LSE Southeast Asia

LSE Southeast Asia The Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre is an inter-disciplinary, regionally-focused academic centre within the Institute of Global Affairs at LSE.
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The Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre (SEAC) is an inter-disciplinary, regionally-focused academic centre within the Institute of Global Affairs at LSE. Building on the School's deep historical connections with Southeast Asia, the Centre seeks to promote the best academic and policy research on the region, deepen research ties with Southeast Asia, and improve the student experience at LSE. SEAC is LSE’s gateway to understanding Southeast Asia.

Call for Papers! 📝 Dr Maaike Matelski and collegues are looking for participants in their upcoming EuroSEAS conference p...
02/04/2026

Call for Papers! 📝
Dr Maaike Matelski and collegues are looking for participants in their upcoming EuroSEAS conference panel ‘Comparative identities and repertoires of contention among youth movements mobilizing amidst rising authoritarianism in South(East) Asia’.

They are looking for additional cases (e.g. Thailand, Myanmar) in order to make it comparative. They explicitly welcome (junior) scholars from the region, including South and East Asia (Bangladesh, Nepal, Hong Kong) as well as female presenters to submit their abstracts.

Please get in touch with any questions.

Deadline is 10 April.

For more information, please visit the conference pages: https://www.euroseas.org/papers/

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌“Myanmar online reactions to the abduction of President Maduro from Venezuela” 🇲🇲🇻🇪In this blog p...
20/03/2026

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌
“Myanmar online reactions to the abduction of President Maduro from Venezuela” 🇲🇲🇻🇪

In this blog post, Maaike Matelski, Eva van Roekel and Htet Hlaing Win describe the strong reactions which the removal of Venezuelan President by the United States elicited from online audiences in , who predominantly called for a similar in their country.

About the authors:
Maaike Matelski is an alumna of the MSc Human Rights program at the LSE and currently works as Assistant Professor in the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

Eva van Roekel is an associate professor at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

Htet Hlaing Win is a Myanmar researcher, columnist and student at the NMBU - Norwegian University of Life Sciences and junior researcher in the Ethnographic Impact for Social Justice project.

Interested? 🧐
🔗 Click the link in the bio to read the full piece!

Blog Myanmar Venezuela

🎉 CONGRATULATIONS 🥳Dr. Qingfei Yin, Associate Professor of International History at the London School of Economics and P...
20/03/2026

🎉 CONGRATULATIONS 🥳

Dr. Qingfei Yin, Associate Professor of International History at the London School of Economics and Political Science, has been awarded one of the 2025/26 SEAC Research Fund awards for her project ‘From Singapore to Oslo: Chinese Seamen and the Global Cold War.’ 👏

Want to learn more about her research? Click the link below! 🤩
🔗 https://lnkd.in/eYUF9vUq

🚨HAPPENING NEXT WEEK 🙌 “Death by a Thousand Cuts: Digital Repression and Pro-Democracy Movements in Thailand (soft launc...
18/03/2026

🚨HAPPENING NEXT WEEK 🙌
“Death by a Thousand Cuts: Digital Repression and Pro-Democracy Movements in Thailand (soft launch)” 🇹🇭

How does in the age of technologies undermine pro-democracy movements in ? In this talk, Dr. Janjira Sombatpoonsiri presents insights from her forthcoming book, Death by a Thousand Cuts: Digital Repression and Democracy in Thailand, which offers one of the most systematic, ecosystem-based analyses of digital repression targeting the youth-led protests of 2020–2021.

🗓️ Wednesday 25 March
⏰ 12pm-1.15pm
📍 LSE Cheng Kin Ku Building - Room 2.18 (CKK.2.18)

🔗 Click the link in the bio to register to attend in-person or online!

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌“The Resilience Paradox: Why Indonesia Pays More After Disasters Than Before” 🇮🇩Tropical Cyclone ...
16/03/2026

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌
“The Resilience Paradox: Why Indonesia Pays More After Disasters Than Before” 🇮🇩

Tropical Cyclone Senyar in Indonesia illustrates how underfunded climate resilience does not eliminate costs but shifts them onto communities after disasters strike. Focusing on Indonesia’s adaptation finance architecture, Nela Navida and Anisa Indah Pratiwi examine whether prevention is funded ex-ante, how resources are distributed across levels of government, and why private finance rarely supports community resilience. They argue that a response-heavy system creates predictable fiscal losses and poverty traps, and call for prevention-centred, accountable financing that prices disaster risk upstream rather than downstream.

About the authors:
Nela Navida is an economist at the International Growth Centre, focusing on Indonesia-related projects. She holds a Master of Public Administration in Economic Policy from the The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).

Anisa Indah Pratiwi is a Consultant at Just Transition Finance Lab, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change & the Environment focusing on emerging markets. She completed a Master of Public Policy at the University College London.

Interested? 🧐
🔗 Click the link in the bio to read the full piece!

🚨HAPPENING THIS WEDNESDAY 🙌 “(In)formality in a ‘Singapore-like Cebu’: paradoxes and contestations in world-class city-m...
16/03/2026

🚨HAPPENING THIS WEDNESDAY 🙌
“(In)formality in a ‘Singapore-like Cebu’: paradoxes and contestations in world-class city-making”

In this presentation, Dr. Jordana Ramalho explores the politics and practices shaping contemporary urban (re)development and world-class city-making in the Philippines. 🇵🇭

🗓️ Wednesday 18 March
⏰ 12pm-1.15pm
📍 LSE The Marshall Building - Room 2.06 (MAR 2.06)

🔗 Click the link in the bio to register to attend in-person or online!

