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Southeast Asia in Transition: Imagining Environmental Futures in SEA: Mekong 2030 Southeast Asia in Transition: Imagining Environmental Futures in SEA: Mekong 2030
Virtual Virtual
Contact
Jaymen Laupola

Southeast Asia in Transition: 2022 Webinar Series
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. HST

Live online via zoom

Click here to register

IMAGINING ENVIRONMENTAL FUTURES IN SEA: MEKONG 2030
featuring

Speakers:
Kulikar Sotho, Cambodia, Director, "Soul River"
Anysay Keola, Laos, Director, "The Che Brother"
Alex Curran-Cardarelli, Producer, MEKONG 2030
Sean Chadwell, Associate Producer, MEKONG 2030, and executive director of the Luang Prabang Film Festival

Moderator:
Dr. Courtney Work, Department of Ethnology, National Chengchi University, Taiwan

In recent decades, people living in Southeast Asia have witnessed major shifts from predominantly subsistence agriculture to industrializing economies, with attendant changes in migration, crop production systems, and major infrastructure (roads, dams, industrial estates). This webinar will explore how communities in the region are experiencing the economic, social, and cultural dislocations of these transformations. We will focus on forests, rivers, documentarians and writers, and Imaging Environmental Futures.

Southeast Asia in Transition: 2022 Webinar Series
Tuesday, May 24, 2022
2:00 p.m. - 3:30 p.m. HST

Live online via zoom

Click here to register

IMAGINING ENVIRONMENTAL FUTURES IN SEA: MEKONG 2030
featuring

Speakers:
Kulikar Sotho, Cambodia, Director, "Soul River"
Anysay Keola, Laos, Director, "The Che Brother"
Alex Curran-Cardarelli, Producer, MEKONG 2030
Sean Chadwell, Associate Producer, MEKONG 2030, and executive director of the Luang Prabang Film Festival

Moderator:
Dr. Courtney Work, Department of Ethnology, National Chengchi University, Taiwan

In recent decades, people living in Southeast Asia have witnessed major shifts from predominantly subsistence agriculture to industrializing economies, with attendant changes in migration, crop production systems, and major infrastructure (roads, dams, industrial estates). This webinar will explore how communities in the region are experiencing the economic, social, and cultural dislocations of these transformations. We will focus on forests, rivers, documentarians and writers, and Imaging Environmental Futures.