Friday, May 27, 2011

Show 186: A Look Back: The Extractive Industries

 
Dear Viewer,

Please find the attached release for the upcoming Equity Weekly Show, broadcast every Sunday after national news (around 8h00 + PM) on National Television T.V.K. and rebroadcast on Mondays at Noon.

This week in our show 186:

A Look Back: The Extractive Industries


We hope you will find our show of interest and welcome your contributions and feedback.

For more information about our program or to watch past program, please visit : http://www.equitycam.tv/


If you wish to review some of our previous shows online, you can find all our clips on http://www.youtube.com/equitycam

If you wish to share your comments on our shows, please go to http://www.facebook.com/EquityCam or message to 012 345 867


Thanks for your attention,

Equity Programs

A UNDP / TVK Initiative

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Sa Sa Bassac: Thoamada Related Events!

 
ARTIST TALK
VUTH LYNO WITH SRUN SRORN
WEDNESDAY 1 JUNE
6:30-8:30PM
KHMER + ENGLISH

Artist Vuth Lyno will share ideas and processes behind his solo exhibition Thoamada with specific attention on the workshop conducted with participants whose portraits and voices became his subject matter. Following Lyno will be a presentation by human rights activist and Gay Pride festival organizer Srun Srorn who will contextualize the LGBT situation and history of activism in Cambodia.

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KIDS CREATE!
SUNDAY 5 JUNE
2:00-3:30 KHMER
4:00-5:30 ENGLISH

Exhibition tour, face painting and portrait session with kids ages 6-10. Each class is limited to 8 students. Caregivers are welcome to accompany. Please reserve your space at erin@sasabassac.com.  FREE!

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IN CONVERSATION 03 
WITH ARTIST VIET LE
MODERATED BY PAMELA NGUYEN COREY
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
6:30-8:30PM
KHMER + ENGLISH

Please join us for an evening of conversation with artist, writer and curator Viet Lé, who will discuss his current project boy bang/, a new music video trilogy about fake Asian boy bands and solo performers in various personas and costumes which examines the borders of spectacle, desire and audience. Through the creation of faux boy bands and stars, Lé questions the boundaries of community and identity. 

This event is made possible in part by a grant from the City of Los Angeles, Department of Cultural Affairs.

Viet Lé's artwork has been exhibited at the Laguna Art Museum, USA; DoBaeBacSa Gallery, Seoul, Korea; Cape Museum of Art, MA, USA; The Banff Centre, Alberta, Canada; Ethan Cohen Fine Arts Gallery, New York, USA; Shoshin Performance Space, New York University; among other venues. His work has been featured in numerous anthologies. Lé has received fellowships from the Civitella Ranieri Foundation (Italy), Fulbright Foundation (Vietnam), the Center for Khmer Studies (Cambodia), and the  Fine Arts Work Center (USA). Lé obtained his MFA from the University of California, Irvine, where he has also taught Studio Art courses, and is currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Southern California. www.vietle.net 

Pamela Nguyen Corey is a Fulbright-Hays DDRA Fellow 2010-2011, Doctoral Candidate, History of Art and Visual Studies at Cornell University, focusing on contemporary art in Cambodia and Vietnam.
 

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

dreams of life opening june 3rd

From: Linda Saphan 
 
dear friends,
so many thanks to all of you who came to my opening at bophana. your presence and support was very much appreciated. it was so nice to see many friendly faces...
the black is black exhibition is ongoing till may 28. we actually added an installation piece of folded butterflies by phare art school students.

AND yes i have another opening on JUNE 3RD at 6:30pm at new art gallery (street 9 house 20 just next to Kapko market). this exhibition is a project with Qudy Xu and myself for the last year and a half: searching ourselves and in our own creative process to come together. They are all new pieces, just out of the oven if I may say so...

please spread the news/info if you can. hoping to see many more friendly faces...
a special thanks to asia life for sponsoring this exhibition...

--
Linda Saphan
www.saphan.info


Wednesday, May 18, 2011

BLACK is BLACK

 
hello,
tomorrow thursday may 19th at 6:30pm the opening of my first solo
exhibition will be at bophana center, 64, street 200 in phnom penh.
and yes i will be there. i hope to see many of you and have a chat on
what's new...

the exhibition BLACK IS BLACK is very much a coherent set of works
from 2007 to 2011.
looking forward to chat with you tomorrow,
yours,
linda
--
Linda Saphan
www.saphan.info



Wednesday, May 04, 2011

Human Sciences Happy Hours: On Monday May 9: Transacted Kinship Vietnamese Children Sold for Adoption in Cambodia

Dear all,

Welcome to our up coming Human Sciences Happy Hours !!

On Monday May 9, 2011

Baitong Restaurant, St 360, BKK1, corner 360/ Norodom Street

                                                                        

Transacted Kinship:Vietnamese Children Sold for Adoption in Cambodia

presented by Nicolas Lainez

 This presentation addresses the sale of Vietnamese children in Cambodia. My goal is to explore this issue embedded in stereotypes, and to move beyond the anti-trafficking discourse. To do so, I privilege the actor's viewpoint (emic perspective), colonial literary and legal sources. Data for this paper was gathered in 2009-10 through fieldwork conducted in Châu Đốc (on the Vietnamese border) and among the Vietnamese communities in Phnom Penh (Cambodia). It is presented with a discussion of a number of methodological barriers encountered in the field.

Firstly, the discussion with a mother who sold her daughter explores the motivations, conditions and prices of Vietnamese children sold in the Cambodian market. These sales can be validated by a deed that includes the price and the name of both the seller and the buyer. Similar contracts found in reports and press clips from the colonial period prove that the same practice is carried out despite the temporal spacing: the "sale of a child for adoption" (bán làm con nuôi). It therefore demonstrates historical continuity in terms of human sale.

