UPCOMING EVENT: Transdisciplinarity for Global Sustainable Development [24 January 2023]

Transdisciplinarity for Global Sustainable Development: Opportunities and Challenges for Research and Teaching

Transdisciplinarity for Global Sustainable Development: Opportunities and Challenges for Research and Teaching

24 January 2023, Smart Classroom, 7th Floor, Faculty of Political Science,

Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand and online 

Co-organized by M.A. and Ph.D. Program in International Development Studies (MAIDS-GRID) and Center for Social Development Studies (CSDS), Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University; School for Cross-faculty Studies, The University of Warwick; and Chulalongkorn University UNESCO Chair in Resource Governance and Futures Literacy

Please register to join the event here.

Globally and in Southeast Asia there has been a growing interest in transdisciplinary approaches to understand and act on urgent global sustainability challenges. These have ranged from urban planning and design, to rethinking education, to responding to climate change. Transdisciplinary approaches are intended to catalyze the collaboration of researchers from different disciplinary backgrounds together with community representatives and practitioners who may include state agencies, civil society organizations, and private sector. When undertaken well, it offers the possibility of new forms of accountability between academic researchers and society, given that core to transdisciplinarity is building trusted relationships and undertaking knowledge co-production.  

Transdisciplinary approaches draw on new principles for organizing and conducting research and teaching. Whilst experience on transdisciplinary approaches is growing, there are challenges to undertaking transdisciplinary approaches, ranging from how to effectively build an interdisciplinary academic research team and foster trusted working relationships with collaborators, to how to successfully co-design and implement research projects, and how to ensure that knowledge is actionable and simultaneously solves societal challenges whilst also transferring gained knowledge to other contexts. How universities can teach transdisciplinary approaches and be organized to promote and facilitate it is also an emerging question.

The objective of this seminar is to share experience and identify promising approaches to strengthen transdisciplinary research and teaching to respond to complex global sustainable development challenges.

Speakers

Opening remarks:

  • Dr. Bhanubhatra Jittiang, Assistant Dean for International Affairs and Director of the M.A. and Ph.D. Program in International Development Studies (MAIDS-GRID)

Speakers:

  • Dr. Naruemon Thabchumpon, Associate Professor and Director of Asian Research Center for Migration (ARCM), Chulalongkorn University

  • Dr. Marta Guerriero, Associate Professor and Head of International Partnerships, Global Sustainable Development, School for Cross-faculty Studies, The University of Warwick

  • Dr. Carl Middleton, Assistant Professor and Director of Center for Social Development Studies (CSDS), Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

Chair:

  • Dr. Jessica Savage-Wilkes, Associate Professor, Global Sustainable Development, School for Cross-faculty Studies, The University of Warwick

Concluding remarks:

  • Dr. Stephanie Panichelli, Professor and Head of School, School for Cross-faculty Studies, The University of Warwick

For enquiries, please contact Dr. Carl Middleton.

UPCOMING EVENT: Virtual Conference on Sustainable Development and the Future of the Mekong [Online, 27 October 2020]

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13.30-15.30, Tuesday, 27th October 2020 via Zoom

Carl Middleton from CSDS will be presenting on this event.

The Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace (CICP) is going to organize a virtual conference on "Sustainable Development and the Future of the Mekong". For those participants who wish to attend in this virtual event, please complete the reply form in link here: http://bit.ly/FutureMekong

Panel IV: Human Security Issues in the Mekong Context: Agriculture, Energy, Water and Environment

The topics of rising energy demand, food and water security as well as environment have become increasingly salient in recent years and interact directly both at present and in future with the sustainability of the Mekong. Panelists from the Lower Mekong states, drawing on their particular areas of expertise, will address one or more of these human security issues and examine what policy frameworks can be developed in order to avoid humanitarian and development crises in the subregion.

Panelists:

Instigator: H.E. Amb. Pou Sothirak, CICP Executive Director

  • Dr. Mak Sithirith, Water Governance Specialist and Senior Research Fellow at CICP

  • Mr. Lê Trung Kiên, Senior Researcher, Institute for Foreign Policy and Strategic Studies, Diplomatic Academy of Vietnam

  • Dr. Han Phoumin, Senior Energy Economist, Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia, Jakarta

  • Ms. Solinn Lim, Country Director, Oxfam Cambodia

  • Dr. Carl Middleton, Deputy Director, Center for Social Development Studies, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand

Carl’s presentation will be on ”Water data democratization in the Mekong-Lancang basin”. For more information about this event, please visit the organizer’s webpage here.


