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Conference Program for ISTR Asia Pacific 2019 Conference Co‐hosted by the School of Global Studies, Thammasat University and Center for Civil Society and Philanthropy, National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA) Bangkok, Thailand

Monday, July 15, 2019

8.00 – 9.00 Registration 9.00 – 9.20 Opening 9.20 – 10.50 Parallel Session A

Paper Session 1 – Civil Society and Democratization Moderator: Oonagh Breen, UCD Sutherland School of Law, Ireland Danpaul Santos, University of Bridging Government and Civil Society: The Concerned the Philippines, Philippines Citizens of ABRA for Good Marion Totter, Vienna Civil Society‐ A Social System as an Agent for University of Economics and Democracy Business, Austria Ruth Simsa, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria Dana Doan, Indiana University, Partners, Leaders, or Beneficiaries? Understanding USA Constituent Engagement as it Relates to Non‐profit Governance and Accountability

Paper Session 2 – Regulatory Regimes and Civil Society Moderator: Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, USA Justin Lee, National University Centralisation and its Discontents: Coordinating or of Singapore, Singapore Controlling Voluntary Sector Social Service Providers in Singapore? Fengshi Wu, University of Do NGO Restrictions Work? State and Environmental Melbourne, Australia Civil Society in China and Russia Ellie Martus, The University of Warwick, United Kingdom Qihai CAI, Chinese University of Dredge or Facilitate? Understanding the Impact of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Environmental NGO on Environmental Petition Chengyang He, Hong Kong

1 Paper Session 3 ‐ Social Enterprise Moderator: Helen Liu, National Taiwan University, Taiwan Fiona Martin, University of New Social Enterprises in Australia: What are the legal and South Wales, Australia practical challenges to their operation? Yuichi Goto, Onomichi City Managing the Tension Between Economic Purpose and University, Japan Social Purpose Keiko Yokoyama, Kansai University, Japan Erica Kim Man Lee, Hong Kong Marketing Capabilities and Firm Performance: The Baptist University, Hong Kong Moderating Role of Market Turbulence Ho Lee, HKCT Institute of Higher Education, Hong Kong Dhino Geges, Ritsumeikan Asia Harmonization Efforts in Promoting Community Pacific University, Japan Resilience through Social Enterprises: Experiences from Small Island Communities in the Philippines

Paper Session 4 ‐ Emerging Areas of Theory and Practice Moderator: Fengshi Wu, University of Melbourne, Australia Yogesh Mishra, IIT Delhi, India Contending Representative Claims and Leadership Role Nandini Deo, India in CSOs in Jharkhand, India Margit van Wessel, Wageningen University, Netherlands Antonius Sumarwan, Third Sector Accountability: Re‐examining the Queensland University of 'Promises' of Accountability Through a Structuration Technology, Australia Theory Lens Belinda Luke, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Craig Furneaux, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Taira Suzuki, TEDIC / Miyagi Unique Features of Volunteer Management at Child University Japan NPOs: Focusing on Volunteers' Sense of Personal Involvement

Paper Session 5 ‐ Global Challenges to Third Sector Sustainability Moderator: Carolyn Cordery, Aston Business School, United Kingdom Koichi Nakao, University of The Activities and Financial Sustainability of the Hyogo, Japan Japanese Nonprofit Organizations in Underpopulated Areas Ruth Phillips, The University of Exploration of the Impact of Microfinance on Returned Sydney, Australia Irregular Migrants from Cambodia Deanna Davy, United Nations, Thailand

2 Geri Mason, Seattle Pacific University, USA Takako Nakajima, Osaka How Succession Can Be Successful? : Latest Literature University of Commerce, Japan Review Toward Sustainable Nonprofit Organizations

10.50 – 11.05 Coffee Break 11.05 – 12.35 Parallel Session B

Panel 1 – China's New Framework for Regulating and Controlling Overseas NGOs and Foundations: Perspectives from China, Europe and North America on Two Years of Experience under the Overseas NGO Law Moderator: Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin‐Madison  Political, Legal and Administrative Intention: How the Chinese Overseas NGO Law Works, Xijin Jia, , China  Restraining, Replacing, Reorienting: An institutionalist Perspective on China’s Changing Approach of Overseas NGOs, Bertram Lang, Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany  Two Years of the New Chinese Framework for Overseas NGOs and Foundations: A View from North America, Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, USA

