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Reframing Development:
Post-Development, Globalization, and the Human Condtion



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International Conference
REFRAMING DEVELOPMENT:
POST-DEVELOPMENT, GLOBALIZATION, AND THE HUMAN CONDITION
Osaka University Global COE Program “A Research Base for Conflict Studies in the Humanities”
Osaka University Global Collaboration Center (GLOCOL)

venue: Icho Kaikan, Suita Campus

日時 200947)~10(金
[会場]大阪大学吹田キャンパス銀杏会館3
■参加無料・事前登録不要
■使用言語:英語[通訳なし] 


Pre-conference event Young Scholars’ Workshop
Tuesday, April 7, 2009

13:00-13:40
Privatization and urban development in post-socialist Mongolia: A challenge for (re)construction of public spaces in Ulaanbaatar city
Yu NISHIGAKI
13:50-14:30
Undue “soft” development: A case study of the debate over “cultural village” in a commune in Central Vietnam
Astufumi KATO
14:40-15:20
What development implies: A case study of urban kampung in Malaysia
Toru UEDA
Coffee break
15:40-16:20
Mystique of development: The labyrinth of South African land policy
Yumi SAKATA
16:30-17:10
Dollarization on a street corner: The acceptance process of foreign currencies under hyperinflation in Zimbabwe today
Mayu HAYAKAWA
17:20-18:00
Repaying mortgages to build more houses: A key to the success of Habitat for Humanity’s project in Kenya
Shin-ichiro ISHIDA


CONFERENCE PROGRAM

Wednesday, April 8, 2009
0900-1000 Registration
1000-1010 Welcome:
Professor Eisei KURIMOTO, Osaka University, Japan Director GLOCOL
1010-1025 Opening Address:
Professor Kiyokazu WASHIDA President of Osaka University, Japan
1025-1040 Conference Theme:
Professors Eisei KURIMOTO & Mustapha Kamal PASHA (Co-conveners)
1100-1230 SESSION I: Divided Spaces, Divided Subjects
Chair: Professor Mustapha Kamal PASHA, University of Aberdeen, UK
Presenters:
Anna M. AGATHANGELOU, York University, Canada
Slavery Remains in Reconstruction and Development: Value, Struggle, Imperial Debris and (Un) making Racial Geographies
Sanjay SETH, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK
The Limits of our (Modern, Western) Knowledge and Development
Michael J. SHAPIRO, University of Hawaii, USA Anti-Sovereign Lives: Divided Subjects and Fractionated Assemblages
1230-1400 LUNCH
1400-1530 SESSION II: Mystique and Critique
Chair: Professor Eisei KURIMOTO, Osaka University, JAPAN
Presenters:
Makoto KOBAYASHI, Ochanomizu University, Japan
Development as Political Violence
Yukio IKEMOTO, University of Tokyo, Japan
Competition, Equality, and Human Evolution
Mustapha Kamal PASHA, University of Aberdeen, UK
The Unbearable Lure of Development: Ashis Nandy’s Cultural Critique
1530-1600 TEA/COFFEE BREAK
1600-1800 SESSION III: Utopia and Emancipation
Chair: Professor Sanjay SETH, Goldsmiths College, University of London, UK
Presenters:
Giorgio SHANI, Ritsumeikan University, Japan
Empowering Homo Oeconomicus: The Biopolitics of Human Development
Craig N. MURPHY, Harvard University, USA
If Development follows Decolonization, What follows Development?
Ritu VIJ, University of Aberdeen, UK
Civil Society as Utopia Robbie
SHILLIAM, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Development as Babylon


Thursday, April 9, 2009
0900-1000 Registration
1000-1200 SESSION IV: The Antinomies of Post-development
Chair: Professor Yoichi MINE, Osaka University, Japan
Presenters:
Siba N. GROVOGUI, John Hopkins University, USA
Faking Development: Market Strategies and Partnership in the Post-development Era
Motoi SUZUKI, National Museum of Ethnology, Japan
Development as Experiment: A Two-Fold Approach in the Era of Post-Development
Yoshihiro NAKANO, International Christian University; Waseda University, Japan
Postdevelopment and the Question of Technology: An Alternative Strategy towards Economic Democratization
Martin WEBER, University of Queensland, Australia
Reflections on Autonomy and Heteronomy: Beyond the ‘Development/ Postdevelopment’ Debate
1200-1400 LUNCH
1400-1545 SESSION V: Dividing Practices and Biopolitics
Chair: Professor Chih-yu SHIH, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Presenters:
Marie SUETSUGU, Aberystwyth University, Wales, UK
Dividing Practices and the Subject of Development
Jacqueline BERMAN, Berkeley Policy Associates, USA
Development, Globalization and Remittances: Centralized Hyper-marginalizations at the Limits of Global Practice
Hiroyuki TOSA, Kobe University, Japan
The Politics of Security-Development Complex: Reconsidering Securitization of Development
Eiichi HOSHINO, University of the Ryukyus, Japan
Developmentalism Trap in Okinawa
Heloise WEBER, University of Queensland, Australia
Development as Emancipation: Reclaiming the Subject

1545-1600 TEA/COFFEE BREAK
1600-1800 SESSION VI: Making Development Work
Chair: Professor Siba N. GROVOGUI, John Hopkins University, USA
Presenters:
Satoshi NAKAGAWA, Osaka University, Japan
Against Generification: Going Between Aestheticization and Materialization
Eisei KURIMOTO, Osaka University, Japan
Various Trajectories of Development: Possible Scenarios in the Post-War Southern Sudan
Yoichi MINE, Osaka University, Japan
The Ambiguity of Development: From a Japanese Perspective
Yumiko TOKITA-TANABE, Osaka University, Japan
Development as Hope: Towards and Ecology of Life
Matt DAVIES, Newcastle University, UK
Making Cities Work: Development in the Urban Context

Friday, April 10, 2009
0900-1000 Registration
1000-1200 SESSION VII: Creativity, Learning and the Practice of Development
Chair: Professor Craig N. MURPHY, Harvard University, USA
Presenters:
Junji KOIZUMI, Osaka University, Japan
The Uses of ‘Development’ in Japan’s Foreign Policy and the Role of Universities
Chih-yu SHIH, National Taiwan University, Taiwan
Anomaly as a Method: Collecting Chinese Micro-Theories of Transition
Gustavo Lins RIBEIRO, Universidade de Brasilia, Brazil
Pirating Development
Masayoshi SHIGETA, Kyoto University, Japan
African Studies and ‘Development’ in Japan: Seeking Substantial Relationships between Research and Practice
1200-1400 LUNCH
1400-1630 SESSION VIII: Vision/Visuality
Screening of the film, Eye in the Sky (2007)
Chair: Professor Mustapha Kamal PASHA, University of Aberdeen, UK
Commentary: Professor Michael J. SHAPIRO, University of Hawaii, USA
1630-1645 TEA/COFFEE BREAK
1645-1745 SESSION IX: Open Discussion
Chair: Professor Junji KOIZUMI, Osaka University, Japan
1745-1800 CLOSING REMARKS
Professor Junji KOIZUMI, Osaka University, Japan
1800 CLOSING


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