UPCOMING ONLINE PANEL DISCUSSION: Confronting the Triple Trap in the Mekong Region: The Pandemic, Economic Downturn, and Climate Crisis

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This panel is convened by the Center for Social Development Studies, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University for the Seventh South-South Forum on Sustainability (SSFS7) hosted by Lingnan University, Hong Kong.

Thursday 16 July 2020, start from 14:00-16:00 GMT+7/Thailand Time

In this session, we will discuss how the ‘triple trap’ - the pandemic, economic downturn, and climate crisis – have affected communities across the Mekong region, and how these challenges have been responded to by them, as well as by civil society and state. We also examine the long-term implications of the triple trap, asking what transformations have already occurred and what could happen in the future.

Speakers:

  • "The Implications of Covid 19's Disruption of Global Supply Chains for Southeast Asia" by Walden Bello, Focus on the Global South

  • "Inequality, migration and Covid 19 in Thailand and the Mekong Region" by Naruemon Thabchumpon, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

  • "The pandemic in Northeast Thailand and implications for communities and (post)development” by Kanokwan Manorom, Faculty of Liberal Arts, Ubon Ratchathani University

  • "The impact of Covid 19 in rural Myanmar: Community, civil society, and state responses" by Nwet Kay Khine, Paung Ku, Myanmar

Discussant: Pianporn Deetes, International Rivers, Thailand

Moderator: Carl Middleton, Center for Social Development Studies, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.

This panel will be an online panel discussion hosted via Zoom and is a public session of the SSFS7 conference. Registration is required on the link below:

ZOOM WEBINAR REGISTRATION

On the registration page, please choose 'No Registration Fee Required' and 'Invited Participant' and choose the ’16 July: Workshops on Venezuela, Mexico and Mekong Region‘ to receive the Zoom link for this session.

For more information about this conference, please visit the conference website here.

UPCOMING INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE PAPER: International Conference on Creative Tourism and Development

International Conference on Creative Tourism and Development

Creativity & Connectivity & Sustainability in ASEAN

6-7 February 2020, Chaloem Rajakumari 60, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand

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Session 1, Panel 1: Creative Tourism for Sustainable Development in the Thai-Myanmar Andaman Sea

Thursday, 6 February 2020, 11:00-12:30, 7th Floor

Chair: Naruemon Thabchumpon

Discussant: Albert Salamanca International Conference Agenda

  • Contestation and Coproduction of Local Knowledges: Transdisciplinary Research for Creative Tourism Development in Thai-Myanmar Andaman Sea by Naruemon Thabchumpon

  • The Boom of Cross-Border Tourism in Ranong-Kaw Thaung: A Concern on Mass Tourism and Potential for Creative Tourism Development by Wipawadee Panyangnoi

  • Potentials of Agro-tourism Development in Rural Area of Thailand and Lesson-Learnt for Border Connectivity: Community Leaderships’ Perspectives by Aungkana Kamonpetch

  • An authentic artisanal fishing experience? : A case of community-based fishing tourism in Prachuap Khiri Khan by Nithis Thammasaengadipha

  • Creative Tourism Destination Management: A case of Sustainable Community-based Tourism Plan in Ranong Province by Orapan Pratomlek

Abstract for  Creative Tourism Destination Management: A case of sustainable Community-based Tourism Plan in Ranong Province

by Orapan Pratomlek*

Tourism management under the vision of “Stability, Prosperity and Sustainable” it’s a significant challenge for the community in effort to truly create sustainable creative tourism. The community have been intensifying to develop tourism activity by using community identity, local livelihood and culture with the aims to add value of existing resources but at the same time having to consider the stability in the quality of life as well as raise up the potential that generate income for community members. The Community Department Office, Ministry of Interior attempts to introduce “OTOP Inno-Life Tourism-Based Community” to promote tourism and encourage community to adopt tourism framework set into their plans. Ranong has applied the tourism framework proposed into action by trying to comply with existing community-based tourism plan. A raise of question is how it can be led to sustainable and creative tourism. Does it have a strong cooperation between government agency and community to involve in tourism activities plan or is simply that tourists are interested in coming to experience from their own travel? This paper aims to study the community tourism strategic planning by implementing OTOP Inno-life Tourism-Based Community proposed by government agency. 

