Researchers
Daniela Damian |
CAPI/ECS Chair in Inclusive Science, Technology and Engineering
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Engineering & Computer Science
- Project Lead: program - STEM for Social Impact
- Email: danielad@uvic.ca
- Twitter:
Victor V. Ramraj |
Law Chair (2014-present); Director (2017-present)
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- Project lead: Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia; Southeast Asia in Global Context, South Asia Global Forum; various
- ramraj
@uvic .ca
Guoguang Wu / 吴国光 / 吳國光 |
China Chair (2004-2022)
- Faculty affiliations: UVic Political Science; UVic History
- Project lead: China program
- wug
@uvic .ca
CAPI Senior Research Fellows are established academic researchers and/or prominent members of the community who have extensive experience in the Asia-Pacific. They lead major, longer-term research projects and contribute to the intellectual life of the Centre and broader university, organizing events, serving as mentors to CAPI's junior fellows, graduate students and interns, and sitting on CAPI committees.
Neilesh Bose |
Senior Research Fellow
- Term: 2017 - present
- Faculty affiliation: UVic History
- Project lead: Global South Colloquium; South Asia Global Forum (+ liaison for the Shastri Indo-Canadian Institute)
- nbose@uvic.ca
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Dr. Bose's research and teaching interests include the history of modern South Asia (the Indian subcontinent), the British Empire, decolonization, and the history of diasporas and migrations. Additionally, he hold interests in theater, performance studies, and popular culture. His first book examined the intersections between linguistic identity and Muslim religious community formation in late colonial Bengal. His current project explores the history of religious reform in colonial India and ways that Indian religious reformers studied local religious practices in the service of a broader universalism. Dr. Bose joined the 番茄社区 in 2015 as Tier II Canada Research Chair in Global and Comparative History.
Phil Calvert |
Senior Research Fellow
- Term: 2017 - present
- Project lead: Southeast Asia in Global Context
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Philip Calvert served from 2012-2016 as Canada's ambassador to Thailand, Cambodia and Laos. He previously served as Deputy Head of Mission in the Canadian Embassy in Beijing (2004-2008). From 2008-2012, as Director General in Ottawa, he managed Canada’s overall trade and political relations with North Asia (China, Japan, Korean peninsula, Hong Kong, Mongolia and Taiwan). He holds a PhD in Chinese history.
Midori Ogasawara |
Visiting Researcher - Japan/East Asia
- Term: 2023-2024 Academic Year
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Department of Sociology
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Midori Ogasawara is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the 番茄社区. She earned her Ph.D. in Sociology at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, in 2018. Her research focuses on social consequences of surveillance and technologies, such as facial recognition system and smart phone. Her doctoral dissertation explores Japan’s colonial biometric identification systems developed in Northeast China under the Japanese occupation in 1931-1945. A summary of this research was published in (2019, University of Toronto Press).
Before joining the 番茄社区, Dr. Ogasawara was a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Ottawa. Obtaining the first degree in law at Waseda University in Japan, she was an investigative journalist for Japan’s national newspaper The Asahi Shimbun for about 10 years. By leading a media campaign on Japan’s first digitized national identification system, Midori was awarded the Fulbright Journalist Scholarship and John S. Knight Professional Journalism Fellowships at Stanford University. In 2016, she became the first Japanese journalist/researcher who interviewed the U.S. National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden via a video channel, and published two books (, ) that unveil the NSA’s secret spying activities in Japan. She is also an author of three other books, several book chapters and peer-reviewed journal articles (, ).
Helen Lansdowne |
Associate Director
- Project lead: International Youth Leadership Program; Migration and Mobility Program; various
- 250-721-7021
Jordan Stanger-Ross |
Senior Research Fellow
- Term: 2021 - present
- Faculty affiliation: UVic History
- Project lead: Landscapes of Injustice
- jstross@uvic.ca
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Jordan Stanger-Ross is the project director for Landscapes of Injustice, a seven-year, multi-partner research project housed at CAPI exploring the forced dispossession of Japanese Canadians during the Second World War. He is associate professor of history at the 番茄社区. He is a former Chair of the Canadian Committee on Migration, Ethnicity, and Transnationalism, which is affiliated with the Canadian Historical Association, and founded UVic’s Committee for Urban Studies, which initiated the interdisciplinary lecture series, The City Talks.
