AAS 2024 Virtual Day will take place on the Zoom Events platform. All sessions (unless otherwise indicated) will take place LIVE in the US EASTERN TIME ZONE.
The full program for the virtual day is here.
At least four Virtual Day sessions will feature cutting-edge work in Philippine Studies:
8:00 AM-9:30 AM EST - The Challenge of Political Reform in the Philippines. Chaired by Dominique Caouette, University of Montreal The Rise of "the National" in Philippine Politics: Neoliberal Screening of Welfare Inclusion and Violent Exclusion Wataru Kusaka, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies Duterte's Federalism and Constitutional Change Project: From Campaign Promise to Abandoned Reform Maria Ela Atienza, University of the Philippines, Diliman An Unchanging Terrain? Environment and Climate Change in the Philippines from Duterte to Marcos, Jr. Ruth Lusterio-Rico, University of the Philippines, Diliman State Policy Toward Philippine Migrant Workers: A Typological Framework Kazue Takamura, McGill University Erik Kuhonta, McGill University Discussant: Dominique Caouette, University of Montreal
10:00-11:30 AM EST - Digitalization, Labor, and Displacement: Lessons and Questions from Southeast Asia. Chaired by Rhacel Parreñas, Princeton University The Lived Lives of Global Logistics: Migration, Transnational Labor and Invisible Trade from and through Taiwan Beatrice Zani, French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) Smart Labor and the Fantasy Production of ASEAN Smart Cities Stephanie Santos, Chulalongkorn University Selling the "Canadian Dream" and Normalizing Downward Mobility: Citizenship Pathways and Migration Influencers in Asian Migrations Maria Cecilia Hwang, McGill University Getting Paid to "Live My Own Life": Disrupting the Notion of Kathoey through "Platform-Dependent Creative Labour" Treepon Kirdnark, Chulalongkorn University Discussant: Rhacel Parreñas, Princeton University
8:00 PM-9:30 PM EST - Archipelagic Southeast Asia and MarxistFeminist Critique of Capitalism. Chaired by Thiti Jamkajornkeiat, University of Victoria "Sugar and Spice" and the Mater/Iality of the Commodity in Island Southeast Asia Sylvia Tiwon, University of California, Berkeley Articulating a Marxist-Feminist Critique of Colonial Capitalism through Communist Media Production Rianne Subijanto, City University of New York, Baruch College War and Social Reproduction: Rural Women in the Face of Counterinsurgency Sarah Raymundo, University of the Philippines, Diliman Planetary Questions and Marxist-Feminist Critique in the Philippine Context Neferti Tadiar, Barnard College, Columbia University
8:00 PM-9:30 PM - Strategies to Survive, Resist, and Win the War: Comparative Historical Perspectives from Veterans and Youth in Timor Leste, Vietnam, and the Philippines. Chaired by Therese Nguyen, Universidade Nacional Timor Leste Forsaken Young People of East Timor: "To What Extend Does Young People Contribute to Peace and Development of Post Independent East Timor?" Azerino Vieira, Universidade da Paz (UNPAZ Commander David Daitula: A Heroic Journey for TimorLeste's Independence – Lessons for the Young Generation Jose Cornelio Guterres, Universidade da Paz (UNPAZ), Food for Survival in War and Alternative Food to Survive in Climate Change: Comparative Experiences in Timor-Leste and Vietnam Therese Nguyen, Universidade Nacional Timor Leste Environmental History and Climate Justice from the Perspectives of Youth and Resistance War Veterans in East Timor/Timor Leste, the Philippines, and Indonesia: A Comparative Analysis Jacqueline Siapno, Universidade da Paz (UNPAZ)
We apologize for being late to share this reminder, for the formatting, and if we've overlooked any relevant sessions or presentations.
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