Paper Session 6 – Emerging Theory and Practice Moderator: Belinda Luke, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Fengshi Wu, University of Rethinking Civil Society's Normative Power Melbourne , Australia Dipendra K.C., Thammasat Spatial Heterogeneity in the Founding Patterns of University, Thailand NGOs Serdar S. Durmusoglu, Thailand Masa Deguchi, MINPAKU, Japan Shifting Sands of Dormant Accounts for Public Interest Activities in Japan: Global Trend and Japanese Culture

Paper Session 7 ‐ Civil Society Governance in the New Millenia Moderator: Barbara Ibrahim, in Cairo, Egypt Susan Appe, University at Albany Enhancing Participation in Global Governance: (SUNY), USA Transnational Governance, FATF and Civil Society Ma. Celia Guzon, University of the The Shared Responsibility of Government and Civil Philippines, Philippines Society Organizations in Watershed Protection: A Cases of Co‐Management in the Philippines Aya Okada, Tohoku University, Communicating to Bring Back the Donors: Case of a Japan Nonprofit in Japan Yu Ishida, Miyagi University, Japan Masahiro Yamamoto, Kanazawa University, Japan 3 Paper Session 8 ‐ Partnerships and Collaborations Moderator: Ruth Phillips, The , Australia Jessica Gillies, The University of Exploring Relationships Between Government and Sydney, Australia Non‐Government Support Service Delivery in the Post‐Trafficking Context in Thailand Yuko Nishide, Tohoku University, Cross‐sector Partnership For Community Japan Development After Disaster: From Social Junro Nishide, Meiji University, Entrepreneur and Social Capital Perspectives Japan Shun Nakazawa, Miyagi University, Outcomes and Challenges of Personnel Support Japan in Disaster‐Affected Areas: The Case Studies Hideyuki Sasaki, Miyagi University, of Taiwan and Japan Japan Yuya Yoshida, Japan Yu Takahashi, Japan

12.35 ‐ 13.30 Lunch 13.30 – 14.45 Opening Keynote: Anthony J. Spires, Senior Lecturer and Deputy Director of the Centre for Contemporary Chinese Studies at The University of Melbourne. “Civil Society Regulation and Organizational Culture: Reflections on Theory and Practice in China.” 14.45 – 15.00 Three‐minute Thesis Competition Award 15.00 – 16.30 Parallel Session C

Panel 2 ‐ Migrant Workers in Taiwan: and Civil Society Moderator: Yu‐Yuan Kuan, National Chung‐Cheng University, Taiwan  Board Games and Migrant Workers: A Case Study of the 1095 Culture, Annie Kuan, 1095 Culture Studio, Taiwan; Yu‐Yuan Kuan, National Chung‐Cheng University, Taiwan  Reconfiguring Overseas Filipino Community in Taiwan: Migrant Workers’ Beauty Pageants in the Era of Social Media, Yi‐Yu Lai, Taiwan  Taiwanese In‐Job Training Policy for Enhancing the Migrant Care Workers' Capacity‐ An Analysis Focusing on the Program of ‘Empowering Migrant Care Workers’ Enforced by Taichung City Government, Annie Kuan, 1095 Culture Studio, Taiwan; Chen‐Fen Chen, Taiwan

Paper Session 9 ‐ Civil Society and Democratization Moderator: Daniel Barragán, Universidad de los Hemisferios, Ecuador Shih‐Jung Hsu, National Chengchi Land Use Planning, Human Right Deprivation, and University, Taiwan Third Sector in Taiwan Grace Li Min Liao, China Land‐Based Finance, Human Right Deprivation, and University of Technology, Taiwan Third Sector in Taiwan Chang‐kai Wang, National The Growing Trend of Faked NPOs Related to ChengChi University, Taiwan Taiwan's Urban Renewal 4

Paper Session 10 ‐ Social Enterprise Moderator: Mokbul Ahmad, Asia Institute of Technology, Thailand Albert Teo, Tung Wah College, Assessing the Social Impact of a Singaporean Social Hong Kong Enterprise Through the Lenses of Theory of Change and Social Return on Investment Ling Han, NUS Businesss School, The Encroachment of Business? A Comparative Study of Singapore the B Corp Movement in Asia Chengpang Lee, National University of Singapore, Singapore Varaporn Pothipola, The Use of Management Control Systems in Social Chulalongkorn University, Enterprises and for Social Enterprise Scale Up Thailand LuYi Hsieh, Chang Jung Christian Tribes, Social Enterprise and Social Innovation: Back to University, Taiwan the Future