Key Words: OTOP Inno-life Tourism-Based Community, Creative tourism, Community tourism and activity plan

*Center of Excellence on Resource Politics for Social Development Studies, Center for Social Development Studies (CSDS), Chulalongkorn University (csds.chulalongkorn@gmail..com)

IN THE NEWS: 'Powering Up Sustainable Energy for Asia'

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IN THE NEWS

By Sam Geall [Chatham House, 11 March 2019]

Asia’s cryosphere, the vast stores of frozen water in the high mountains that feed the rivers on which some 1.3 billion people depend, is warming far faster than average, an expert assessment warned recently, adding that two-thirds of Himalayan glaciers could disappear by the end of the century.

This and other warning signs make clear the need for a sustainable energy transition in Asia, not only given the urgency of mitigating climate change, but also because renewable energy technologies can help to provide cheap and reliable energy to areas where grid-based provision is unreliable or otherwise prohibited by geography or high costs.

A green transformation, if done right, can address poverty reduction goals and improve health and environmental quality. But achieving this requires rethinking many assumptions about the current system that generates and distributes electricity, and its interconnections with a genuinely sustainable society.

Read more at this link here.

This article was produced from the forum we co-organized with Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V. and Chatham House on “Powering up Sustainable Development for Asia: The Future of Global and Regional Investment in Asia’s Energy Sector”, which was held in Chulalongkorn University, 25 January 2019. For more information about this forum, please visit the link here.

UPCOMING RESEARCH FORUM: "Powering up Sustainable Development for Asia: The Future of Global and Regional Investment in Asia’s Energy Sector" [Bangkok, 25 January 2019]

09.00 - 17.00, Friday, 25th January at Alumni Meeting Room, 12th Floor, Kasem Utthayanin Building (อาคารเกษม อุทยานิน), Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

Co-organized by Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung e.V., Chatham House, and Center for Social Development Studies, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

Renewable energy technologies not only help to mitigate climate change by substituting for carbon-emitting fossil fuels, but also can expand energy security by avoiding exposure to the volatility of fossil fuel markets. Renewables can also help provide cheap and reliable energy to areas where grid-based provision is unreliable or otherwise prohibited by geography or high costs. The increased efficiency and renewable nature of such energy can improve energy availability, energy security and economic resilience.

Last year saw the second highest level of investment in global clean energy, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), at US$333.5 billion, despite falling technology costs. Globally, the solar sector in China dominated, with a total of $132.6 billion of investments – leading to over 50 GW of additional solar capacity. In regional terms Asia, largely China, continued to dominate the global landscape. According to the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA), Chinese sustainable energy investment oversees has doubled in the last three years and now stands at $44 billion. 

The importance of the accelerated deployment of renewable energy and energy efficiency is also reflected in UN Sustainable Development Goal 7: Affordable and Clean Energy, and it is a central goal for many countries in Asia. It is also increasingly an important focus for, and aspects of, countries’ and institutions investments in Asia.

China has put emphasis on the green ‘Belt and Road’ and 'South-South environmental cooperation', for example. In Myanmar, a Chinese government partnership with a Beijing-based environmental NGO pledged to provide US$2.9 million worth of solar panels and clean cook stoves. Leading Japanese companies are also looking overseas for opportunities in the renewable energy sector, including in India. Aid programs from a range of countries, including the US, Japan and Korea are also seeking to support sustainable energy transition.

Civil society groups and communities are also calling for – and working directly towards – an energy transformation across the region, including promoting decentralized electricity generation, energy efficiency, demand side management, and more participatory power planning processes. Countries across Asia also have a great deal of their own experience to draw on in promoting renewable energy that serves the needs of the poor.

