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Asia Leadership Fellow Program - 2003 Fellows
1.Palagummi SAINATH (India)
Free-lance
Journalist
Research Interest: Mass Media versus Mass Reality
Mr. Sainath, one of India's leading journalists based in Mumbai, is committed
to shedding light on marginalized people living in rural areas, and to
bettering their condition through his reportage. After receiving a M.A.
in history from Jawaharlal Nehru University, he launched his career as
a journalist at the United News of India in 1980.
Later he joined the Blitz,
a major South Asian weekly in Mumbai, where he worked as deputy chief editor
for ten years until winning a Times of India fellowship in 1993 and setting
out on two-year-long travels to the ten poorest districts in India. His
reports during this period were published as the award-winning book Everybody
Loves a Good Drought: Stories from India's Poorest Districts (Penguin,
1997).
In the last decade, he has spent on average three-fourths of the
year with village people, sending articles to various newspapers. The photographs
he has taken in rural India have resulted in several highly acclaimed photo
exhibitions. He has received numerous awards both within and outside India,
including the Amnesty International Global Award for Human Rights Journalism
in its inaugural year (2000).
2.HAM Samnang (Cambodia)
Assistant
Director/Senior Research Fellow, Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and
Peace (CICP))
Research Interest: Media and Democratization in Cambodia
Mr. Ham is one of the few Cambodian journalists and now researchers who
can write in a critical way. He is currently the Assistant Director of
the Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace (CICP), an independent,
neutral, and non-partisan research institute based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
Besides conducting research, he facilitates conferences, seminars, and
workshops within and outside the country, and he himself has been invited
to numerous conferences abroad.
Before joining the CICP in 2002, he was
an associate editor of the Cambodia Daily (the only English-language daily
in Cambodia) and has been active in writing about the mass media in Cambodia
and about Cambodia's democratization. His responsibilities at the Cambodia
Daily included reporting and helping expatriates in their Khmer communication
in the Khmer cultural/historical context.
3.YANG Guang (China)
Professor
and Director-General, Institute of West-Asian and African Studies, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences
Research Interest: China's Energy Security--with a Specific Focus on Oil
Supply
Since 1978, Mr. Yang has been a researcher/professor at the Institute of
West-Asian and African Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, where
he currently serves as the Director-General; he is one of China's leading
scholars in Middle Eastern Studies. He has published numerous articles
and monographs on development, economics, and energy issues in Middle Eastern
countries.
His recent publications include "Development Report for
the Middle East and Africa" (Social Scientific Documentation Publishing
House, 1997-2003) and "The Social Security Systems of the West-Asian
and African Countries" (The Publishing House of Reform, 2000).
He
also serves as executive president of two national associations, namely
the Chinese Association for Middle East Studies and the Chinese Society
for Asian and African Studies, both of which have hundreds of members.
He received a master's degree in law from the Graduate School of the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences in 1999. Having studied in Paris and Wisconsin,
USA, in the 1980s, he has a good command of both English and French.
4.CHUNG Chin-Sung (Korea)
Professor,
Department of Sociology, Seoul National University
Research Interest: Human Rights in Asia; Identity and Social Movements
of Koreans in Japan
Ms. Chung is a well-known sociologist in Korea whose publications are also
esteemed internationally. Having received her Ph.D. in sociology from the
University of Chicago in 1984, she has taught sociology at several universities.
She has also dedicated herself to gender and human rights issues on both
the governmental and non-governmental level. She has served as a member
of several Advisory Committees for women's issues for the Korean national
government, and also has been active in NGOs in such areas as the "comfort
women," those women who were drafted for military sexual slavery by
Japan during the World War II. Wartime violence against civilians is one
of her main interests, and she has published numerous books and papers
on this matter both in Korean and English.
Currently she is serving as
an Alternate Member of the United Nations Sub-Commission on the Promotion
and Protection of Human Rights.
