Other News
New Publication: Victor Agboga
Victor Agboga, a third year PhD student at PAIS recently published an article "Selective forgiveness and the politics of amnesties in Nigeria", in The Round Table: The Commonwealth Journal of International Affairs. Through the lens of political settlement, he argues that domestic peace processes could mimic existing power inequalities, thereby including some groups and excluding others from state forgiveness.
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Geoeconomics of Infrastructure Financing in the Indo-Pacific
Saori N. Katada is Professor of International Relations at University of Southern California, and she is currently a Banque de France/Fondation France-Japon Fellow at L’École de Haute Etudes en Sciences Sociales (FFJ/EHESS) in Paris France. Her book Japan’s New Regional Reality: Geoeconomic Strategy in the Asia-Pacific was published from Columbia University Press in 2020, and its Japanese version in 2022. She has co-authored two recent books: The BRICS and Collective Financial Statecraft (Oxford University Press, 2017), and Taming Japan’s Deflation: The Debate over Unconventional Monetary Policy (Cornell University Press, 2018). She was the vice president of International Studies Association (ISA) from 2021 to 2022. She has her Ph.D. is from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (Political Science), and her B.A. from Hitotsubashi University (Tokyo). Before joining USC, she served as a researcher at the World Bank in Washington D.C., and as International Program officer at the UNDP in Mexico City.
This project examines the infrastructure investment ‘competition’ between Japan and China in the context of privatization of development finance in the post-global financial crisis world. As geoeconomic challenge to China’s infrastructure ‘big push’ through its Belt-and-Road Imitative, Japan and the Quad powers responded by establishing Blue Dot Network to certify bankable infrastructure projects with the hope that such certification will invite institutional investors to infrastructure financing in the Indo-Pacific region. By examining contrasting financing features and risk consideration of infrastructure financing between China and Japan, the project illustrates the foundation of quantity versus quality competition among the financial suppliers of infrastructure investment.
Date: Friday, 4th November
Time: 17:15-18:30
Venue: S0.13, Social Sciences
For additional information, please contact the EASG at easg@warwick.ac.uk
Drugs, (Dis)order, and Development in the Myanmar-China borderlands
Dr Patrick Meehan works in Global Sustainable Development in the School of Cross-Faculty Studies at the 91¸£Àû, and he is also a post-doctorate research fellow in the Department of Development Studies at SOAS. In this seminar, Dr Meehan provides insights into the political economy of the illegal drug trade in Myanmar based on extensive fieldwork conducted as Co-Investigator of a five-year research programme (2017-2022) led by SOAS University of London entitled 'Drugs and (dis)order: Building sustainable peacetime economies in the aftermath of war’. This seminar explores how Myanmar’s flourishing drug economy is not only rooted in the country’s longstanding armed conflict, but is also central to processes of rapid political, economic, and social change that have re-shaped Myanmar’s borderlands since the 1990s. Through exploring issues of cultivation, trafficking, and rising local drug use, Dr Meehan reveals how drugs have become embedded in the DNA of the Myanmar state and the development processes through which Myanmar’s resource-rich borderlands have been integrated into the global economy.
Date: 27th October 2022
Time: 16:15-17:30
Venue: MS.05, Zeeman Building
This seminar is part of the East Asia Study Group (EASG) Seminar Series. For further information please contact the EASG at easg@warwick.ac.uk.
Blog by Vicki Squire on ethical and practical issues in data-driven humanitarian assistance
, Vicki Squire discusses how research from the Data and Displacement project points to a disconnect between international humanitarian standards and practices on the ground, highlights the need to revisit existing ethical guidelines such informed consent, and signals the importance of investing in data literacies.
Data and Displacement project report and project event
The Data and Displacement project (PI: Vicki Squire) launched its final project report at the Palais des Nations in Geneva on 12 September. The findings reveal that, as new ways to collect data continue to grow, humanitarian actors need to improve ethical and operational data practices for internally displaced persons (IDPs).
The AHRC and FCDO-funded team of researchers for the Data and Displacement project come from the Universities of 91¸£Àû, Ibadan, Juba and Glasgow, and from the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
Over two years, the team of experts conducted 174 in-depth interviews with a range of stakeholders, including international data experts, donors, and humanitarian practitioners, as well as regional humanitarian actors and IDPs living in camps in north-eastern Nigeria and South Sudan.