Paper Session 11 – Philanthropy Moderator: Theo Schuyt, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Netherlands Alexandra Williamson, Giving Journeys Queensland University of Technology, Australia Belinda Luke, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Hyunrang Han, Arizona State Philanthropic Foundation Funding for Women: A Pilot University, USA Study in the Western Region of the U.S. Lili Wang, , USA Elaine Xu, Murdoch University, Solving Water Inaccessibility through Individual Australia Purchases: An Analysis of Cause‐Related Marketing Campaigns between 2005 and 2018

16.30 – 16.45 Coffee Break 16.45 – 18.15 Parallel Session D

Panel 3 ‐ Highlights about Social Enterprise in a few Asian countries Moderator: Eric Bidet, Le Mans University, France  A General Overview about Social Enterprise in Asia, Eric Bidet, Le Mans University, France; Jacques Defourny, University of Liege, Belgium  A Development Model and Typology of Social Enterprise in Thailand, Prapin Nuchpiam, National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA), Thailand

5  Dependent Interdependence: Government/Non‐profit Relationship in Human Services in China, Yuanfeng Zhang, Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China  Social Enterprises and Agricultural Value Chains in Southeast Asia, Lisa Dacanay, Institute for Social Entrepreneurship in Asia, Philippines

Paper Session 12 – Philanthropy Moderator: Nana Afadzinu, West Africa Civil Society Institute, Ghana

Salma Akhter, University of Civil Societies in Listening to Unheard Voices: BMP and Dhaka, Bangladesh Empowerment of Women Through Social Capital in Bangladesh Shaza Aldairany, Universiti Philanthropy Beyond Conflict: Syrian Diaspora in Teknologi, Malaysia Malaysia Rosmini Omar, Universiti Teknologi, Malaysia

Min Young Lee, The Beautiful Youth Participation on Philanthropy in Korea: From the Foundation, South Korea Youth Allocation Committee of the Beautiful Foundation Naoto Yamauchi, Osaka The Effects of Trust and Network on Volunteering in University, Japan East Asia: A Comparative Analysis Yaxi Jiang, Osaka University, Japan Ruixuan Wang, Osaka University, Japan

Paper Session 13 ‐ Corporate Social Responsibility Moderator: Bhekinkoso Moyo, University of Witswatersrand, South Africa Mokbul Ahmad, Asia Institute of Corporate Social Responsibilities in Bank: An Analysis Technology, Thailand on Commercial Banks in Bangladesh Ching‐Hsun Chang, National How to Enhance Green Co‐innovation Performance? Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan Yu‐Shan Chen, China Jo‐Eun Seok, Seoul National State‐owned Enterprise as a Policy Tool for CSR and University, South Korea Social Value?: From Implications of CSR and Social Value of State‐owned Enterprises in South Korea Liang Shang, City University of Work‐integration Social Enterprises as a New Hong Kong, Hong Kong Alternative to Improve the Well‐being of Disabled Yanto Chandra, The Hong Kong Employees Polytechnic University, Hong Kong

Paper Session 14 – Social Enterprise Moderator: Fiona Martin, University of New South Wales, Australia 6 Rashmi Urs, University of Social Enterprises and Sustainable Rural Healthcare: a Mysore, India Study in India

Maria Nindita Radyati, Trisakti Uni Papua‐Football for Peace: Challenges and Choices University, Indonesia to achieve Sustainability Suharti Sadja, Trisakti University, Indonesia Harry Wijaya, Trisakti University, Indonesia So Il Kwon, , Understanding Asia's Social Enterprise ‐ Current Status South Korea and Future Agenda in Korea and Bangladesh Razia Sultana, Ewha Womans University, South Korea Sangmi Cho, Ewha Womans University, South Korea Yu Yuan Kuan, National Chung‐ Social Innovation and Social Enterprise: What Can the Cheng University, Taiwan Taiwanese Cases Tell Us?