5.Hamid BASYAIB (Indonesia)
Writer/Activist,
AKSARA Foundation
Research Interest: The Views of Indonesian's Islamic Fundamentalisms on
Democracy
Mr. Hamid is one of the leading Muslim intellectuals who speak, with a
great deal of courage and determination, for a radical reexamination of
Islamic precepts, including the issues of Islamic law, an Islamic state
and personal freedom.
Currently, he is a writer and researcher for the
Aksara Foundation, a non-profit organization contributing to the peaceful
development of an intelligent and interactive civil society in Indonesia.
Before joining the Aksara Foundation, he had been editor-in-chief of several
magazines and daily newspapers since 1983.
Not only is he a contributor
to newspapers and magazines, but also he is often cited by the media for
his insights into Indonesian politics. He has published several books on
world and domestic politics. He conducted his graduate study at the Faculty
of Political Science, University of Gadjah Mada.
6.Supara JANCHITFAH (Thailand)
Reporter/Writer
for the Bangkok Post
Research Interest: In Search of a 'Minority Report'
As an investigative reporter/writer for the "Perspective" section
of the Bangkok Post, Ms. Supara conducts in-depth research and interviews,
with special emphasis on environmental and social issues. She holds a master's
degree in Rural Development Management from the University of the Philippines,
and before joining the Bangkok Post in 1993, she had been involved with
NGOs in the fields of community development, agricultural and rural management,
and women's development.
She has spent years working in the field to gain
a deeper understanding of conflicts caused by governmental development
and the people's perspective on its effects. Among numerous honors, she
recently received the 2001 Human Rights Press Award from Amnesty International
Thailand for her outstanding and consistent reporting on human rights issues,
including the rights of children, tribal people, refugees and women. She
also won the Reuters Fellowship, which enabled her to conduct research
at the University of Oxford in 1999-2000.
7.NAKANO Yoshiko (Japan)
Honorary
Lecturer, Department of Japanese Studies, University of Hong Kong
Research Interest: The Transnational Flow of Japanese Products: A Hong
Kong Perspective
Ms. Nakano is currently a research assistant professor in the Department
of Japanese Studies of the University of Hong Kong, where she has initiated
a number of innovative teaching programs in business, communication and
media studies.
She received her Ph.D. in sociolinguistics from Georgetown
University, and has worked as a researcher for documentary programs produced
by NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation).
Her firsthand experience as a
researcher for award-winning media programs is well-reflected in her later
work: a co-edited volume Reporting Hong Kong: Foreign Media and the Handover
(Curzon, 1999) provides an in-depth look at how the international media
reported this Asian milestone, and her recent articles consider Japanese
pop culture on Chinese campuses. She was an Abe Fellow in 2000-2001, a
prestigious fellowship awarded to academics and professionals who are committed
to research on pressing global issues.
8.Marian Pastor ROCES (Philippines)
Critic
and Independent Curator; President, Tao, Inc.)
Research Interest: A Critique of "Heritage": The Aestheticized
Construction of the Past in Service of Current Power Arrangements
Ms. Roces is an independent curator and critic who works, lectures and
writes internationally. Her theoretical work is grounded in the politics
of cultural representation, mainly in museums, but also in relation to
larger agendas dealing with indigenous cultures, the traumas of modernization,
and power as it operates in urbanization.
She is also the president of
Tao, Inc., a corporation specializing in the development of museum and
exhibition projects, and cultural planning and management, focused by a
social justice agenda.
Her recent curatorial work includes "Sheer
Realities: Body, Power and Clothing in 19th Century Philippines" (Asia
Society, New York City, 2000); "Laon-Laan," which deals with
the politics, science, and culture of rice in the Philippines (National
Museum, 2003); and "Science Fictions," a major international
exhibition of contemporary artists who are critiquing the orders of knowledge
promoted by specific sciences (Earl Lu Gallery, Asian Civilizations Museum,
Singapore Art Museum, and the Esplanade, Singapore, 2003).