george.pdf&amp;nbsp;18.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Ramses&amp;nbsp;Amer,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;General Assembly and the Kampuchean Issues, Report No. 31,Department of Peace and&amp;nbsp;Conflict&amp;nbsp;Research&amp;nbsp;Uppsala&amp;nbsp;University, 1989, in&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 23, 1 (1992), pp. 167-69.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;19. Geoffrey C. Gunn and Jefferson Lee,&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;Watching Down Under,&amp;nbsp;Bangkok, Institute of Asian Studies,&amp;nbsp;Chulalongkorn&amp;nbsp;University, 1991, in&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 23, 2 (1992), pp. 438-42.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;20. Jennifer W. Cushman,&amp;nbsp;Family and State,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Formation of a Sino-Thai Tin-Mining Dynasty 1797-1932,&amp;nbsp;Singapore,&amp;nbsp;Oxford&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;Press, 1991, in&amp;nbsp;Kajian&amp;nbsp;Malaysia, X, 2 (December 1992), pp. 87-90.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;21.&amp;nbsp;Trevor Findlay,&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;the Legacy and Lessons of UNTAC,&amp;nbsp;Stockholm:&amp;nbsp;Stockholm&amp;nbsp;International Peace Research Institute and&amp;nbsp;Oxford&amp;nbsp;University&amp;nbsp;Press.&amp;nbsp;1995; and Timothy Carney and Tan&amp;nbsp;Lian&amp;nbsp;Choo,&amp;nbsp;Whither&amp;nbsp;Cambodia?Beyond the Election,&amp;nbsp;Singapore:&amp;nbsp;Institute&amp;nbsp;of&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asian&amp;nbsp;Studies, 1993, in&amp;nbsp;Journal of Southeast Asian Studies,Vol. 26, No. 2 (September 1995), pp. 439-443.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1995findlay.pdf&amp;nbsp;22.&amp;nbsp;Mak&amp;nbsp;Phoeun,&amp;nbsp;Histoire&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;Cambodge&amp;nbsp;de la fin&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;XVIe&amp;nbsp;siècle au début&amp;nbsp;du&amp;nbsp;XVIIIe, in&amp;nbsp;Bulletinde&amp;nbsp;l'École&amp;nbsp;Française&amp;nbsp;d'Extrême-Orient&amp;nbsp;Tome 83 (1996), pp. 405-15.&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1996mak.pdf&amp;nbsp;Journalism&amp;nbsp;1. An article on the Cambodian National Ballet, in&amp;nbsp;Standard Bangkok Magazine, 21 August 1971, pp. 14-15.&amp;nbsp;2. Five articles on contemporary&amp;nbsp;Cambodia,&amp;nbsp;published in the&amp;nbsp;Canberra Times:&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Phnom Penh&amp;nbsp;Decays Behind a Bustling, Cheerful Facade&amp;quot;, 22 October 1981;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Communists Are Scarce in Today's&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;quot;, 26 October 1981;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Kampuchea's Markets are&amp;nbsp;Totally&amp;nbsp;Free and Thrive on Smuggling&amp;quot;, 29 October 1981; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Supervised Free Elections Could Become a Farce&amp;quot;, 2 November 1981;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 149-154&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;Border Diplomacy Lesson given by&amp;nbsp;Thailand&amp;quot;, 9 November, 1981.&amp;nbsp;3. &amp;quot;Kampuchea's International Position&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Vietnam Today&amp;nbsp;(Canberra), no.19, November 1981.4. &amp;quot;Recent Propaganda on&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Vietnam&amp;nbsp;Today&amp;nbsp;(Canberra), No. 25, May 1983.5. &amp;quot;Where&amp;nbsp;Defence&amp;nbsp;is Still the Priority&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp;The Guardian&amp;nbsp;(UK), 8 January 1985.&amp;nbsp;6. &amp;quot;Phnom Penh,&amp;nbsp;decembre&amp;nbsp;1984&amp;quot; [French adaptation of &amp;quot;Where&amp;nbsp;defence&amp;nbsp;is Still the Priority&amp;quot;, by&amp;nbsp;Serge&amp;nbsp;Thion], in&amp;nbsp;Cambodge&amp;nbsp;histoire et&amp;nbsp;enjeux: 1945-1985,&amp;nbsp;L'Harmattan, Paris, 1975.&amp;nbsp;7. &amp;quot;Sihanouk to go home as an honored senior citizen?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Sydney Morning Herald, 1 March 1985.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;8. &amp;quot;Cambodia's long road to recovery&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Age&amp;nbsp;(Melbourne), 20 March 1985.&amp;nbsp;9. &amp;quot;Phnom Penh Revisited: Gone is the Gloom&amp;quot;, Inside Asia (London), No 5, Sept-Oct 1985.&amp;nbsp;10. &amp;quot;Kampuchea&amp;nbsp;Edges Away From&amp;nbsp;Hanoi&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Canberra&amp;nbsp;Times, 5 January 1987.&amp;nbsp;11. “Amnesty International&amp;nbsp;och&amp;nbsp;kriget&amp;nbsp;mot&amp;nbsp;Kampuchea”,&amp;nbsp;Kommentar&amp;nbsp;(Stockholm), Nr 8/1988, pp. 33-39; an&amp;nbsp;abridged Swedish translation of an unpublished paper, “Amnesty International and the War&amp;nbsp;Againt&amp;nbsp;Cambodia”, sent&amp;nbsp;to several participants in the June 1987 international NGO conference in&amp;nbsp;Brussels.12. &amp;quot;Cambodia: Laying some Groundwork&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Nation (Bangkok), 5 February 1989&amp;nbsp;13. &amp;quot;Economic Headway in&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), 12 February 1989&amp;nbsp;14. &amp;quot;Rättigheter&amp;nbsp;bättre&amp;nbsp;idag&amp;nbsp;än&amp;nbsp;tidigare&amp;quot; [critique of Amnesty report on&amp;nbsp;Cambodia],&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Kommentar&amp;nbsp;(Stockholm), 4/1989, pp. 33-36.&amp;nbsp;15. &amp;quot;Outside powers' manipulations fascinate the&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;watchers&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Guardian Weekly, 26 July 1990.&amp;nbsp;16. &amp;quot;Notable changes in&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), 5 January 1991.17. &amp;quot;Chea&amp;nbsp;Sim: The&amp;nbsp;Hardline&amp;nbsp;Leader?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), 6 January 1991.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 363-367&amp;nbsp;18. &amp;quot;Is&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;Ready for Liberalization?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), 13 January 1991.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 367-371&amp;nbsp;19. &amp;quot;A Change of Heart?&amp;nbsp;US&amp;nbsp;motives suspect in Cambodian peace process&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Aliran&amp;nbsp;Monthly&amp;nbsp;(Penang&amp;nbsp;Malaysia),&amp;nbsp;Vol&amp;nbsp;11, No 7 (1991), pp. 22-26.&amp;nbsp;20. &amp;quot;Elakt&amp;nbsp;spel&amp;nbsp;om&amp;nbsp;Kambodja&amp;quot; (Swedish version of nos. 14-16),&amp;nbsp;Kommentar&amp;nbsp;(Stockholm), NR1/91 (1991), pp. 30-35.&amp;nbsp;21.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Rauhansopimus&amp;nbsp;merkitsee&amp;nbsp;kambodzalle&amp;nbsp;lopun&amp;nbsp;alkua&amp;quot; ['The&amp;nbsp;peace agreement is the beginning&amp;nbsp;of the end for&amp;nbsp;Cambodia'],&amp;nbsp;Helsingin&amp;nbsp;Sanomat, 10 January 1992.&amp;nbsp;22.&amp;nbsp;Överlever&amp;nbsp;Kambodja&amp;nbsp;'Freden'&amp;quot; ['Will&amp;nbsp;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;survive the peace?'],&amp;nbsp;Kommentar&amp;nbsp;(Stockholm), Nr 1-2, 1992, pp. 3-13&amp;nbsp;23.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;After&amp;nbsp;the Peace&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Thai-Yunnan&amp;nbsp;Project Newsletter,&amp;nbsp;Canberra, AustralianNational&amp;nbsp;University, Number Seventeen, June 1992, pp. 3-18.

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 384-416&amp;nbsp;24.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Cambodia's Elections: Retrospect and Prospect&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh&amp;nbsp;Post&amp;nbsp;1/6, Sept 25, 1992.&amp;nbsp;25.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Khmer Elections: Retrospect and Prospect&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), Nov 13, 1992.&amp;nbsp;26.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Cambodian polls:&amp;nbsp;Untac&amp;nbsp;promoting a 1955 result?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation&amp;nbsp;November 14, 1992.&amp;nbsp;27. &amp;quot;Amnesty report&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), 12 Feb 1994&amp;nbsp;28.&amp;nbsp; &amp;quot;Phnom Penh&amp;nbsp;Power Plays&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The&amp;nbsp;Nation, 15 April 1994.&amp;nbsp;29.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;Myths in Cambodian journalism&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation, 16 July 1994.&amp;nbsp;30. &amp;quot;PRK unfairly remembered&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 4, no. 8, 21 April-4 May, 1995, pp.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 6, 19 (including a review of Esmeralda&amp;nbsp;Luciolli,&amp;nbsp;Le&amp;nbsp;mur&amp;nbsp;de&amp;nbsp;bambou).&amp;nbsp;31. &amp;quot;The debate to apportion blame&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 4, no. 16, 11-24 August 1995,&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;p.7&amp;nbsp;32. &amp;quot;Kambodja, En&amp;nbsp;rättvis&amp;nbsp;betraktelse&amp;quot; [original English title, &amp;quot;Cambodia&amp;nbsp;three years later&amp;quot;],Kommentar&amp;nbsp;(Stockholm), Nr 2, 1996, pp. 15-24.&amp;nbsp;33. &amp;quot;The tricks of democracy, thanks to the Great Powers&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 5, no. 22,31 October-14 November, 1996, p. 13.&amp;nbsp;34. &amp;quot;Son&amp;nbsp;Sen&amp;nbsp;and all that--challenging the KR pundits&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 5, no. 24, 29November-12 December, 1996, p. 7.&amp;nbsp;35. &amp;quot;Whither&amp;nbsp;Cambodia's democracy&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation&amp;nbsp;(Bangkok), 16&amp;nbsp;MaY&amp;nbsp;1997, p. A4.&amp;nbsp;36. &amp;quot;Whither Cambodian democracy?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 6, no. 11, 30 May-June 12, 1997, p. 9.&amp;nbsp;37. &amp;quot;Foreign interference: enough is enough&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 6, no. 12, 13-26 June 1997, p. 9.&amp;nbsp;38. &amp;quot;A non-standard view of the 'coup'&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 6, no. 17, 29 August-11 September 1997, p. 11.&amp;nbsp;39. &amp;quot;Flip side view of&amp;nbsp;Cambodia's woes&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;The Nation, 18 November 1997&amp;nbsp;40. &amp;quot;Ed's OK, what about Hayes?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post,&amp;nbsp;30/1-13/2, 1998.&amp;nbsp;41. &amp;quot;From Info-Ed to the UN Center for Human Rights&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 7, no. 7, 10-24 April, 1998&amp;nbsp;42. &amp;quot;Revisiting the legalities of '93&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 7, no. 10, 22 May-4 June 1998&amp;nbsp;43. “Troubling Conjunctions”,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 10, no. 1, January 5-18, 2001.&amp;nbsp;44. &amp;quot;Hayes sells paper, soul&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, Vol. 10/9, April 27 - May 10, 2001, letter&amp;nbsp;45. &amp;quot;From Ionia to&amp;nbsp;Viet Nam&amp;quot;.&amp;nbsp;Phnom Penh Post, vol. 12/14,&amp;nbsp; July&amp;nbsp;4 - 17, 2003&amp;nbsp;46. &amp;quot;Wrong on&amp;nbsp;Gottesman&amp;quot;, critique of Luke Hunt's review of&amp;nbsp;Gottesman,&amp;nbsp;PPP, 14/2, 28/1-10/2, 2005, p. 13&amp;nbsp;47. &amp;quot;The Future of Thailand?&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;1977, rewritten 1979, details and notes in 2011; unpublished. &amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery1977future.pdf&amp;nbsp;48. &amp;quot;Review of&amp;nbsp;Nayan&amp;nbsp;Chanda&amp;nbsp;‘Brother Enemy’&amp;quot;; unpublished, in

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;pp. 193-219&amp;nbsp;Many of these articles are collected in&amp;nbsp;

http://michaelvickery.org/vickery2010kicking.pdf&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Other publication&amp;nbsp;GUERIN, Mathieu, &amp;quot;Paysans et bandits dans les rizières, La violence dans les campagnes cambodgiennes pendant la Grande Dépression&amp;quot;,&amp;nbsp;Histoire et Sociétés Rurales, n° 47, 1er semestre 2017, p. 41-74.MARYANN BLANDER, Migration Disruption: Crisis and Continuity in the Cambodian Mass Returns.Beavan, Nancy, Derek Hamilton, Tep Sokha, and Kerry Sayle. “Radiocarbon Dates from the Highland Jar and Coffin Burial Site of Phnom Khnang Peung, Cardamom Mountains, Cambodia.” Radiocarbon 57, no. 01 (2015): 15–31. doi:10.2458/AZU_RC.57.18194.William B. Noseworthy, “Articulations of Southeast Asian Religious Modernisms: Islam in Early 20th Century Cambodia &amp;amp; Cochinchina”IAN G.BAIRD, Biography and Borderlands: Chao Sone Bouttarobol, a Champassak Royal, and Thailand, Laos and Cambodia, Institute for East Asian Studies, Sogang University 2017</description>
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				<title>Newsletter May 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/261496</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 31 May 2017 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
				<description>Bulletin HSEPP Mai 2017&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP Newsletter for May 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.&amp;nbsp;
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Bulletin HSEPP Mai 2017&amp;nbsp;
						(519.53 ko)
				

	CALL FOR PAPERSBOURSES DE RECHERCHEDE LA FONDATION MARTINE AUBLET APPEL A CANDIDATURESANNEE UNIVERSITAIRE 2017 – 2018La Fondation Martine Aublet, sous l’égide de la Fondation de France, continue à offrir pour l’année universitaire 2017-2018, douze bourses de recherche doctorale à des étudiants inscrits en troisième cycle dans un établissement d’enseignement supérieur français ou en co-tutelle avec une université étrangère. Elle crée cette année dix bourses de Master.BOURSES DOCTORALESIl s’agit de bourses de début de thèse (première et deuxième année de 3° cycle) destinées à financer exclusivement des recherches de terrain d’au moins six mois en Afrique, en Asie, en Océanie, au Moyen-Orient, dans l’Océan Indien et les Amériques amérindienne, latine et caribéenne.Les disciplines concernées sont l’anthropologie, l’ethnomusicologie, l’ethnolinguistique, l’histoire de l’art, l’histoire, l’archéologie, et la sociologie.Si l’appel à candidatures est ouvert à tous les domaines thématiques de recherche, il est impératif que la méthodologie d’enquête soit qualitative et relève de l’observation participante ethnographique, du traitement d’archives et de la documentation historiographique (collections comprises), de la participation à des chantiers de fouilles archéologiques ou bien de la conduite d’entretiens thématiques et directifs. &amp;nbsp;Ces bourses sont attribuées pour une durée de 12 mois non reconductible, du 1er novembre au 31 octobre. Elles sont chacune d’un montant global de 15000 euros, versé en deux fois. Elles sont allouées après évaluation et sélection des dossiers par le Comité des rapporteurs et le Conseil Scientifique de la Fondation Martine Aublet, et validation par le Conseil d’administration de la Fondation. &amp;nbsp;Aucune condition de nationalité n’est exigée.Les lauréats seront tenus de remettre à la Fondation un premier rapport succinct de leurs travaux à mi-parcours de leur recherche. Un second rapport, qui prendra la forme d’un court article, sera publié dans les Annales de la Fondation Martine Aublet.BOURSES DE MASTERIl s’agit de bourses de 1ère ou de 2nde année de Master destinées à financer exclusivement des recherches de terrain d’environ un mois en Afrique, en Asie, en Océanie, au Moyen-Orient, dans l’Océan Indien et les Amériques amérindienne, latine et caribéenne. Les disciplines concernées sont l’anthropologie, l’ethnomusicologie, l’ethnolinguistique, l’histoire de l’art, l’histoire, l’archéologie, et la sociologie. Si l’appel à candidatures est ouvert à tous les domaines thématiques de recherche, il est impératif que la méthodologie d’enquête soit qualitative et relève de l’observation participante ethnographique, du traitement d’archives et de la documentation historiographique (collections comprises), de la participation à des chantiers de fouilles archéologiques ou bien de la conduite d’entretiens thématiques et directifs. Le projet de recherche initié par le Master doit contribuer à enrichir les connaissances sur les collections extra-européennes des musées français.Ces bourses sont attribuées sous la forme d’un chèque d’un montant de 1500 euros versé en une fois. Elles sont allouées au mois de novembre après évaluation et sélection des dossiers par le Comité des rapporteurs et le Conseil Scientifique de la Fondation Martine Aublet, et validation par le Conseil d’administration de la Fondation.&amp;nbsp;Aucune condition de nationalité n’est exigée.MODALITES D’ENREGISTREMENT DES CANDIDATURESLes demandes de bourses de recherche doctorale et de Master doivent être établies suivant un formulaire à télécharger, durant la période de l’appel à candidature, sur le site Internet du musée du quai Branly-Jacques Chirac.Le dossier de candidature aux bourses doctorales devra être accompagné d’une lettre du directeur de thèse arguant de la qualité du projet présenté.Le dossier de candidature aux bourses de Master devra être accompagné d’une lettre du directeur de Master attestant de l’inscription en Master.&amp;nbsp;Pour être enregistré, le dossier de candidature complet doit obligatoirement faire l’objet d’un double envoi&amp;nbsp; avant le 12 juin 2017 à minuit :&amp;nbsp;- par voie électronique, à l’adresse suivante :&amp;nbsp;



	
			bourses.martineaublet@quaibranly.fr

	




&amp;nbsp;. Les différents documents seront regroupés en un unique fichier pdf intitulé de la façon suivante NOMDUCANDIDAT_bourseFMA_DOC_2017.pdf ou NOMDUCANDIDAT_bourseFMA_MASTER_2017.pdf&amp;nbsp;L’ensemble du dossier de candidature ne dépassera pas 5Mo.&amp;nbsp;- par courrier postal (avec mention ‘Candidature Bourses Fondation Martine Aublet’ portée sur l’enveloppe), avec le formulaire de candidature daté et signé, à l’adresse suivante :&amp;nbsp;Fondation Martine Aublet,Département de la recherche et de l’enseignement,Musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac,222, rue de l’Université,75343 Paris Cedex 07&amp;nbsp;Borderland Spaces: Ruins, Revival(s) and Resources6th Conference of the Asian Borderlands Research Network
Deadline2 October 2017
Conference dates23 - 25 August 2018
VenueAmerican University of Central Asia, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan
Ruins, Revival(s) and ResourcesAsian borderlands create spaces that induce dedicated livelihood strategies, inspire self-definition on both individual and collective scales, and allow for specific regimes of resource extraction. Borderlands in Asia tend to be peripheral to the centres of state power, while they are at the same time a prime locus for the enactment and realisation of state authority. Across Asia borderlands are experiencing a dual connectivity linking spaces across borders as well as to the economic and political heartlands of the states that claim them. This conference aims to focus attention on the generative and productive capacity of border spaces, which is urgently in need of being addressed.Remnants of the past, both material as well as immaterial&amp;nbsp;ruins, constitute heritages that continue to affect livelihoods across Asian borderlands. Increasingly, borderlands witness a surge in religious, cultural, linguistic, and ideological&amp;nbsp;revival(s), where the past is perceived as a resource for securing community futures. Whether through the bottom-up claims of marginalized communities or top-down state processes of recognition, designations of cultural heritage have become arenas of contestation where varied actors seek to reframe histories. The past and present of borderlands are intimately linked to&amp;nbsp;resource&amp;nbsp;extraction. Often, the presence of resources has been instrumental in producing borders and borderlands, and been conducive to the production of space, territory, and demography. As resource extraction in borderlands intensifies, it is increasingly bound up in violent conflict and military occupation.


