ALFP 2006 Fellows
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Mohiuddin
Ahmad (Bangladesh) Mr.
Ahmad is an economist by training, a researcher by profession, a
poet by passion and an occasional columnist. As a freedom fighter,
he directly participated in the armed resistance movement against
the Pakistani occupation army in 1971. Having obtained his M.A.
from Dhaka University in 1973, he has been in the field of development
since 1977. He is a founding member (in 1980) and currently Chairperson
(since 1996) of CDL, a national NGO involved in documentation, information
communication, research and policy advocacy. He is a well-known
social communicator, development practitioner and solidarity activist
in the region, having been involved with such NGOs as ARENA, the
South Asia Alliance for Poverty Eradication (SAAPE) and the Jubilee
South-Asia Pacific Movement on Debt and Development (APMDD). Mr.
Ahmad has authored and edited 28 books including six poetry books
and two novels as well as several research studies, gazetteers and
essays. He writes both in Bangla and English. Proposed Research Topic: Democracy, Development and Diversity
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Albert
E. Alejo (Philippines) Fr.
Alejo, a Filipino Jesuit, worked first with labor groups in Manila
before earning a doctorate in anthropology at the School of Oriental
and African Studies (London). A poet and philosopher in his native
Tagalog, he is now in Mindanao engaged in indigenous peoples' advocacy
and dialogue with Muslim civil society, through the Mindanawon Initiatives
for Cultural Dialogue which he heads. He spearheads the emerging
nationwide Ehem! Anticorruption Movement and guides the Amuma Cancer
Support Group which he founded. He is a professor of anthropology,
philosophy and development studies at Ateneo de Davao University,
where he is also director of the Research and Publication Office.
His recent publications include Generating Energies in Mount Apo:
Cultural Politics in a Contested Environment. Forthcoming are a
book on the spirituality of integrity in public service and an anthology
of mystical poems in translation. Proposed Research Topic: Corruption In Post-Conflict Situations: A Challenge to Interfaith Dialogue and Cooperation
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Kunda
Dixit (Nepal) Mr.
Dixit is a well-known Nepali journalist and publisher whose group,
Himalmedia, has gained a reputation for professionalism and integrity
and played an important role in upholding press freedom and democracy
in Nepal during the past year. Having received his M.A. in journalism
from Columbia University, he worked for the BBC World Service at
the United Nations Headquarters and later served as Asia-Pacific
director of the news agency Inter Press Service, based in Manila.
While there, Mr. Dixit was involved in reporting and editing stories
from the region that were ignored by the mainstream media. He is
the author of the book Dateline Earth: Journalism As If the Planet
Mattered (Manila: Inter Press Service, 1996), which is used in journalism
schools around the world to show students how to write meaningfully
on environmental and development issues. He is also a visiting professor
at Kathmandu University, where he teaches journalism and communications. Proposed Research Topic: Building Democracy from the Grassroots Up
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Maria
Hartiningsih (Indonesia) Ms.
Hartiningsih is a journalist who has been working at Kompas Daily
for 21 years. Her consistent commitment to marginalized groups in
society made her the first journalist to be awarded "The Yap
Thiam Hien Award for Human Rights Educator." Previously, she
received numerous awards, including one from UNCHS Nairobi, for
her reports on homeless people. Having graduated from the Institute
of Journalism in Jakarta, Ms. Hartiningsih earned her Master's Degree
in Women Studies at the University of Indonesia, Jakarta. Since
1992, she has been covering international conferences on the environment
and development, population, women, children, and other social issues.
She also has written essays for various anthologies such as "Luka-luka
Peradaban" (The Wounds of Civilization) in the anthology, Gender
and Law, to be published in June 2006. Currently she is actively
doing fieldwork, and writing in-depth reports on social injustices,
with the focus on gender issues in contemporary Indonesia. Proposed Research Topic: Identity as a Mask: Indonesian Plurality at a Crossroads
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Kamata,
Yoji (Japan) While
studying Agricultural Economics at the University of Tokyo, Mr.
Kamata visited several communes in Japan to find a place for people
to live together. After graduation, he worked as a truck driver
for organic foods and researcher of the KJ method in order to realize
true democracy. He has been exploring creating a new development
model of international cooperation based on traditional and folk
wisdom. He received his M.A. in the anthropology of development
and social transformation. His lifework is to support the revitalization
of traditional Tibetan medicine, to initiate further the KJ method,
and to try to realize the concept of "Ancient Futures"
(Natsukashii Mirai in Japanese) where society is sustainable and
people can live happily. Proposed Research Topic: Ancient Futures: Questioning Basic Assumptions of Development
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Lee
Seejae (Korea) Having
obtained his Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Tokyo, Dr.
Lee has taught social movements, environmental sociology and sociological
theories at the Catholic University of Korea since 1982. He is a
founding member of the Korean Federation for Environmental Movement,
assuming chairmanship of the policy committee of KFEM, and is director
of the Citizens' Institute for Environmental Studies. He is also
a founding member of the Korea Association for Environmental Sociology
and acted as the first president of the organization between 2000
and 2004. Since 2002, he has served as a board member representing
KFEM in the anti-desertification campaign in Northeast China in
cooperation with Jilin Province. He is presently affiliated, as
a visiting professor, with the China Center for Sustainable Development
Research, Peking University, Beijing. Proposed Research Topic: Northeast Asian Environmental Cooperation and NGO
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Nguyen
Thanh Son (Vietnam) Mr. Nguyen is a well-known literary critic in Vietnam. Having obtained his Master's degree in international journalism from the Moscow Institute of International Relations, he lectures now at Hanoi National University on communications, but is widely known in Vietnam for his first book, on Vietnamese literature, My Literary Criticism (Ho Chi Minh City: Youth Publishing House, 2003), and for his numerous contributions to the local press on arts, movies, literature and branding. In 2005, Mr. Nguyen received a Rockefeller fellowship, and currently he is working on his second book, Vietnamese Literature in the Post Renovation Period. He is also a founder and managing director of T&A Communications Vietnam, one of Vietnam's first PR agencies, where his responsibilities include development of client relationships and proposal formulation. Proposed Research Topic: Vietnamese Diaspora--An Asian Community outside of Asia
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Janet
Pillai (Malaysia) Senior Lecturer, University Sains Malaysia Ms. Pillai lectures in Acting & Directing, Performance Theory and Children's Theatre. A pioneer and veteran director in the field of young people's theatre in Malaysia, she has directed more then 30 major performances at the commercial, educational and community level. She also co-ordinates ARTS-ED, a non-formal multi-arts education program in the state of Penang specializing in program development and training for young people in the traditional as well as contemporary arts. Ms. Pillai is also a regional consultant and trainer in heritage education for young people. Her research and publication focus is on non-formal arts education, heritage education, conflict and learning theories related to the arts. Proposed Research Topic: Sustainability of Non-Formal Education in Community Settings
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