Feng Xu |
Visiting China Researcher (2022-23); Senior Research Fellow
- Term: 2021 - present
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Department of Political Science
- Project lead: Migration, Mobility, and Displacement Journal
- fengxu@uvic.ca
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Dr. Feng Xu is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the 番茄社区. She specializes in Comparative politics and the Global South (China). Her current research interests concern feminist political economy, migration and urbanization, and labor market.
She is the editor-in-chief of Migration, Mobility & Displacement, CAPI's online, open access academic journal. She also serves on CAPI's Steering Committee.
Pooja Parmar |
Senior Research Fellow
- Term: 2023-2026
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- Project lead: Indigeneity in Asia
- parmar@uvic.ca
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Pooja Parmar is an Associate Professor and President’s Chair in Law and Indigeneity in a Global Context at UVic Faculty of Law. Her research focuses on the legal profession, ethical lawyering and Indigeneity. One of her current projects is a SSHRC-funded study of Indigenous laws as sources of ethical legal practice in BC. Much of Dr. Parmar’s research is informed by her interest in legal pluralism and legal history, and by questions of legal epistemology in multi-juridical spaces. In her published research Dr. Parmar has examined aspects of human right to water, Indigeneity, oral history and Indigenous claims, lawyers as translators across legal worlds, intersections of law and colonialism, and land, law and development.
Pooja Parmar |
Senior Research Fellow
- Term: 2023-2026
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- Project lead: Indigeneity in Asia
- parmar@uvic.ca
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Pooja Parmar is an Associate Professor and President’s Chair in Law and Indigeneity in a Global Context at UVic Faculty of Law. Her research focuses on the legal profession, ethical lawyering and Indigeneity. One of her current projects is a SSHRC-funded study of Indigenous laws as sources of ethical legal practice in BC. Much of Dr. Parmar’s research is informed by her interest in legal pluralism and legal history, and by questions of legal epistemology in multi-juridical spaces. In her published research Dr. Parmar has examined aspects of human right to water, Indigeneity, oral history and Indigenous claims, lawyers as translators across legal worlds, intersections of law and colonialism, and land, law and development.
Meyer Aaron |
- CAPI Associate since 2020
Sikata Banerjee |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Gender Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2017
Melia Belli Bose |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Art History & Visual Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2017
James Boutilier |
- CAPI Associate since 2000
Angie Chau |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Pacific and Asian Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Raveendra Chittoor |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Gustavson School of Business
- CAPI Associate since 2017
Marlea Clarke |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Political Science
- CAPI Associate since 2021 (previously a CAPI Senior Research Fellow)
Deborah Curran |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Thiti Jamkajornkeiat |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Pacific and Asian Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2023
Nigel Mantou Lou |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Psychology
- CAPI Associate since 2023
Donna Greschner |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
Jingjai Hanchanlash |
Robert Hanlon |
- Faculty affiliation: Thompson Rivers University
- CAPI Associate since 2024
Simi Kang |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Gender Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2021
Dulma Karunarathna
- Faculty affiliation: University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka
- CAPI Associate since 2024
Asad Kiyani |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Willy Wo-Lap Lam |
- CAPI Associate since 2022
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Dr Lam has been an Adjunct Professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (Centre for China Studies, History Department and the Master’s Program in Global Political Economy) since 2007. He is also a Senior Fellow at Jamestown Foundation, a foreign-policy think tank in Washington D.C. With 40 years of experience writing and researching about China, Willy Lam is a recognized expert on areas including the Chinese Communist Party, elite politics, Chinese foreign policy and foreign economic relations, as well as the country’s economic and political reform.
The veteran Sinologist has published seven books on China, including Routledge Handbook of the Chinese Communist Party (Routledge, London, 2018); Chinese Politics in the Era of Xi Jinping (Routledge, London, 2015); Chinese Politics in the Hu Jintao Era (M.E. Sharpe, New York, 2006); and The Era of Jiang Zemin (Prentice Hall, Singapore & New York, 1999). His new book, The Fight for China’s Future (Routledge, London), came out in 2020.
