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SASE-Kyoto-2018-Program.Pdf Table of Contents At-A-Glance Calendar …………………………………………………………………………….. 2 Presidential Welcome ……………………………………………………….…………………… 5 About This Program…………………………………………...……...……………………….….. 6 This Year’s Conference Theme……………………….……………………………………….. 7 Next Year’s Conference Theme…………………………………………………………..…… 8 Call for 2019 Mini-Conference Themes…………………………………………………… 9 Special Events……………………………………………………………………………………… 10 General Information for Participants…………………………………………………….. 11 Maps…………….……………………………………………………………………………………… 12 SASE Early Career Workshop Awards…………………………………………………… 15 EHESS/ Fondation France-Japon Young Researcher Travel Prizes………….. 17 EHESS/ Fondation France-Japon Best Paper Award………………………………. 18 SER Best Paper Prize……………………………………………………………………………. 19 SASE 2018 Elections…………………………………………………………………………….. 20 List of Sessions and Rooms by Network and Mini-Conference……………..…. 21 Main Schedule……………………………………………………………………………………... 36 Participant Index……..…………………………………………………………………………....89 SASE 2018: Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice 1 Doshisha University SASE 30th Annual Conference Doshisha University (Kyoto, Japan): 23-25 June 2018 Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice Friday, June 22 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm: Registration (Imadegawa Campus: Ryoshinkan Building, Room RY103) Saturday, June 23 8:00 am - 5:30 pm: Registration (Imadegawa Campus: Ryoshinkan Building, Lobby) Morning Afternoon 9:00-10:30: Sessions 2:30-4:00: Sessions 10:30-10:45: Break 4:00-4:15: Break 10:45-12:15: Sessions 4:15-5:45: Sessions 6:00-7:00: 1:15-2:15: Featured Speaker Featured Speaker Christine Parker Ching Kwan Lee University of Melbourne, Australia University of California - Los Angeles, USA The Challenge of Eco-Social Regulation The Specter of Global China in a Consumptogenic World Hardy Hall (Basement floor of Kambaikan Building, Hardy Hall Muromachi Campus) (Basement floor of Kambaikan Building, Muromachi Campus) 7:15-9:00 Welcome Reception Keishikan Building (1st Floor and Basement Floor) SASE 2018: Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice 2 Doshisha University Sunday, June 24 8:00 am - 5:30 pm: Registration (Imadegawa Campus: Ryoshinkan Building, Lobby) Morning Afternoon 9:00-10:30: Sessions 2:30-4:00: Sessions 10:30-10:45: Break 4:00-4:15: Break 10:45-12:15: Sessions 4:15-5:45: Sessions 6:00-7:00: 1:15-2:15: Presidential Address Featured Speaker Gary Herrigel University of Chicago Emiko Ochiai Kyoto University, Japan Hardy Hall (Basement floor of Kambaikan Building, Toward a Theory of Human Muromachi Campus) Reproduction in Mature Societies: Asian, European and American Paths 7:00-7:30: Hardy Hall (Basement floor of Kambaikan Building Muromachi Campus) Awards Ceremony Hardy Hall (Basement floor of Kambaikan Building, Muromachi Campus) 8:00-10:30 Gala Reception Kyoto Hotel Okura Gyoun Banquet Hall, 4th floor (537-4 Ichinofunairicho, Nakagyo Ward) SASE 2018: Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice 3 Doshisha University Monday, June 25 9:00-10:30: Sessions 10:30-10:45: Break 10:45-12:15: Sessions 12:15-1:15: Featured Speaker Wang Hui Tsinghua University, China The Crisis of Equality-in-Difference and the Decline of Representation Hardy Hall (Basement floor of Kambaikan Building, Muromachi Campus) SASE 2018: Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice 4 Doshisha University A Word from SASE President Gary Herrigel SASE is delighted and honored to be able to host its Annual Meeting in Kyoto this year. Asia has long been a focus of attention for many members of the Association and increasing numbers of our members come from many fine Universities in the region. Moreover, it is an auspicious historical moment in the global political economy due in no small part to the way in which the spectacular rise of the larger Asia region has transformed trade and power relations around the world. By having our annual meeting in Asia for the first time, SASE is both acknowledging and expressing these shifts in emphasis and attention. We are increasingly a global organization not only in word, but also in deed. May the future continue to cultivate the open cosmopolitan spirit within our organization that the current inaugural meeting in Asia represents. The SASE leadership would like to thank the many people who have made this first meeting in Asia possible. Our hosts at Doshisha University have been incredibly efficient and gracious in extending themselves and their venue for the conference. We thank in particular Masayo Fujimoto, Sayaka Sakoda, Madoka Watanabe, and Tadashi Yagi for an inordinate amount of hard work and very good will in making things happen. We are also grateful to the Kyoto Convention Bureau, ANA Airlines, and