Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (Kakenhi)
"Planted Forests in Equatorial Southeast Asia: Human-nature Interactions
in High Biomass Society"
Project Leader: ISHIKAWA, Noboru
- Outline
-
The tropics have the highest potentiality to reproduce biomass due to greater
solar radiation and active heat and water cycle. The region has also been
the most fertile ground for bio-resource commodification in human history.
With the changing status of biomass as forest and agricultural products,
bio-materials, and financial instruments, the tropical zone has undergone
fast-paced metamorphoses from extensive, environment-dependent, resource
utilization to intensive agro-industrial production, including large-scale
plantation of oil palm and Acacia mangium.
Defining high biomass society as a crucial niche for global survival and
sustainability, this project examines the multidimensional driving forces
of change in northern Borneo. High biomass societies offer important locales
to investigate the transformation of regional landscapes for food production,
development of renewable sources of energy and biomaterials, and reduction
of carbon emission. Formulas for better articulation among human community,
local fauna and flora, geospheric/atmospheric circulations, and global
political economy are duly needed. Scholars across disciplines are to set
new agenda for sustainable biomass societies through fieldwork.
- List of Seminars and Symposia
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- Special Seminar
- Date:June 15, 2011 16:00-18:00
- Place:Room No.331, Inamori Foundation Memorial Building, Kyoto University
- Speaker: Shamsul A. B.
- Distinguished Professor of Social Anthropology, Director, Institute of
Ethnic Studies (KITA), National University of Malaysia (Universiti Kebangsaan
Malaysia)
- Title:“From Conflict to Cohesion: The analytical challenge in Southeast Asian
Studies”
- Organizer:Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S)"Planted Forests in Equatorial
Southeast Asia: Human-nature Interactions in High Biomass Society"
- Abstract:
- Southeast Asia as a form of knowledge, as being presented in the field
of Southeast Asian studies, popularized and expanded during the Cold War
has privileged what could be called as a ‘conflict approach’ in which the
workings of centrifugal forces as the ruling societal pattern informed
analyses regarding the region and its component countries. Underpinning
this conflict approach was the well-known ‘domino theory.’ Therefore, each
component country was perceived as a domino that would fall one after another
as communism expanded its influence in the region, namely, from Mainland
Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Burma) to the Maritime
part of the region (Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore, Brunei and the Philippines).
Social scientists, working independently or for the noncommunist countries
(USA, UK, France, Germany), held the viewpoint that the internal conflict
and struggle within the region made it fragile and vulnerable to communist
takeover. Saving the region from communist takeover became almost a ‘political
salvation’ for both the noncommunist bloc and the majority of their social
scientists. Although the Cold War was over in 1989, the conflict-based
analytical paradigm persists until today. The countries of the region continued
to be seen as fragile and vulnerable exposed to new transnational forces,
such as global fundamental Islamic activism, that would find roots locally
rather easily. Political analysts often playing the ‘prophet of doom’ role
frequently offer negative predictions about the future of these societies.
It was predicted once that the fall of Suharto would lead to the breaking
down of Indonesian unity as a nation-state. Malaysia was predicted to suffer
from serious bloody ethnic conflicts every time an economic crisis occurred
in Asia. But none of these has actually taken place. Why it didn’t happen
has also to be explained. Perhaps, as this presentation shall argue, that
it is useful to approach this issue sociologically from a ‘cohesion approach’
with the assumption that the plural societies in Southeast Asia are generally
in a state of ‘stable tension’ meaning they have been surviving in a situation
dominated by major societal contradictions but nonetheless, longitudinally,
remains generally cohesive. In other words, there is social cohesion within
these societies, but the journey has not been plain sailing. Empirical
evidence from Malaysia shall be presented as a case study.
-
- Shamsul A.B. is Distinguished Professor of Social Anthropology and, currently,
Founding Director, Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA), Universiti Kebangsaan
Malaysia (UKM), Bangi, Selangor, Malaysia. He has researched, written and
lectured extensively, in the last 25 years, on the theme “politics, culture
and economic development,” with an empirical focus on Malaysia and Southeast
Asia. His award-winning monograph From British to Bumiputera Rule (1986,
reprinted 1990, 2nd edition 2004) is a study on the phenomenology of class
and ethnic relations in a Malaysian rural community. His academic activism
takes many forms: conferences and lecture tours in Asia, Europe, North
& South America & the Oceania; public policy formulation in Malaysian
higher education; museum re-conceptualization projects; and as a political
analyst on Malaysia current affairs in local and international media (Channel
News Asia, Al-Jazeera, National Geographic, Australian Broadcasting Corporation
and the BBC). Recently, he was awarded the prestigious ACADEMIC PRIZE 2008,
of the Fukuoka Prize, Japan.
- International Seminar on Radically Envisioning a Different Southeast Asia:
From a Non-State Perspective
- Date:January 18th - 19th, 2011
- Place:Inamori Foundation Hall (Room No. 333), Inamori Foundation Memorial Building,
Kyoto University
- Organizers:Asian Connections: Southeast Asian Model for Co-Existence in the 21st Century
Asian CORE Program, Japan Society for the Promotion of Science/ Planted
Forests in Equatorial Southeast Asia: Human-nature Interactions in High
Biomass Society Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S)/ In Search of
Sustainable Humanosphere in Asia and Africa, Global COE Program, Kyoto
University,
- Date:December 11, 2010, 15:00 - 17:30
- Name of Meeting:The 15th Oil Palm Seminar
- Place:Small -size Seminar Room (Room. No. 330), Inamori Foundation Memorial Building
3rd floor, Kyoto University
- Organizers:the Oil Palm Club and Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research (S): "Planted
Forests in Equatorial Southeast Asia: Human-nature Interactions in High
Biomass Society."
- Presenter:Pek Leng (independent researcher)
- Topic:"The Costs and Benefits of the Oil Palm in Malaysia"
- Presenter:Riwanto Tirtrosudarmo (Indonesian Institute of Sciences-LIPI)
- Topic:"Indonesian migrant workers in oil palm plantation in Malaysia"
- Date:November 17, 2010 15:30~17:00
- Name of Meeing:Lecture of Dr Lee Hua Seng
- Place:Small Meeing Room , Inamori Foundation Memorial }Building, Kyoto University
- Presenter:Dr Lee Hua Seng (President of Sarawak Timber Association)
- Topic:"Some aspects of forestry in Sarawak in the seventies"
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