Dr Lam has a B.A. and Master’s in Buddhist Studies from the University of Hong Kong; an MA in China studies from the University of Minnesota; and a Ph.D. in political economy from Wuhan University, China. His views on China, China-U.S. and China-Taiwan relations as well as other current affairs are regularly cited by the New York Times, Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Globe and Mail, The Straits Times, Bloomberg, the Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.
Jae Woon Lee |
- CAPI Associate since 2020
Sujin Lee |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Pacific and Asian Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2019
ann-elise lewallen |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Department of Pacific and Asian Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2021
Carol Liao |
- CAPI Associate since 2020
Qian Liu |
- Faculty Affiliation: University of Calgary
- CAPI Associate since 2020
Isabel Lloyd |
- CAPI Associate since 1999
Andrew Marton |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Pacific and Asian Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2017
- CAPI Director: 2014-2017
Jeremy Webber |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Ted McDorman |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 1988
Catherine Morris |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 2001
Renée Mulligan |
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Sudhir Nair |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Gustavson School of Business
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Trung Nguyen |
- Faculty affiliation: Faculty of Law
- CAPI Associate since 2024
Sada Niang |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic French
- CAPI Associate since 2017
Midori Ogasawara |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Sociology
- CAPI Associate since 2021
Thanh Phan |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 2020
Cody Poulton |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Pacific and Asian Studies
- CAPI Associate since 2017
Supriya Routh |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Law
- CAPI Associate since 2017
Daromir Rudnyckyj |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Anthropology
- CAPI Associate since 2019
Hugh Stephens |
Reeta Tremblay |
- Faculty affiliation: UVic Political Science
- CAPI Associate since 2017
Can Zhao |
- CAPI Associate since 2022
Yukari Takai |
- Home institution/position:
Research Associate at the York Centre for Asian Research, York University, Toronto - Country:
Canada - Duration of visit:
September to December 2024 - CAPI designation:
PWFC visiting scholar
Bio
Dr. Yukari Takai is a Research Associate at the York Centre for Asian Research at York University in Toronto, Canada. She is a historian of North America and the transpacific world. During her term of Scholar in Residence, Takai begins new research entitled “De-Essentializing the National, De-Constructing the Transnational.” It calls for greater sensitivity to gender and translocalism in the global history of women and men of Japanese background. The focus of her research is two-fold. The first is the tradition of dékasegi, particularly among women from Japan’s southern and southwestern regions in the early twentieth century. The second is migration for the purpose of conscription deferral with a primary focus on young men originating from Japan’s southernmost islands of Okinawa and beyond in the 1930s and early 1940s. Together, Takai proposes, the two-pronged approach of the project places the history of dispossession and displacement of Nikkei civilians in a fresh new light beyond familiar chronology of the years of World War II and immediately after.
Han Le |
- Home institution/position:
Associate Professor at Shanghai Academy of Social Science - Country:
China - Duration of visit:
April 2023-April 2024 - CAPI designation:
Visiting CSC scholar
Bio
Dr Han Le is an Associate Professor at the Shanghai Academy of Social Science who specializes in fertility desire and motherhood penalties. Her current research interests concern feminist political economy, and the digital inclusion, with a recent project exploring the impact of fertility disagreement on behavior of couples. .
Risa Jitosho
- Home institution/position:
Associate Professor of International Business and Consumer Behavior at School of Policy Science, Ryukoku University. - Country:
Japan - Duration of visit:
September 2024 to September 2025 - CAPI designation:
Visiting Scholar (Faculty contact - Endo Takahiro)
Bio
Risa Jitosho (Ph.D., Kobe University) is an Associate Professor of International Business and Consumer Behavior at School of Policy Science, Ryukoku University, Japan. She received her Ph.D. From Kobe University in 2019. Her primary research interest is in the area of cross-cultural consumer behavior, recently focusing on brand personality, acceptance of ethnic foods, acceptance of foods using novel technologies such as genetic modification, and cultural barriers.