Ruins:&amp;nbsp;In which ways do the legacies of former state rule, of conflict or environmental hazards - abandoned infrastructures such as roads, irrigation systems or border installations, decaying cultural and religious heritage or historically informed imaginations of precarity and superiority, cohesion and otherness – play out in the identity-formation and socio-economic strategies of borderland populations? How (and with which effect) do these legacies, but also ‘re-discovered’ legal frameworks and maps, become instrumental for the invention, enforcement, opening and shifting of borders in current state politics?

Revivals:&amp;nbsp;How are specific cultural, religious, and linguistic practices and performances harnessed to make claims about identity, belonging, and entitlement? How do these new forms of expression embody continuity with the past as well as its transformation? How do ideological trajectories such as communism and democracy circulate as global discourses, which may be localized in specific borderland contexts to revive political participation and lead to new forms of mobilization? With these questions, we solicit panels that attend to the temporal and spatial dynamics of revival in relation to our other themes of ruins and resources.

Resources:&amp;nbsp;We seek panels analysing conventional resources from land to timber, from crops to rare species, from valuable minerals to bio-prospects. Furthermore, as borderlands become sites for intensified resource extraction, exploration, and transit, they are also sites for imagining resources in different ways. They are sites where human resources arrive in and depart from borderlands as labourers but also as bureaucrats, soldiers, professionals, students, and athletes. They are sites that generate manufacturing and agricultural resources through factories and export processing zones. And they are sites that produce revenue for state and non-state actors in enclaves of pleasure targeting tourists, settlers, and mobile professionals.



Application ProcedureSince one of the main goals of this conference is to spur collaboration and conversations across diverse fields in the hope of building up a more nuanced picture of the intersections and relationships across Asian borderlands, we would like to include scholars, writers, policy studies researchers, artists, filmmakers, activists, the media, and others from a wide variety of disciplinary backgrounds. We hope that these conceptually innovative panels, based on new research, will help to develop new perspectives in the study of Asian Borderlands.&amp;nbsp;We encourage applicants to submit a full panel proposal, as only a small number of individual papers will be selected. We will consider proposals for panels and roundtables that have a thematic focus, are of a comparative character, and involve scholars or practitioners affiliated with different institutions. If you are looking for other people to join your panel prior to the 2 October deadline, you may post your panel abstract and contact information on our Facebook page (

https://www.facebook.com/AsianBorderlands/) in order to reach a wider network.The deadline to send in panel, roundtable and paper proposals is&amp;nbsp;Monday 2 October 2017. Participants will be notified around January 2018. Please visit the&amp;nbsp;

Application Forms Page&amp;nbsp;to submit your proposal.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
FundingVery limited financial support may be made available to some scholars who reside in Asia and some junior or low-income scholars from other parts of the world. If you would like to be considered for a grant, please submit the&amp;nbsp;

Grant Application Form&amp;nbsp;in which you state the motivation for your request. Please also specify the kind of funding that you will apply for or will receive from other sources. Please note that the conference operates on a limited budget, and will not normally be able to provide more than a partial coverage of the costs of travel. The form should be submitted before&amp;nbsp;2 October 2017. Requests for funding received after this date will not be taken into consideration.Further information about registration fees, the venue, accommodation, and logistics will be provided on the ABRN website (

http://www.asianborderlands.net/) once the panels have been accepted.Convenors


Duncan McDuie-Ra, University of New South Wales, Australia

Erik de Maaker, Leiden University, the Netherlands

Henryk Alff, Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research, Germany

Sara Shneiderman, University of British Columbia, Canada

Svetlana Jacquesson, American University of Central Asia, Kyrgyzstan

Tina Harris, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands

Willem van Schendel, University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands



OrganizersThe conference is organized by the&amp;nbsp;

American University of Central Asia;&amp;nbsp;

International Institute for Asian Studies&amp;nbsp;and the&amp;nbsp;

Asian Borderlands Research Network (ABRN).For more information, please contact us at&amp;nbsp;



	
			info@asianborderlands.net

	




CALL FOR PAPERS:&amp;nbsp; 7th&amp;nbsp;International Conference on The History of Medicine in Southeast Asia (HOMSEA 2018)To be held in Vientiane, Lao People’s Democratic Republic (LPDR)15-17 January 2018With support from:&amp;nbsp;Sydney Southeast Asia Centre (SSEAC, The University of Sydney, Australia)Institut de Recherche sur le Développement (IRD, France)Université de Montréal (Canada)&amp;nbsp;Program Committee:Prof. Warwick Anderson, University of Sydney, AustraliaDr. Pascale Hancart-Petitet, IRD Vientiane, LPDRProf. Laurence Monnais, Université de Montréal, CanadaAssoc. Prof. Hans Pols, University of Sydney, AustraliaDr. Vanphanom Sychareun, University of Health Sciences, Vientiane, LPDRDr. Kathryn Sweet, independent scholar, Vientiane, LPDRand members of the Local Organizing CommitteeAll proposals on the subject of the history of medicine and health in Southeast Asia will be considered. We will also consider proposals in medical anthropology. Special attention will be given to proposals dealing with Laos.Please submit a one-page proposed abstract for a 20-minute talk, and a one-page CV by July 15 2017 to Dr. James Dunk&amp;nbsp;



	
			james.dunk@sydney.edu.au

	




Note that it may be possible to subsidize some of the costs of participation for scholars from the Southeast Asia region, and for graduate and postgraduate students. If you wish to ask for support,please send a separate email justifying your request by July 15 to James Dunk.Propositions will be reviewed byearlySeptember 2017.Further information regarding the venue, registration fees, and accommodation options will be available by then.Laurence Monnais &amp;nbsp;Professeur titulaire - Département d'histoireDirectrice – Centre d’Etudes de l’Asie de l’Est (CETASE)Directrice scientifique – Les Presses de l’Université de Montréal (PUM)&amp;nbsp;

http://www.pum.umontreal.ca/Chercheur - Equipe MEOS&amp;nbsp;

http://www.meos.qc.ca/&amp;nbsp;- Institut de recherche en santé publique de l’Université de Montréal (IRSPUM)&amp;nbsp;

http://www.irspum.umontreal.ca/&amp;nbsp; Université de MontréalC.P. 6128 Succ. Centre-villeMONTREAL, QC, CANADA H3C 3J7Tél&amp;nbsp;:&amp;nbsp;

514-343-6544&amp;nbsp;Call for contributions&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Violences et terreurs instituées&amp;nbsp;La revue souhaiterait publier des articles sur&amp;nbsp;la Birmanie en particulier, mais aussi sur d’autres pays de l'Asie du Sud-Est&amp;nbsp;Le terme de terrorisme a envahi l’actualité tout en recouvrant un ensemble de violences très diverses. Ce terme est néanmoins difficile à définir que ce soit sur le plan juridique, politique ou sociologique. La terreur peut être revendiquée comme un mode d’action tandis que le terrorisme peut être pour les gouvernements une arme de fustigation qui stigmatise l’ennemi à abattre. La confusion règne fréquemment sur les intentions et les inspirations des auteurs de violences et ajoute à la terreur des populations, autorisant les États à s’emparer de la thématique de la sécurité pour installer une gouvernance de crise. En quoi ces configurations appellent-elles un regard anthropologique ?&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Ce numéro du Journal des anthropologues entend nourrir la réflexion générale sur les situations de violences, terreur et terrorisme. Il se fixe trois types de questionnements regroupés autour de l’État, l’idéologie et le sujet :&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;- Déconstruire les usages du terme de terrorisme à partir de terrains précis ;&amp;nbsp;- Replacer les situations singulières dans le cadre globalisé qui leur donne sens et ce, dans des aires géographiques variées ;&amp;nbsp;- Distinguer et requalifier anthropologiquement la nature des violences en jeu et restituer l’intelligibilité des situations ;&amp;nbsp;- Déployer comment le terrorisme est un instrument au service des gouvernements, comment la terreur devient un mode de gouvernance, comment s’édifie un terrorisme d’État.&amp;nbsp;- Appréhender la manière dont les rites collectifs fusionnent les populations autour du deuil, de la souffrance et de la compassion, avec ou contre les États selon les configurations.&amp;nbsp;- Analyser les productions de subjectivités sous l’effet de menaces généralisées effectives ou fantasmatiques, d’injonctions répétées à la vigilance et d’extension des appareils de surveillance.&amp;nbsp;- Requestionner la nature et le statut de la victime. Occultées ou exhibées en fonction des intérêts des États (dictatures ou démocraties), les victimes sont héroïsées ou ignorées et posent la question du coût des réparations et dédommagements matériels et symboliques - Etudier les nouveaux marchés de la sécurité et de la peur et les modes d’implication des sujets&amp;nbsp;- Repenser le rôle que jouent les sciences sociales en termes de critique et /ou de légitimation des gouvernements et des mobilisations identitaires et allophobes.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Les résumés doivent être adressés aux trois coordinateurs au plus tard le30 septembre 2017,&amp;nbsp;et les articles le31 janvier 2018.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Parution prévue :2e semestre 2018.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Coordination : Marion Aubrée, Laurent Bazin,&amp;nbsp;Monique Selim Marion Aubrée : marion.aubree@ehess.fr&amp;nbsp;Laurent Bazin : bazinlaurent@wanadoo.fr&amp;nbsp;Monique Selim : monique.selim@ird.fr&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;PUBLICATIONS&amp;nbsp;
We are delighted to inform you that the website dedicated to the Khmer Inscriptions Program and the presentation of its ongoing progress is now online at the following address:

epigraphia.efeo.fr/CIKYou will find there useful documents to download, prepared within the framework of this project, notably the Inventory of the 1360 K.-number inscriptions known and documented to day.&amp;nbsp;Chik, C., &amp;amp; Wright, W. E. (2017). Overcoming the obstacles: Vietnamese and Khmer Heritage Language Programs in California. In O. Kagan, M. Carreira, &amp;amp; C. Chik (Eds.),A handbook on heritage language education: From innovation to program building&amp;nbsp;(pp. 222-236). New York, NY: Routledge

View articleBRAAF, Rochelle. Sexual violence against ethnic minoriƟes during the Khmer Rouge regime. 2014.&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;FECHTER,ANN-MEIKER, An excess of goodness? Volunteering among aid professionals &amp;nbsp;in Cambodia, South East Asia Research, 2017.&amp;nbsp;

View Article&amp;nbsp;Mousson No 29&amp;nbsp;|&amp;nbsp;2017Le commerce du sexe en Asie du Sud-Est. Approches pluridisciplinairesSexual Trade in Southeast Asia. Multidisciplinary ApproachesSous la direction de&amp;nbsp;Laurence&amp;nbsp;Husson.Activité tolérée voire illégale selon les pays et de ce fait malaisément mesurable, la prostitution n’en a pas moins en Asie du Sud-Est un poids économique considérable. Aux stéréotypes de la littérature coloniale ou aux traditions locales a succédé un véritable marché alimenté par la demande propre à ces pays, elle-même attisée par l’urbanisation accélérée, les inégalités croissantes et le tourisme dit «&amp;nbsp;sexuel&amp;nbsp;» mondialisé. L’étude du «&amp;nbsp;phénomène prostitutionnel&amp;nbsp;» en Asie du Sud-Est a bénéficié des enquêtes occasionnées par la propagation du Sida dans la région dans les années 1990. Ces dernières sont cependant loin d’avoir répondu à la somme de questions économiques, sociales, politiques, juridiques que soulève un tel thème. Par goût de la théorie ou simple militantisme, trop d’auteurs ont sauté l’étape de l’historien, du géographe, du sociologue et de l’ethnologue pour se lancer dans des économies de la prostitution qui reposent sur des terrains partiels. Ce numéro résolument pluridisciplinaire fait la part belle à l’histoire via les littératures locales, coloniales, les archives, les rapports médicaux,&amp;nbsp;etc. afin d’analyser les aspects qu’a pu revêtir ce phénomène à diverses époques et en divers lieux&amp;nbsp;; à la sociologie, en s’interrogeant sur les pratiques, les itinéraires des travailleurs du sexe, les réseaux, leur organisation&amp;nbsp;; à l’anthropologie, pour décrire les relations entre les acteurs, le passage d’une prostitution «&amp;nbsp;traditionnelle&amp;nbsp;» et «&amp;nbsp;locale&amp;nbsp;» à une prostitution «&amp;nbsp;moderne&amp;nbsp;» et «&amp;nbsp;internationale&amp;nbsp;»&amp;nbsp;; à la géographie, pour identifier les flux de personnes, les réseaux et leur localisation ainsi que mettre en évidence la grande mobilité des différents acteurs impliqués, ainsi qu’à la littérature en langue vernaculaire.


Introduction


Laurence&amp;nbsp;Husson







The Need for a Multidisciplinary Approach to Prostitution in the Southeast Asian Context[Texte intégral]Nécessité d’une approche pluridisciplinaire de la prostitution dans le contexte sud-est asiatique


Articles


Graeme John&amp;nbsp;Hugo







Population Mobility And Prostitution In Southeast Asia&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Mouvements de populations et prostitution en Asie du Sud-Est





François-Xavier&amp;nbsp;Bonnet







From&amp;nbsp;Oripun&amp;nbsp;to the&amp;nbsp;Yapayuki-San: An Historical Outline of Prostitution in the Philippines[Texte intégral]D’oripun&amp;nbsp;à&amp;nbsp;yapayuki-san: un aperçu historique de la prostitution aux Philippines





Terence&amp;nbsp;H.&amp;nbsp;Hull







From Concubines to Prostitutes. A Partial History of Trade in Sexual Services in Indonesia[Texte intégral]Des concubines aux prostituées. Une histoire partielle du commerce des services sexuels en Indonésie





Isabelle&amp;nbsp;Tracol-Huynh







Silhouettes du monde prostitutionnel&amp;nbsp;: les prostituées au Tonkin colonial&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Silhouettes of the Prostitution World: Prostitutes in Colonial Tonkin





Philippe&amp;nbsp;Le&amp;nbsp;Failler







Le renouveau des lentilles d’eau&amp;nbsp;: de la prostitution à Hanoi à la toute fin du&amp;nbsp;xxe&amp;nbsp;siècle&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]The Renewals of Floating Duckweed, Prostitution in Hanoi at the Last End of the 20th century





Jean&amp;nbsp;Baffie







From&amp;nbsp;Ying Nakhon Sopheni&amp;nbsp;to&amp;nbsp;Sao Borikan: Banality and Originality in the Development of Prostitution in Thailand&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]De&amp;nbsp;Ying Nahon Sopheni&amp;nbsp;à&amp;nbsp;Sao Borikan: banalité et originalité dans le développement de la prostitution en Thaïlande





Marion&amp;nbsp;Bottero







Le fantasme de la femme thaïlandaise et la crise occidentale de la masculinité&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]The Fantasy of the Thai Woman and the Western Crisis of Masculinity





Laurence&amp;nbsp;Husson







Who Are the Clients and What They Say about Prostitution in South-East Asia?&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Les clients et leurs propos sur la prostitution en Asie du Sud-Est





Monique&amp;nbsp;Zaini-Lajoubert







Dans la littérature malaisienne, la prostitution est un fléau social à éradiquer&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]In Malaysian Literature, Prostitution is a Social Plague to be Eradicated.


Emmanuel&amp;nbsp;Poisson




Cave&amp;nbsp;(L’entraîneuse). Un essai de Nguyễn Việt Hà traduit par Emmanuel Poisson&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Cave&amp;nbsp;(The bargirl). An Essay by Nguyễn Việt HàTranslated by Emmanuel Poisson


Article de compte rendu


Review article





Antonio&amp;nbsp;J.&amp;nbsp;Guerreiro







Oral Literature, Heritage and Ritual Performances in Borneo: A Review of Two Recent Publications&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]


Comptes rendus


Books reviews





Bernard&amp;nbsp;Formoso







Cosmopolitan Sex Workers. Women and Migration in a Global City, Christine B.N. Chin[Texte intégral]Oxford, Oxford University Press, 3 cartes, 1 diagramme, 1 photo, bibliographie, index, 2013, 234&amp;nbsp;p.





Philippe&amp;nbsp;Le&amp;nbsp;Failler







The Ironies of Freedom. Sex, Culture, and Neoliberal Governance in Vietnam, Nguyễn-võ Thu-hương&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Seattle, University of Washington Press, 2008, XXVIII-336&amp;nbsp;p.





Frédéric&amp;nbsp;Roustan







Marriage Migration in Asia: Emerging Minorities at the Frontiers of Nation-States, Sari K. Ishii, éd.&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Singapore, Kyoto, NUS press, Kyoto University Press, 2016, 304&amp;nbsp;p.





Bernard&amp;nbsp;Formoso







Chrétiens évangéliques d’Asie du Sud-Est. Expériences locales d’une ferveur conquérante, Pascal Bourdeaux &amp;amp; Jérémy Jammes, éd.&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Rennes&amp;nbsp;: Presses universitaires de Rennes, bibliographie, index, 391&amp;nbsp;p.





Bernard&amp;nbsp;Formoso







Chinese Houses of Southeast Asia. The Eclectic Architecture of Sojourners &amp;amp; Settlers, Ronald&amp;nbsp;J. Knapp, photos par A. Chester&amp;nbsp;Ong, préface de Wang Gungwu&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]North Clarendon, Vermont, Tuttle Publishing, 2010, illustrations, index, bibliographie, 288&amp;nbsp;p.





Pierre&amp;nbsp;Pichard







Le Baphuon – de la restauration à l’histoire architecturale, Pascal Royère&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Paris, EFEO, Mémoires archéologiques 27, 2016, 272 pages +&amp;nbsp;27 planches.





Gilles de&amp;nbsp;Gantès







Mobile Citizens. French Indians In Indochina, 1858-1954, Natasha Pairaudeau&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Copenhague, Nordic Institute of Asian Studies, Monograph series, n°&amp;nbsp;129, 2016, 370&amp;nbsp;p.





Bernard&amp;nbsp;Formoso







Imperial Bandits. Outlaws Rebels in the China-Vietnam Borderlands, Bradley Camp Davis[Texte intégral]Seattle &amp;amp; London, University of Washington Press, 3 cartes, 12 photos, glossaire, bibliographie, index, 2017, 266 p. +&amp;nbsp;XIII.





Arnaud&amp;nbsp;Kaba







The Oil Palm Complex. Smallholders, Agribusiness and the State in Indonesia and Malaysia, Rob Cramb &amp;amp; John McCarthy, éd.&amp;nbsp;[Texte intégral]Singapour, National University of Singapore Press, 2016, 512&amp;nbsp;p.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Asian Ethnicity, vol. 28, no. 3, June 2017Table of contents


Infrastructures for ethnicity: understanding the diversification of contemporary Indonesia byZane Goebel

Ethnic Chinese in Malaysian citizenship: gridlocked in historical formation and political hierarchy byCheun Hoe Yaw

Multi-ethnic school environment from the school leader’s perspective: challenges and approaches to improve multi-cultural competency among teachers in Malaysia byYasmin Ahmad and Najeemah Mohd Yusof

Chinese Indonesians: how many, who and where? byEvi Nurvidya Arifin, M. Sairi Hasbullah and Agus Pramono

‘Green Tibetans’ in China: Tibetan geopiety and environmental protection in a multilayered Tibetan landscape byJoshua Esler

Oppositional consciousness, cultural preservation, and everyday resistance on the Uyghur Internet byRebecca A. Clothey and Emmanuel F. Koku

‘Don’t discriminate against minority nationalities’: practicing Tibetan ethnicity on social media byAndrew Grant

Translating culture: missionaries and linguists in contemporary Yunnan Province byGideon Elazar

Understanding ethnic visibility through language use: the case of Taiwan Hakka byHuei-ling Lai


Book ReviewsVoir :

http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/caet20/18/3ABOUT CAMBODIA’s COMMUNE ELECTIONWill CPP threats turn to violence?

