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Cambodia and Mainland Southeast Asia at its Margins: Minority Groups and Borders
Center for Khmer Studies (CKS) International Conference,
Siem Reap - Cambodia |
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The problems of ethnic groups are one central concern. Transnational and cross-border influences are creating new challenges and opportunities for ethnic minorities. The Cham and other Muslim communities are reconnecting to international Islam. Labor markets cross national boundaries. Vietnamese migrant workers travel to Cambodia, as Cambodian workers travel to Thailand. International loans, agencies and programs targeting "development," itself an often disruptive cross-border force, are transforming many Cambodian institutions and redefining traditional social margins in the process. This clash of forces is most profoundly felt by the indigenous peoples. The conference invites examination of other minorities and vulnerable groups “on the margins” who have been systematically denied access to important social resources. Theories of social exclusion teach that the landlessness, street children, victims of domestic violence and gay and lesbian persons are on the margins of different Cambodian institutions and that significant borders and boundaries need not be of a strictly geographic nature.
Developing from the fifth semester session
of the Center for Khmer Studies' Rockefeller Foundation funded Building
Capacity in Higher Education (BIC-HE) program covering vulnerable
peoples and ethnic minorities in Mainland Southeast Asia, this two day
conference provides a forum in which early career Cambodian academics
present their research alongside international scholars with related
interests. With an emphasis on developing comparisons between Cambodia
and other countries in Southeast Asia, individual presentations and
panel discussions provide opportunities for the presentation of
research, trends and analyses covering minority groups in Southeast
Asia. Please submit titles, short abstracts with 300 words maximum and contact details to cheanmen@khmerstudies.org by December 15 2007. For more information download the conference agenda. Please download registration form and return to sreypich@khmerstudies.org by February 29, 2008. Conference Advisory Committee: Peter Hammer, Kate Frieson, Chean R. Men
For accommodation information, please contact TITH Sreypich at sreypich@khmerstudies.org.
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