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X-WR-CALNAME:RCSD : The Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for RCSD : The Regional Center for Social Science and Sustainable Development
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BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:Asia/Bangkok
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:+0700
TZOFFSETTO:+0700
TZNAME:+07
DTSTART:20260101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Bangkok:20260324T100000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Bangkok:20260324T120000
DTSTAMP:20260404T215123
CREATED:20260318T033327Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260318T033353Z
UID:12062-1774346400-1774353600@rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th
SUMMARY:Special Lecture: Gender\, Education and Conflict - Rethinking Connections
DESCRIPTION:RCSD invites all to join a special lecture “Gender\, Education and Conflict – Rethinking Connections” with Liz Maber on Tuesday\, 24 March 2026 from 10 am to noon at the Subaltern Meeting Room\, Faculty of Social Sciences\, Chiang Mai University. \nAttention to gender and education in times of conflict has often focused on girls’ vulnerabilities to violence in accessing schooling. Access to school and increased risks of violence are significant concerns that deserve attention\, however alone they cannot account for the gendered nature of educational experiences in times of conflict. In this talk Dr Liz Maber will rethink these connections\, drawing on her work over the last 15 years in Myanmar and Bangladesh\, to examine the varied and multi-directional ways in which gender intersects with education and conflict. Exploring the education work that happens beyond the state in times of crisis\, through community groups and social movements\, offers an entry point for reassessing priorities in learning and fundamental questions of who education is intended to serve and for what purpose. \nDr Liz Maber is Associate Professor in Sociology of Education at the Faculty of Education\, University of Cambridge\, where her work focuses on gender and education in conflict and displacement\, resistance to authoritarianism and militarization\, and social transformation.
URL:https://rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th/event/special-lecture-gender-education-and-conflict-rethinking-connections/
LOCATION:Subaltern Meeting Room\, Operations Building\, Faculty of Social Sciences\, Chiang Mai\, Chiang Mai\, 50200\, Thailand
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Bangkok:20260409T130000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Bangkok:20260409T150000
DTSTAMP:20260404T215123
CREATED:20260323T044122Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260326T093215Z
UID:12121-1775739600-1775746800@rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th
SUMMARY:Book Talk: Socializing Land - Plantations\, Disposession\, and Resistance in Laos
DESCRIPTION:RCSD invites all to attend a book talk on Thursday\, 9 April from 1-3 pm\nat the Subaltern Room\, RCSD\, Faculty of Social Science\, Chiang Mai University. \nIn “Socializing Land: Plantations\, Dispossession\, and Resistance in Laos\,” author Miles Kenney-Lazar provides a sophisticated ethnographic critique of the global land rush\, focusing on the proliferation of Chinese and Vietnamese pulpwood and rubber plantations in southern Laos. Moving beyond a view of land as a mere commodity or “thing\,” Kenney-Lazar argues that land is fundamentally a set of social relationships. By examining the experiences of the ethnic minority Brou people in Savannakhet\, the book reveals how the coercive expropriation of territory by state-investor partnerships is met with persistent friction and contestation. \nThe author highlights the contradictory role of the Lao state\, which simultaneously pursues investment-driven growth while pledging to protect limited peasant land rights. Crucially\, the research demonstrates that despite the disastrous effects of dispossession\, these struggles can ironically strengthen peasant social ties to the land through organized resistance\, perhaps ultimately limiting attempts at alienation. \nThis upcoming talk offers a deeper look and chance to engage with the author on the political relationships between government officials\, plantation managers\, and village authorities that shape the contemporary agrarian landscape in Southeast Asia. All interested students\, faculty\, and members of the public are welcome to attend. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nPhoto: Nicholas Bosoni www.nicholasbosoni.com
URL:https://rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th/event/book-talk-socializing-land-plantations-disposession-and-resistance-in-laos/
LOCATION:Subaltern Meeting Room\, Operations Building\, Faculty of Social Sciences\, Chiang Mai\, Chiang Mai\, 50200\, Thailand
CATEGORIES:Resource Governance
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Bangkok:20260814T080000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Bangkok:20260816T170000
DTSTAMP:20260404T215123
CREATED:20260319T035104Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260319T035104Z
UID:12075-1786694400-1786899600@rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th
SUMMARY:ICBMS5
DESCRIPTION:The Committee of the International Conference on Burma/Myanmar Studies is pleased to announce that ICBMS 5 will be held at Chiang Mai University from 14 to 16 August 2026. \nMyanmar stands at a critical juncture. The country faces protracted political stalemate\, armed conflict\, economic decline\, and humanitarian crisis. Yet amid fragmentation and violence\, communities continue to build alternative futures. Local organizations\, resistance groups\, and civil society actors across the country are creating new forms of governance\, social movements\, and civic practice that challenge dominant narratives of nation-building. At the same time\, Myanmar’s trajectory is shaped by shifting geopolitical forces across Asia and beyond\, as regional and global powers influence its political economy\, resource frontiers\, and conflict landscape. \nICBMS 5 seeks to foster scholarship and dialogue that advances understanding of these dynamics. The conference will create space for examining how political imagination emerges and takes hold\, how solidarity forms across ethnic\, social\, and cultural divisions\, and how diverse communities articulate shared\, common aspirations while maintaining their distinct voices. We welcome work that engages with both the constraints of the present moment and the possibilities that continue to emerge from below. \nWe invite scholars\, researchers\, activists\, and practitioners working on Myanmar-related issues to join us in Chiang Mai. Guidelines for the submission of abstracts\, panel proposals\, and roundtable proposals will be announced in the coming days. \nConference Themes:\nGeopolitics and Transnational Investment\nVisions of Social Revolution\nElectoral Politics and Political Consequences\nHuman Rights\, Justice\, and Equity\nHealth and Humanitarian Politics\nRefugees\, Migration\, Labour\, and Forced Displacement\nEnvironmental Justice: Transboundary Pollution and Climate Change\nAgrarian Transition and Food Sovereignty\nIllicit Economies and the Scam Industry\nGender\, Class\, and Intersectionality\nArts\, Media\, and Popular Culture\nSocial Reproduction and Care\nEducation and Social Change\nKnowledge Production in Burma/Myanmar Studies \nFurther updates and key dates will be announced soon! \n 
URL:https://rcsd.soc.cmu.ac.th/event/icbms5/
LOCATION:Chiang Mai
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