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Southeast Asia Program

Revisiting The Air War in Indochina: American Strategic Bombing From Vietnam to the Present

April 21, 2022

11:25 am

Uris Hall, G08

This is a hybrid event. Registration information is below.

This academic year marks the 50th anniversary of the publication of the first major interdisciplinary research project undertaken by the then newly established Peace Studies Program, now the Judith Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies -- The Air War in Indochina.

The report, subsequently published by Beacon Press, was based entirely on open-source materials and interviews, and presented an assessment of the war and especially its toll on civilians that remains unmatched to this day.

About the speakers

This seminar features Cornell Professor Emeritus Norman Uphoff, one of the project’s original principal investigators, discussing the history of the study; and Oxford Professor Neta Crawford, co-founder of the Costs of War Project, explaining how she and her colleagues have used similar methods to study the impact of contemporary warfare, including strategic bombing. Professor Matthew Evangelista will introduce and chair the session.

Register here

This seminar is part of the spring seminar series with the Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS).

In accordance with university event guidance, all campus visitors who are 12 years old or older must also present a photo ID, as well as proof of vaccination for COVID-19 or results of a recent negative COVID-19 test. If you are not currently participating in the Cornell campus vaccination/testing program, please bring proof of vaccination or the results of a recent negative test.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies

Southeast Asia Program

Southeast Asia Language Week

The logo of Southeast Asia Language Week, April 11-15, 2022
April 5, 2022

April 11-15

Celebrating the study of Southeast Asian languages and cultures at Cornell! 

Rice Around the World

Wednesday, April 13 from 4:30pm to 9:30pm, Alice Cook House

Join the Einaudi Center programs for an Alice Cook House themed dinner, featuring rice dishes from around the world.

CMSA Thingyan

Saturday, April 16 from 1pm to 6pm, the Kahin Center

Come celebrate the Burmese new year, and help raise funds for Mutual Aid for Myanmar, hosted by the Cornell Myanmar Student Association (CMSA).

Musics of Southeast Asian America

Saturday, April 16 at 7:30pm, Kip Theatre

Direct from the San Francisco/Bay Area, Cambodian American vocalist Bochan Huy and Filipina American hip hop artist Ruby Ibarra take the Kip Theatre stage in this live concert celebrating Southeast Asian American sisterhood. Join us in this season of springtime renewal and New Years for much of Southeast Asia. Defying the afterlives of U.S. war and empire in Southeast Asia, their music pulsates with histories of art and resistance in Cambodia and the Philippines, as they show us how young Asian Americans form their political voice through diverse genres (hip hop and Cambodian rock), multiple languages (English, Tagalog, Khmer, and Waray), and popular music.

Click here for more information and free ticket reservation. 

CAPSU Asia Night

Saturday, April 16 from 8pm to 12am, Ho Plaza

The Cornell Asian Pacific Student-Union (CAPSU) will be hosting its 17th annual Asia Night, and the first in-person Asia Night in three years! This is one of the largest cultural celebrations at Cornell, where CAPSU's APID/A-interest student organizations unite to celebrate their heritage and culture through food, music, and dance.

Additional Information

Deadline Extended: Undergraduate Scholarship for SEASSI!

A flyer offering a scholarship to undergraduates for the study of Southeast Asian languages.
April 5, 2022

Study a Southeast Asian language this summer with funding

SEAP offers one qualified undergraduate student a chance to win a full scholarship to intensively study a Southeast Asian language for eight full weeks at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. This scholarship is intended for beginners; no prior instruction in or knowledge of any Southeast Asian language is necessary. 

SEASSI is an eight-week intensive language training program, offering a chance to jumpstart your language learning experience. Each language course is equivalent to two semesters of study, with full academic year credit. Learn more about SEASSI.

Additional Information

Nobel Laureate Leymah Gbowee: Forging Lasting Peace

May 3, 2022

5:00 pm

Alice Statler Auditorium

Forging Lasting Peace: Movements for Justice in a Pluralist World (Bartels World Affairs Lecture)

In our ethnically, racially, linguistically, and religiously diverse world, how do we find common ground? Amid ongoing conflict and violence, how do we foster lasting peace? In our world full of inequalities, what practices of activism and solidarity lead to transformative change? Drawing on her experiences of mobilizing, demanding, and brokering peace, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize winner Leymah Gbowee shares how action and activism can shape a just world.