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/national/will-cpp-threats-turn-violenceCambodia’s Commune Election: A political Tipping Point

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/commune-elections/cambodias-commune-elections-political-tipping-point?utm_content=bufferffa25&amp;amp;utm_medium=social&amp;amp;utm_source=facebook.com&amp;amp;utm_campaign=buffer&amp;nbsp;Kem Ley Lives on for Grassroots Democracy Party in Elections

https://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/kem-ley-lives-grassroots-democracy-party-elections-130233/&amp;nbsp;Expert Views on Cambodia’s Local Elections

https://www.cambodiadaily.com/second2/expert-view-think-will-key-issue-voters-commune-elections-130610/&amp;nbsp;</description>
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				<title>HSEPP's Newsletter Mars & Avril 21017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/260123</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 30 Apr 2017 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
				<description>HSEPP March and April 2017 Digest&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP March and April 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and informations with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Newsletter Mars &amp;amp;April 2017&amp;nbsp;
						(181.76 ko)
				

	NEXT HSEPP’S CONFERENCE“Cinematic Forces of Modernity and Tradition in អនអើយស្រីអន (An Euil Srey An) 1972”ByPhally Chroy: Ph.D. candidate in Interdisciplinary Arts at Ohio University. His research covers Cambodia, cosmopolitanism, and critical theory.OnMay 19th, 2017, at 6:00pm, in the meeting room of Royal University of Fine-Arts.(Conference will be done in English language)&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Abstract:&amp;nbsp;អនអើយស្រីអន (An Euil Srey An) is a 1972 popular film from the Cambodian Golden Age of Arts directed by the Golden Age director Ly Bun Lim. During the 1990’s, អនអើយស្រីអន resurfaced in various Cambodian communities in the United States and helped imagine a particular moment of Cambodia for diasporic Cambodian refugee children. In this presentation, Phally Chroy will investigate the film’s thematics that shaped a “mythos” of Cambodia for Cambodian refugees and Cambodian-Americans to examine memory and popular culture as a force of “encapsulation” and mythmaking.This presentation contextualized critical theory and methodological approaches that analyzes memory theory, reporting how individuals construct narratives through a reading of personal history and popular culture. The presentation will be based on textual and visual analysis of “Khmerness”, instances of cultural references to Khmer notions of religion, mythology, arts, etc.., and recording their appearances in the film. The data collected was juxtaposed with current scholarship on Cambodian-American identity for analysis and critique from memory research from sociology and current publication on Cambodia-American identity.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;OTHER CONFERENCES&amp;nbsp;International Seminar, 10-12 April 2017&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
Organized by Labex « Urban Futures » &amp;amp; UMR AUSSER, ENSAPB; LATTS, Lab’Urba, UPEM;with the Research Department LESTARI, Universitas Kebangsaan Malaysia and Indian Institute of Human Settlements (IIHS)
Steering Committee:
Olivier Coutard (LATTS); Adèle Esposito (AUSSER); Joël Idt (Lab’Urba); Etienne Monin(TELEMME); Andrea Palmioli (AUSSER-HKU); Margot Pellegrino (Lab’Urba), with Antoine Brès&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;This international seminar brings together, and confronts, studies of diffuse urbanization in Europe and Asia. Its ambition is to produce theoretically informed and&amp;nbsp;theory-informing comparative empirical knowledge on how these peripheral urban areas and regions develop and transform, how they are practiced and lived, and on the use of resources (land, energy, water...) involved in these processes. Studies of the production and transformation of, and ways of life in, urban environments abound, yet these two issues are usually analyzed separately.Above all, a vast majority of these studies disregards issues of urban form and materiality broadly conceived. Conversely architects, urbanists and geographers have described or advocated variegated&amp;nbsp;land use patterns, built area layouts and building designs, but in these studies, analyses on how built environments are produced and lived generally remain either superficial, oversimplified or&amp;nbsp;normative.&amp;nbsp;The seminar is organized around 4 panels and two keynote talks:- Panel 1: Urbanity Beyond Centrality- Panel 2: “Ordinary” urban production and transformation- Panel 3: Activity systems- Panel 4: Territorial and Urban ecologies- Keynote talk 1 : Diffusing Urbanization: Deciphering the Spatial Assemblages of 21st Century Urbanization - Terry McGee- Keynote talk 2: Diffuse City and Horizontal Metropolis - Paola Vigano’Detailed presentation and program:&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

https://diffuse.sciencesconf.org/&amp;nbsp;Registration (free but mandatory):&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

Diffuse Urbanization Perspectives from Asia and Europe - Sciencesconf.org&amp;nbsp;Lecture series ANDRÈ MALRAUX: THE LOOTER OF BANTEAY SREI WHO ROSE TO HIGH POLITICAL OFFICE.In the annals of archaeology, Heinrich Schliemann, Katherine Routledge, Madeleine Colani and Howard Carter, to name a few, will be forever associated with pioneering work respectively in Troy, the Easter Island, the Plain of Jars and Egypt. Other would-be archaeologists have become household names for the wrong reasons. One of the best-known cases concerns Andrè Malraux, a young French intellectual arrested in Phnom Penh on 24 December 1923 as he attempted to smuggle out of Cambodia several tons of bas-reliefs looted from Khmer temples and destined to collectors in Europe and America. Archival data recorded by George Groslier, the director of the National Museum responsible for the arrest, reveal that the looting involved not just Banteay Srei but also another temple never mentioned in relation to this case. Malraux was tried in Indochina but did not serve a single day of his three-year sentence and was free to return to France at the end of 1924. But why was Malraux arrested in 1923, the same year that the French colonial authorities authorised the sale of Khmer artefacts, under certain conditions? What lines of defence did Malraux use against the colonial powers he accused of neglecting Cambodia’s heritage? How did Malraux morph from youthful looter to Minister for Cultural Affairs under the presidency of Charles de Gaulle in France? In my talk I will discuss the facts of the case in light of previously unknown archival data and photographic evidence.Lia Genovese holds a PhD from SOAS-University of London for a Dissertation titled ‘The Plain of Jars of North Laos - Beyond Madeleine Colani’. She lectures at Thammasat and Silpakorn Universities (Bangkok) and is a Member of the Lecture Committee at the Siam Society. Her current research interests include: the Plain of Jars of Laos; colonial archaeology; the megaliths of South and Southeast Asia; Iron Age mortuary practices; the life and work of French archaeologist Madeleine Colani; cultural heritage. Her journal articles and book reviews can be accessed at academia.eduDate: Thursday, 25 May 2017Time:&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 7.30 p.m.Place:&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; The Siam Society, 131 Asoke Montri Rd, Sukhumvit 21Non-members donation: B200. Siam Society members, members’ spouses and children, and all students showing valid student ID cards are admitted free of charge. For more information, please contact Khun Arunsri or Email&amp;nbsp;: 



	
			info@siam-society.org

	




Approaches to the Study of Khmer and Cham Art: a Research Workshop with Tran Ky Phuong and Soumya James, 16/05/2017, CSEAS, SOAS.Scholarship on ancient Khmer and Cham art evolved concomitantly with the French colonial project, and has long been grounded in archaeological and epigraphic study. This workshop presents new currents of research expanding the field. Tran Ky Phuong is the leading scholar of Cham art. After a first curatorial career at the Danang Museum of Cham Sculpture, he joined the Vietnam Association of Ethnic Minorities’ Culture and Arts, where he has launched research combining ethnographic and art historical methods. Soumya James represents a new generation of Southeast Asia art historians. Her work examines the representation of the divine feminine in cultural and eco-political landscape of Angkor.Tran Ky Phuong is a former curator of the Museum of Cham Sculpture in Da Nang (1978-98); currently he is a senior research fellow with the Vietnam Association of Ethnic Minorities’ Culture and Arts; and is a researcher of the Center for Cultural Relationship Studies in Mainland Southeast Asia (CRMA Center) of Chulachomklao Royal Military Academic, Thailand and at APSARA Authority, Siem Reap, Cambodia; from 2012 until the present he has been a consultant of UNESCO World Cultural Heritages at My Son Sanctuary. He has awarded several research fellowships to study at International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS), Leiden; Asia Research Institute (ARI) of National University of Singapore; Center for Advanced Studies in the Visual Arts (CASVA), National Gallery of Arts, Washington DC.He has published several books and articles in Vietnamese, English and Japanese, including: My Son in the History of Cham Art (1988); Vestiges of Champa Civilization (2008); Champa Iseki/Champa Ruins (co-author with Shige-eda Yutaku, 1997); The Cham of Vietnam: History, Society and Art (co-editor with Bruce Lockhart), NUS Press (2011); “The Architecture of Temple-Towers of Ancient Champa (Central Vietnam)” in Champa and the Archaeology of My Son, Vietnam (2009); “The Preservation and Management of the Monuments of Champa in Central Vietnam: The Example of My Son Sanctuary, a World Cultural Heritage Site”, in Rethinking Cultural Resource Management in Southeast Asia: Preservation, Development and Neglect (2011);“The new archaeological finds in Northeast Cambodia, Southern Laos and Central Highland of Vietnam: Considering on the significance of overland trading route and cultural interactions of the ancient kingdoms of Champa and Cambodia”, in Advancing Southeast Asian Archaeology 2013, SEAMEO SPAFA Regional Center for Archaeology and Fine Arts, Bangkok, Thailand (2015).Soumya James is an independent Art Historian who studies premodern South and Southeast Asian art. She received her PhD in Art History from Cornell University. Her dissertation focused on the cultural and eco-political significance of the divine feminine at three Angkor period sites. Her research investigates the relationship between landscape and built form, gender and sexuality, and the art historical links between premodern South and Southeast Asia. Following her graduation, she continued her research while working as the coordinator for the Science and Society Programme at the National Centre for Biological Sciences, Bangalore, India. She was a Postdoctoral Associate at the Franke Program in Science and the Humanities and a Fellow at the Whitney Humanities Center, both at Yale University. She is currently working on a book manuscript and planning her next fieldtrip to Cambodia.Voir : 

https://www.soas.ac.uk/cseas/events/16may2017-approaches-to-the-study-of-khmer-and-cham-art-a-research-workshop-with-tran-ky-phuong-and-.html&amp;nbsp;CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Call for applications for the Martine Aublet Foundation scholarships, academic year 2017-2018The Martine Aublet Foundation, under the guidance of the Fondation de France, is offering a dozen doctoral research grants for the 2015-2015 academic year to students registered in doctoral studies in a French institution of higher education or in co-sponsorship with a foreign university.The disciplines concerned are Anthropology, Ethnomusicology, Ethnolinguistics, Art History, History, Archaeology and Sociology. These grants are designed to finance exclusively field research in Africa, Asia, Oceania, the Middle East, the Indian Ocean and the Caribbean, Latin and Amerindian Americas.&amp;nbsp;If no thematic area of research has been chosen, it is essential that the research methodology be qualitative and involve ethnographic participant observer techniques, archival processing and historiographical documentation (including collections), participation in archaeological dig sites or conducting thematic, directive interviews. These grants thus cover the initial phase of research for a thesis (first and second year of doctoral studies) and not the final writing phase (beginning in the third year).These non-renewable grants are made for a period of 12 months, from November 1 to October 31. Each is a total amount of 15,000 €, paid in two installments. They are awarded after the evaluation and selection of applications by the Committee of Rapporteurs and the Scientific Council of the Martine Aublet Foundation and validation by the Board of Directors of the Foundation. There are no conditions regarding nationality.For more information: 

http://www.quaibranly.fr/fr/recherche-scientifique/activites/bourses-et-prix-de-these/bourses-et-prix-de-la-fondation-martine-aublet/bourses-de-la-fondation-martine-aublet&amp;nbsp;Call for applications for the University of Tokyo 2017 Summer Program in Japanese Archaeology and Heritage&amp;nbsp;The Faculty of Letters of the University of Tokyo, in conjunction with the Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, invites applications from undergraduate students who are not of Japanese nationality and interested in Japanese archaeology and heritage to take part in a two-week Summer School program in Japan from 9th to 23rd September 2017.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Participants will spend the whole period with undergraduate students from the University of Tokyo and learn together about Japanese culture and history. This is the fourth year that this program will run. The first week of the program will be based at the Hongo Campus of the University of Tokyo in the central part of Tokyo, involving lectures, group work and visits to historical sites and museums.&amp;nbsp; This will be followed by a week in Hokkaido.&amp;nbsp; The Hokkaido part of the program will include lectures, visits to museums and heritage sites, and archaeological excavation at the Tokoro settlement dating to the Satsumon period (Cir. 11th centuries CE) which has been the focus of a long-term research project at the Department of Archaeology of the University of Tokyo.&amp;nbsp; The program will be led by lecturers at the Faculty of Letters of the University of Tokyo. The costs of the stay in Japan including accommodation, meals and internal travel will be covered by the Faculty of Letters of the University of Tokyo.&amp;nbsp; Successful applicants will be responsible to pay for their own international travel costs to and from Tokyo as well as international travel insurance (to be arranged by themselves).&amp;nbsp; The entire program will be taught in English.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; No Japanese language or previous experience of Japan is required, although having some basic command of Japanese would make the application stronger.&amp;nbsp; Participants will be asked to submit an essay on their experience upon conclusion of the program; this essay will be published online subsequently. Five students will be selected to join this program with five undergraduate students from the University of Tokyo.&amp;nbsp; Those who have been selected are expected to participate in the whole program. Full details of the program including instructions for application can be found at: 

http://sainsbury-institute.org/news-events/tokyo-summer- school-2017/The deadline for applications is 5th May.Contact: Dr Sam Nixon | Senior Research AssociateCentre for Archaeology and Heritage Sainsbury Institute 64 The Close | Norwich | NR1 4DH | UKT +44 (0)1603 597502&amp;nbsp;

http://sainsbury-institute.org/about-us/staff-2/senior-research-associate/&amp;nbsp;Call for application of Ph.D scholarship at Centre for the Study of Manuscript CulturesThe Graduate School of the “Centre for the Study of Manuscript Cultures” (CSMC, IntegriertesGraduiertenkolleg im Sonderforschungsbereich 950 “Manuskriptkulturen in Asien, Afrika und Europa”) at the University of Hamburg invites applications for Ph.D. scholarships 2+1 year scholarships of € 1.200 per month (tax free) starting October 1st 2017.The CSMC is a unique research centre for the historical and comparative study of manuscript cultures in Asia, Africa, and Europe building on decades of manuscript studies at the University of Hamburg. It was established with a generous grant from the German Research Association (DFG) in order to develop a comprehensive approach to manuscript cultures including disciplines such as philology, palaeography, codicology, art history, and material analysis. Communication in the international research community of the Centre is conducted in English, Ph.D. (Dr. phil.) dissertations should be written in English or German.First information can be found on the Centre’s webpage which will be continually updated:

http://www.manuscript-cultures.uni-hamburg.de/We are looking for highly qualified and highly motivated Ph.D. students with an M.A. or equivalentdegree in all disciplines studying manuscript cultures regardless of region.Applications with a research proposal compatible with the programme of the Centre’s objectives, CVand copies of B.A., M.A. or other relevant certificates must be sent as ONE pdf document to the Director of the Graduate School before May 31st, 2017:Prof. Dr. Oliver Huck&amp;nbsp;Fakultät für GeisteswissenschaftenCSMC



	
			stipendium.geisteswiss@uni-hamburg.de

	




&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;`&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;PUBLICATIONS&amp;nbsp;Sorry Trump, Cambodia owes the U.S. nothing. By Philip J. Cunningham. Special To The Japan Times. March 23, 2017

View article&amp;nbsp;Cambodia Appeals to Trump to Forgive War-Era Debt. By Julia Wallace. New York Times, April 2, 2017.&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;NOEL HIDALGO TAN, Rock Art: The Unseen Art of Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;TIM FREWER, (2017) The gender agenda: NGOs and capitalist relations inhighland Cambodia, Critical Asian Studies, 49:2, 163-18.&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;ANGELA S.CHIU, The Buddha in Lanna: Art, Lineage, Power, and Place in Northern Thailand, University of Hawaii Press, 2017&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Julian Kirchherr, Nathanial Matthews, Katrina J. Charles, Matthew J. Walton, &amp;quot;“Learning it the Hard Way”: Social safeguards norms in Chinese-led dam projects in Myanmar, Laos and Cambodia&amp;quot;, Energy Policy, vol. 102, March 2017&amp;nbsp;

View abstract&amp;nbsp;MARK BBRAY, « La confiance en jeu et la croissance de l’éducation de l’ombre », Revue internationale d’éducation de Sèvres, 68 | 2015, 81-92.&amp;nbsp;

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				<title> HSEPP's Newsletter February 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/258648</link>
				<pubDate>Mon, 03 Apr 2017 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
				<description>HSEPP February 2017 Digest&amp;nbsp;Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP February 2017 Digest. You are all wellcome to share your suggestions, publications and information with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.&amp;nbsp;
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Newsletter  February 2017&amp;nbsp;
						(264.70 ko)
				

	CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;International Association of Buddhist UniversitiesCall for Articles, JIABU, Vol. XICritical Issues from Buddhist Women&amp;nbsp;This is a call for papers for the 11th&amp;nbsp;Volume of the Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Universities (JIABU), published by the generosity of&amp;nbsp;Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University through the International Association of Buddhist Universities.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The volume aims to be a special edition, covering&amp;nbsp;Critical Issues from Buddhist Women.&amp;nbsp; This volume aims at having authors or professors who are Buddhist women, discussing the ideas that are important for Buddhist women.&amp;nbsp; We would like male-associates to respectfully, not submit anything for this edition, but be keen to encourage female-associates to contribute to this edition.&amp;nbsp; This specialized theme should be of great interest to our university students and professors training and working in the field of Buddhist Studies and those involved in the education process.&amp;nbsp; We encourage interdisciplinary studies and welcome articles from female Buddhist scholars in all fields related around the theme, towards:&amp;nbsp;Critical Issues from Buddhist Women.&amp;nbsp;Women are over ½ of the global population, and women are the most seen in Buddhist settings, certainly inside Buddhist temples – women must never be silenced.&amp;nbsp; This edition will ensure that the voices of women in Buddhism are heard, through their academic contributions.&amp;nbsp; Papers can be about contributions from Buddhist women, analysis of doctrines from Buddhist women, important Buddhist women of today, critical issues for Buddhist women, advancements in bhikkuni-ordinations, just to name a few, but not limited to those topics – again, this is to encourage critical or important issues for Buddhist women.&amp;nbsp; Papers selected for the journal should possess:


Thematic relevance

innovative theoretical perspectives,

clarity of organization,

an accessible prose style,

and significant research in primary resources


a higher extension of wisdom from what has already been written about.&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Please remember to produce an endeavor that deals with relevant topic material, Buddhist texts and the readers in meaningful ways.&amp;nbsp; Please send all final full-papers inclusive of an abstract and keywords, as&amp;nbsp;Microsoft Word Files&amp;nbsp;(.doc or .docx).&amp;nbsp;


Call for Papers issued:&amp;nbsp;21 February 2017Final Full-Article Deadline:&amp;nbsp;22 September 2017Publication of the JIABU, Volume 11:&amp;nbsp;as soon as possible online, and in hardcopy, according to the capacity of Mahachulalongkornrajavidyalaya University.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;We must have your fully-perfected articles by the final deadline date to ensure that the article is considered for publication.&amp;nbsp; Once the academic peer-review committee completes their selections, and the editorial-team has completed any additional formatting/revisions, the 11th&amp;nbsp;Volume of the JIABU will be released.&amp;nbsp;PAPER SUBMISSION GUIDELINES


Submitted papers are refereed and selected on the basis of quality and relevance to the main theme of Critical Issues from Buddhist Women for this special edition, 11th&amp;nbsp;Volume of the JIABU.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

Papers should be from 10-15 pages (not strict on these specifications), submitted in the preferred font: ‘Times EXT Roman’ (for papers with Pāli/Sanskrit diacritic markings).&amp;nbsp;

Please download this font:&amp;nbsp;

http://www.bcca.org/services/fonts/&amp;nbsp;--and compose your article in this font.&amp;nbsp; Articles will be returned if there are any undisplayed diacritical-markings.


