打印

IIAS Announcement: Summer Programme in Asian Studies

IIAS Announcement: Summer Programme in Asian Studies

The Summer Programme in Asian Studies is a programme set up by the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS) in collaboration with Leiden University and hosted in Leiden and Amsterdam.

Registration is now open! Registration closes on the 15th of January 2011.

For more information, view IIAS website at http://www.summerprogramme.asia/.   

Heritage Conserved and Contested: Asian and European Perspectives





This first Summer Programme in Asian Studies aims to shed light on the various definitions, interests, and practices associated with the question of cultural heritage in Asia and Europe.

The programme aims at Master’s and doctoral students incorporating heritage issues in their work.

Research specialists from various academic backgrounds (social anthropology, history, archaeology, conservation studies including cultural resource management) will combine their expertise to provide participants with an intensive - yet interactive - experience. The theme of cultural heritage touches upon a wide array of knowledge forms and traditions (including those of local actors) while it also links theoretical frameworks with applied and policy-relevant knowledge and action.

The programme will be run by two world-renown scholars in the fields of cultural heritage theory and cultural Asian history, respectively: Prof. Michael Herzfeld (Harvard University) and Prof. Nira Wickramasinghe (Leiden University).

The key questions associated with cultural heritage that arise most frequently are:


  • Who determines what “heritage” is and what mechanisms are in place to ensure that a reasonable consensus is involved?
  • What is the role of national governments and inter-national (state) organizations in such processes and how is that role calibrated to local and regional interests and needs?
  • To what extent have private economic interests now, whether in symbiosis with state authorities or independently, become the new forces redefining cultural heritage boundaries and canons?
  • To what extent are religious claims given equal emphasis in deciding the appropriate use of sites claimed by religious groups, and what are the consequences of observed differences and inequities?
  • What provisions are made for people displaced by such interventions and what avenues are explored for involving them in the reconstruction and preservation processes? What is (or could be) the role of local voluntary actors and non-state agencies, and how does that role affect or modify our understanding of the concept of “civil society”?
  • What provisions are made for the preservation and exhibition of alternative perspectives?
  • To what extent is the concept of “heritage” a European invention, and how does its history affect its current reception and implementation in Asia? Are there Asian ways – “official” or “vernacular”- that should be associated to this ever-evolving definition? How far do Asian religious traditions (e.g., the doctrine of reincarnation) direct ideas of preservation and reconstruction?
  • What is the meaning of “intangible heritage,” how useful is this category, and what conceptual and practical problems does it evince?
  • When dealing specifically with Asia and Europe: how should the various agencies and stakeholders go about addressing the question of the specifically colonial heritage or cultural legacy. To what extent is there a “shared [colonial, postcolonial, and/or crypto-colonial] heritage”?
  • Should we support conservation or creative transformation? What is the role of contemporary artists in the definition of cultural heritage?
  • How and why has cultural heritage in fast-growing Asian (and European) cities, especially urban physical space, become such a contested political and social ground? Do archaeologists and historians face particular difficulties in urban contexts, and how far should their consultative role affect overall planning?

In addition, the Summer Programme will explore methodological issues, including:


  • The use of video and other visual recording techniques in addressing heritage issues.
  • The engagement of legal and other policy experts, including civil society activists, in determining appropriate courses of action.
  • The representation of the various academic disciplines in decision-making.
  • Ethnographic and survey approaches to local responses and politics.


[General Information]

For who
The Summer Programme in Asian Studies is primarily meant for advanced students. This means that we do not accept students other than PhD researchers and Master students. Only PhD researchers can present their researcher at the PhD conference. Master students are welcome to attend the PhD conference as observers.

Registration
To apply for participation in the Summer Programme in Asian Studies, please fill in the Application form. Registration opened November 8th, 2010 and closes January 15th, 2011.

Selection procedure
The programme allows a maximum of 25 participants. All students, who registered before the deadline (15 January 2011), will be informed about the selection before 1 March 2011. We will not correspond about the outcome of the selection procedure.

Costs
Participants must pay the following registration fee: 200 Euros.
This fee includes lodging, breakfast and lunch during the programme, two dinners and an information package.

Lodging
Lodging is free for the selected participants. Lodging is arranged on the basis of 1-person rooms.

Travel costs
The selected participants can reimburse their travel costs using the Reimbursement form. The amount of the reimbursement will be mentioned in the confirmation letter.
For Dutch participants who have traveled with an OV-chipkaart, please print out an overview of your travel expenses and send it along with your reimbursement form.

Payment
After you have received the confirmation of your participation, you will receive further information about the payment of the registration fee. You can pay with credit card (Master or Visa) and via bank transfer (Paylogic; for Dutch participants only).

Cancellation policy
Participation in the Summer Programme can be cancelled free of charge until three weeks before the start. If cancellation occurs within 21 days prior to the start of the programme, the fee will not be refunded.

Certificate
Participants can receive a certificate for the Summer Programme. On the Application form it is requested whether you would like to receive certificates or not. During each workshop an attendance sheet will circulate. Please sign this sheet, because otherwise you won’t receive the certificate.


Source: IIAS

[ 本帖最后由 玉兰 于 2011-1-10 11:28 编辑 ]

TOP

回复 1# 的帖子



[ 本帖最后由 玉兰 于 2011-1-10 11:26 编辑 ]

TOP

回复 2# 的帖子

费用那一栏后面的怎么都传不上去,以为是字数超了,盖了三层楼才知道是欧元符号在作怪,只好用euro代替

[ 本帖最后由 玉兰 于 2011-1-10 11:34 编辑 ]

TOP