Paper Session 15 – Partnerships and Collaboration Moderator: Masayuki Deguchi, MINPAKU, Japan Shun Nakazawa, Hirosaki A Historical Review of the Antecedents of Functional University, Japan Differentiation among Non‐Profit Intermediate Support Yuya Yoshida, Japan Organizations in the Context of the Great East Japan Hideyuki Sasaki, Miyagi Earthquake University, Japan Yu Takahashi, Japan Yuanfeng Zhang, Zhongnan Killing Three Birds with One Stone: Does the POS University of Economics and Law, Promote China's toward China NPM/NPG Paradigm? Lijiang Zhao, Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, China Farhat Naz, Wageningen Navigating the Diversities: Complementarity in Civil University, Netherlands Society Organizations Collaboration in Disaster Risk Reduction in Indian Context Hiroaki Yabe, NPO SOKOAGE, Relationship Between the Subjective Sense of Japan Happiness of Disaster Recovery Workers and Their Workplace Environment: Targeting NPO Employees

19.15 – 20.30 Welcome Reception & Dinner

7 Tuesday, July 16, 2019

8.00 – 9.00 Registration 9.00 – 9.30 Professor Hsin‐Huang Michael Hsiao, Reflecting on My Research Journey of Social Movements and Civil Society in Taiwan and Beyond. Professor Hsiao is the founding president of the Taiwan Association for Third Sector Research (TATSR) and Senior Advisor to the President. 9.30 – 11.00 Board Panel: Regulator Impositions on the Third Sector: International Perspectives Chair, Ruth Phillips, ISTR President, Australia NGO Regulatory Backlash? A Cross‐National Examination of State Motives for NGO Regulation Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University, Canada Joannie Tremblay‐Boire, Georgia State University, USA

What Can We Expect of Charity Regulators? Charity Scandals, Declining Public Trust and Confidence … and Regulator Accountability Carolyn Cordery, Aston Business School, United Kingdom

Riding the Regulatory Wave: Reflections on Recent Explorations of the Statutory and Non‐Statutory Non‐Profit Regulatory Cycles in 16 Jurisdictions Oonagh B. Breen, UCD Sutherland School of Law, Ireland

The Shifts in the Regulatory Regime of State and Civil Society Organizations Partnerships in Brazil Mario Aquino Alves, Fundação Getulio Vargas, Brazil Natasha Caccia Schmitt Salinas, Fundação Getulio Vargas, Brazil

State Control on INGO in China Kin‐man CHAN, Hong Kong

10.30 – 10.45 Coffee Break 10.45 – 12.15 Parallel Session E

Panel 4 – Practitioner Panel Moderator: Elizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia University, Canada Benjamas Siripatra, Local Waste Management for Community Funeral Fund Development Foundation, Thailand Kai‐li Lee, Garden of Hope From Service to Advocacy: Integrated Approach on Foundation, Taiwan the Promotion of Migrant Domestic Workers Right Veena KN, Dayananda Sagar Multi‐pronged Interventions to Empower Street Business Academy, India Vendors in Bengaluru V J. Byra Reddy, University of Petroleum and Energy Studies, India Shashidar Channappa, Oxford college of Arts, India

8 Paper Session 16‐ Regulatory Regimes and Civil Society Moderator: Mario Aquino Alves, Fundação Getulio Vargas, Brazil Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin‐ State‐Driven Nonprofit Self‐Regulation: The Madison Emergence of Self‐Regulatory Mandates in China Antonius Sumarwan, Queensland Examining Credit Union Accountability To University of Technology, Australia Government in a Lightly‐regulated Context Belinda Luke, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Craig Furneaux, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Anita Venanzi, The Chinese INGOs Unwelcomed: Cutting Off the International University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Civil Society Linkage by Immigration Control Vincent Chong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Paper Session 17 ‐ Social Enterprise Moderator: Maria Nindita Radyati, Trisakti University, Indonesia Mohammad Reza Alipour, A Cursory Review of Social Enterprise Activities in Independent Researcher, Iran Iran's Third‐Sector Ecosystem‐ Changes and Challenges of Regulator Casper Claassen, of A Spatial Analysis of Social Enterprise Governance, Germany Agglomeration in South Korea: At the Interstice of Johanna Mair, Hertie School of Policy, Community, and Market Governance, Germany Junki Kim, Seoul National University, South Korea Dong‐Myeon Shin, South Korea Advocacy Coalitions and Regulatory Changes in the Sang Hun Lim, Kyung Hee University, Development of the Social Economy in South South Korea Korea