the Fondation France-Japon de L’EHESS, as well as to Doshisha University itself, for underwriting support. Finally, thanks need to be extended to the SASE staff, Martha Zuber, Pat Zraidi, and Jacob Bromberg, for staying on top of the infinite number of details and unbounded tasks associated with an international meeting of this scale and scope. Bravo to all! The President would like to thank the members of the Program Committee, Mary Gallagher and Tobias Schulze-Cleven, for their broad knowledge and hard work identifying great speakers and panels for the conference. But most importantly, we all need to thank the Program Director, Sébastien Lechevalier, whose extensive knowledge of the academic and cultural landscape in Japan helped in uncountable ways to make this event in Kyoto possible. May you all have a wonderful and productive event in Kyoto! SASE 2018: Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice 5 Doshisha University About This Program This conference schedule has been loosely divided into two event types: speakers and sessions. In an attempt to limit scheduling conflicts, sessions do not overlap with featured speakers. Plenary and semi-plenary featured speakers are all listed in the at-a-glance calendar. There are ten time slots for sessions over the course of the conference, as indicated on the at-a- glance calendar. Since there are multiple sessions scheduled into each time slot, each session has been identified with a letter and a number. The letter corresponds to the network organizing the session and is paired with a number to create a unique identifier to help you locate the session in the program. Featured Panels are listed as FP, Mini-Conference Themes as TH, and Special Events as SP. To find out where and when a given participant is presenting, you can look at the participant list at the back of this program. Next to his or her name, you will find the panels in which he or she is presenting (e.g., Jane Doe, A-8). Once you have this information, you can look for the A-8 panel in the main schedule in order to find the session time and location. Alternatively, you can visit https://sase.confex.com/sase/2018/meetingapp.cgi/Home or download the SASE 2018 mobile app through Google Play or the Apple Store. The main schedule provides a detailed list of sessions (titles, locations, participants, etc.) in chronological order. To help you navigate it more quickly, a list of sessions organized by network appears just before it in this program. The PDF version of this program is available on the SASE website www.sase.org *Please note: You must bring your own laptop if you plan on using a PowerPoint presentation (Macintosh users should also bring a standard VGA convertor). SASE 2018: Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy, and Justice 6 Doshisha University SASE 2018 Annual Conference Theme Global Reordering: Prospects for Equality, Democracy and Justice Doshisha University – Kyoto, Japan For decades, scholars have been charting the multiple effects of “globalization” on political, economic and social practices in the developed and developing world. Broadly, globalization has been understood to involve open trade and the growth of transnational flows, linkages and interdependencies at all levels involving knowledge, labor, business, finance, technology, regulation and norms, such as human rights. After World War II, multiple regimes and institutions traversing and interlinking domestic and transnational positions emerged and were then continuously modified to foster and govern the globalization process. For decades, the diffusion of the ideology and practice architectures of “globalization” was made possible by a strong developed capitalist alliance of mostly western powers, headed by the United States. The results of this historical project have been highly uneven: some regions of the global south (especially Asia), experienced tremendous growth and living standard improvement, while others (eg in Africa) languished; the metropolitan north experienced an initial multiple decade period of prosperity followed by ever more obvious stagnation and socio-economic distress. After more than a half century of increasing openness, nearly all regions in the north and south are experiencing alarming and seemingly ever worsening inequality and often painfully disruptive adjustment in work, civic and private lives. In the wake of these developments, the forces unleashed by the globalization project now seem to be pushing toward its recalibration. Economic success in Asia, especially in China, has shifted global power relations and alliances, challenging the premier position of the US. Recently, populist and authoritarian movements in many global regions have channeled reactions to globalization’s
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