Transnational, National and Local Approaches to Human Security in South-East Asia - 5th Viennese Conference on South-East Asian Studies, Society of South-East Asian Studies (SEAS), May 28-29, 2010 Vienna, Austria

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Call for Papers

Transnational, National and Local Approaches to Human Security in South-East Asia

5th Viennese Conference on South-East Asian Studies, organized by the Society of South-East Asian Studies (SEAS)

May 28 & 29, 2010 Vienna, Austria

While traditional military conflicts have since the end of the Cold War further diminished, new non-traditional menaces, such as poverty, migration, people smuggling or environmental degradation, have increased. Major events like the Asia Financial Crisis of 1997, the SARS epidemic in 2003 and the tsunami in 2004 have demonstrated that individuals are often more affected by these incidents than the state. The United Nations' 1994 Human Development Report defines human security as both "freedom from want" and "freedom from fear", referring to threats in seven areas: economic, food, health, environment, personal, community and political security. Yet, human security remains a vague inter-disciplinary concept, which is consequently still contested, both theoretically and politically.

The 5th Viennese Conference on South-East Asian Studies in late May 2010 invites submissions from various disciplines that deal with the question how the broad spectrum of human security challenges has been conceptually and politically addressed on the transnational, national or local level. Panel 1 examines how human security is defined in South-East Asia, Panel 2 looks at its concrete implementation.

Panel 1: The human security discourse in South-East Asia

Panel 2: The implementation of human security on transnational, national or local level

Panel 3: Open Panel - In our open Panel we offer researchers from all disciplines the opportunity to present analyses that are related to South-East Asia.

Keynote speaker: Prof. Donald Emmerson, Director, Southeast Asia Forum, Stanford University

Paper proposals (max. two A4 pages) and a CV should be submitted via e-mail (publics@seas.at) by March 8, 2010. The submitters of abstracts will be notified not later than March 31, 2010. The presentation can be held in German or English, should not exceed 20 minutes and leave another 10 minutes for discussions in the plenum. Successful conference contributions can also be submitted to the Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies (ASEAS) for publication.

We particularly want to encourage PhD students to submit proposals for this conference.

For further information on SEAS and ASEAS: publics@seas.at; aseas@seas.at

Website: http://www.seas.at/

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