Paper Session 18 ‐ Global Challenges to Third Sector Sustainability Moderator: Yu‐Yuan Kuan, National Chung‐Cheng University, Taiwan Tashkin Vasfi, Liverpool John The Role of Market Orientation on NPO's Social Moores University, United Kingdom Performance: An Investigation of British Non‐Profit Eleni Lioliou, United Kingdom Organisations Yangyong Zhang, Xiamen Survival in the Changing and Challenging Cultural, University, China Institutional, and Professional Contexts in China: Narratives of Social Workers at NPOs Dipendra K.C., Thammasat The Spatial Allocation of Foreign Aid in Nepal: A University, Thailand Comparative Study of Bilateral, Multilateral, INGO, and NGO Aid

9 Paper Session 19 – Sustainable Well‐being Moderator: Anna Domaradzka, University of Warsaw, Poland Yasuo Kawawaki, Kansai An Empirical Study on the Role of Residents: Social University of International Studies, Networks Acting to Resist Post‐Disaster Recovery Japan Disparities Masanari Sakurai, Ritsumeikan Are Disaster Volunteers Insufficient? ‐ An Analysis of University, Japan Flood Disaster Area Volunteer Acceptance in Japan Lesley Harris, University of Household Food Insecurity in Grandparent‐Headed Louisville, USA Households Who Have Been Impacted by HIV/AIDS in Nguyen Duy Thang, Hannah Vietnam: Exploring the Effectiveness of Empathy Nguyen, Gina Rosen, USA Clubs

12.15 ‐ 13.15 Lunch 13.15 – 15.00 Parallel Session F

Session 20: Panel 4 ‐ Panel of the Persons Affected by Leprosy: Roles of Civil Society to Establish Regulatory Regimes to Widely Recognize Leprosy As Human Rights Issues

Interpreters: Uday Thakar, India; Doddy Tumanduk, Indonesia

 Medical and Social Aspects of Leprosy, Arturo Cunanan, Jr., The Philippines  Roles of Civil Society to Establish Regulatory Regimes to Widely Recognize Leprosy As Human Rights Issue, Takahiro Nanri, Atomi University, Japan  Strengthening Participation of People Affected by Leprosy in Leprosy Services (SPP)/The CLAP (Coalition of Leprosy Advocate in the Philippines) Experience, Jennifer Quimno, The Philippines  The Development of the Concept of Active Participation from the Community and Government to Empowering Young People Affected by Leprosy. Program Study in Gowa District‐South Sulawesi Province, Indonesia, Paulus Manek, Indonesia  Community Led Advocacy Approach Vis a Vis Access to Welfare Services/Schemes – Experiences of Association of People Affected by Leprosy (APAL) India, Vagavathali Narsappa, India

Paper Session 21 ‐ Regulatory Regimes and Civil Society

Moderator: Susan Appe, University at Albany (SUNY), USA Ssu Ming Chang, National Taipei Good Governance? The Passage of the Foundations University, Taiwan Act: Challenges for the Foundations and nonprofit organizations in Taiwan Parbatkumar Rai, Tribhuvan Federal Democracy: Problem and Prospects in University, Nepal Perspective of Nepal Noe John Joseph Sacramento, Is Hope Still With Our Children? The NGOs in University of the Philippines Cebu, Confronting a Younger Criminally Responsible The Philippines Population in the Philippines Momoyo Mitsuno, Oita Prefectural Filipino Residents' Experience of Supporting Labor College of Arts and Culture, Japan Migrants to Japan in Times of Change 10 Paper Session 22: Social Enterprise Moderator: Casper Claassen, Hertie School of Governance, Germany Naoki Suzuki, Seisen University, What Makes the Victims of the Fukishima Daiichi Japan Nuclear Disaster Hold Their Tongues Liang Shang, City University of Social Enterprises in Promoting Health and Well‐being: Hong Kong, Hong Kong An Exploratory Study Yanto Chandra, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong Justine Ravi Orduna, Nankai Social Enterprises in the Philippines: Towards University/University of the Institutionalization and Development Philippines, The Philippines Kristina C. Mina, Glenda T. Reyes, Don S. Francisco, Kim Joseph M. Medina Jenny Hao Shi, Zhejiang Social Innovators: A New promoter in Social University, China Governance Qing MIAO, China