Sujin Lee |
- Home department/position:
Assistant Professor, UVic Department of Pacific and Asian Studies - Duration of visit:
July to December 2021 - CAPI project:
Visiting faculty program
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Dr. Lee's research mainly concerns the population discourse in the Japanese colonial empire, with a particular focus on birth control, eugenics, and the production of motherhood.
During her CAPI visitorship, she plans to hold a workshop on the politics of population in Asia. This workshop aims at creating a critical dialogue between Asian societies about how different modes of politics - e.g., governmentality, scientific rationality, gender politics, and globalization - regulate the quantity, quality, and mobility of population(s). To facilitate a transnational dialogue on the question of the political dimension of population discourses, she intends to invite scholars whose work concerns the historical or contemporary politics of population control and reproductive technologies in different Asian societies.
Daniela Damian |
- Home department/position:
Professor, UVic Computer Science - Duration of visit:
July to December 2021 - CAPI project:
Visiting faculty program
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Dr. Daniela Damian is a Professor of Software Engineering in 番茄社区’s Department of Computer Science, where she leads research in the Software Engineering Global interAction Laboratory (). Her research interests include Software Engineering, Requirements Engineering, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work and Empirical Software Engineering.
During her CAPI visitorship, Daniela, in collaboration with UVic Anthropology professor Daromir Rudnyckyj, will be undertaking a project examining developments in money and technology in Asia, with a focus on fintech and data privacy.
Ploykaew Porananond |
- Home institution/position:
Lecturer, - Country:
Thailand - Duration of visit:
June to October 2021 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
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Dr. Porananond (PhD, University of Glasgow) is the Director of the Center of ASEAN Transnational Studies at the Faculty of Law, Chiang Mai University. Her research interest is comparative competition law and the enactment and enforcement of competition laws in Southeast Asia and within new jurisdictions. Her book, (Wolters Kluwer) was published in 2018. During her stay at UVic, Dr. Porananond will be working on her current project exploring globalization of the goals of competition law, which looks into the interaction between the economic oriented goal of competition law advocated by matured competition law jurisdictions and more socially and politically inclusive ones adopted by younger jurisdictions.
Kitpatchara Somanawat |
- Home institution/position:
Lecturer, - Country:
Thailand - Duration of visit:
June to October 2021 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
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Kitpatchara Somanawat is a Lecturer at the Faculty of Law at Chiang Mai University, Thailand, specializing in legal history, legal philosophy, social theory and constitutionalism. During his UVic stay, he will be using primarily historical methods to compare the traits of First Nations and Thai judges.
Pema Wangdi |
- UVic department of study:
UVic Law - Home institution:
- Country:
Bhutan - Duration of visit:
July 2020 to April 2021 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
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Pema Wangdi is a PhD student at the Law and Society Program at UVic and a Canadian Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Advanced Scholar (QES-AS). He is a senior lecturer and one of the founding faculty members at the Jigme Singye Wangchuck (JSW) School of Law, Bhutan’s first law school.
Pema has been working on the law school project since 2011, which led to its opening on July 3, 2017, when the law school welcomed its first cohort of 25 students to the campus. He has designed and taught the philosophy course for the law students and also co-designed and taught the Political Science Course. He is also part of the committee who is designing the Gross National Happiness and the Law Course, which is considered to be the capstone of the JSW School of Law Curriculum.
Prior to this current job, Pema worked as a Managing Director of a Radio Station popularly known in Thimphu, Bhutan as Kuzoo FM, the Voice of the Youth. He has also worked as a curriculum writer and audio/visual producer for the Ministry of Education. Apart from that he has an experience of teaching from Kindergarten to the University level. He received his teaching training from Samtse College of Education, Bhutan and studied Cinema, TV, Stage and Radio from the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology in Alberta. He received his BA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics from Rangsit University, Thailand and MA in Philosophy from Fordham University, NY USA.