Papers may be rejected for specific circumstances, but may be rewritten, following committee recommendations.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;PLEASE SEND FINAL PAPERS or any questions, to:&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;General Editor &amp;amp; IABU Manager:&amp;nbsp;
&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Dr. Dion Peoples:&amp;nbsp;



	
			dion2545@hotmail.com

	







&amp;quot;Time-temporality in Southeast Asia.&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp;Call for papers of the international conference of the INALCO (National Institute of Oriental Languages and Civilizations) to&amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;Time-temporality in Southeast Asia.&amp;quot;&amp;nbsp;
Practical arrangements
&amp;nbsp;
The proposals (one page summary) accompanied the title, name and surname, the institutional affiliation, the email address and a short curriculum vitae of the author should be sent&amp;nbsp;before 1 June 2017&amp;nbsp;to the following email address:&amp;nbsp;



	
			camnam2017@free.fr

	




&amp;nbsp;. On the Scientific Committee, the organizing committee reserves the right to retain or reject the proposals in an interval of one month from this deadline.&amp;nbsp;The communication&amp;nbsp;languages&amp;nbsp;are&amp;nbsp;French and English;&amp;nbsp;speaking time per speaker will be 30 minutes (25 minutes of intervention followed by 5 minutes for questions). The most interesting papers will be published.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;For more information please following this link&amp;nbsp; : 

http://camnam2017.free.fr/pages/whiterings_indexpag.html&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The 2017 Sizihwan International Conference on Asia-Pacific Studies&amp;nbsp;The 2017 Sizihwan International Conference on Asia-Pacific StudiesOctober 26-28, 2017Conference theme: “Challenges to Local Politics in the Asia-Pacific Region”Keynote Speaker: Dr. Takeshi Kawanaka (Deputy Director-General, Area Studies Center, IDE-JETRO)ANNOUNCEMENT：Local politics in Asia-Pacific have never out of the scope of social sciences discourses, as the regional, national, and local politics in the region undergo concurrent challenges and new dynamics, which impact the political process and prospect of each other. Social sciences quest the role of national and international institutions in shaping local politics, and vice versa; the issues concerning local governments’ autonomy and governance; the controversies involving the competition over the voices and exits for local diversities in economy, ethnics, religion, identities, etc. Last, but not least, the problem of the challenges to local politics that challenge in return the politics in national and regional level.The 2017 Sizihwan Conference on Asia-Pacific Studies aims to broaden and deepen these discourses involving local politics in countries across Asia and the Pacific Ocean. We welcome discussions of common research concerns about local politics in national and regional context, and of the local particularities to which the existing theories should respond. We hope scholars and researchers interrogate and analyze different political, economic, social, cultural phenomena and developments in relation to local politics, and share with the participants deeper andcomprehensive understanding of the complexities and nuances of such as these are found in the Asia-Pacific region.INSTRUCTIONS FOR SUBMISSION：English is the working language for the conference, and we accept only papers written in English. Paper proposals should be submitted in WORD format, and contain the title of the paper, name and affiliation of the author(s), contact information (address, telephone, and e-mail), and an abstract of the paper with no more than 250 words. For multi-authored papers, please identify the presenting author(s). Please submit paper proposals to 2017 Sizihwan Conference online submission. For conference-related inquiries, please contact Ms. Nera Huang, the conference manager, at lovenera.huang@gmail.comIMPORTANT DATES:• Abstract Submission Due: May 31, 2017• Notification of Acceptance: June 20, 2017• Full Paper Due: September 1, 2017 (If your paper is not received by the due day, your name will be removed from the conference agenda.)• Conference Dates: October 26-28, 2017• Conference Venue: National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung, TaiwanHosts: Institute of China and Asia-Pacific Studies, National Sun Yat-sen University; Department of Political Science, the University of the Philippines, DilimanCo-hosts: College of Social Science, National Policy Research Center, NSYSURegistration fee: FreeNotes:1. Paper presenters will receive honorarium.2. Meal will be provided during the conference.3. A half-day city tour will be provided.4. Free to enjoy the pretty and attractive beach on the NSYSU campus.Contact: Miss Nera Huang at lovenera.huang@gmail.com or 



	
			nsysuicaps@gmail.com

	




Tel: +886-7-5252000*5571 / +886-9-53880117Website：

http://www.icaps.nsysu.edu.tw/bin/home.php&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;PUBLICATIONS&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;SOK UDOM DETH,2014, Factional Politics and Foreign Policy Choices in Cambodia-Thailand Diplomatic Relations, 1950-2014,&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;RACHEL HUGHES, Victims’ rights, victim collectives and utopic disruption at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia,&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Baker, C. &amp;amp; Wright, W. E. (2017). Foundations of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism (6th ed). Bristol, UK: Multilingual Matters&amp;nbsp;

View abstract&amp;nbsp;GUILLOU Anne Yvonne, 2016, « Potent places as embodied memory in Cambodia”, special issue “Memory thickness. Presenting Southeast Asian Pasts”, Guest editor Penny Edward,&amp;nbsp;The Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia, Univ. of Kyoto, september, n°20.Free access:&amp;nbsp;

http://kyotoreview.org/issue-20/embodied-memory-cambodia/&amp;nbsp;BLOT Julie et GUILLOU Anne Yvonne, 2017, &amp;nbsp;«&amp;nbsp;Cambodge. La pression sur l’opposition s’accentue&amp;nbsp;»,&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;Abigaël Pesses et Claire Thi Liên Tran (dir.),&amp;nbsp;L’Asie du Sud-Est 2017. Bilan, enjeux et perspectives, Bangkok/Paris : IRASEC/Les Indes Savantes, pp. 151-184.&amp;nbsp;GUILLOU Anne Yvonne, 2016, « El ‘señor de la tierra’. La rendición de culto al cenotafio de Pol Pot »,&amp;nbsp;in&amp;nbsp;Sévane Garibian (ed),&amp;nbsp;La muerte del verdugo. Reflexiones interdisciplinarias sobre el cadaver de los criminales de&amp;nbsp;masa, Buenos Aires&amp;nbsp;: Editeur Miño y Dávila, Coll. « Nuevo Foro Democrático », pp. 59-78. ISBN: 978-84-16467-63-1&amp;nbsp;GUILLOU Anne Yvonne, 2016, «&amp;nbsp;Les trois visages de Lok Ta Khleang Muang dans la province de Pursat : géographie sacrée d’une figure complexe&amp;nbsp;»,&amp;nbsp;Conférences du Centre de recherche Yosothor, Phnom Penh, Fac. d’archéologie, Univ. Royale des Beaux-Arts du Cambodge, 29 janvier. Conférence en khmer et en français. Accès enligne&amp;nbsp;

http://yosothor.org/lectures/AnneGuillou.html&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;SOPHORNTAVY VORNG, 2017, A Meeting of Masks: &amp;nbsp;Status, Power and Hierarchy in Bangkok, NIAS Press worldwide,pp206.&amp;nbsp;

View abstracts&amp;nbsp;MAGHA AMRITH, 2017, Caring for Strangers: Filipino Medical Workers in Asia, NIAS Press worldwide, pp 240.&amp;nbsp;

View abstract&amp;nbsp;PAUL T.COHEN,2017,&amp;nbsp; Charismatic Monks of Lanna Buddhism NIAS Press worldwide, pp272.&amp;nbsp;

View abstract&amp;nbsp;ADELINE CARRIER, Phnom Penh à l'épreuve de l'urbanisation libérale sous contrôle international, IRD-IRASEC, 2017, pp.167-190

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				<title>Newletter Jan 2017</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/255808</link>
				<pubDate>Wed, 01 Feb 2017 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
				<description>Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP January 2017 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and information with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.HSEPP’s Conferences&amp;nbsp;From Robespierre to Pol Pot – Nuon Chea, via Stalin, Hilter&amp;amp; Mao: A Psyco-Analytical Approach to History, by Pr. Jean Artarit15 February 2017 at RUFA (conference in French language)Abstract: In this talk, Professor Jean Artarit proposed to recall the experience of terror under Democratic Kampuchea, by approaching it through the depths of the human psyche, dwelling on narcissistic phenomena observed among most revolutionaries. Pol Pot and Nuon Chea who are being in denial of their past involvement in the tragedy of the second half of the 1970s are the obvious cases in point. He will also speak about the collective sub-consciousness and the mythical history of Cambodia.Biography:Dr. Jean Artarit. Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry, a psychoanalyst, a psychiatrist from the French hospitals, former head of Psychiatry at Bichat Hospital in Paris, expert at the tribunals, has written a number of books of psycho-history among which one on Robespierre (CNRS edition), and others on various members of the Convention during the French Revolution and on Georges Clemenceau, Prime Minister of France during the First World War. He has now been working on the Khmers rouge for a number of years.&amp;nbsp;OTHER CONFERENCES&amp;nbsp;Séminaire EHESS&amp;nbsp;: Modes d’autorité et conduites esthétiques de l’Asie du Sud à l’Insulinde(in french)Séance&amp;nbsp;Autorité politique et arts de la performanceLundi 20 mars 2017 Autorité politique et arts de la performanceSalle 662, EHESS, 198 Av. de France, 75013 ParisLucie Labbé (CASE)&amp;nbsp;: La danse classique khmère : une esthétique incorporée, entre individualité de l’artiste et légitimation de l’autorité politiqueMore information&amp;nbsp;: 

http://case.ehess.fr&amp;nbsp;Séminaire général du CASE&amp;nbsp;: Anciennes et nouvelles élites en Asie du Sud-est(in french)Séance du 20 avril 2017, Maison de l’Asie - Grand Salon&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;Catherine Scheer, National University of Singapore, ARI : Quand la « vie nouvelle » devient problématique : les Bunong protestants confrontés à l’expansion de l’économie de marché sur les hautes terres cambodgiennesMore information&amp;nbsp;: http://case.ehess.fr/index.php?1877CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;nbsp;CFP : International Symposium, Gender in Southeast Asian Art Histories, 11-13 October 2017, Power Institute, University of Sydney, AustraliaGender in Southeast Asian Art Historiesis convened by Yvonne Low, Roger Nelson, Clare Veal, and Stephen Whiteman. The event is generously supported by the Asian Studies Association of Australia, the Power Institute, the Sydney Southeast Asia Centre, and the School of Literature Art and Media at the University of Sydney.Studies focused on gender in Southeast Asian societies have emerged, in recent decades, in approximate concurrence with the development of regionally focused Southeast Asian art histories. The founding premise of this international symposium is that there has hitherto been insufficient discursive intersection between these two fields.Topics discussed may include:1. Accounts of individual artists and collectives whose work engages with gender;2. Investigations of gender in the exhibitionary, critical, and historiographical receptions of works of art, from any period3. Considerations of the relationships between artists and/or works of art and larger Southeast Asian cultural constructs of gender, as enacted in political, economic, religious and other domains.More information: 

http://www.powerpublications.com.au/cfp-gender-southeast-asian-art/Deadline&amp;nbsp;: 28 February 2017&amp;nbsp;Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across AsiaHistorically, trade routes served as transmission belts for Buddhist theology. The nexus between trade and Buddhism is most commonly understood in the spread of Buddhist theology and art across Asia. Today, this practice continues to grow and diversify. The spread of Buddhism has contributed to the development of new markets and a growing industry in Buddhist objects, artefacts, paraphernalia, and merchandise. Moreover, Buddhism is also a value that is traded. This traded value includes statues and scriptures, but also comes in the form of immaterial value; namely in the promises or potential that are ascribed to objects, artefacts and paraphernalia that are considered or are branded as Buddhist. This panel calls for papers dealing with the translations and transformations of Buddhism in relation to the trade in Buddhist things.&amp;nbsp;Such objects can be Buddhist because they represent commodified Buddhism, are objects needed for Buddhist practice, or products marketed as Buddhist. By engaging in discussions regarding the trade and translation of Buddhist material culture we want to develop new analytical approaches and ask how trade practices translate and transform objects related to Buddhism. We aim to build a broad geographical understanding of practice. Therefore, possible subjects might include the trade in amulets in Thailand, Japan, and Vietnam, or the global trade in Tibetan painted scrolls produced in Nepal, India and China. We are also interested in other Buddhist objects that are traded, including offerings for the Buddhist altar, religious images and statues, prayer beads, charms, monastic paraphernalia, and so forth.A further area for discussion relates to the people who need such objects for their Buddhist practice, for the Buddhist temple, or for inserting the spiritual in an otherwise secular, modern world. How are these Buddhist things translated and transformed as they change hands from the artisan in the workshop, to the petty merchant, the art dealer, the tourist, the Buddhist practitioner, the ritual specialist and so forth? How do these things become Buddhist?&amp;nbsp;Conveners&amp;nbsp;of panel“Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia”:Trine Brox, Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of CopenhagenEmma Martin, Institute for Cultural Practices, University of ManchesterPlease include in your submission:• Name, institutional affiliation, short bio• Abstract that clearly lays out the title, argument and methodology (approx 250 words)• Intended panel (Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia)Conveners and organizing committee will assess the submitted abstracts and inform you of the decision soon hereafter.The panel is organized by the BBB-project:

https://centerforcontemporarybuddhiststudies.wordpress.com/bbb-project/Keywords: Asia, Buddhism, Buddhist objects, capitalism, CFP, globalization, markets, materialculture, materiality, trade, transformation, translation.For more information:&amp;nbsp;

http://asiandynamics.ku.dk/english/adi-conference-2017/panels/trade-and-translation-of-buddhist-material-culture-across-asia/Contact: Submit abstracts to Marie Yoshida (



	
			marie.yoshida@nias.ku.dk

	




)Deadline:1 March 2017&amp;nbsp;CFP: 9th Annual International ADI Conference University of Copenhagen,Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia, 26-28 June 2017Conveners of panel “Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia”:Trine Brox, Deptartment of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of CopenhagenEmma Martin, Institute for Cultural Practices, University of ManchesterHistorically, trade routes served as transmission belts for Buddhist theology. The nexus between trade and Buddhism is most commonly understood in the spread of Buddhist theology and art across Asia. Today, this practice continues to grow and diversify. The spread of Buddhism has contributed to the development of new markets and a growing industry in Buddhist objects, artefacts, paraphernalia, and merchandise. Moreover, Buddhism is also a value that is traded. This traded value includes statues and scriptures, but also comes in the form of immaterial value; namely in the promises or potential that are ascribed to objects, artefacts and paraphernalia that are considered or are branded as Buddhist.This panel calls for papers dealing with the translations and transformations of Buddhism in relation to the trade in Buddhist things. Such objects can be Buddhist because they represent commodified Buddhism, are objects needed for Buddhist practice, or products marketed as Buddhist. By engaging in discussions regarding the trade and translation of Buddhist material culture we want to develop new analytical approaches and ask how trade practices translate and transform objects related to Buddhism. We aim to build a broad geographical understanding of practice. Therefore, possible subjects might include the trade in amulets in Thailand, Japan, and Vietnam, or the global trade in Tibetan painted scrolls produced in Nepal, India and China. We are also interested in other Buddhist objects that are traded, including offerings for the Buddhist altar, religious images and statues, prayer beads, charms, monastic paraphernalia, and so forth.More information: 

http://asiandynamics.ku.dk/english/adi-conference-2017/panels/trade-and-translation-of-buddhist-material-culture-across-asia/Deadline for submitting abstracts:1 March 2017&amp;nbsp;Call for papers – New York Conference on Asian Studies on September 22-23, 2017New York Conference on Asian Studies, NYCAS 2017Hobart and William Smith CollegesAbout: Consuming AsiaThe Hobart and William Smith Colleges will host the 53rd annual meeting of the New York Conference on Asian Studies (NYCAS) on Septeber 22-23, 2017.The NYCAS 2017 program committee invites proposals for panels, roundtables, and individual papers on all aspects of Asian and Asian-American history, culture, and contemporary life, representing disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and professional schools. Interdisciplinary proposals are also welcome. Graduate students are especially encouraged to apply. The theme of the conference is “Consuming Asia.” Sessions that address this theme are especially welcome, but proposal on any topic relating to Asia will be considered.More information: 

https://nycas2017.wordpress.com/Deadline: The deadline for all paper, panel, and roundtable submissions is April 1, 2017.&amp;nbsp;Call for applicationSummer Junior Fellowship Program (2017) Cambodian Scholars Application ProcessCKS has been running a Summer Junior Resident Fellowship Programs in Cambodia since 2004. The program is intended for those individuals who have a genuine interest in Cambodia and Southeast Asia, and who may be considering graduate studies or careers in the region. With this in mind the focus is on striking a balance between academic rigor and extra curricula activities and field visits designed to give students a better understanding of contemporary Cambodian society. Cambodian history and culture cannot be fully understood without considering the influence of powerful regional neighbours such and Thailand, Vietnam and China, and international powers, like France, the United States, and more recently the United Nations. The program, therefore, will also focus on Cambodia’s past and present relationships with its neighbours and its place within the region.The fellowship covers the cost of accommodation, tuition, field/study trips, local transport and include a small daily stipend allowance. In addition, the fellows will have access to CKS’s resources in Siem Reap, including the library, Internet and lecture/presentation facilities.Application and Eligibility Requirements:Candidates must be proficient in English speaking, reading and writing (TOEFL 400-500 or equivalent). Each applicant should provide the following:


A one page statement of purpose (providing the reasons for wanting to participate in this program)

A two page statement outlining their topic of interest

Evidence of English level

CV


More information: 

http://www.khmerstudies.org/research-training/summer-junior-resident-fellowship-program/Contact: Applications should be sent by e-mail to Ms. Sim Puthea



	
			puthea_sim@khmerstudies.org

	




Deadline: April 30th, 2017Civil Society Scholar AwardsThe Civil Society Scholar Awards (CSSA) support international academic mobility to enable doctoral students and university faculty to access resources that enrich socially engaged research and critical scholarship in their home country or region.The awards support activities such as fieldwork (data collection); research visits to libraries, archives, or universities; course/curriculum development; and international collaborations leading to peer-reviewed publication.Civil Society Scholars are selected on the basis of their outstanding contributions to research or other engagement with local communities, to furthering debates on challenging societal questions, and to strengthening critical scholarship and academic networks within their fields.More informationplease 

click here Deadlinefor receipt of applications is: March 31, 2017Recrutement de&amp;nbsp;10 post-doctorants à l'EHESS en 2017Dix contrats de chercheurs post-doctorants sont ouverts à l'EHESS à compter du 1er septembre 2017 pour une durée d'un an, éventuellement renouvelable.Dans le cadre d’un partenariat avec le Musée des civilisations de l’Europe et de la Méditerranée (MuCEM), une candidature sélectionnée s’inscrivant dans le champ d’activité de cet établissement (les dynamiques des sociétés contemporaines du bassin méditerranéen) pourra être soumise au MuCEM pour un co-financement éventuel et une intégration du candidat au département recherche et enseignement du MuCEM.&amp;nbsp;Ces emplois concernent les différents domaines des sciences humaines et sociales.Ils sont proposés aux jeunes chercheurs ayant soutenu&amp;nbsp;entre le 1er janvier 2014 et le 31 janvier 2017, une thèse de doctorat dans un autre établissement que l'EHESS, en France ou à l'étranger.La rédaction du projet de recherche et d'activités post-doctoralesen anglais est autorisée.Toutefois, un bon niveau de compréhension et d'expression orale en français est requis. Les candidatures se font uniquement en ligneMore information&amp;nbsp;: 

http://recrutement.ehess.fr/front-offres.html?directContact&amp;nbsp;: Pour toute information complémentaire, merci de nous&amp;nbsp;contacter, exclusivement par mail, à l'adresse: 



	
			recrutement-admin@ehess.fr

	