Paper Session 23 – Developing Southern Theory for Third Sector Studies Moderator: Dipendra K.C., Thammasat University, Thailand Nur Azam Perai, University of Mapping the Malaysian Third Sector: Uncovering its Stirling, United Kingdom Shape, Size and Scope Anita Venanzi, The Chinese Mind the Gap. Unexplored Perspectives of Corporate University of Hong Kong, Hong Interference in the Volunteering Sector Kong Rita Manchanda, Wageningen State and Civil Society Relations in India: Deft Shove University, India and Push Maneuvers Enable Reimagining of What CSOs can be

Paper session 24 Sustainable Development Goals Moderator: Salma Akhter, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh Maria Faina Diola, University of Examining Coproduction in a Sustainable the Philippines, The Philippines Development Project: Do Community Action Groups Charlie Rivas, University of the Matter? Philippines, The Philippines Dilli Prasai, Tribhuvan University, Gender Equality and Women Empowerment Through Nepal Water‐Economy Vien Chu, University of Newcastle, Success in Micro‐enterprise Development: Australia Sustainable Models Versus Sustainable Outcomes Belinda Luke, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Parameshwari Prakash, PES Sustainable Resource Management: A Study of College of Science, Arts and Agricultural and Food Cooperatives in Asia Pacific Commerce, India Region

11 15.00 – 15.15 Coffee Break 15.15 – 16.45 Parallel Session G

Paper Session 25 – Sustainable Well‐being Moderator: Justin Lee, National University of Singapore, Singapore V.J. Byra Reddy, University of Income Inequality Reduction: The Role of State and Petroleum and Energy Studies, Third Sector in India India Veena KN, Dayananda Sagar Business Academy, India Marzina Begum, University of The Role of Civil Society in Environmental Protection Rajshahi, Bangladesh in Bangladesh: A Case Study of Thermal Power Plants Oanh Cao, The University of Value Co‐creation in Public Service Delivery Through Northampton, Vietnam Multi‐Sector Community Engagement in Vietnam Richard Hazenberg, University of Northampton, United Kingdom Fred Seddon, United Kingdom Ngo Le Bao Tran, Thammasat Perceived Effectiveness of Alternative Teacher University, Thailand Preparation Programs: A Case Study of Teach for Dipendra K.C., Thammasat Thailand University, Thailand

Paper Session 26 – Social Enterprise Moderator: Alexandra Williamson, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Liang Shang, City University of Work‐integration Social Enterprise in the Disability Hong Kong, Hong Kong Sector: An Exploratory Study from Beneficiaries’ Yanto Chandra, The Hong Kong Perspectives Polytechnic University, Hong Kong Helen Liu, National Taiwan Ownership Forms and Public Policy in Taiwan University, Taiwan Mariko Kunimi, DEN‐En CHOFU Social Accounting for Non‐Profit Social Organizations University, Japan in Japan

Paper Session 27 ‐ Regulatory Regimes and Civil Society Moderator: Vien Chu, University of Newcastle, Australia Yongdong Shen, Zhejiang Party's Advance and Administration's Retreat: The University, China Politics of the Ruling Party, the Government and Jianxing Yu, Zhejiang University, Associations in China China Lalit Kumar, Sulabh International Re‐treading of NGOs Required to Manage Increasing Social Service Organisation, India Regulatory Pressure and Resource Insecurity Yasunobu Maeda, Shizuoka Investigation of Volunteer Recruitment for University, Japan Environmental Activities and Use of ICT for it Yasuhumi Mori, National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan Toshihisa Asano, Hiroshima University, Japan 12 Hiromasa Inuduka, Nonprofit Organization CoCoT, Japan Misha Sharma, Ashoka University, Estimating Philanthropic Capital in India India

16.45 – 18.00 Closing Plenary

The Third Sector Environment and Regulatory Change in the Asia Pacific Region Chair: Mark Sidel, University of Wisconsin‐Madison, USA  Nguyen Thi Bich Diep, Team Leader/Civil Society, British Council (Hanoi), Vietnam  Professor Jia Xijin, Institute of Philanthropy, School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University (Beijing), China  Professor Ingrid Srinath, Centre for Social Impact and Philanthropy, Ashoka University (Delhi), India  Professor Juree Vichit‐Vadakan, National Institute of Development Administration (NIDA, Bangkok), Thailand  David Moore, Vice President for Legal Affairs, International Center for Nonprofit Law, USA

18.00 – 18.30 Closing

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