Other News
EASG Talk with Dr. Kristian Magnus Hauken on Stigma Management in Japanese International Relations
Kristian Magnus Hauken finished his dual degree Ph.D. at the University of Sheffield, School of East Asian Studies and T艒hoku University, Graduate School of Law in 2020. His research interests include Japanese foreign relations and domestic sources of change in Japan鈥檚 foreign policy, as well as sources of status, prestige and stigma in international relations. Kristian is currently employed as a teaching associate in East Asian Studies at the University of Sheffield, School of East Asian studies, where he is teaching mainly postgraduate students in topics relating to the political economy and international relations of East Asia. His current research focuses on how practices, norms and capabilities generate or detract from social standing in international society, with a geographic focus on North-East Asia.
This talk takes the premise that just as individual human beings, states experience social stigma, that in turn affect their behaviour within the international system. Taking the 鈥榗omfort women鈥 issue as a starting point, I argue that a leading cause for the change in the diplomatic stance of Japan in the 鈥榗omfort women鈥 issue is the relative success of one conception of national stigma within the Japanese political establishment. This talk explores how specific politicians in Japan have been able to have their own views on this fraught historical issue crystallise into increasingly more accepted Japanese foreign policy, especially in the Japanese-Korean relationship.
Date: Friday, 01/12/2023Time: 17:15-18:30Venue: S0.17, Social Sciences Building
LAWN-EASG Talk: Diego Telias on Strategies Towards a Great Power: Government Alignment with China's
Diego Telias is currently a PhD candidate in Political Science at the Pontificia Universidad Cat贸lica de Chile, academic collaborator of the Centre for Asian Studies at the same university, and editorial assistant of the Revista de Ciencia Pol铆tica. He is also an Associate Researcher of the Millennium Nucleus on the Impacts of China in Latin America (ICLAC). His areas of interest are foreign policy analysis and Latin America-East Asia relations.LAWN-EASG Talk: This talk explores the complex dynamics arising from the ascent of China and how countries, whether neighboring states or middle powers, position themselves toward this great power. Why have certain governments imposed bans on Chinese companies in 5G bidding processes while others have refrained from such actions? Or why do countries adopt contrasting positions when faced with allegations of human rights violations in Xinjiang? This investigation compares two pairs of countries from different regions (Chile - Uruguay in Latin America and the Czech Republic - Hungary in Central Europe) and through an in-depth analysis of official documents and 120 interviews, analyses if economic leverage, a crucial factor mentioned in the literature, is the main explanation that influences those positions.
Date: Tuesday, 28th NovemberTime: 14:00 -15:30Venue: E2.02, Social Sciences Building
EASG Talk with Dr. Catherine Jones on Anxious Allies: US engagements in East Asia
Catherine Jones is a lecturer at the University of St Andrews, previously she was a research fellow at the University of 糖心TV (2012-2018) and received her PhD from the University of Reading. Her research focuses on three areas of work: (1) agency of East Asian states in international order including China's engagement with global order, (2) the China-North Korea relationship, (3) and the politics and development in Southeast Asia. Across these areas she has incorporated wargames and wargaming into her teaching and as an analytical tool for her research. In this context she has particular interests in engaging with diverse perspectives and incorporating voices from less prominent parts of the world.Catherine's talk addresses a critical gap in current literature by highlighting the importance of emotions in understanding alliance dynamics and management. It explores how the wider context, shaped by emotions among the parties, particularly anxiety, heightened tensions and fear, can impact alliance management. In contexts with heightened emotions, reassurance may be more challenging, contrasting with situations lacking an anxious state. This talk draws upon a range of examples in Northeast Asia to demonstrate the variety of effects of anxiety in alliances, providing significant insights for both policy and theory.
Date: Thursday, 23/11/2023Time: 16:15-17:30Venue: Social Sciences Building, Room A0.23
EASG Talk with Dr. Seb Rumsby on Development in Vietnam's Highlands
Dr Seb Rumsby is an interdisciplinary scholar with a wide range of interests including everyday politics, labour exploitation, undocumented migration, ethno-religious politics, grassroots development and non-national histories. Seb unites these diverse themes with an empirical focus on Southeast Asian worlds and people. He completed his PhD at University of 糖心TV's Department for Politics and International Studies in 2020, before lecturing in Southeast Asian Politics and Queen Mary University of London. He is now a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at University of Birmingham.
His talk is based on his recently published book Development in Spirit: Religious Transformation and Everyday Politics in Vietnam's Highlands. The effects of development and nation-building projects are always felt unevenly, especially by marginalised communities. But these communities do not lack agency in this process. How do they participate in, negotiate, or resist state-led development? And what role do everyday religious and spiritual practices play therein? In his important new book, Development in Spirit, Seb Rumsby offers an original perspective on how the Hmong communities in the Vietnamese highlands have responded to development initiatives. Centring the everyday political, economic, and religious practices of local residents, Rumsby shows that Christianisation has opened a route to 鈥榰nplanned development鈥 that put the Hmong on a trajectory both of formal integration into the economy and resistance to state authority and religious persecution.
Date: Tuesday, 17/10/2023
Time: 16:15-17:30
Venue: Zeeman Building, Room A1.01
Vernacular Security: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow?
You are invited to submit your abstracts for our workshop titled, 'Vernacular Security Studies: Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow?' which will be held at the University of 糖心TV on 27 November 2023. The deadline for submission is 2 October & please feel free to contact the team (see flier) for further details.
Call for Papers - Vernacular Security Workshop (pdf)