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌“Malaysia’s Borneo Question: Adaptation or Separation?” 🇲🇾A recent remark questioning whether   w...
04/03/2026

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌
“Malaysia’s Borneo Question: Adaptation or Separation?” 🇲🇾

A recent remark questioning whether was “meant to be” has reignited debate about secession in the States of and . In this article, Dr. Arnold Puyok argues that such rhetoric reflects bargaining and renegotiation within the federation rather than genuine ethnic mobilisation and separatism in the classic sense. By examining the Malaysia Agreement 1963 (MA63) demands, constitutional changes, and comparative federal experience, he shows that Malaysia’s survival as a federation lies in continuous renegotiation of the federal bargain.

Dr. Arnold Puyok is a Visiting Senior Fellow at the Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre, The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and an Associate Senior Fellow at the ISEAS - Yusof Ishak Institute (ISEAS), Singapore. He is also a Senior Lecturer in Politics and Government Studies at Universiti Malaysia Sarawak (UNIMAS).

Interested? 🧐
🔗 Click the link in the bio to read the full piece!

🤩 UPCOMING SEAC CAFE SESSION ☕️Our third SEAC Cafe session will feature Dr. Laura Antona, Assistant Professor of Human G...
04/03/2026

🤩 UPCOMING SEAC CAFE SESSION ☕️

Our third SEAC Cafe session will feature Dr. Laura Antona, Assistant Professor of Human Geography at The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Her expertise includes: Migration, violence, domestic labour, home, Southeast Asia

🗓 9 March 2026
🕚 1:00pm-2:00pm

🔗 Registration link: https://lnkd.in/e4kP4Fkq

The SEAC Café consists of a series of small group sessions over the course of the year giving all LSE students the opportunity to engage with LSE SEAC Associates in an array of fields all focused on the Southeast Asia region. These sessions are group meetings for open discussion in a more informal setting.

* This event is strictly open to LSE students *

🎙️NEW PODCAST EPISODE OUT 📢 Thailand’s February 2026 Snap Election: A Conversation with Prof Duncan McCargoThis episode ...
27/02/2026

🎙️NEW PODCAST EPISODE OUT 📢
Thailand’s February 2026 Snap Election: A Conversation with Prof Duncan McCargo

This episode unpacks the 8 February 2026 snap election and constitutional referendum in hashtag . The results paint a mixed picture: a decisive win for the country’s conservative forces alongside signals of progressive change, particularly regarding the drafting of a new hashtag . 🇹🇭

Dialogues on Southeast Asia sits down with Prof Duncan McCargo, President’s Chair in Global Affairs at Nanyang Technological University Singapore and a world-leading specialist on Thai politics, to make sense of what the results mean.

Prof McCargo focuses on the comparative politics of Southeast Asia, especially Thailand, on which he has published widely. He is the author of a dozen books, including Fighting for Virtue: Politics and Justice in Thailand (Cornell, 2019) and Future Forward: The Rise and Fall of a Thai Political Party (NIAS Press, 2020).

You can find the episode here 👉 https://lnkd.in/eyBSTCr2

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌“In Aceh’s Waters, “Making Harmony” Hides Indonesia’s Blue Economy Failures” 🇮🇩Indonesia’s blue e...
27/02/2026

🚨 NEW BLOG POST ALERT 🙌
“In Aceh’s Waters, “Making Harmony” Hides Indonesia’s Blue Economy Failures” 🇮🇩

Indonesia’s blue economy views community adaptation and coordination as markers of success, but Eman Zahid Jokhio’s fieldwork in reveals that this so-called “harmony” masks unequal relations, harm, and the failure of , instead of resolving them.

Eman Zahid Jokhio is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Political Science at Universitas Islam International Indonesia (UIII). She holds a Bachelor’s degree in International Relations from the University of Sindh, Pakistan. Her writing has previously appeared in prominent Pakistani magazines as well as in Modern Diplomacy, Stratsea, Islamabad Policy Research Institute and European Studies Review.

Interested? 🧐
🔗 Read the full piece here: https://lnkd.in/e-65C8cA

📩 PhD Student Workshop: Call for Papers 👏 The Southeast Asia Centre (SEAC) at The London School of Economics and Politic...
26/02/2026

📩 PhD Student Workshop: Call for Papers 👏

The Southeast Asia Centre (SEAC) at The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) is delighted to partner with the Association of Southeast Asian Studies (ASEAS) to host a workshop for PhD students across the UK working on Southeast Asia on Wednesday, 3 June 2026. 📚

Building on the success of last year’s workshop at LSE, this event brings together doctoral researchers from universities across the UK who are working on Southeast Asia. The workshop provides a supportive space to:
1️⃣ Present ongoing research and receive peer feedback
2️⃣ Exchange ideas and insights
3️⃣ Build networks with fellow PhD researchers focused on the region

We are unable to provide financial support for travel or accommodation in connection with participation in the workshop, but we hope that provision of the venue and other amenities for the workshop will enable and encourage participation among PhD students working on Southeast Asia across the UK.

🗓️ 3 June 2026
📍 The London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)

Deadline: Friday, 20 March

🔗 For more information and how to apply: https://lnkd.in/eywpE2uS

Address

London School Of Economics And Political Science
London
WC2A2AE

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm

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