The workshop aims to:

  • Assess the role of clean energy in Asia’s goal to develop sustainable energy that serves the needs of the poor;

  • Consider the place of renewables in overseas aid and investments strategies in Asia, including in China’s Belt and Road Initiative;

  • Address whether learning across different regional contexts on the implementation of cost-effective, reliable clean energy might bring benefits for clean energy development.

  • Create a network of interested experts who can develop further research proposal(s) and collaboration on these topics.

 Key outcomes of the events will be:

  • Sharing lessons on how clean energy enhances both energy security and climate change mitigation;

  • Enhanced understanding of the importance of Asian, and in particular Chinese, sustainable energy investment in the global market;

  • Examining how and where Asian countries can draw on both good and bad experiences of their own and other countries’ energy and development policy with regard to sustainable energy that serves the needs of the poor; and,

  • Develop plans for the creation of a network with an understanding of the opportunities for common research and activities.

Program and List of Panelists:


08.30 - 09.00  Registration

09.00 - 09.15  Welcome remarks 

  • Dr. Ake Tangsupvattana, Dean, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

  • Dr. Sam Geall, Chatham House

  • Dr Peter Hefele, Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung

09.15 - 10.45  Panel 1: Trends and Emerging Opportunities

Chair: Dr. Carl Middleton, CSDS, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

  • “Energy Transition Pathways for the 2030 Agenda in Asia and the Pacific” by Hongpeng Liu, Energy Division, United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific

  • “Energy Trading in Thailand” by David Martin, Power Ledger, Australia/Thailand

  • “A Power Sector Vision for the Greater Mekong Region“ by Shannon Siyao Wang, World Wildlife Fund

  • “Energy transformation and the role of civil society in Thailand” by Suphakit Nuntavorakarn, Healthy Public Policy Foundation, Thailand

10.45 - 11.15 Tea Break

11.15 - 12.45  Session 2: Aid and investment agendas supporting an energy transition

Chair: Dr. Champa Patel, Asia-Pacific Programme, Chatham House, London

  • “How EU development cooperation can support the energy transition” by Jerome Pons, Delegation of the European Union to Thailand

  • “Role of business and private actors in the process of low-carbon transformation in China” by Dr. Wei Shen, Institute of Development Studies, Brighton, United Kingdom

  • ‘'Climate finance and the sustainable energy transition in Asia” by Yossef Zahar, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)/IGES

12.45 - 13.45 Lunch

13.45 - 15.15 Session 3: Enhancing Energy Sector Investments in Asia: Assessment and Inclusive Decision Making

Chair: Ellen Kelly, Department for International Development (DFID), UK

  • “Transforming Southeast Asia’s electricity sector through Impact Assessment” by Dr. Decharut Sukkumnoed, Faculty of Economics, Kasetsart University

  • “Towards Strengthening Environmental and Social Safeguards in Southeast Asia” by Matthew Baird, Asian Research Institute for Environmental Law and Visiting Scholar, Vermont Law School

  • “Environmental Assessment in Energy Projects in Myanmar: Civil societies experience and recommendations” by Pyi Pyi Thant, Heinrich Böll Stiftung

15.15 - 15.45 Tea Break

15.45 - 17.15 The Way Ahead: Realizing opportunities for sustainable electricity transformation

Chair: Dr. Jakkrit Sangkhamanee, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

  • “Hydropower vs other renewables in the Greater Mekong region: Ensuring the resilience of Asian Deltas” by Marc Goichot, World Wildlife Foundation

  • “Green Jobs and Energy Transition in Southeast Asia” by Chariya Senpong, Climate and Energy Campaigner for Greenpeace Southeast Asia

  • “Lessons learned from China’s solar boom, and implications for Asia” by Dr. Sam Geall, Chatham House

  • “Off-grid solutions in rural Myanmar: Innovation in technology and approach” by Nathalie Risteau, Yoma Mandalay

17.15 - 17.30 Wrap-up and Closing Remarks

  • Dr. Champa Patel, Asia-Pacific Programme, Chatham House, London

  • Dr. Carl Middleton, CSDS, Faculty of Political Science, Chulalongkorn University

To register for this forum, please e-mail us your name, organisation, and position to  Anisa Widyasari (CSDS) at communications.csds@gmail.com. The seat is limited and registration will be accepted on first come first served basis. 

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