黑料社区

ASAA President Prof. Kate McGregor announces the 2021 John Legge Prize for Best Thesis in 黑料社区

ASAA President Prof. Kate McGregor announces the 2021 John Legge Prize for Best Thesis in 黑料社区

2021 John Legge Prize for Best Thesis in 黑料社区

I am delighted as President of the ASAA to announce that the 2022 John Legge Prize for the best thesis in Asian studies in Australia in 2021 has been awarded to Dr a graduate from the University of New South Wales for the thesis titled 鈥淏ecoming Resilient: Disaster Recovery in Post-Yolanda Philippines through Women鈥檚 Eyes.鈥

The judges have also awarded a runners-up prize, to a second outstanding thesis this year. The thesis on Indonesia titled 鈥淭he Precarious Past: Historical Practices in Indic Java鈥 was written by Dr from the University of Sydney.

The ASAA would like to congratulate the two winners on these outstanding theses and thank all who also entered their work for consideration this round. We had a very strong field this year which is wonderful to see.

The John Legge Prize is one of seven prize/grant schemes offered by the ASAA. This prize recognizes cutting edge research performed by postgraduates across our broad field of research.

Below is a citation for the winning thesis by Kaira Zoe Alburo Ca帽ete prepared by our three judges Associate Professor (Latrobe University), Dr (Sydney University) and Dr (The University of Queensland). The ASAA would also like to sincerely thank the judges for their time and service to Asian studies.

Citation for Kaira Zoe Alburo Ca帽ete鈥檚 thesis 鈥淏ecoming Resilient: Disaster Recovery in Post-Yolanda Philippines through Women鈥檚 Eyes,鈥 UNSW Sydney, July 2021.

Dr Ca帽ete鈥檚 thesis is an exceptional piece of original, innovative, and ambitious scholarship. It is written with a confidence and maturity that is rarely encountered in PhD theses. Focusing on the everyday experiences of Filipino women in the recovery from typhoon Yolanda (2013) in Tacloban City, the Philippines, Dr Ca帽ete pioneers a new form of 鈥渄isaster study from below鈥 and convincingly argues for epistemic diversity in how communities 鈥 especially women 鈥 respond to disasters. She deconstructs the Filipino state鈥檚 鈥渂uild back better鈥 discourse, foregrounding how its concepts of 鈥渃are鈥 and 鈥渞esilience鈥 seek to disciple and render its subjects governable, and then carefully and critically interrogates how her interlocutors negotiate, re-appropriate and contest the state鈥檚 discourse while exploring alternative pathways to recovery.

The thesis combines extensive ethnographic fieldwork (2017-19), which was conducted utilising her knowledge of the local languages (Tagalog, Cebuano and Waray), with a series of thoughtful theoretical interventions. The author moves seamlessly between the empirical and the theoretical, compellingly layering her insights across the chapters. Her argument is nuanced yet lucidly presented, demonstrating a sophisticated and in-depth engagement with the theoretical literature in feminist, development and disaster studies. Dr Ca帽ete鈥檚 writing is evocative, and at times deeply moving, taking readers deep into the precarity and insecurity of these women鈥檚 daily lives, but also their lived resilience.

Dr Ca帽ete further develops a unique photo-based methodology from visual anthropology and feminist stand-point theory, called PhotoKwento or 鈥減hoto stories.鈥 By providing her participants with digital cameras and allowing them to take photographs, assemble them into a photo album and then narrative their emotions, she de-centres the research-participant power structure and allows for the co-construction of knowledge.

The ASAA wishes both winners success with their future careers.

Professor Kate McGregor

ASAA President

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