Deadline&amp;nbsp;: 1er Mars 2017&amp;nbsp;Bourses d’études du musée du quai Branly - Jacques Chirac ANNEE UNIVERSITAIRE 2017 – 2018&amp;nbsp;Research Fellowshipsacademic year 2017 – 2018:The musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac offers every year doctoral and post-doctoral fellowships to support Ph.D. candidates and early career scholars in pursuing innovative research projects. The academic fields concerned are: anthropology, ethnomusicology, art history, history, archaeology, sociology, performance studies. The research topics concerned are: Western and non-Western arts, material and immaterial heritage, museum institutions and their collections, technology, ritual performance and material culture. The projects most likely to benefit from the environment of the musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac will be examined with particular attention. During the year of their fellowship, the laureates will present in the museum’s Research and Higher Education Department’s internal seminar a scientific paper intended for later publication. They will be required to deliver a detailed report to the museum’s research department at the end of the fellowship.Le musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac propose chaque année des bourses doctorales et postdoctorales destinées à aider des doctorants et de jeunes docteurs à mener à bien des projets de recherche originaux et innovants. Les disciplines concernées sont&amp;nbsp;: l’anthropologie, l’ethnomusicologie, l’histoire de l’art, l’histoire, l’archéologie (à partir du néolithique), la sociologie, les arts du spectacle. Les domaines de recherche privilégiés&amp;nbsp;sont&amp;nbsp;: les arts occidentaux et extra-occidentaux, les patrimoines matériels et immatériels, les institutions muséales et leurs collections, la performance rituelle, la technologie et la culture matérielle. Les projets particulièrement susceptibles de tirer parti de l’environnement du musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac seront examinés avec la plus grande attention. Au cours de l’année, les candidats sélectionnés présenteront un article destiné à être soumis à publication scientifique dans le cadre du séminaire interne du département de la Recherche et de l’Enseignement du musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac. Ils devront fournir au département de la Recherche et de l’Enseignement un rapport d’activité détaillé de leurs recherches au terme de la bourse.Les bourses doctorales&amp;nbsp;: Trois bourses doctorales sont destinées à soutenir des doctorants en fin de thèseinscrits au moins en troisième année pour l’année universitaire 2017-2018 (dans une université française ou étrangère). Ces bourses sont une aide à la rédaction et excluent les recherches de terrain et d’archive.Elles concernent uniquement des thèses portant sur des sociétés extra-européennes. Ces bourses doctorales sont attribuées pour une durée de 12 mois non reconductible, du 1er octobre au 30 septembre. Elles seront en 2017 d’un montant mensuel de 1300 euros net. Elles sont allouées après évaluation et sélection des dossiers par le Comité d’évaluation scientifique du musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac. Aucune condition de nationalité n’est exigée.Les bourses postdoctorales&amp;nbsp;: Le musée du quai Branly – Jacques Chirac propose cinq bourses postdoctorales à de jeunes docteurs pour élaborer collectivement un programme de recherche d’un an sur la thématique «&amp;nbsp;valeur et matérialités&amp;nbsp;».Les candidat(e)s peuvent solliciter cette boursejusqu’à cinq ans&amp;nbsp;après la soutenance de leur thèse, c’est-à-dire pour des thèses soutenuesdepuis le 1er janvier 2012. Ils/elles ne pourront prendre leurs fonctions au musée que sur présentation de leur attestation de doctorat, ou le cas échéant, de leur pré-rapport de soutenance.More information:

http://www.quaibranly.fr/en/scientific-research/activities/scholarships-and-thesis-prizes/research-fellowships/Contact&amp;nbsp;: 



	
			bourses@quaibranly.fr

	




Deadline: Monday, the 3rd of April 2017PUBLICATIONS&amp;nbsp;ALVIN CHENG-HIN LIM, 2015, China’s ‘Belt and Road’ and Southeast Asia: Challenges and Prospects, Longus Institute for Development and Strategy, Jati, Vol. 20, p.3-15

View article&amp;nbsp; &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;MIRIAM STARK, PETER GRAVE, and TAN OUN SUY, 2015, Differentiating Khmer Stoneware Production: An NAA Pilot Study from Siem Reap Province, Cambodia, Archaeometry, 12p.View article&amp;nbsp;VONG MUN, 2016, Progress and Challenges of Deconcentration in Cambodia: The Case of Urban Solid Waste Management.CDRI, Working Paper Series No. 110, CDRI&amp;nbsp;, 28p. &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;

View article&amp;nbsp;PRIGENT, STEVEN, 2014, &amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;La vie des habitants de Cheung Kok sous le régime khmer rouge&amp;quot;,Aséanie, n°33, pp 43-59.&amp;nbsp;MARYANN BYLANDER, Poor and On the Move: South-South Migration and Poverty in Cambodia, 35p.

View article&amp;nbsp;PASCAL ROYÈRE, 2016 Le Baphuon, De la restauration à l’histoire architecturale, 

École française d'Extrême-Orient, 272p.

View abstract&amp;nbsp;KANOKWAN MANOROM, IAN G.BIARD &amp;amp; BRUCE SHOEMAKER, 2017, The World Bank, Hydropower-based Poverty Alleviation and Indigenous Peoples: On-the-Ground Realities in the Xe Bang Fai River Basin of Laos, Forum for Development Studies, 26p.

View abstract&amp;nbsp;SOPHORNTAVY VORNG, 2016, A Meeting of Masks Status, Power and Hierarchy in Bangkok, NIAS Press, 224p.

View abstract&amp;nbsp;Pál Nyíri, Danielle Tan, 2016, Chinese Encounters in Southeast Asia: How People, Money, and Ideas from China Are Changing a Region, Irasec et&amp;nbsp;University of Washington Press, coll. Etudes transnationales, 312p.

Table of contents &amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Alfred Gerstl,&amp;nbsp;Mária Strašáková (eds),&amp;nbsp;2016, Unresolved Border, Land and Maritime Disputes in Southeast Asia :&amp;nbsp;Bi- and Multilateral Conflict Resolution Approaches and ASEAN’s Centrality, Brill, 339p.

View abstract&amp;nbsp;«&amp;nbsp;Team digs into Cambodia’s ‘dark ages'&amp;nbsp;» by Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon, 16/12/2016, The Phnom Penh PostA team of archaeologists hope the discovery of a bronze foundry near the ancient site of Longvek will yield information about an era thought to be lost to history.A footnote, a hunch and a land development project near Boeung Samrith led to the discovery this month of an ancient bronze foundry that served Cambodia’s 16th-century kings at Longvek.The find in Kampong Chhnang province could yield insight into Cambodia’s Middle Period, the era between the fall of Angkor and the beginning of the French protectorate often called the “dark ages” because few records of it exist.The discovery culminates a two-year search by a team of researchers led by Dr Martin Polkinghorne of Flinders University in Australia, whose first hint came from a footnote in the Cambodian Royal Chronicles, which were compiled centuries after the foundry’s existence.More information:&amp;nbsp;

http://www.phnompenhpost.com/post-weekend/team-digs-cambodias-dark-ages&amp;nbsp;Péninsule, no. 72, 2016 (1)SommaireI. Rencontres et échangesAvec le monde indo-musulmanÀ propos des musulmans et d’Ayudhya (1350-1767) parGilles DeloucheLe chant occulte des pantouns, interprétations de poèmes malais dans l’œuvre d’Henri Fauconnier par&amp;nbsp;Yann QueroEntre nationalismes asiatiquesBùi Quang Chiêu&amp;nbsp;à Calcutta (1928), le miroir brisé des nationalismes vietnamien et indien parAgathe Larcher-GoschaII. Dents noires et sang rouge&amp;nbsp;: représentations et interditsLe chasseur, sa femme et les interdictions parBernard&amp;nbsp;DupaigneLe noircissement des dents chez les chiqueurs de bétel vietnamiens. Quelques observations préliminaires de la documentation&amp;nbsp;par&amp;nbsp;Nguyen Xuân Hiên, Jane D. Chang &amp;amp; Margret J. VlaarComptes rendusMore information:&amp;nbsp;

http://peninsule.free.fr/pages/peninsule_72pag.html&amp;nbsp;Obieg, no. 2 (2016): Special Issue : &amp;nbsp;Parallel contemporaries : The art of Southeast AsiaEditor: Krzysztof GutfranskiObieg is a&amp;nbsp;bilingual Polish-English online quarterly that deals with the humanities.Table of content&amp;nbsp;:Parallel Contemporaries: The Art of Southeast Asia by&amp;nbsp;Krzysztof GutfranskiThe Distances of Our Time: Reflections on Art Criticism and Southeast Asia by&amp;nbsp;Lee Weng ChoyRethinking Curatorial Colonialism by&amp;nbsp;Simon SoonPublic Play: Audience Involvement and the Decoding of Concept in Socially-engaged Southeast Asian Contemporary Art by&amp;nbsp;Iola LenziAffective Labor and the Philippine Body by&amp;nbsp;Patrick D. FloresDefining the Thai Territory through Monuments: The Counter-insurgency in the Highlands Border by&amp;nbsp;Thanavi ChotpraditPlaying with National Politics: Vietnamese Artists’ Visions of War byNora TaylorThe Chorus of Idle Footsteps byRon HansonCurrencies of the Contemporary: Biennials and the International in Southeast Asia by&amp;nbsp;David TehComparative Contemporaries by&amp;nbsp;Lee Weng-Choy, Sue Acret, Patrick D Flores, Ho Tzu-Nyen, Ly Daravuth, Keiko SeiMore information: 

http://obieg.u-jazdowski.pl/en/azja&amp;nbsp;Voices 2016 (2): Global modernity and the (re-)emergence of ghosts«&amp;nbsp;Global modernities and the (re-)emergence of ghosts&amp;nbsp;», eds.&amp;nbsp;Oliver Tappe, Andrea Hollington, Sinah Kloß, Tijo Salverda, Nina Schneider (Global South Studies Center)Abstract: Are ghosts modern? It seems that modernization and spirituality do not contradict each other in most parts of the world. Animist beliefs and ghost rituals often form part of people’s everyday lives vis-à-vis a globalized economy. For them, the unpredictable forces of ‘the market’ correspond with the elusive world of spectral entities. Facing economic risk, flexibility, and precarity, people address the ghosts for protection and luck. This issue of “Voices” will explore the interplay of economic and ritual practice, of everyday uncertainties and ghostly agency, of emerging modernities and (re-) emerging spiritualities.Some papers about Cambodia / Indochina/ Southeast Asia:


Spirits in Cambodian politics byPaul Christensen&amp;nbsp;(University of Göttingen)

Fansipan legend, Indochina summit : a spiritual landscape in the making byKirsten W. Endres (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle, Germany)

Ghost movies in Southeast Asia and beyond by&amp;nbsp;Peter J. Bräunlein (University of Göttingen)


Download here :&amp;nbsp;

http://voices.uni-koeln.de/2016-2/globalmodernitiesand&amp;nbsp;Southeast Asian Studies, vol. 5, no. 3 (december 2016)Special Focus: Global Powers and Local Resources in Southeast Asia: Political and Social Dynamics of Foreign Investment VenturesGuest Editor: Morishita Akiko


Introduction by&amp;nbsp;Morishita Akiko

Economic Development via Dam Building: The Role of the State Government in the Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy and the Impact on Environment and Local Communities by&amp;nbsp;Andrew Aeria

Political Dynamics of Foreign-Invested Development Projects in Decentralized Indonesia: The Case of Coal Railway Projects in Kalimantan by&amp;nbsp;Morishita Akiko

Rare Earth Plant in Malaysia: Governance, Green Politics, and Geopolitics by&amp;nbsp;Kai Lit Phua


Articles


When Memory Speaks: Transnational Remembrances in Vietnam War Literature by&amp;nbsp;Quan Manh Ha

The Case of Regional Disaster Management Cooperation in ASEAN: A Constructivist Approach to Understanding How International Norms Travel by&amp;nbsp;Muhammad Rum

Highland Chiefs and Regional Networks in Mainland Southeast Asia: Mien Perspectives by&amp;nbsp;Le Jiem Tsan, Richard D. Cushman, and Hjorleifur Jonsson


Book ReviewsOnline free access:&amp;nbsp;

https://englishkyoto-seas.org/&amp;nbsp;Journal of contemporary Asia, vol. 47, no. 1 (2017)Table of contents:&amp;nbsp;

http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rjoc20/47/1&amp;nbsp;Contemporary Southeast Asia, vol. 38, no. 3 (december 2016)Table of contents&amp;nbsp;:Roundtable


The Arbitral Tribunal’s Ruling on the South China Sea – Implications and Regional Responses byClive Schofield, Lowell Bautista, Nong Hong, Ann Hsiu-an Hsiao, Nguyen Thi Lan Anh, Prashanth Parameswaran, Evan Laksmana


Articles


Deciphering the Shift in America’s South China Sea Policy byPhuong Nguyen

Xi Jinping’s Foreign Policy Dilemma: One Belt, One Road or the South China Sea? byWenjuan Nie

Russia’s Image and Soft Power Resources in Southeast Asia: Perceptions among Young Elites in Laos, Thailand and Vietnam byAlexander Bukh

Campaigning for All Indonesians: The Politics of Healthcare in Indonesia byEunsook Jung

Reflections of a Reformed Jihadist: The Story of Wan Min Wan Mat byKumar Ramakrishna


Site :&amp;nbsp;

https://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg/publication/2199OTHERSKhmer Battleground by Aizzat Nordin, 17/01/2017, Invisible Photographer AsiaAizzat&amp;nbsp;Nordin&amp;nbsp;was a&amp;nbsp;Malaysian&amp;nbsp;recipient of the&amp;nbsp;Angkor Photo Travel Grants.Khmer Battleground&amp;nbsp;was made during the 2016&amp;nbsp;Angkor Photo Workshop&amp;nbsp;in Siem Reap, Cambodia.Pradal Sereyor Kun Khmeris a form of ancient martial arts practiced by the Kingdom of Angkor army since the 9th century to wage war against their main enemy, the Vietnam-based kingdom of Champa, and later Siam, resulting in the domination of what&amp;nbsp;is&amp;nbsp;now known as Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Laos. In an effort to erase this art, manyKun Khmer lok kru (Masters) were targeted by the vicious Khmer Rouge Regime and executed in the 70’s, leaving Cambodian struggling with poverty and socioeconomic growth after the regime era. Today,Kun Khmer fighters fight hard with pride and dignity in the arena or at the pagoda in the rural areas for extra money, hoping that it’s enough to feed their loved ones.Interview: 

http://invisiblephotographer.asia/2017/01/17/khmerbattleground-aizzatnordin/Aizzat Nordin’s website: 

http://cargocollective.com/aizzatnordin</description>
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				<title>HSEPP Newsletter Dec2016</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/254182</link>
				<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 2017 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
				<description>Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP December 2016 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and information with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.
	
				
				
				
				
				

	
	
	
	
	
	
		Newsletter Dec2016&amp;nbsp;
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	HSEPP CONFERENCE&amp;nbsp;				
	
			
    
                                
    
    
                    
            
    
    
    

				HSEPP’s YOUTUBE CHANELWe are pleased to inform you that now you can listen to the past conference of HSEPP on YouTube. Click on the 

link and choose the conference that you want to listen.&amp;nbsp;CALL FOR PAPERS&amp;quot;Reframing the Archive: The Reuse of Film and Photographic Images in Postcolonial Southeast Asia&amp;quot; on 1st June 2017Organiser: Centres &amp;amp; Programmes OfficeAbout: In recent years, the decision to engage with colonial and postcolonial archives has become increasingly commonplace within Southeast Asian film, photography and visual culture. Whilst this renewed interest in archival materials has resulted in an increased awareness of the complexities of lens-based media, it has also allowed practitioners to challenge both the dominant narratives of colonialism and their neo- and postcolonial legacies. In the case of Cambodia and its diasporas, this archival impulse – and its accompanying modes of (re-) appropriation – is exemplified by films such as Rithy Panh’s La France est notre patrie [‘France is our Homeland’] and Davy Chou’s Golden Slumbers. Whereas the former offers an insight into the hypocrisies of French colonial rule, the latter takes its lead from the development of twentieth century Cambodian cinema. Yet despite differing in their aims and emphases, these projects share a number of common characteristics – namely, a desire to foreground the importance of preserving and revisiting archival materials: two imperatives which have acquired a particular significance in the aftermath of the Khmer Rouge regime.Taking its lead from these recent developments, this symposium will explore the ways in which colonial and postcolonial film and photographic archives have been rearticulated within a range of Southeast Asian political and aesthetic contexts. How have artists and filmmakers sought to subvert existing power relations through the use of colonial images? To what extent have archival materials and technologies allowed for an investigation into the emancipatory potential of the lens? How have these techniques been utilised by diasporic populations? Though preference will be given to submissions which focus on Southeast Asia, we also welcome papers that draw comparisons with other postcolonial contexts. Possible lines of enquiry include:


The political and aesthetic implications of re-situating images

Hindu-Buddhist aesthetic conventions and their use/subversion in colonial and postcolonial lens-based practices

The ethics, politics and artistic innovations of documentary work

Contemporary artistic practices which explore the themes of space, place and home

The return of European filmmakers and photographers to the postcolony


The symposium will be accompanied by screenings of two feature-length films by Cambodian filmmakers and a series of short films by emerging filmmakers from Southeast Asia. This programme, we believe, will provide a further opportunity to address the themes raised by the symposium. The conference and screening programme are organised by Dr Joanna Wolfarth, Dr Fiona Allen, and Annie Jael Kwan independent curator, The Asia Projector.Conditions to apply: To submit a paper, please send paper titles, abstracts of c. 500 words and a 2-page CV to&amp;nbsp;



	
			reframingthearchive@gmail.com

	




More information: 

click hereContact: Tel: +44 (0)20 7898 4892 ; email: 



	
			centres@soas.ac.uk

	




Deadline:&amp;nbsp;31st January 2017Explorations Volume 14: “Seas, Oceans, Rivers, and Springs: Perspectives on Water in the Study of Southeast Asia”About: Constituting more than 70% of the area of Southeast Asia, water has long played a fundamental role in shaping the history, culture, politics, and development of the region. Monsoon rains influenced agricultural practices and determined migrations. Maritime trade routes attracted both local and foreign merchants, while kingdoms and empires sought control over strategic waterways and port cities to project their power over global commerce. For coastal communities, the seas and rivers continue to provide livelihoods and connections to the broader world. In recent years, issues relating to water security, rising sea levels, devastating floods, and maritime border disputes have dominated news stories about Southeast Asia. These issues, trends, and phenomena invite scholars to explore the multitude of ways that water influences and helps define Southeast Asia in every field of study.Explorations is looking for graduate student papers that bring water, in all of its forms, to the forefront of Southeast Asian Studies. We are particularly interested in papers that examine the role of water in Southeast Asian societies or analyze and critique water-related policies and trends. In raising these questions, this journal seeks to consider the possibilities of using the water perspective in studying Southeast Asia. We encourage submissions from all fields of study, topics, and time periods. Possible topics (but not limited to) to explore:


The spiritual significance of water and its use in religious ceremonies and cleansing rituals

Traditions, customs, and beliefs of seafaring and coastal communities in both historical and contemporary contexts

Water security and disputes at both the local and national level

Impact of monsoons and flooding on the major urban areas of Southeast Asia (Jakarta, Manila, Bangkok, etc…)

Modification and management of water bodies (dams, canals, reservoirs, etc…)

