Southeast Asia Program
Ken MacLean
Professor, Clark University
Ken MacLean is a professor of international development and social change and a faculty member at the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies. He has more than two decades of experience working with NGOs on issues related to human rights violations, conflict-induced displacement, state-sponsored violence, extractive industries, and territorial disputes across South East Asia.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Faculty
- SEAP Faculty Associate in Research
Contact
Email: kmaclean@clarku.edu
Phone: 508-793-7201
Neal Keating
Associate Professor, SUNY-Brockport
Neal Keating is a cultural anthropologist interested in the problems of structural power in the contemporary world. His work involves collaborative research with Indigenous Peoples in Southeast Asia and North America, with a focus on issues of human rights, old and new colonialities, land-grabs, and language shifts.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Faculty
- SEAP Faculty Associate in Research
Contact
Email: nkeating@brockport.edu
Phone: (585) 395-5707
Nori Katagiri
Professor, Saint Louis University
Nori Katagiri is a professor of political science at Saint Louis University. He teaches and conducts research on international relations, security studies, and East Asia.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Faculty
- SEAP Faculty Associate in Research
Contact
Email: nori.katagiri@slu.edu
Phone: 314-977-3044
Jack Harris
Professor Emeritus, Hobart and William Smith College
Jack Harris studies men and masculinity in Vietnam. He has expanded into looking at the experience of Vietnamese as they go through massive economic and social change. He is an applied sociologist and consults with local governments across the United States on business process reengineering, change management, and municipal information technology.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Faculty
- SEAP Faculty Associate in Research
Contact
Email: harris@hws.edu
Phone: 315-781-3439
Thomas Gibson
Professor, University of Rochester
Thomas Gibson’s first field research project concerned the relationship between the egalitarian and pacifist values of the Buid, an indigenous people inhabiting the highlands of Mindoro, Philippines, and the hierarchical and aggressive values of the Christian and Muslim societies found in the lowlands (1986). He followed this up with a comparative study of attitudes toward violence and aggression among shifting cultivators throughout Southeast Asia, showing that they varied according to historical exposure of different groups to raiding by lowland and coastal societies (1990).
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Faculty
- SEAP Faculty Associate in Research
Contact
Email: thomas.gibson@rochester.edu
Phone: 585-275-8739
Jennifer Gaynor
Research Fellow, SUNY-Buffalo
Jennifer Gaynor's research examines the constitution of maritime worlds, especially the spatial dimensions of the maritime, through the analysis of material practices, forms of representation, and institutional structures.
Additional Information
Pilapa Esara Carroll
Associate Professor, SUNY-Brockport
Pilapa Esara Carroll is an associate professor of anthropology at SUNY-Brockport. Her areas of specialization include issues of displacement and refugee resettlement, ethnographic documentary production, gender inequality and social difference, social practices of marriage and intimacy, processes of migration and identity negotiations, economic development and globalization, and Asia and its diasporas.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Faculty
- SEAP Faculty Associate in Research
Contact
Email: pesara@brockport.edu
Phone: (585) 395-5345
Christopher Bjork
Professor of Education on the Dexter M. Ferry Chair, Vassar College
Christopher Bjork earned his PhD in educational anthropology at Stanford University. Certified to teach both elementary and secondary school, he has worked as a classroom teacher in Japan and the United States.
Additional Information
Matthew Amster
Professor, Gettysburg College
Matthew Amster is a cultural anthropologist and filmmaker with extensive experience working in Borneo and, more recently, has started a new project in Denmark.
His research in Borneo was among the Kelabit of Sarawak, with special focus on religious conversion and change, urban ethnicity, gossip and social networks, and the key role of the international border in Kelabit rural life. In 2008, he completed his first film, “The Internet and the Water Buffalo,” about the introduction of the internet into the interior highlands of Borneo.
Additional Information
Ryadi Adityavarman
Associate Professor, Colorado State University
Ryadi Adityavarman is an associate professor in the Interior Architecture program at Colorado State University. He has a multidisciplinary background in architecture, interior design, and historic preservation with a particular focus in Indonesian architectural traditions. As a Rotary Peace Fellow, he is interested in global humanitarian and socio-cultural sustainability initiatives.