Author Archive

Tales of old Thailand and Japan

Posted by ewcmedia on Jul 03 2008 | General, Research

Ayutthaya
Ayutthaya

It’s the stuff of high adventure: Warrior kings, mysterious ships from far-off Japan, thriving trade across oceans and generations.

All part of the real-life tale of Thailand’s King Naresuan, who sat on the Thai throne more than 400 years ago when adventurous Japanese traders and samurai first settled in Thailand. And, you can read all about it in English thanks to Kennon “Ken” Breazeale, a projects coordinator at the Center. Here’s the story: Continue Reading »

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Staring community-led preservation efforts in the face

Posted by ewcmedia on Jun 19 2008 | From the field, General

By Shayne Hasegawa

Theory was put to practice recently when 26 graduate students from the University of Hawaii, Hawaii Pacific University and Clark University in Massachusetts got their feet wet and hands dirty as they toured community-led sustainability efforts on Oahu.

Students load rocks
Students load rocks to help rebuild an ancient Hawaiian fishpond

The group visited He’eia Fishpond in Windward Oahu and several sites along the southern Ka Iwi coastline, including world-famous Hanauma Bay. But they experienced far more than the usual tourist would encounter. Continue Reading »

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An inside look at Asia-Pacific security concerns

Posted by ewcmedia on Jun 11 2008 | General, Research

IT’S EASY to get opinions about the security and stability of the Asia Pacific region — everyone has one.

Regionwide security concerns

But Center official Richard Baker has a view with more than a little heft to it. Each year, Continue Reading »

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Young leaders get front-row seats in U.S. Asia policy-making

Posted by ewcmedia on Jun 03 2008 | General

So much for closed door conversations among the “old guard” about the future of U.S. policy.

At least one slice of the next generation of leaders recently had a front-row seat at high-level discussions of potential Asia policy for the next presidential administration, thanks to the Pacific Forum CSIS’s Young Leaders program.

Top thinkers and policy makers met in Honolulu last week to draft a new U.S. Asia policy for submission to the incoming administration. They were joined by nine fresh faces, young people destined to be the policy-makers of tomorrow. Continue Reading »

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Asia to the U.S.: Is anyone listening?

Posted by ewcmedia on May 29 2008 | General

U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates is off to Asia this week to attend the 7th annual meeting of the International Institute of Strategic Studies’ Asia Security Summit in Singapore, better known as the Shangri-la “dialogue” on Asia-Pacific security issues.Shangri-la map

His trip is generating fresh speculation Continue Reading »

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Burma and the world in the post-cyclone era

Posted by ewcmedia on May 20 2008 | General, Research

By Justin Liang

On May 2nd, Cyclone Nargis exacted a tragic toll upon Burma, spawning a humanitarian crisis of unprecedented proportions.
Coming amid a controversial referendum vote on a new constitution drafted by the ruling junta, the havoc wrought by the storm—and the regime’s uninspired response to international assistance—has raised numerous questions about the challenges and opportunities of engagement with the isolationist regime.

I recently had the opportunity to ask some of these questions to Ambassador Priscilla Clapp, who served as Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy

clapp
Pricilla Clapp

in Burma from 1999-2002 and recently retired after a 30-year career with the U.S. government. Ambassador Clapp has written extensively on Burma and will be speaking at an upcoming program at the East-West Center in Washington (see details of that program, as well as on another Burma program in Honolulu May 21, below).

Clapp spoke candidly about diplomacy with the ruling junta, prospects for humanitarian assistance, and the road ahead in Burma. Continue Reading »

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A Center rite of passage

Posted by ewcmedia on May 19 2008 | Alumni, General

Allison Pan and Gordon Ring
Allison Pan receives her certificate from Alumni Officer Gordon Ring

Even the best of times have to end some day.

So it was for a roomful participants who took part last week in the Center’s Ho’opuka Ceremony, a formal occasion to recognize the completion of various awards and programs sponsored by the Center.
Some 85 participants were on hand and another 28 — unable to attend — were undoubtedly there in spirit. Continue Reading »

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Time just right for new U.S. Asia Pacific Council meet

Posted by ewcmedia on May 14 2008 | General, Research

Opening panel
Charles Morrison introduces the U.S. Asia Pacific Council meeting.

Take economic tremors in the United States that quite possibly could spread to Asia, add a billion Chinese who are feeling a little disrespected by the rest of the world, stir in a new conservative prime minister in South Korea and a Mandarin-speaking Prime Minister of Australia and what do you get?

Just about the perfect time, in the thinking of Center President Charles Morrison, for the latest gathering of the U.S. Asia Pacific Council of the East West Center. Continue Reading »

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Journalists were on way to the epicenter

Posted by ewcmedia on May 12 2008 | From the field, General

Journalists like to get up close to any big story, but this one was closer than most.

A group of a dozen East West Center Jefferson Fellowship journalists are in China this week where their plans were to visit the “other China,” developing regions in the west beyond the coastal “boomtowns.” Their itinerary included planned stops in Chongqing and the Sichuan provincial capital of Chengdu, precisely where Monday’s devastating 7.9 magnitude earthquake struck. Continue Reading »

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In Hawaii, a colorful gathering of nations

Posted by ewcmedia on May 09 2008 | Alumni, General

Between showers of that familiar Manoa rain, students and EWC participants gathered April 19 in the garden fronting Hale Halawai for a high-spirited cultural fair.

The students showed off their national dress (including a tres chic fashion show of Indonesian traditional attire), shared local foods and crafts, and enjoyed a bellydance troupe, a martial arts demonstration, a Thai new year’s ceremony, Indian singing, gong music from the Philippines and dances of Vietnam, Burma, Thailand and Samoa.

Vietnamese dancers
Vietnamese students performed a graceful dance with fans and umbrellas

Click HERE for more photos from that delightful afternoon. Does it stir memories of your time at the Center?

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