Challenges of climate change and rising sea levels in coastal regions

Preservation of marine ecosystems

Global and regional expectations of expanding maritime trade in Southeast Asia

Maritime border disputes


More information: 

click hereDeadline: February 4, 2017CFP: International Academic Forum (IAFOR) - The Asian Conference on Asian Studies 2017 (ACAS2017)Date: June 1, 2017 to June 4, 2017Location: JapanSubject Fields:Anthropology, Asian History / Studies, Asian American History / Studies, East Asian History / Studies, SociologyAbout: 

The International Academic Forum (IAFOR), invites submission of abstracts to 

The Asian Conference on Asian Studies 2017 (ACAS2017). This international and interdisciplinary conference will act as a centre for academics, practitioners and professionals to discuss new research in the asian studies. ACAS2017 will create opportunities for the internationalisation of higher education and sharing of expertise. We invite professionals from all corners of the world to develop policies, exchange ideas, and promote new partnerships with organisations and peers.The Asian Conference on Asian Studies (ACAS2017) will be held alongside&amp;nbsp;

The Asian Conference on Cultural Studies (ACCS2017)&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;

The IAFOR International Conference on Japan &amp;amp; Japan Studies (IICJ2017).&amp;nbsp;Registration for any one of these conferences permits attendance in all three
 within the event.To submit an abstract:&amp;nbsp;

http://iafor.org/iafor/iafor-submission-system/login.phpContact: 



	
			acas@iafor.org

	




More information: 

http://iafor.org/conferences/acas2017/Deadline:&amp;nbsp; Abstracts submission: January 12, 2017
Results of abstract reviews returned to authors: Usually within two weeks of submission
Full conference registration payment for all presenters: April 14, 2017
Full paper submission: July 4, 2017
Submit an Asia Pacific Memo (APM)About: Have an interest in the Asia-Pacific region? Have a research topic close to your heart? Want to share your research and ideas with others? We’d love to hear from you and so would our readers.The Asia Pacific Memo Idea
: Put simply, the Asia Pacific Memo strives to communicate academic research about the contemporary Asia Pacific to a broader audience beyond the Academy. We do this through succinct memos that strive to communicate a key idea that is backed up by research.Alternately, we also do the occasional video memo. Through short but informative interviews with researchers, policy makers and authors, we communicate some of the latest research trends and introduce&amp;nbsp;recent book publications for the region. If you feel you might have a promising topic for a 5-7 minute video interview or profile, please contact us as well.Why Write a Memo?
Well the most important reason is because you feel compelled to do so. But why send it to us? Asia Pacific Memo is growing rapidly. Memos are delivered weekly to over 2000&amp;nbsp;subscribers across a spectrum of backgrounds and disciplines. Our website and Facebook page attracts thousands of visitors per month and our Tweets also enjoy a large following. Publication of an Asia Pacific Memo can be a useful additional avenue to communicate and disseminate your research findings.The Perfect Memo
: OK, perhaps the perfect memo doesn’t exist. But the ideal Memo is written to be accessible to a reader of any mainstream newspaper. However, a Memo differs from a newspaper article because it develops one academic concept rooted in research in very short form (300 to 350 words), while linking to current events when appropriate. The Memo makes a strong case for an observation/conclusion. That means that phrases such as “my research explains…” are not appropriate. Instead, the Memo should offer the explanation or an element of the explanation referred to here. In this aspect, a Memo is quite different from a typical article abstract that is more likely to include phrases like “I analyze…”.Along with your Memo, you&amp;nbsp;must&amp;nbsp;include:



A headline

A second headline (less than 110 characters) for our Facebook, Twitter, and Academia.edu accounts

A 1-sentence biography, and link to your website (if available)

Maximum of 7 links to related articles/videos/photographic essays/scholarly journals/books, etc. (at minimum, 60% of these links should be academic in nature)


More information: 


http://www.asiapacificmemo.ca/Contact: 



	
			asiapacificmemo@gmail.com

	





ASIAN REVIEW: Calls for papers.About: Asian Review, the blind-peer reviewed journal of the Institute of Asian Studies at Chulalongkorn University, celebrates its 30th year of publication in 2017. The journal, now published twice a year, is committed to interdisciplinary approaches to the study of Asia, and publishes articles from a wide range of academic disciplines in the humanities and social sciences to promote an understanding of contemporary Asia. Areas of special concern include cultural studies, ethnicity, development, economics, foreign affairs, language, literature, migration, politics and religion.&amp;nbsp; From 2017, the journal will publish one thematic issue and one general issue. Contact: Papers for the general issue may be sent to 



	
			ias@chula.ac.th

	




Call for Papers and Workshop: Political ideologies in Southeast AsiaAbout:The Institute of Asian Studies (Chulalongkorn University) in partnership with the Institute of Asia Pacific Studies (University of Nottingham, Malaysia Campus) invites submissions that explicitly engage with ideological analysis related to state-society relations, political contest and the construction of political power in a Southeast Asian setting. Papers that apply existing or new forms of ideological analysis to explore concrete expressions of the ideology in question are strongly encouraged. Some of the themes or issues we hope to explore include:*the distinctive traditions of meaning surrounding key political concepts such as liberty, equality, the general interest, or security in particular political settings.*the dissemination of explicit ideological forms and the role of public intellectuals, media or think-tanks play in the consolidation of particular ideological orientations.* manifest ideological competition in parliamentary debates or other public forums.*the social basis of distinctive ideologies or of ideological hybrids.*unnamed ideological forms and their lifeworld.*the impact of ideological currents on public policy.*the morphology of liberalisms, conservatisms, feminisms, environmentalisms, fascisms or any other recognized ideology.* the value or otherwise of thick ideological analysis in enhancing understanding of well-described political conflicts.Scholars who have written on ideology in languages other than English and who wish to develop their work for publication in English are especially welcome to submit. Selected participants will be invited to attend a two-day workshop in Bangkok in May or June 2017 to present draft papers. A second workshop may be held in Kuala Lumpur. Financial assistance to attend will be provided, but only airfares from within Southeast Asia may be funded. Publication will be subject to blind review. Depending on the number of papers received, an edited monograph may also be published.Link: 

http://www.ias.chula.ac.th/ias/en/News-Activities-Detail.php?id=95Contact: Michael Connors (



	
			michael.connors@nottingham.edu.my

	




).Deadline: Interested authors are requested to submit an abstract by February 20th, 2017PH.D. GRADUATE WORKSHOP FOR SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES, MONTREAL, CANADADate: 27-28 APRIL 2017About:: SEAGASE – Southeast Asia Group / Groupe Asie du Sud-Est – a consortium of research groups from universities in the Montreal area, invites applications from Ph.D. students for a workshop on Southeast Asian Studies to be held at McGill University and the Université de Montréal on 27-28 April 2017.The workshop will provide Ph.D. students an opportunity to present their research and to receive critical feedback. The structure of the workshop will be focused on maximizing discussion and critique. Students from all disciplines are encouraged to apply. Participants will be selected based on the strengths of their research project, as well as the need for institutional and disciplinary diversity. The keynote speaker at the workshop will be Professor Eric Tagliacozzo of Cornell University.How to apply: please send a 1-page abstract of your dissertation and your C.V. to: 



	
			seagasemontreal@gmail.com

	




 with the subject heading: “Ph.D. Graduate Workshop”.Limited funding is available for the workshop. This funding comes in the form of two grants of CAD $800 each designated for Ph.D. students from a university in Southeast Asia. If these funds are not allocated to students from Southeast Asia, they will be allocated to other students on the basis of need.Contacts: Professor Dominique Caouette: 



	
			Dominique.caouette@umontreal.ca

	




&amp;nbsp;; Professor Erik Martinez Kuhonta: 



	
			erik.kuhonta@mcgill.ca

	




Deadline: 15 January 2017The Twenty Seventh Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society (SEALS 27)Date of the conference: 11-13 May 2017Venue: Padang, West Sumatra, IndonesiaLink: 

http://jakarta.shh.mpg.de/seals27/Contact: for abstract submission: 



	
			sealsxxvii@gmail.com

	




Deadlinefor abstract submission: 31 January 2017Panel call for papers: Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia at the 9th Annual International ADI Conference University of CopenhagenDate:26-28/6/2017About: Historically, trade routes served as transmission belts for Buddhist theology. The nexus between trade and Buddhism is most commonly understood in the spread of Buddhist theology and art across Asia. Today, this practice continues to grow and diversify. The spread of Buddhism has contributed to the development of new markets and a growing industry in Buddhist objects, artefacts, paraphernalia, and merchandise. Moreover, Buddhism is also a value that is traded. This traded value includes statues and scriptures, but also comes in the form of immaterial value; namely in the promises or potential that are ascribed to objects, artefacts and paraphernalia that are considered or are branded as Buddhist.This panel calls for papers dealing with the translations and transformations of Buddhism in relation to the trade in Buddhist things. Such objects can be Buddhist because they represent commodified Buddhism, are objects needed for Buddhist practice, or products marketed as Buddhist. By engaging in discussions regarding the trade and translation of Buddhist material culture we want to develop new analytical approaches and ask how trade practices translate and transform objects related to Buddhism. We aim to build a broad geographical understanding of practice. Therefore, possible subjects might include the trade in amulets in Thailand, Japan, and Vietnam, or the global trade in Tibetan painted scrolls produced in Nepal, India and China. We are also interested in other Buddhist objects that are traded, including offerings for the Buddhist altar, religious images and statues, prayer beads, charms, monastic paraphernalia, and so forth.A further area for discussion relates to the people who need such objects for their Buddhist practice, for the Buddhist temple, or for inserting the spiritual in an otherwise secular, modern world. How are these Buddhist things translated and transformed as they change hands from the artisan in the workshop, to the petty merchant, the art dealer, the tourist, the Buddhist practitioner, the ritual specialist and so forth? How do these things become Buddhist?Conveners of panel“Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia”: Trine Brox, Department of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen Emma Martin, Institute for Cultural Practices, University of Manchester.How to apply: Please include in your submission:• Name, institutional affiliation, short bio• Abstract that clearly lays out the title, argument and methodology (approx 250 words)• Intended panel (Trade and translation of Buddhist material culture across Asia)Conveners and organizing committee will assess the submitted abstracts and inform you of the decision soon hereafter.The panel is organized by the BBB-project:

https://centerforcontemporarybuddhiststudies.wordpress.com/bbb-project/More information: 

http://asiandynamics.ku.dk/english/adi-conference-2017/panels/trade-and-translation-of-buddhist-material-culture-across-asia/Contact: submit abstracts to Marie Yoshida: 



	
			marie.yoshida@nias.ku.dk

	




Deadline:1 March 2017&amp;nbsp;International Max Planck Workshop :&amp;nbsp;«&amp;nbsp;Sangha Economies: Temple Organisation and Exchanges in Contemporary Buddhism&amp;nbsp;», , Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle/Saale, GermanyDate: 21-22 september 2016Organisers: Saskia Abrahms-Kavunenko, Christoph Brumann,&amp;nbsp;Beata Świtek - Research Group “Buddhist Temple Economies in Urban Asia”About: No other “world religion” has given monasticism such a central role as Buddhism in which the sangha – the community of monks and, where recognised, nuns – is one of the «&amp;nbsp;three jewels&amp;nbsp;» (together with the Buddha and his teachings). While the first monks where itinerant mendicants, their successors settled down, eventually establishing prosperous and often very long-lived institutions. When these house hundreds or even thousands of monks or nuns, it is only natural that economic and management concerns arise. But these are no less pressing when, as in Japan, most temples are sustained by just a single priest and his family.Questions pertaining to the economic organisation of Buddhist monasteries and temples have been neglected for a long time, reflecting the otherworldly orientation of Buddhist doctrine that sees the attachment to worldly riches as a hindrance for salvation and enlightenment. In recent years, however, there is a perceptible turn towards “managing monks” (Jonathan Silk), with several historical studies showing how economic pursuits were part and parcel of Buddhist monasticism from early on. Contemporary Buddhism is increasingly being scrutinised for its economic entanglements, both in theological attempts to construct a Buddhist economic ethics and in empirical investigations.Website:&amp;nbsp;

http://www.eth.mpg.de/3534110/buddhist_temple_economiesFull call for papers:

http://web.eth.mpg.de/data_export/events/5958/2017_CfP_Buddhist_Temple_Economies.pdfDeadline:&amp;nbsp;01/03/2017Verge: Studies in global Asia, vol. 4, no. 2: IndigeneityAbout: A new journal that includes scholarship from scholars in both Asian and Asian American Studies published by the University of Minnesota Press.Indigeneity,Edited by Charlotte Eubanks (Penn State University) and Pasang Yangjee Sherpa (The New School)In this special issue, we are interested in charting the interactions between notions of indigeneity and Asian-ness. Possible topics include, but are not limited to: conversations between Asian American and First Nations peoples, and tensions between identity, land, and language; indigenous activism in response to climate change and international development (whether in the Himalayan region, the Gobi desert, or the littoral zones of Pacific islands); the place of indigenous cultural production vis-a-vis the/a State (e.g. the circulation or suppression of Chukchee literature in Eastern Siberia, the questions of ownership over cultural property in Vanuatu, the display of native artifacts in national museums, and so on); practices of resistance and policies of assimilation, both historical and contemporary (Ainu in Japan and Eastern Russia, aboriginal groups in Taiwan,&amp;nbsp;the Orang Asli in peninsular Malaysia, designated ‘national minorities’ in the PRC, the Dravidian/Aryan divide in South Asia, etc); historical encounters of indigenous groups with expanding states and empires; the many problematics, demographic and otherwise, of categorizing Pacific Islanders with Asian Americans; practices of indigenous knowledge in Asia and Asian America; the human geography of settler and indigenous communities (i.e. the displacement of Hawaiians by Asian settlers, the legal rubric and social position of ‘Asians’ in East Africa and&amp;nbsp;‘overseas Chinese’ in South-East Asia vis-a-vis ‘local’ communities, claims to biculturalism in Aotearoa New Zealand); the creation of land reservations for indigenous peoples (in the&amp;nbsp;Philippines, for instance); the international politics of indigenous rights; archeology and the deep histories of indigenous artwork and artefacts; the digitalization of indigenous ‘ways of knowing’; and so forth.We welcome approaches from across the qualitative social sciences and the humanities and especially encourage papers grounded in a particular discipline, time, and place but which speak to questions, concerns, and topics of debate that are of relevance to a wide range of scholars.
Website:

&amp;nbsp;http://www.upress.umn.edu/journal-division/journals/verge-studies-in-global-asias Deadline:&amp;nbsp;15th June 2017&amp;nbsp;CALL FOR APPLICATIONAcademic Position: Human Geography (Mainland Southeast Asia focus) – University of Colorado-BoulderAbout: The Department of Geography invites applications for a non-tenure track full-time instructor position in Human Geography with a regional specialization in mainland Southeast Asia.&amp;nbsp; In partnership with the Center for Asian Studies (CAS), this position is partially funded by a grant to build capacity in Southeast Asian Studies on campus.&amp;nbsp; Preference will be given to candidates with strong field research and teaching experience, including language training, in mainland Southeast Asia, and a research specialization complementing the Department’s existing strengths in development studies, cultural, political, and population geographies, as well as political ecology.Minimum Qualifications: PhD in Geography or a related field (by August 15th 2017)Preferred Qualifications: Field research and teaching experience, including language training, in mainland Southeast AsiaGeography department: 

http://geography.colorado.edu/Review of applications will begin onJanuary 15, 2017and continue until the position is filled.Contact: For further information and informal inquiries, please contact the chair of the search committee, Professor Tim Oakes (



	
			toakes@colorado.edu

	




)More information: https://cu.taleo.net/careersection/2/jobdetail.ftl?job=07659&amp;amp;langPostdoctoral Fellowship – Digital Humanities Asia, Stanford UniversityThe Digital Humanities Asia (DHAsia) program at Stanford University invites applications for a 12-month Postdoctoral position during the 2017-2018 academic year. This position is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Sawyer Seminar program, with further support provided by Stanford University. The successful applicant is expected to begin on or by October 1, 2017.Stanford University is a globally recognized leader in the fields of Digital Humanities, GIS, text analysis, social network analysis, Text Technologies, and natural language processing. The Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis (CESTA), the Center for Interdisciplinary Digital Research (CIDR), the Literary Lab, and more attract scholars from around the world who are eager to learn from our experiences and implement our methods. Flagship projects, such as Mapping the Republic of Letters, the Çatalhöyük Living Archive, Kindred Britain, the ORBIS Geospatial Network Model of the Roman World have all begun to reshape not just the methods that we as Humanists bring to bear on our questions, but the very questions we ask.At home within this rich DH ecology at Stanford, Digital Humanities Asia (DHAsia) seeks to advance a new era in Non-Western Digital Humanities, with a focus on East, South, Southeast, and Inner-Central Asia. We seek energetic and creative applicants who demonstrate innovative thinking and a proactive approach to the questions that digital humanities methods, approaches, tools, and theories raise in their academic disciplines.More information: 

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/8685Link: Applications should be submitted via 

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/8685Deadline: 11:59 pm EST on Friday, February 17, 2017.Postdoctoral fellowship in Asian Borderlands, Aarhus UniversityThe Department of Anthropology, School of Culture and Society, Faculty of Arts, Aarhus University invites applications for a two-year postdoctoral fellowship. The appointment begins on 1 September 2017 or as soon as possible thereafter.The position is affiliated with the AUFF Starting Grant research project “The Rise of Special Economic Zones in Asian Borderlands – RisezAsia” (

http://projects.au.dk/risezasia/). Theoretically the project wishes to develop tools for critical engagement with the unique forms of exclusion and marginalisation in borderlands instigated by special economic zones (SEZs). Secondly, in addition to its contribution to theoretical framings of borderland political economy, the research attempts to document the processes through which Asian borderlands are currently experiencing some of the largest land-grabs in modern history. Through the creation of new SEZs, millions of hectares of land are being annexed by mining and plantation companies for industrial exploitation, and remote borderlands are being populated by thousands of labour migrants. These large-scale acquisitions of land, population movements and the infrastructure projects they result in have a large impact on these ecologically vulnerable border zones and their populations.Applicants must propose a country and a borderland research site and describe how the research priorities of the RisezAsia project will be relevantly addressed in the subproject. Fieldwork is envisaged.Link:

http://www.au.dk/en/about/vacant-positions/scientific-positions/stillinger/Vacancy/show/875198/5283/PUBLICATIONSRACHEL HUGES, 2016, Victims' rights, victim collectives and utopic disruption at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, vol.22(2), pp. 143-166

View articleALEXANDER LABAN HINTON, 2016, Man or Monster? The Trial of a Khmer Rouge Torturer, Duke University Press, 360 p.

About the bookSIMON SPRINGER, 2016, Klepto-Neoliberalism: authoritarianism and patronage in Cambodia, Chapter 12, pp.235-254

View articleJOHN MARSTON, 1997, Cambodia 1991-94: Hierarchy, Neutrality and Etiquettes of Discourse, 455 p.

View articleANNE HANSEN, 2006, 

Modernist Reform in Khmer Buddhist History, Siksācakr No.8, 15 p.

View articlePAUL CHRISTENSEN, 2016, Spirits in Cambodian Politics, [in] Global Modernities and the (Re-)Emergence of Ghosts - Voices from around the world, pp.6-10

View articleTRUDE JACOBSEN, 2017, Sex trafficking in Southeast Asia: a history of desire, duty and debt, Routledge, 140 p.

View book’s coverageJOAN HEALY, 2016, Writing for Raksmey: a story of Cambodia, Monash University Publishing, 224 p.

View book’s coverageIAN BAIRD, 2016, Should ethnic Lao people be considered indigenous to Cambodia? Ethnicity, classification and the politics of indigeneity,&amp;nbsp; Asian Ethnicity, Vol. 17, No. 4, 506 – 526, 

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14631369.2015.1137196

View articleANDELINE CARRIER, 2009, Les enjeux urbains de l’habitat du plus grand nombre, [in] Cambodge Nouveau, n° 278, 16 p.