Songkrant Pongboonjun |
- UVic department of study:
UVic Law PhD - Home institution:
- Country:
Thailand - Duration of visit:
September 2018 to August 2020 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
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Songkrant is a PhD student at the Law and Society Program at the 番茄社区 and a Canadian Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Advanced Scholar (QES-AS). Songkrant was an environmental lawyer who practiced law in Thailand for ten years and then shifted to teach law at Chiang Mai University, Thailand, since 2016. His worked was about empowering local people to protect their environment, natural resources, and their health and also encouraging young lawyers to engage in public interest lawyering, especially in environmental field. He is interested in the interaction between formal legal institutions, such as legal texts, judiciary, and informal institutions such as local communities, public interest lawyers, academy that leads to create law in action, in order to find the best way to expand civil liberties and civil rights. His tentative thesis title is “Creating Rights from the Bottom: The Case of Environmental Public Interest Lawyers in Thailand”. This work will investigate the roles and impacts of public interest lawyers in developing environmental rights in the context of developing country like Thailand.
Ratana Ly |
- UVic department of study:
UVic Law PhD - Home institution:
- Country:
Cambodia - Duration of visit:
September 2017 to August 2020 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
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Ratana Ly is a PhD candidate in the UVic Faculty of Law. She completed her LLB at the Royal University of Law and Economics, Cambodia, and LLM at the Nagoya University, Japan. She then worked as a researcher at the Center for the Study of Humanitarian Law in Cambodia, focusing her research on international human rights, international criminal law, labor migration, and refugees. Observing the recent booming of construction in Cambodia, she is keen to explore the relationship between this business sector with labor rights, migration, gender, and the environment. In her spare time, she enjoys taking long walks. Ratana is looking forward to the exciting challenges and opportunities, which will come her way during the program, and learn as she goes. Ratana is particularly grateful to CAPI, the QES-AS scholarship, and UVic for the funding and other support, which allow her to undertake these studies.
Nima Dorji |
- UVic department of study:
UVic Law PhD - Home institution:
- Country:
Bhutan - Duration of visit:
September 2017 to August 2020 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
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Nima Dorji is a PhD student at the Law and Society Program at the 番茄社区 and a Canadian Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Advanced Scholar (QES-AS). He is a senior lecturer and one of the founding faculty members at the Jigme Singye Wangchuck (JSW) School of Law, Bhutan’s first law school. Nima has been working on the law school project since 2014, which led to its opening on July 3, 2017, as the law school welcomed its first cohort of 25 students to the campus. Before joining JSW, Nima worked as a Legal Officer at Bhutan National Legal Institute (BNLI). He was one of the founding staff members of BNLI, managing UN-funded activities and legal dissemination programs. He received his BA and LLB (Hons.) degrees from NALSAR University of Law in India in 2009, his Postgraduate Diploma in National Law (PGDNL) from the Royal Institute of Management, Bhutan, in 2010, and his Master of Laws (LLM) from the University of Canberra, Australia, in 2014
Vandanet Hing |
- Home institution:
, - Country:
Cambodia - Duration of visit:
January to June 2020 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
Ly Anh Hoang |
- Home institution:
- Country:
Vietnam - Duration of visit:
November 2019 to February 2020 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
Tiasa Basu Roy |
- Home institution:
MPhil in History, - Duration of visit at UVic:
June to August 2019 - CAPI project:
South Asia Global Forum
Shane Barter |
- Position, home institution:
Associate Professor of International Studies, and Director of the Pacific Basin Research Center, - Duration of visit at UVic:
June to August 2019
Ramesh Bairy T.S. |
- Home institution:
Associate Professor of sociology at the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay, Mumbai, India - Duration of visit at UVic:
2019 - CAPI project:
South Asia Global Forum
Sunayana Ganguly |
- Home institution:
- Country:
India - Duration of visit:
May to August, 2018 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
Sushmita Pati |
- Home institution:
- Country:
India - Duration of visit:
May to August, 2018 - CAPI project:
Regulating Globalization in South and Southeast Asia
Yashomati Ghosh |
- Home institution:
Associate Professor at the - Duration of visit at UVic:
September to October 2017 - CAPI project:
South Asia Global Forum