A book signing and reception with refreshments will follow the lecture.

Lecture: 5:00–6:30 p.m. | Alice Statler AuditoriumBook signing and reception: 6:30–7:30 p.m. | Park AtriumFree ticket required for in-person attendance: Reserve your ticket. Join the lecture virtually by registering at eCornell.

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Learn more about our distinguished speaker by reading her book, Mighty Be Our Powers: How Sisterhood, Prayer, and Sex Changed a Nation at War. Pick up your copy from The Cornell Store and bring it to the book signing! Buffalo Street Books will also have copies for sale at the event.

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How did Leymah Gbowee's protests lead to lasting peace? Read a Bartels explainer by Naminata Diabate.

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About Leymah Gbowee

Nobel Peace laureate Leymah Gbowee is a Liberian peace activist, trained social worker, and women's rights advocate. She currently serves as executive director of the Women, Peace, and Security Program at Columbia University's Earth Institute and is the founder and current president of the Gbowee Peace Foundation Africa, founding head of the Liberia Reconciliation Initiative, and cofounder and former executive director of the Women, Peace, and Security Network Africa. She is also a founding member and former Liberian coordinator of Women in Peacebuilding Network/West Africa Network for Peacebuilding.

Host and Sponsors

The Bartels World Affairs Lecture is a signature event of the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies. Part of Einaudi's work on Inequalities, Identities, and Justice, this year's lecture is cosponsored by Einaudi's Institute for African Development and Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, in cooperation with Peace is Loud. To learn more about Peace is Loud and discover other empowering women peacebuilders, visit www.peaceisloud.org.

Bartels World Affairs Lecture

The Einaudi Center’s flagship event brings distinguished international figures to campus each academic year to speak on global topics and meet with Cornell faculty and students, particularly undergraduates. The lecture and related events are made possible by the generosity of Henry E. Bartels ’48 and Nancy Horton Bartels ’48.

Additional Information

Program

Einaudi Center for International Studies

Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies

Institute for African Development

East Asia Program

Southeast Asia Program

Latin American and Caribbean Studies

Institute for European Studies

South Asia Program

Ukraine War Pushing Food Prices Even Higher

Andriivs'kyi descent, Kyiv, Ukraine
March 24, 2022

Chris Barrett, IAD/SEAP

“It’s kind of a perfect storm,” says Chris Barrett, professor of applied economics and management. “It’s not just a matter of, food prices are going high. It’s food prices are going high at a moment when many places are already crippled by the challenges posed by COVID, by political disruptions elsewhere, by droughts and floods and other natural disasters.” 

Additional Information

Topic

  • Development, Law, and Economics

Program

Languages

Cornell offers four levels of study in Burmese, Indonesian, Khmer, Tagalog, Thai, and Vietnamese. View this semester's language course offerings here.

SEAP Alumn Hilary Faxon Wins American Association of Geographers Award

Hilary Faxon headshot
March 15, 2022
Congratulations to Dr. Hilary Faxon, a SEAP alumn and a current Ciriacy-Wantrup Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of California Berkeley, who has won the American Association of Geographers' top early career award at the annual conference!
The award was given for her paper, 'Welcome to the Digital Village: networking geographies of agrarian change,' which theorizes the digital village as a networked social space in which online practices emerge from existing agrarian relations to reconfigure the strategies of economic survival, the landscapes of home, and the tactics of politics. The paper is forthcoming from the Annals of the American Association of Geographers.

Additional Information

Topic

Tags

  • International Development
  • Land Use

Program

Visiting Scholar May Sabe Phyu Wins Franco-German Prize for Human Rights

A headshot of May Sabe Phyu
March 15, 2022

May Sabe Phyu has been the director of the Gender Equality Network in Myanmar since 2011. The network unites 120 civil-society organisations in the fight to prevent violence against women. May Sabe Phyu works to promote confidence-building across different ethnic groups and to improve the circumstances of ethnic minorities in the country, particularly the Kachin. Since the military coup on 1 February 2021, she has spoken out about the specific issues faced by women and has fought for equitable access to justice.

Additional Information

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