Secondly, I will describe how emic representations help to justify acts that are absolutely condemned by the State, but that are justified by some destitute social groups due to their particular context: a desperate mother who does not want her child, and decides to get rid of him to retrieve some money. The famous novel When the light is out by Ngô Tất Tố (1939) depicting the story of a destitute mother who eventually sells her daughter to pay off tax debts and to free her husband, illustrates how desperation can excuse immorality and social condemnation.

Finally, Vietnamese informants tend to suggest that girls are more expensive than boys because parents not only take into account the wellbeing of the child with his adoptive family, but also consider the return on investment. Indeed, destitute daughters can work in prostitution; therefore they can remit higher sums of money to their parents than boys. A calculation takes place thus suggesting that for poor families involved in child sale, raising a girl means investing into the future.

This talk summarizes a chapter from the forthcoming Alliance Anti-Trafic' Research Report: Nicolas Lainez (June 2011), Transacted Children and Virginity: Ethnography of Ethnic Vietnamese in Phnom Penh, Ho Chi Minh City, Alliance Anti-Trafic Vietnam.

 

Nicolas Lainez was born in 1975 in Barcelona, Spain. He's currently enrolled in a PhD program on social anthropology at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (Paris). He is researcher for the NGO Alliance Anti-Trafic Vietnam (Ho Chi Minh City), and associated researcher at the Research Institute of Contemporary Southeast Asia (Bangkok). His research focuses on cross-border mobility, human transactions, informal credit, debt-bondage, commercial sex, social structures, and the social construction of trafficking from the colonial to the contemporary period. His 30-months' ethnography is based in the Mekong Delta (Vietnam), Phnom Penh (Cambodia) and Singapore.

 

--
Human Sciences Happy Hours in Phnom Penh

email: hshhpp@gmail.com
web: http://hshhpp.pbworks.com/

Coordinating team:
Emiko Stock, Pascale Hancart Petitet, Gabriel Fauveaud
 

Publication: Gabriel Fauveaud, « Retour sur le drame de l’Île des Diamants : l’investissement immobilier des grands projets urbains à Phnom-Penh », EchoGéo [

From: HSHHPP Humaines <hshhpp@gmail.com>
Date: 2011/5/4




FYI

Sur le vif 2011

Retour sur le drame de l’Île des Diamants : l’investissement immobilier des grands projets urbains à Phnom-Penh

Gabriel Fauveaud

Gabriel Fauveaud, « Retour sur le drame de l’Île des Diamants : l’investissement immobilier des grands projets urbains à Phnom-Penh », EchoGéo [En ligne] , Sur le vif 2011 , mis en ligne le 03 mai 2011, consulté le 03 mai 2011. URL : http://echogeo.revues.org/12367

Accès libre en ligne: http://echogeo.revues.org/12367



Cet article se propose de revenir sur la mort, suite à un mouvement de foule qui eut lieu le 22 novembre 2010, de plus de 350 personnes sur le pont d’un grand projet urbain privé actuellement en construction à Phnom-Penh. Il s’agira pour nous, à partir de ce drame marquant, de souligner certaines dynamiques contemporaines de la construction des espaces urbains de la capitale cambodgienne. A travers le grand projet de l’Île des Diamants, nous souhaitons interroger le rôle des grands promoteurs immobiliers dans la fabrication de la capitale. Pour ce faire, nous évoquerons l’internationalisation des modes de construction en Asie du Sud-Est et au Cambodge qui se caractérise par un retrait de la planification urbaine et une multiplication des projets urbains privés. L’exemple de l’Île des Diamants nous permettra d’illustrer certaines grandes tendances de l’urbanisation à Phnom-Penh. Nous montrerons comment l’évolution du discours sur la ville moderne génère des antagonismes au sein de la politique urbaine actuelle, et interrogerons la capacité des grands investisseurs immobiliers à fabriquer des espaces urbains pérennes.

Mots-clés :
investissement immobilier, grand projet urbain, Phnom-Penh, privatisation de l’espace ; développement urbain, Île des Diamants


Through this article, we would like to underline few main dynamics of the contemporary urban development of Phnom‑Penh after more than 350 people died on Diamonds Island, a new private large scale project under construction. The Diamonds Island project questions the role of the large scale real-estate investors in the fabrication of the urban space. We will get onto the evolution of the internationalization of the production of the urban space. By this end, we will be able to replace the “urban project” within the institutional and historical local reality. Through the particular example of the Diamonds Island, we will approach the evolution of the urban modernity understood as a marketing strategy. Finally, the Diamond Island tragedy reveals the antagonisms of the current urban politic and interrogates the capacity of the private investors to construct a sustainable city.

Keyword :

Real-estate investment, urban large scale project, Phnom-Penh, privatization of space, urban development, Diamonds Island



Gabriel Fauveaud, « Retour sur le drame de l’Île des Diamants : l’investissement immobilier des grands projets urbains à Phnom-Penh », EchoGéo [En ligne] , Sur le vif 2011 , mis en ligne le 03 mai 2011, consulté le 03 mai 2011. URL : http://echogeo.revues.org/12367

http://echogeo.revues.org/12367


--
Human Sciences Happy Hours in Phnom Penh

email: hshhpp@gmail.com
web: http://hshhpp.pbworks.com/

Coordinating team:
Emiko Stock, Pascale Hancart Petitet, Léo Mariani, Gabriel Fauveaud

 

Monday, May 02, 2011

Fwd: Roam ! Dansez ! Episode 2

 

 

 


Plus d'informations   More

Centre Culturel Français du Cambodge
218 rue 184 - 023 213 124 /125
www.ccf-cambodge.org 

 




 

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