View paperAstrid Norén-Nilsson, 2016, Good Gifts, Bad Gifts and Rights: Cambodian Popular Perceptions and the 2013 Elections, [in] Pacific Affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, vol. 89, no. 4 [on line]

View abstractWard Berenschot, Henk Schulte Nordholt, and Laurens Bakker (eds), 2016, Citizenship and Democratization in Southeast Asia, Brill, 314p.

Table of contentsSOJOURN: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia Vol. 31/3 (November 2016), interesting articles:


Philippe Peycam, &amp;quot;The International Coordinating Committee for Angkor: A World Heritage Site as an Arena of Competition, Connivance and State(s) Legitimation&amp;quot;

Emiko Stock, &amp;quot;Two Rituals, a Bit of Dualism and Possibly Some Inseparability: 'And so that's how we say that Chams and Khmers are one and the same.'&amp;quot;

Peter A. Jackson, &amp;quot;The Supernaturalization of Thai Political Culture: Thailand's Magical Stamps of Approval at the Nexus of Media, Market and State&amp;quot;

Indrė Balčaitė, &amp;quot;'When ASEAN Comes': In Search of a People-Centred ASEAN Economic Community in Greater Mekong Borderscapes&amp;quot;

Erick White, &amp;quot;The Institutional Dynamics of the Contemporary Thai Sangha: A New Research Agenda&amp;quot;

Andrew Hardy, &amp;quot;New European–Southeast Asian Research on the Region: Conclusions of the SEATIDE Project on 'Integration in Southeast Asia, Trajectories of Inclusion, Dynamics of Exclusion'&amp;quot;




https://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg/publication/2197South East Asia Research, vol. 24, no. 4 (december 2016)Table of contents


Dreaming about the neighbours: Magic, Orientalism, and entrepreneurship in the consumption of Thai religious goods in Singapore byAndrew Alan Johnson

Air crafting: Corporate mandate and Thai female flight attendants’ negotiation of body politics by&amp;nbsp;Arratee Ayuttacorn

‘To build a generation of stars’: Megachurch identity, religion and modernity in Indonesia byJeaney Yip and Chang-Yau Hoon

Transition into marriage in Greater Jakarta: Courtship, parental influence, and self-choice marriage byAriane J. Utomo, Anna Reimondos, Iwu D. Utomo, Peter F McDonald and Terence H. Hull

Unpacking the figure of the backpacking neighbourhood Phạm Ngũ Lão in the making of Hồ Chí Minh city byMarie Gibert and Emmanuelle Peyvel




http://ser.sagepub.com/content/24/4?etoc&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;OTHERSA blog: Please find the address of the research blog associate to the seminar&amp;nbsp;Societies and Environments in Southeasth Asia: 

https://nature.hypotheses.org/This blog will be used as a collaborative tool to restitute all sessions. I've already published the introductive session I've made to present Descola's thought (part 1) and how it resonates in Southeast Asia (part 2).The&amp;nbsp;presentation of Stephane Rennesson on &amp;quot;Beetles contests in Thailand&amp;quot; is coming soon. I will soon send you an invitation to publish your own presentation on the blog.
Thank you to relay these publications&amp;nbsp;in your online academic networks to enlarge the audience. You can for exemple use the announcements made by Irasec in its Facebook page: 

https://www.facebook.com/Irasec-Institut-de-recherche-sur-lAsie-du-Sud-Est-contemporaine-227556457273889/?fref=ts and Twitter account @irasecbangkok &amp;nbsp;In order to announce your presentation thank you to send us:- a picture linked to your subject of research- a sort biography with a picture of you (few lines with your discipline, institutional affiliation, research interests and 1 or 2 main publications)- a link to your institution- a short abstact of your presentation (one month before)</description>
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				<title>HSEPP newsletter oct/nov2016</title>
				<link>http://shs-encounters-cambodia.ird.fr/content/view/full/249234</link>
				<pubDate>Thu, 01 Dec 2016 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
				<description>Dear HSEPP Members and Friends,Here’s our HSEPP October 2016 Digest. You are all welcome to share your suggestions, publications and information with us and to come to present a research paper to the HSEPP conference.&amp;nbsp;Scholars and researchers who wish to give a lecture presenting need to send us a bio data, presentation title and abstract in English and French, as well as a proposed date. For any questions, please feel free to contact us. Lectures can be given in Khmer, French, or English.    HSEPP newsletter oct/nov2016HSEPP’s YOUTUBE CHANELWe are pleased to inform you that now you can listen to the past conference of HSEPP on YouTube. Click on the 

link and choose the conference that you want to listen.&amp;nbsp;Next HSEPP conferenceCambodian farmers in the 1929 global economic crisis, the example of Kampong Thom Province«វិបត្ដិសេដ្ឋកិច្ចឆ្នាំ១៩២៩ និងប្រជាកសិករខ្មែរ ដោយលើកយក ខេត្ដកំពង់ធំជាឧទាហរណ៍ »Vutha UmOn 26th December, in the Meeting Room of Royal University of Fine Arts at 6PM.(Conference will be done in Khmer language)សង្ខេបជាភាសាខ្មែរ :
 វិបត្តិសេដ្ឋកិច្ចពិភពលោកដែលចាប់ផ្តើមដំបូងនៅសហរដ្ឋអាមេរិចនៅខែតុលាឆ្នាំ១៩២៩បានធ្វើឲ្យប៉ះពាល់យ៉ាងធ្ងន់ធ្ងរដល់ជាពិសេសនៅអឺរ៉ុប និង ប៉ះពាល់រហូតដល់ឥណ្ឌូចិន និង ជាពិសេសប្រទេសកម្ពុជា។ នៅក្នុងសារណានេះយើងសិក្សាផ្តោតសំខាន់ទៅលើការផលប៉ះពាល់ពីវិបត្តិសេដ្ឋកិច្ចនេះមកលើប្រជាជនខ្មែរ និង ជាពិសេសចំពោះកសិករ ដោយយើងលើកយកខេត្តកំពង់ធំមកធ្វើជាឧទាហរណ៍ដើម្បីយល់ពីប្រទេសកម្ពុជាទាំងមូល។ វិបត្តិនេះមានផលប៉ះពាល់យ៉ាងខ្លាំងទៅលើសេដ្ឋកិច្ច និងសង្គមកម្ពុជា។ ដំបូងយើងផ្តោតទៅលើផលវិបាកលើសេដ្ឋកិច្ច និង ទីពីរផលប៉ះពាល់ទៅលើសង្គម។វិធីសាស្រ្តស្រាវជ្រាវ៖ ការសិក្សារបស់យើងសង្កត់ទៅលើឯកសារនៅបណ្ណាសារដ្ឋាន ជាពិសេសរបាយការណ៍ប្រចាំខែរបស់ចៅហ្វាយខេត្រ ដោយវិភាគទៅលើទិន្នន័យនៅក្នុងរបាយការណ៍ទាំងនេះតាមរបៀប Histoire quantitative។ ជីវប្រវត្ដិៈ &amp;nbsp;លោក អ៊ុំ វត្ថាបានទទួលសញ្ញាបត្របរិញ្ញាបត្រផ្នែកបុរាណវិទ្យាពីសាកលវិទ្យាល័យភូមិនវិចិត្រសិល្បៈ និង INALCO នៅឆ្នាំ ២០១៤ និង អនុបណ្ឌិត LLCER នៅឆ្នាំ ២០១៦។ បច្ចុប្បន្ន គាត់ជាមន្រ្ដីរាជការនៃក្រសួងវប្បធម៌និងវិចិត្រសិល្បៈ។Abstract in english
&amp;nbsp;: The global economic crisis which began in the United States in October 1929 had important consequences in Europe and beyond in French Indochina, particularly in Cambodia. This study examines the impact of this crisis on Cambodian peasants by taking the province of Kompong Thom as an example to understand the whole of Cambodia. Our study focuses on two main problems peculiar to farmers at that time: first, the economic consequences and then the social consequences.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;OTHER CONFERENCESLa prouesse et la retenue sexuelles des figures royales khmères et indiennes dans les inscriptions et les épopées sanskrites, Dominic Goodall (EFEO)Date
: 12 décembre 2016, 14h – 17hLieu
: Maison de l’Asie, 22 Avenue du Président Wilson, au Grand Salon du 1er étagePrésentation&amp;nbsp;
: Cette présentation s’inscrit dans le cadre du séminaire «&amp;nbsp;Modes d’autorité et conduites esthétiques de l’Asie du Sud à l’Insulinde&amp;nbsp;» de l’EHESS, coordonné par Dana RAPPOPORT (CASE) &amp;amp; Tiziana LEUCCI (CEIAS)Lien
: 

https://enseignements-2016.ehess.fr/2016/ue/524/&amp;nbsp;Rencontres et AG de l’AFRASE 2016 Mardi 13 décembre 14h-18h Maison de l’Asie: Corpus et langues d’Asie du Sud-Est : traitement et exploitation numériques
Programme&amp;nbsp;
:14h00&amp;nbsp;: Louise Pichard-Bertaux et Alice Vittrant : Introduction et présentation de la thématique14h15-15h00&amp;nbsp;: Les données sonores de Michel Ferlus (ASE continentale)Alexis Michaud : Le projet de numérisation DO-RE- MI-FA : Données des Recherches de Michel Ferlus en Asie du Sud-Est (projet financé par la Bibliothèque Scientifique Numérique)Michel Ferlus : Des enregistrements sans expérience à la numérisation : les insouciances du terrain.15h00-15h45&amp;nbsp;: Les données sonores et textuelles de Denise Bernot (Birmanie)Alice Vittrant : Documenter les données sonores de Denise Bernot dans Pangloss/Cocoon : travail sur les métadonnéesLouise Pichard-Bertaux : Les carnets de terrain de Denise Bernot dans Odsas : description et annotation16h00-16h30&amp;nbsp;: François Lagirarde : Manuscrits du LanNa : numérisation, diffusion et exploitation (EFEO)16h030-17h00&amp;nbsp;: Made Windu Antara Kesiman : Analyse de manuscrits sur feuilles de palmier numérisés de l'Asie du Sud-Est (Projet Amadi, Université de La Rochelle)17h00: Projection : « Denise Bernot : langues, savoirs et savoir-faire de Birmanie » film de Alice Vittrant et Alexandra de Mersan, réalisé par Céline Ferlita et Maryline Leducq qui a reçu le Grand prix du festival du film de chercheur à Nancy en juin 2016.17h30-18h00&amp;nbsp;: Discussion finale18h00 Assemblée générale de l’Afrase suivie d’un apéritif.Mail
: 



	
			afrasebureau@gmail.com

	




Lieu&amp;nbsp;
: Maison de l’Asie 22 avenue du Président Wilson 75016 Paris&amp;nbsp;CALL FOR PAPERSThe&amp;nbsp;

3rd International Conference on Public Policy&amp;nbsp;will take place at the National University of Singapore, 28th - 30th June 2017Presentation
:Following the success of ICPP1 (GRENOBLE 2013) and ICPP2 (MILAN 2015), the International Public Policy Association (IPPA) is pleased to invite you to the 3rd INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PUBLIC POLICY which will take place at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (NUS), SINGAPORE from Wednesday 28th June to Friday 30th June 2017. This conference is organised in conjunction with the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore.Procedure
:


To Log in on your account or create an account

To browse on the&amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;List of Panels&amp;quot; on our website 

Here&amp;nbsp;and to read the call for papers proposed

To click on &amp;quot;Submit a paper&amp;quot; button on the panel page or on the homepage of the conference with the code of the panel

To enter the emails of the co-authors, the title of the paper and an abstract the paper (300-500 words) explaining your paper project


Link
: 

http://www.ippapublicpolicy.org/conference/icpp-3-singapore-2017/7Deadline
:&amp;nbsp; 15th january 2017&amp;nbsp;T16P10 - Out of Sight, Out of Mind? Revisiting Health and Environmental Public Policies at (and for) the Margins in Southeast Asia,Abstract
: The purpose of this panel is to explore, through a multidisciplinary approach, the construction, translation and local negotiation of public environmental and health policies at (and for) the margins in Southeast Asia. The intensification of economic activity and the opening of new areas of trade raise new questions for rapidly changing societies. In this sense, the margins may be understood as laboratories, i.e. spaces, places and contexts, where new ways of doing things and new relations between people are being invented and tested. This includes new production processes, labour relations, land uses, etc. Such experimental areas are however also embedded in sometimes quite rigid social networks, and relations of power and authority. This panel proposes to question how public health and environmental policies take into account (or not) local stakeholders at the margins. Questions that will guide this panel include:


how do those in charge of implementing public health and environmental policies at the margins juggle between international/national injunctions and local realities? What are their contradictions, their tensions but also their leeway to reconfigure public policies locally?

how do local people and newcomers living at the margins cope with public health and environmental policies and their actors? What are their experiences with the legibility/illegibility process of state programs and practices?

how does focusing at the margins raise new questions for the design and implementation of public health and environmental policies? Does it propose new forms of action that are more adapted to the peculiar context of frontiers? What mechanisms may help ensure that the outcomes of public health and environmental policies be more fair, inclusive and sustainable? What mechanisms may help ensure that the margins retain their identity as a space for opportunities and innovation?


Link
: The&amp;nbsp;call for papers&amp;nbsp;for the ICCP3 can be consulted&amp;nbsp;

here.Procedure
: To&amp;nbsp;submit the abstract&amp;nbsp;of your paper (300-500 words), please&amp;nbsp;

login here.Panel details:
&amp;nbsp; Panel No.6 under T16 - Sustainable Development and PolicyDeadline
:&amp;nbsp;January 15th, 2017&amp;nbsp;The Twenty Seventh Meeting of the Southeast Asian Linguistics Society (SEALS 27)Date of the conference
: 11-13 May 2017Venue
: Padang, West Sumatra, IndonesiaLink
: 

http://jakarta.shh.mpg.de/seals27/Contact 
for abstract submission: 



	
			sealsxxvii@gmail.com

	




Deadline
 for abstract submission: 31 January 2017&amp;nbsp;SPAFA Journal: Call for SubmissionsPresentation
: SEAMEO SPAFA, Southeast Asia’s Regional Centre for Archaeology and Fine Arts, has recently set up 

a website to access the online open access SPAFA Journal. The SPAFA Journal focuses on Southeast Asian archaeology, performing arts, visual arts and cultural heritage. This SPAFA publication has been in publication since 1980, first as the SPAFA Digest, before being renamed the SPAFA Journal in 1991. Now, as an open access journal, publishers expect to reach a greater number of readers, as well as to carry multimedia content such as music and video clips. The journal accepts scholarly, peer-reviewed research articles pertaining to the archaeology, fine arts and cultural heritage of Southeast Asia, and shorter contributions such as photo and video essays, book and exhibition reviews, and brief reports. SEAMEO-SPAFA’s aim for the journal is to have articles and content catering to both the academic community and the general public.The following submissions are accepted for the 2017 volume of the SPAFA Journal:


Original research papers

Brief reports

Thesis abstracts

Exhibition / performance / book reviews

Photo and video essays


The new SPAFA Journal website will also host other publications, including the old volumes of the SPAFA Journal and SPAFA Digest, which are being digitised and should be made available in early 2017.Link
: For additional information about the SPAFA Journal and how to contribute to it, please visit 

http://www.spafajournal.org/&amp;nbsp;Call for Papers “Crossings in Southeast Asia” - Cornell Southeast Asia Program’s - 19th Annual Graduate Student Conference on March 10-12, 2017Presentation
:Crossings evoke the process of traversing and negotiating terrains, waters, temporalities, identities and paradigms. How do crossings challenge the boundaries of these concepts in the studies of Southeast Asia? In thinking about intersections of old and new ideas, what crossings have scholars attempted and what obstacles have they faced? Cornell Southeast Asia Program’s 19th Annual Southeast Asian Studies Graduate Student Conference is inviting submissions that engage these questions. The conference will be held March 10-12, 2017 at the Kahin Center for Advanced Research on Southeast Asia at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. Professor Anne Blackburn from the Department of Asian Studies at Cornell will be joining us as our keynote speaker.We welcome submissions of abstracts by December 15, 2016 from graduate students who have completed original research related to Southeast Asia. There is no specific theme for this conference, as we hope to attract a wide range of submissions. Our intention is to reflect the dynamic research currently undertaken by graduate students. The Cornell Southeast Asia Program’s Graduate Committee will review the abstracts, select presenters, and organize panels by theme. In order to aid this process of thematic organization, we ask that you please include a few keywords summarizing your presentation along with your abstract.Selected contributors will present their work as part of a panel, and paper abstracts will be included in the conference program. All the panels will have discussants, therefore presenters should be prepared to submit full papers of 5000-8000 words by February 15, 2017.Procedure
: All abstracts should be limited to 250 words and sent in MS Word format. &amp;nbsp;Do not send a .pdf. Please name your abstract using your first and last name together (for example, janedoe.doc for Jane Doe’s abstract). The subject of the message should specify “Abstract” and the body should include the following information:Contact
: Please submit abstracts to the following email address: 



	
			seapgradconf@gmail.com

	




Link
:

more information hereDeadline
: &amp;nbsp;December 15, 2016Notification
 of Acceptance: January 15, 2017Confirmation
 of Attendance Deadline: &amp;nbsp;February 1, 2017Full Papers Due
: &amp;nbsp;February 15, 2017&amp;nbsp;Call for Papers Reflecting (on) the Asia-Pacific: Places, Relations, SystemsDate
: June 9-11, 2017Asian Studies on the Pacific Coast (ASPAC) ConferenceVenue
: Willamette University, Salem, OregonPresentation
: The organizers invite proposals for organized panels, roundtable discussions, individual papers or poster presentations on historical or contemporary topics in the humanities, arts, social sciences, education, health, law, business, environmental sciences or other allied disciplines related to East, South, or Southeast Asia and their diasporas.Link
:

www.willamette.edu/centers/cas/aspac/index.htmlEarly application deadline
: December 30, 2016&amp;nbsp;Call for Applications – «&amp;nbsp;New Frontiers in Asian Economic History&amp;nbsp;»Presentation
: The AAS is pleased to invite applications to participate in the first workshop in its new workshop series “Emerging Fields in the Study of Asia” supported by the Luce Foundation. The first workshop, entitled “New Frontiers in Asian Economic History,” will take place on May 11-15, 2017 at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan.Link
: 

click hereDeadling
: 6 janvier 2017&amp;nbsp;CALL FOR APPLICATIONSUS Ambassadors Fund for Cultural PreservationAbout
: The US Embassy in Cambodia has just issued their call for proposals for the&amp;nbsp;2017 Ambassadors Fund for Cultural Preservation.&amp;nbsp; There is one for the small grant program and one for large grants.Contact
: 



	
			PASPhnomPenh@state.gov

	




Link
:&amp;nbsp;

https://kh.usembassy.gov/education-culture/grant-programs/ambassadors-fund-for-cultural-preservation/Deadline
: December 31st 2016&amp;nbsp;Université d’Heidelberg – Academic Staff At the Institute for Ethnology (in German language)Presentation
:Akademische/r Mitarbeiter/in Am Institut für Ethnologie an der Universität Heidelberg ist eine befristete Vollzeitstelle alsAkademische/r Mitarbeiter/in für drei Jahre ab dem 01.03.2017 zu besetzen. Die Aufgaben sind schwerpunktmäßig Lehre (insbesondere grundständige Lehre sowie forschendes Lehren) und die Betreuung von Studierenden im BA Studiengang Ethnologie. Des Weiteren umfasst das Aufgabengebiet eigene wissenschaftliche Tätigkeiten, wie die Erarbeitung eines Projektantrags, und Mitarbeit bei administrativen Aufgaben. Erwünschte Qualifikation ist eine abgeschlossene Promotion im Fach Ethnologie. Bevorzugte Schwerpunkte in Lehre und Forschung sollten sein:


Südostasien

Ozeanien

Mensch-Umwelt-Beziehungen, Ökologie

Islam


Die Vergütung erfolgt nach TV-L. Die Stelle ist grundsätzlich teilbar.Procedure
: Bewerbungen mit den üblichen Unterlagen (CV, Publikationsliste, Liste der Lehrveranstaltungen, Auswahl von 3 Publikationen) richten Sie bitte per Mail (ein pdf-Dokument) bis spätestens20.12.2016an Ethnologie@urz.uni-heidelberg.de oder an untenstehende Postadresse. Bei Rückfragen wendenContact
: Sie sich bitte an Frau Gabriele Schenk: Institut für Ethnologie der Universität Heidelberg, Albert-Ueberle-Str. 3-5, 69120 Heidelberg. Tel.: 06221 – 542236.Link
: 

click hereDealine&amp;nbsp;
: 20th December 2016&amp;nbsp;Doctoral and Post-doctoral Workshop Theravada Civilizations ProjectPresentation
: The Theravada Civilizations Project is pleased to announce plans for an intensive Doctoral and Post-doctoral workshop, which will be held on March 15, one day prior to the Association for Asian Studies, March16-19, 2012 at the University of Toronto. We will pay for roundtrip airfare and two nights in a hotel, March 14 and 15.Theravada Buddhism is practiced throughout the world with over 150 million practitioners settled primarily in Cambodia, Laos, Sri Lanka, Burma, Nepal, and Thailand. Diaspora communities from South and Southeast Asia as well as the global interest in Insight (vipassana) meditation has led to the growth of Theravada Buddhism in the Americas, Australia, Japan, and Europe. The scholarly study of Theravada Buddhism began with the scrutiny of Pali and Sanskrit literature, but now covers many disciplines including literature, ethics, anthropology, philology, philosophy, history, cultural studies, political science, urban studies, and art and material culture.Venue
: March 15, 2017, University of TorontoHow to apply
: Applicants should send a current cv and a ten-page proposal to 

s-collins@uchicago.eduLink
: 

click hereDeadline
: 1 January 2017&amp;nbsp;Open-rank Positions – Institute of Asian Studies (Brunei)
Presentation
: The Institute of Asian Studies – Universiti Brunei Darussalam opens 3 positions: 
[UBD/IAS/001] Political Geography / International Relations
Associate Professor | Senior Assistant Professor | Assistant Professor
[UBD/IASFASS/002] Environmental Studies
Associate Professor | Senior Assistant Professor | Assistant Professor
[UBD/IAS/003] SociologyAssociate Professor | Senior Assistant Professor | Assistant ProfessorLink
: 

http://ias.ubd.edu.bn/career-in-ias.htmlDeadline&amp;nbsp;
: 29th december 2016&amp;nbsp;CNRS : postes ouverts pour l’année 2017 en section 38 Anthropologie et étude comparative des sociétés contemporainesPresentation
:N°38/01 - 4 directeurs de recherche de 2e classeN°38/02 - 2 chargés de recherche de 1re classe dont 1 prioritairement sur le thème « Anthropologie politique »N°38/03 - 3 chargés de recherche de 2e classe dont 2 prioritairement sur les thèmes : « Aire Océanie-Pacifique »&amp;nbsp;; « Genre »
Links&amp;nbsp;
: 
CR2&amp;nbsp;:

https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do;jsessionid=F04C8AA2EB15E795B5555872E41CAFBD.tpdila11v_3?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000033480019&amp;amp;dateTexte=&amp;amp;oldAction=rechJO&amp;amp;categorieLien=id&amp;amp;idJO=JORFCONT000033479363
CR1&amp;nbsp;:

https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do;jsessionid=F04C8AA2EB15E795B5555872E41CAFBD.tpdila11v_3?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000033480025&amp;amp;dateTexte=&amp;amp;oldAction=rechJO&amp;amp;categorieLien=id&amp;amp;idJO=JORFCONT000033479363DR2&amp;nbsp;:

https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do;jsessionid=F04C8AA2EB15E795B5555872E41CAFBD.tpdila11v_3?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000033480023&amp;amp;dateTexte=&amp;amp;oldAction=rechJO&amp;amp;categorieLien=id&amp;amp;idJO=JORFCONT000033479363Deadline&amp;nbsp;
: La date d'ouverture des inscriptions est fixée au 1er décembre 2016 à 10 heures, heure de Paris. La date de clôture des inscriptions est fixée au 6 janvier 2017.&amp;nbsp;AWARD: Khyentse Foundation Award for Outstanding Dissertations in Buddhist Studies (Europe) open for nominationsPresentation
: Nominations for the Khyentse Foundation Award for Outstanding Dissertations in Buddhist Studies, Europe will be accepted from October 1 through December 31, 2016. Accredited institutions that offer PhD programs in Buddhist Studies or Religious Studies in Europe, including the UK, are invited to nominate one dissertation that was submitted and/or examined in the academic years 2014-15 or 2015-16. The $8,000 award is presented by Khyentse Foundation every two years to the best PhD dissertation in the field of Buddhist Studies. In alternate years, the award goes to the best PhD dissertation in Asia. The dissertation must be based on original research in the relevant primary language or languages, and it should significantly advance our understanding of the subject or Buddhist scriptures studied. Nominations must include four separate documents:


Letter of recommendation by a member of the faculty and/or the chair of the department or institution

Summary of the dissertation in English (not more than 2 pages)

One representative chapter of the dissertation

Full contact details for the department and for the author of the dissertation&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;


Contact
: documents should be submitted by email to 



	
			dissertations@khyentsefoundation.org

	




A five-person committee will select three dissertations to be read in their entirety by all committee members. The result of the competition will be announced by June 30 of the following year. If circumstances permit, the recipient of the award will be invited to give a lecture based on his or her dissertation at an institution selected by Khyentse Foundation.Link
: For further information click 

hereDeadline
: December 31, 2016Stanley Weinstein Dissertation PrizePresentation
: The Council on East Asian Studies at Yale University is pleased to announce the fifth competition for the Stanley Weinstein Dissertation Prize, honoring Professor Weinstein’s many contributions to the study of East Asian Buddhism in North America.&amp;nbsp; The prize will be awarded once every two years to the best Ph.D. dissertation on East Asian Buddhism written in North America during the two previous years.&amp;nbsp; The dissertation must be based on original research in the primary languages and should significantly advance our understanding of East Asian Buddhism.&amp;nbsp; East Asian Buddhism is understood for this competition to refer to those traditions in East Asia that take Chinese translations of the Buddhist scriptures as their basis (Chinese, Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese).&amp;nbsp; Studies of East Asian Buddhist communities in the West are not eligible for consideration.The recipient of the award will be invited to give a public lecture at Yale under the auspices of the Council of East Asian Studies.&amp;nbsp; There is an honorarium of $1,000.Ph.D. programs in Buddhist Studies/Religious Studies in North America are invited to nominate one dissertation that was completed during the academic years 2014-2015 and 2015-16.*
*
 Nominations by the authors themselves will not be accepted.Procedure
: The nomination must be accompanied by a letter of recommendation, readers’ reports for the thesis, and one representative chapter of the thesis. &amp;nbsp;All materials should be sent electronically (PDF format) to 



	
			eastasian.studies@yale.edu

	




.Contact: 



	
			eric.greene@yale.edu

	





Deadline
: 
December 31, 2016.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;The Thailand Laos Cambodia Studies Group funding opportunitiesPresentation
: The Thailand Laos Cambodia Studies Group has some funding that is to be allocated toward supporting TLC-based scholars with travel costs when presenting at the AAS in spring. Any scholars coming from Thailand, Laos, or Cambodia for the conference, please consider submitting a request for travel support to the Board of the TLC Studies Group.Link
: 

http://web.sas.upenn.edu/tlc/&amp;nbsp;PUBLICATIONSSOK OUDOM DETH, 2011, Remembering 7 January 1979 - A 33-Year Debate in Cambodian Political History, 11p.

View articleFABIENNE LUCO, 1997, La gestion communautaire et la société traditionnelle cambodgienne : villages de la forêt inondée du Tonle Sap, 142p.

View articleCAROLINE HERBELIN, Béatrice Wisniewski, 2012, « Situation coloniale et pratique de l’archéologie en Indochine », &amp;nbsp;Les nouvelles de l'archéologie [En ligne], 9p.

View articleSTEPHANIE KHOURY, 2016, Film Review, &amp;quot;Cambodian performing arts. Three films by Yoshitaka Terada, Shota Fukuoka &amp;amp; Sam-Ang Sam&amp;quot;, Ethnomusicology Forum, 25 (1), pp. 141-142

View articlePAUL S.C. TACON, Noel Hidalgo Tan, Sue O’Connor,et al., 2015, The Global implications of the early surviving rock art of greater Southeast Asia, [in] Antiquity, vol.88, no.342, pp.1050-1064

View articleALVIN CHENG-HIN LIM, 2016, Cambodia Joins the “Belt and Road’’, [in] IPP Review, 7p.

View articleALVIN CHENG-HIN LIM, 2015, Human Rights in Cambodia after the Khmer Rouge, Review of Human Right, vol.1, no.1, pp.12-23

View articleALVIN CHEN-HIN LIM, 2017, Ethnic Identities in Cambodia, [in] Katherine Brickell and Simon Springer, The Handbook of Contemporary Cambodia, pp.359-367

About the articleMICHAEL HIRSCH, 2014, The Political Economy of Roti: Urban Refugees in Cambodia and the Struggle for Economic Empowerment, [in] “Transforming Societies: Contestations and Convergences in Asia and the Pacific”, pp.472-497

View full issueAUREL CROISSANT, 2016, Electoral Politics in Cambodia: Historical Trajectories and Current Challenges, ISEAS, 41p.

View articleBRIAN HAYDEN, 2016, Feasting in Southeast Asia, University of Hawaii Press, 336 pp.

About the bookANNE YVONNE GUILLOU, FABIENNE LUCO, 2014, Cambodge: la sortie de la transition post Pol Pot, [in
]
 Jeremy Jammes (dir.), L’Asie du Sud-Est 2014. Bilan, enjeux et perspectives
, IRASEC/Les Indes Savantes, pp. 167-190.

View articleANNE YVONNE GUILLOU, 2016, Le «&amp;nbsp;maître de la terre&amp;nbsp;». Les cultes rendus au cénotaphe de Pol Pot, [in] Sévane GARIBIAN (dir.) La mort du bourreau. Réflexions interdisciplinaires sur le cadavre des criminels de masse, Petra.

About the bookIAN G. BAIRD, 2016, Non-government Organizations, Villagers, Political Culture and the Lower Sesan 2 Dam in Northeastern Cambodia, [in] Critical Asian Studies, 21p.

View article&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;COURTNEY WORK AND ALICE BEBAN, 2016, Mapping the Srok: The Mimeses of Land Title in Cambodia, [in] Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia, Vol. 31, No. 1, pp.37-80

View articlePRAKAN KLINFOONG, The Establishment of Bureau of the Royal Household : The Reform of the Siamese Royal Court after the 1932 Revolution, [in] Journal of the Gratuated School of Asia-Pacific Studies, n°31, pp.39-55

View articleANDREW COCK, 2016, Governing Cambodia’s Forest. The International Politics of Policy Reform, ed.NIAS Press, 322p.

About the bookJEAN MICHAUD, Meenaxi Barkataki-Ruscheweyh, Margaret Byrne Swain, 2016, «&amp;nbsp;Historical Dictionary of the Peoples of the Southeast Asian Massif&amp;nbsp;», Rowman &amp;amp; Littlefield Publishers, 594p.

About the bookMARTIN POLKINGHORNE, 2016, Angkor replicated: how Cambodian workshops produce fake masterpieces, and get away with it, [in] The Conversation [on line]

View articleSARINDA SINGH, 2017, Identities beyond ethnic-based subordination or conflict in the Southeast Asian borderlands: a case study of Lao villagers in northeast Cambodia, [in]Asian Ethnicity, vol. 18, no. 1,

About the articleDALJIT SINGH, Le Hong Hiep, Malcolm Cook, et al., 2016, Special Issue: How Southeast Asia is Sizing Up Trump’s Election Victory, Perspective, n°66, ISEAS

Full issueMIKE HAYES, Azmi Sharom, Hadi Rahmat et al., 2014, An Introduction to Huma Rights in Southeast Asia, SEAHRN eds.

Download here (The textbook is being translated into Thai, Vietnamese, Khmer, and Burmese)ALEXANDER LABAN HINTON, 2016, Man or Monster?: The Trial of a Khmer Rouge Torturer, Duke University Press, 360p.

About the book&amp;nbsp;Mekong Review: Quarterly Literary Journal, vol. 2, no. 1, Nov.2016 – Jan.2017,&amp;nbsp;Issue 5Table of contents


Who is Duch ? byAntonia D. Bryan





The second Panglong trip byDavid Eimer

Attitude adjustement byNic Dunlop

Saving face byEmma Larkin

Where the curb connects byKrysada Panusith Phounsiri

The street where love lives byMaung Philar

a bee hums byKhai Q. Nguyen

A new history of Vietnam byPeter Zinoman

Agent Monsanto byMick Grant

Wild pigs cannot enter byGiulo Ongaro

Ocean of history byJohn Burgess

Refugee pain byRupert Winchester

Threadbare byGill Green

Standing up to China byNicholas Chapman

Smuggling the bodacious byHans van Leeuwen

Khmer new wave byStefanie Sellon

Sre Ambel byJeff Kisseloff

Saving the garden byDavid Hutt

It ain’tphobyConnla Stokes

Guardian of Yangon byPoppy Mcpherson

Dancing withPerséphonebyLarry Strange

Waiting for the smoke to clear byTillman Miller




https://mekongreview.com/&amp;nbsp;Asian Journal of Social Science, 2016, vol. 44, no. 6, Special Focus: Reframing Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asia: Transnational Connections, Comparisons, and MobilitiesTable of contents:IntroductionReframing Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asia: Transnational Connections, Comparisons and Mobilities byKah Seng Loh, Woonkyung Yeo and Keng We KohResearch Articles


Illegalising licitness: Bartering along the Indonesian Borders in the mid-20th century byWoonkyung Yeo

Emergencities : Experts, Squatters and Crisis in Post-war Southeast Asia byKah Seng Loh

Shining Futures, Imminent Dangers : New Nation-States and Mass Violence in Southeast Asia byHenk Schulte-Nordholt

Have Performance, Will Travel : Contemporary Artistic Networks in Southeast Asia byNora A. Taylor

“Beat Your Child with a Flower!” : Asian Advantage and Educational Connectivity between South Korea and Singapore by Younhee Kang




http://booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/15685314/44/6&amp;nbsp;OTHERS&amp;nbsp;- A new website on Cham Studies: 

https://chamstudies.net/
&amp;nbsp;- A new blog on societies and environment in South-East Asia: 

https://nature.hypotheses.org/&amp;nbsp;Online Catalogue of Southeast Asia Collection at the USC Pacific Asia MuseumFree ONLINE catalogue of materials held by the Pacific Asia Museum at Sections include art, Cambodia, Indonesia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam

www.pacificasiamuseum.org/cgi-bin/mwebcgi/mweb.exe?request=hierWorld's Largest Database of PhD Opportunities/ PhD Programmes, Research Projects &amp;amp; StudentshipsWelcome to the World's Largest Database of PhD Opportunities: Find A PhD is a guide to current postgraduate research and PhD studentships. We list details of graduate research programmes from universities throughout the UK, Europe and further afield. New PhDs are added every day, and our listings include 

PhD Research Projects ,&amp;nbsp; 

PhD Research Programmes ,&amp;nbsp; 

Four Year PhD Programmes ,&amp;nbsp; 

International PhD Programmes &amp;nbsp;and &amp;nbsp; 

Clinical PhD Programmes.Link: 

http://www.findaphd.com/&amp;nbsp;Soutenance de Thèse de C.Schantz&amp;nbsp;: &amp;quot;Construire le corps féminin à travers les pratiques obstétricales à Phnom Penh, Cambodge&amp;quot;.Date et lieu
&amp;nbsp;: le vendredi 16 décembre 2016 à 10h00 dans la salle de réunion F.673 -Sorbonne, Galerie Gerson, escalier G2, 1er étage, 54 rue Saint Jacques, 75005 Paris.Résumé de la thèse:
Le Cambodge est l’un des neuf pays au monde à avoir atteint l’OMD 5 des Nations Unies, c’est-à-dire à avoir diminué de trois quarts le taux de mortalité maternelle au niveau national entre 1990 et 2015. Ce taux est ainsi passé de 1020 à 161 décès maternels pour 100&amp;nbsp;000 naissances au cours de ces 25 années. Ce succès est le résultat de politiques publiques volontaristes&amp;nbsp;: une politique de planification familiale, la mise en place de systèmes de financements de la santé, la formation puis le déploiement de milliers de sages-femmes sur le territoire. Cette réussite s’explique également par une mutation sociologique de premier plan : l’accouchement, qui était historiquement un événement avant tout social et qui se déroulait dans l’intimité de la maison, est devenu un événement public pour la femme et sa famille. Alors qu’en 2000 moins de 10% des femmes accouchaient dans une structure médicalisée, elles étaient plus de 80% dans cette situation en 2014, traduisant ainsi la biomédicalisation massive et soudaine de l’accouchement dans tout le pays.Cette recherche sociodémographique remet en question la vision idéalisée des Nations Unies concernant la santé maternelle au Cambodge en rendant visibles et en observant les pratiques obstétricales «&amp;nbsp;par le bas&amp;nbsp;» à partir d’une enquête empirique sur plusieurs terrains à Phnom Penh et en Kandal (milieu rural). La méthodologie développée conjugue une observation participante, à des entretiens semi-directifs auprès de soignants et de non soignants (hommes et femmes), des questionnaires auprès de femmes enceintes puis accouchées (cohorte), ainsi qu’une collecte de données médicales dans quatre maternités de Phnom Penh. Les résultats montrent que certains hôpitaux et cliniques pratiquent des épisiotomies systématiques, ce qui est contraire aux recommandations internationales, et que le taux de césariennes dans la capitale a presque triplé en quinze ans, dépassant depuis le début des années 2000 le seuil de 10% recommandé par l’OMS. Enfin, une pratique répandue de périnéorraphies visant à resserrer fortement le vagin de femmes jeunes et en bonne santé après des accouchements par voie basse, sans indication médicale, est courante dans la capitale. Ces pratiques obstétricales, historiquement construites, vont alors fréquemment être détournées de leur usage médical pour répondre à une demande sociale. Le corps des femmes a été appréhendé dans cette recherche comme un corps social et politique, révélateur des rapports sociaux, sur lequel se jouent de nombreux enjeux de pouvoirs. La thèse a révélé que ces trois pratiques obstétricales faisaient système en se renforçant les unes les autres. A l’intersection entre corps, genre et biomédecine, la recherche a montré que ces différentes pratiques obstétricales pouvaient être conçues comme des instruments de domination. Le genre, tel qu’il est pensé dans la société, va contribuer à fabriquer un sexe féminin,&amp;nbsp;mais aussi à construire un corps féminin de façon plus générale. Mais la thèse a dévoilé également que certaines de ces pratiques vont être saisies par les femmes, afin d’accroître leur attractivité sexuelle, leur permettant de renégocier les rapports de genre, et de maintenir l’harmonie et la stabilité du couple.Mots-clés&amp;nbsp;:
 Cambodge, biomédecine, pratiques obstétricales, épisiotomie, périnéorraphie, césarienne, accouchement, sexualité, rapports de genre.Contact&amp;nbsp;
: Merci de m'informer de votre présence en m'écrivant à 



	
			clemschantz@hotmail.com

	




 afin que je puisse donner votre nom au personnel de sécurité à l'entrée de l'université (plan vigipirate) et afin d'organiser l'apéritif.</description>
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