Results 111 to 120 of about 1,113 (288)
The Temiars are a Mon-Khmer-speaking upland population of northern Peninsular Malaysia. In the 46 years that the author has been investigating their religious life, they have added several exogenous religious traditions to their original localistic and ...
Benjamin, Geoffrey
core
Macau as Method: Recombinant Urbanism in Post‐Socialist China
ABSTRACT In ‘Asia as Method’, Chen Kuan‐Hsing argues for the value of an indigenous inter‐Asian approach to analysing the effects of European imperialism on the countries and citizens of Asia. This article mobilises both Chen's inter‐Asian referencing strategy and the city‐state of Macau to explore Macau's role in China's engagements with global ...
Tim Simpson
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT This study investigates the role of rural aesthetics and cultural practises in promoting active ageing amongst older adults in Baan Pong Nuea Village, Northern Thailand. Addressing a critical gap in the literature, it examines how the residential environment influences elderly well‐being in a rural context.
Alisa Nutley
wiley +1 more source
Emphasizing interactions with ethnic minority hosts, this paper segments domestic tourists visiting Vietnam’s Central Highlands based on their travel motivation.
Kieu T. T. Nguyen +2 more
doaj +1 more source
‘We need solidarity’: Reflections on Building and Troubling Solidarity in Research Ethics in Myanmar
ABSTRACT Calls for solidarity by civil society are taking place alongside changes in how researchers navigate shifting research landscapes. Yet what solidarity‐based research entails in practice and how this might guide, critique, or challenge institutionalised ethics can be elusive.
Vanessa Lamb +3 more
wiley +1 more source
From Indianization, Sinicization, Islamization, to Westernization, the Southeast Asia, since ancient times, has always been a place exposed to external influences in terms of cultures, religions, and communities. Before the West arrived, these influences
Mario, Masaya.
core
ABSTRACT Contemporary rural change in Southeast Asia is shaped by complex, intersecting forces that defy simplistic narratives. Researchers must therefore develop new ways to grasp nuanced, non‐linear, and locally specific processes to understand how transformational shifts may occur (or not) in the region.
John F. McCarthy +2 more
wiley +1 more source
O źródłach zróżnicowania kulturowo-cywilizacyjnego Azji Południowo-Wschodniej
Southeast Asia is an extremely diverse region in terms of cultures and religions. Contemporary southeast asian reality is the result of numerous interactions between different ethnic groups and religions that have taken place throughout history.
Kornel Bielawski
core +1 more source
Research Ethics in Conflict Zones: Reflections on ‘Do no Harm’ Ethics for the Research Network
ABSTRACT What does it mean to ‘do no harm’ in academic research? ‘Do no harm’ ethics emphasizes the responsibility of researchers to mitigate the emotional, physical, and political harms that may arise through participation in research. These concerns are heightened in conflict zones, where access constraints and intersecting vulnerabilities shape the ...
K. B. Roberts
wiley +1 more source
Call for papers, Religion in Southeast Asia, American Academy of Religion
Statement of Purpose: Situated at the nexus of several civilizational influences — including Indian, Chinese, and Middle Eastern — Southeast Asia, as a region, remains understudied in terms of its relevance to the theoretical and methodological study ...
Hélène et Sophie
core +1 more source

